Prescot Heritage Walks

Prescot is one of the oldest towns in Merseyside and it is
believed that an early Christian church was established here in the
7th century. In medieval times Prescot was a thriving market town
and the ecclesiastical centre of a large parish covering much of
south west Lancashire.
The 18th century brought considerable changes to
Prescot and the continued growth in a number of craft industries
created one of the earliest centres of the Industrial Revolution.
These craft industries were concentrated around watch making, tool
making and the potteries, resulting in Prescot’s increased
prosperity. The town also had close links with Liverpool’s
expanding overseas trade and as a result became an important
coaching centre on the Lancashire Turnpike System. As the old
trades disappeared other industries replaced them and during
the 20th century BICC was a big local employer, utilising
the highly skilled watch making workforce. Prescot once had an
unusual tradition known as the Perrying Ceremony. It involved the
officers of the Court Leet throwing heated pennies from the windows
of the Town Hall into the market place below. People would then
scramble to pick them up. Whilst you’re walking the Prescot trail
look out for Stone Street, officially the narrowist named street in
the country.

The route:
- St. Mary’s Church is the only Grade I listed building in the
borough of Knowsley, and dates predominantly from 1610. The church
contains a number of items from earlier buildings including a
C15 vestry, intricate woodcarvings, panelling and an
Anglo- Saxon font. The tower and spire, added in the late
1720s are thought to be the work of a pupil of Sir Christopher
Wren.
- Vicarage Place is a fine example of a Georgian street. Number
10 Vicarage Place dates from the early 18th century and
has some attractive Victorian cast iron railings and
gateposts. On the front of number 8 can be seen the Coat of Arms of
Kings College, Cambridge, originally on the Town Hall of 1755. In
1445 King Henry IV granted the Parish and Manor of Prescot to his
newly established college in Cambridge.
- The church of Our Lady Immaculate and St. Joseph was built in
1856-7 and designed by the architect Joseph Hansom. Hansom became
famous for inventing the ‘Hansom Cab’.
- West Street has dwellings of various dates including an
attractive Victorian terrace (no.s 12-20) and number 4, which still
retains a watch makers gallery at the rear.
- The Clock Face public house, Grade II listed, was originally
called West End House. It was built in the late 18th
century as a Dower House for the widow of the Earl of
Derby.
- The Sun Inn dates from 1798 and is said to be the oldest public
house in continuous occupation in Prescot. In the 1840s it was a
coaching inn and for a short time it was the Excise
Office.
- Prescot Museum is a handsome brick Georgian townhouse dating
from 1776, originally the site of the local cock fighting pit.
During the 19th century it became Parr’s Bank and later
the National Westminster Bank before opening as a museum in
1982.
- In the late 19th century the Prescot watch making
industry was collapsing and in 1889 the Lancashire Watch Making
Company was formed. They built a warehouse and specialist workshop
known locally as the ‘Flatiron Building’ and various local watch
making companies were bought out and the workers employed
here.
- Along Ecclestone Street is evidence of Medieval Prescot, of
note is number 30. Interestingly, the right hand gable is
genuine 17th century and the left hand side is
a 20th century copy. Some of the other shops, behind
their modern frontages have remains of 17th
century building.
- Prescot War Memorial, sculpted by Walter Gilbert and Louis
Weingartner, shows a young army officer holding a gun, standing on
top of the tall Portland stone pedestal. It is unusual because the
date plaque shows that it was unveiled in 1916, two years
before the First World War ended.