Preston Patrick Hall
A late-14th-century house with 15th- and 17th-century
alterations.1
The upper room on the right was used as a
courtroom for the Court Baron: several Quakers, including Thomas Camm, appeared there for non-payment of tithes.
Thomas Machell says:
Here I saw preston Hal which giues Name to that family — an old rambling house with
slender tower ouer the Gate; the Lower Rooms all pavd with Cobbles: but not a . The old Maps
of Speed Camden2 Thus from smal heads doe great Rivers
flow; 3 It stands — in Boggy Bottom
Ground ... [page 386]
It has bin in the Prestons time immemorial & gaue name vnto them — but was odly Quitted by
Sir Thomas Preston; who being a Priest (before It fell to him by the death of Sir John Preston his
Brother) maryed & had Isue 2 daughters — maryed to the Lords Montgomery & Cliford —
[margin] place this elsewhere [end margin] and being in
widdowhood was over persuaded by the Romish priests that the Estate would not prosper vnless he returned to his
former function agane; vpon which he settled
It on his 2 daughters, have first
geuen his Estates in Lancashaire calld the Manner (formerly an Abby)4 vnto the Jesuites, & so went beyond
sea. Putting a Period to the continuation of that ancient family vpon this Estate.
[page 301]
This event was yet to come when Fox passed through, but these Prestons were Royalists, and the previous Lord of the Manor, Sir John Preston, had been killed in battle in 1645. The current Lord was another Sir John Preston, brother to the Sir Thomas who was a Romish priest and who succeeded him in 1663. Both Sir John and Thomas appear in the 1650 List of delinquent papists and ministers sequestered in the Barony of Kendal. After a court case, the gift to the Jesuits was anulled, and the manor was adjudged forfeit to the Crown. The tenancy passed to the Prestons of Holker.
NGR listing: SD5443083748.
1. See Royal Commission on Historic Monuments report pages 195–196. Return
2. Machel seems to have crossed out the word Cobbles by mistake. The remark about the maps appears again at the bottom of the page but is equally incomplete. Return
3. This presumably refers to something said at the time, but it is not clear to what. Return
4. Furness Abbey, which the family acquired at the Dissolution of the monasteries. Return