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A ST. ANNES PIONEER
Reminiscences of Mr. George Lord
WHEN THE TOWN WAS YOUNG.
(Newspaper
article dated 1924)
Mr. George William Lord
is one of St. Annes pioneers. No one is more competent than he to
recount the story of the town's earliest days or the history of its
development since the 'seventies. The memory of those early days come
ever fresh to Mr. Lord and to those like him who knew St. Annes when it
was little more than a rather ambitious hamlet set in a waste of
sandhills.
Memory speeds back quickly over the fifty years' period of
St. Annes’ development, when one compares the St. Annes of 1875 with its
little cottages and great ambitions pictured by Mr. Lord with the St.
Annes of 1924, the modern holiday resort, with its pier, hotels,
cinemas, gardens and all its other attractions, one realises in how
great a degree the town owes its present proud position to the
undaunted efforts of its pioneers.
Once the potentialities of St. Annes
were recognised, it grew with the rapidity of an American prairie town,
and, passing through more than one period of slump, attained its present
proud position among English watering-places within a comparatively
short time. Mr. Lord is one of the few who have seen the town grow from
insignificance to fame, and it is an interesting story that he can tell
of that development.
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Mr. Lord was about
twenty years of age when he came to St. Annes front Bacup in August,
1875. For live months he worked on the making of the old St. George's
Gardens—the site of the present Ashton Gardens —travelling between St.
Annes and Black- pool each day, until, on January 3rd, 1876, he went to
live with the late Mr. Clement Rawstron (the father of Mr. Arthur
Rawstron), at Alpha House, which is, of course, still situate in St.
Andrew's Road South, and which was the first Post Office in St. Annes.
Then Mr. Lord served his apprenticeship as a painter with the late Mr.
Frank Lomax, whose workshop was close to the Parish Church, and with
whom Mr. Lord worked for five or six years.
Meanwhile, St. Annes had
been steadily developing. Then the first building slump came, and, as
there was no work for painters, Mr. Lord joined his fortunes with the
late Mr. John Diggle, whose workshop was next to the Church Road
Wesleyan Church, and learned the slating trade. A few years later he was
busy one day repairing the roof of the Drive Church Schoolroom, when the
late Mr. Daniel Leach, newly arrived back from America, came past.
“That’s not your job, George," said Mr. Leach, and front that day Mr.
Lord's activities were re-transferred to the painting trade, and he
worked for Mr. Leach for many years in Blackpool, St. Annes, Lytham,
Bury and Preston. In those days Mr. Leach worked for Mr. William John
Porritt, and when he returned to America Mr. Lord took over his
contracts and was in charge of all the painting and Slating work for Mr.
Porritt for eleven years. Subsequently he confined himself solely to the
slating business again, anti so worked until the outbreak of the war,
when he, went back once again to the painting trade.
It was shortly
after the end of the war that for Mr. Lord the light failed. Previously
he had seriously injured his right eye at cricket, and about live years
ago his sight was lost to him. He bears his great affliction with a
brave philosophy. It is still his boast that, given a friend to guide
him across the busy roads, he could find his way anywhere about St.
Annes. For has he not seen practically every street laid and every
house built, and, even denied his sight, can there be any strange place
for him in the town of his adoption? In his memory alone he has a happy
companion.
PROSPERITY, THEN SLUMP.
The St. Annes Hotel was in course of construction when Mr. Lord first
set foot in the town. There were a number of fishermen's cottages in
Church Road, but on the front there were two residences only—a house
adjoining the site of the present Southdown Hotel and Miss Davis's
School. A short time passed and then Claremont Villas, at the corner of
Eastbank Road, were erected, with six houses—including Kilgrimol School,
then in charge of Mr. John Allen on South Drive. A few more houses
nearer the centre of the town sprang up on the Drive, and then more
houses were erected in Park Road and Wood Street.
An era of prosperity
for St. Annes had apparently set in, but the promise of success for the
town's promoters was not yet to be fulfilled, for shortly afterwards,
and while the gas works were in course of construction, the first
building slump came and put it check to all progress. It was then, said
Mr. Lord, that the late Mr. W. J. Porritt, a director of the Land and
Building Co., first came prominently into the field. Mr. Porritt was a
man of great faith and sound judgment, and by building property of good
quality and enduring substance, he paved the way for a renewal of
prosperity.
It was about this time that disaster befel Mr. John Ogden,
who had obtained the contract for the construction of the gas works, for
during a gale one winter's night in the late 'seventies the wall on the
railway side of the new buildings was blown down, and so much damage was
caused to the properly that the work of construction had to be
recommenced. Mr. Porritt took over and completed three houses on
Summerfield Terrace in St. Annes Road East, which Mr. Ogden had
commenced, and proceeded to build extensively on North Promenade and in
other parts of the town. That was the real starting-point of St. Annes’
prosperity.
EARLY
CHURCH LIFE.
Mr. Lord has always
been associated with the church and musical life of the town. He
remembers when people of all denominations used to meet for worship
every Sunday in a hay loft over the stables then owned by Mr. Ogden and
now the property of Messrs. T. Whiteside and Sons, off Park Road, and he
can recall the first Free Church services held in the town—it was
actually the United Methodist Church, although in those days
Nonconformists of all creeds had, perforce, to sink all their little
differences and worship together—in a bakehouse in Church Road—a
building which stands to-day.
That was in 1876, and a year later the
Drive Wesleyan School Chapel (as it was then called) was built. Mr. Lord
attended the opening ceremony, and he remembers that, among others,
there were present Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Nutter and their three daughters,
Mr. and Mrs. John Ogden and their three daughters, Mr. Thomas Ormerod
(the first superintendent of the school), Mr. and Mrs. Edward Walmsley
and their son (Mr. Harry Walmsley), and daughter, and Mr. Edward
Hargreaves. It is interesting to note that Mr. Lord, Mr. Hargreaves and
Mr. Harry Walmsley attended the services held recently in celebration of
the 46th anniversary.
FIRST
MUSIC SELLER.
Mr. Lord held the
position of organist at the Drive for 16 years, and was secretary of the
Sunday School for 14 years. Always has he lent his talented services as
an organist willingly. He has played, at some time or other, in every
church in the town with the exception of the Roman Catholic Church.
After his long term of office at the Drive Church, the held a similar
position at the Church Road Church for four years and at the Primitive
Methodist Church for twelve months, while at the Congregational Church,
where he also played occasionally he had a singing class at one time.
He
did not take any part in the construction of the Drive School Chapel,
and it was with a few misgivings that he consented to associate in his
business capacity as a slater painter with the erection of the places of
worship which followed the Drive, for the last thing he wanted people to
think was that he went to church with any idea of promoting his business
interests. Rather would he sacrifice those interests than that people
should think that of him--although, really those who knew Mr. Lord were
never likely to think of him as anything but the Christian gentleman he
always proved himself. Mr Lord, it should be mentioned, was the first
music seller in St. Annes, and there was a time in those early days,
when the front room of his house in Church Roach, was a Mecca of all
local music lovers.
CRICKET CLUB.
Mr Lord was a devotee
of the King Willow in the days before the Palace Shield came into
existence, and when the St.Annes team used to play "friendly” games with
Blackpool, Lytham, Kirkham, and Fleetwood and when the home games were
played on a field which stretched at that time from the present Oxford
Road to Highbury Road. As members of the team he can recollect the Rev.
W. G. Terry (vicar of the Parish Church before the Rev. H. F Butler),
George and William Howarth, Sam Parkinson and Peter Moore. Mr. Lord was
also one of the first members of the present Ashton Institute when it
was situated in Wood Street—before it was transferred to the St.
George's Gardens entrance.
WRECK
THE “MEXICO".
The night of the
"Mexico" disaster still lives vividly in Mr. Lord's memory. It was while
he was in residence in Church Road, and he remembers that he had just
returned from a music lesson and was having his supper before the fire
when the alarm was sounded. Everybody, in those days, whatever the time
of day or night, rushed down to the shore to help in the launch of the
lifeboat immediately the gun was heard. Accordingly Mr. Lord was soon on
the scene of action. It was a glorious moonlight night, following a day
during which a gale had raged furiously, and a heavy sea was running.
The boat was launched and the watchers on the shore were able to follow
its course for a long way in the bright light of the full moon.
They saw
it vanish in the distance, and though they did not know it then they saw
the brave men who manned its going to their death. No news had come
through at 12-30, and Mr. Lord, with many others, went home fully
expecting that by morning the boat would have arrived safely back again.
The morning, instead, brought the terrible news of the boat's loss.
That ill-fated craft was the "Laura Janet," and in the summer before the
disaster Mr. Lord had painted it with no little pride.
HOBBIES.
One of Mr. Lord's pet
hobbies for twenty years was the breeding of collie dogs, and with his
son, Mr. Fred Lord, who left England in November last, and who now holds
the position of High Sheriff of New Jersey, America, he gained many
successes at shows in various parts of the country. In his new home
across the Atlantic Mr. Fred Lord has now some excellent kennels.
Mr. Lord is 68 years of
age, and he has been married 40 years. He is one of the old brigade who
played a worthy part in the building of the town, and now he "looks on”
with the few others who are left, proud of I the work's culmination. It
is right not to forget the patient, ever-hopeful labours of the pioneers
in the era of subsequent prosperity, for those men of the early days
builded well.
Newspaper article dated 1924. |
Monks of Lindisfarne Farms & Cottages Royal Visit 1847 St.Annes Parish Church Fishermen Drowned 1889 St.Marys Church Victoria's Jubilee 1897 Fylde Union Workhouse George William Lord John Ogden 1844-1915 Royal Visit 1913 Royal Visit 1913 St.Annes Market Majestic Hotel Geraldo E H Mumford Lytham Ribble Laundry, Lytham Russell & Co., St.Annes Wood Street 1927 Wood Street 1927 St.Annes Post Office 1927. Royal Visit 1927 Ribble Bridge 1927 Ribble Bridge 1927 Shone & Hartley 1927 Lytham Baths 1928 Stringers, Lytham 1928 Mdme Higginson 1929 Ribble Bridge 1938 Sandhills Sand & Dunes 1938 Josef Locke St.Annes Fete 1952 Lytham Club Day 1954 George Formby Les Dawson |