The calendar of the canonised has
come in handy for the christening of churches.
Without it, we might have indulged in a poor and prosaic
nomenclature; with it, the dullest, as well as the
finest, architecture can get into the company of the
beatified. Barring a few places, all our churches
are associated with some particular saint; every edifice
has cultivated the acquaintance of at least one; but
that we have now to notice has made a direct move into
the general constellation, and is dedicated to the
aggregate body. We believe that in church-naming,
as in common life, “All is for the best,”
and we commend, rather than censure, the judgment which
recognised the full complement of saints when All Saints’
was consecrated. A man maybe wrong in fixing
upon one name, or upon fifty, or fifty hundred, but
if he agglomerates the entire mass, condenses every
name into one, and gives something respectable that
particular name, he won’t be far off the equinoctial
of exactness. In this sense, the christeners
of All Saints’ were wise; they went in for the
posse comitatus of saints backed
the favourites as well as “the field” and
their scheme, so far as naming goes, must win.
There is, however, not much in a name, and less in
a reverie of speculative comment, so we will descend
to a lower, yet, perhaps, more healthy, atmosphere.
In 1841, the Rev. W. Walling, son
of a yeoman living is Silverdale one of
the prettiest places we know of in the North of England came
to Preston, as minister of St. James’s Church.
He stayed at the place for about a year, then went
to Carlton, in Nottinghamshire, and afterwards to
Whitby. Mr. Walling was a man of quiet disposition;
during his stay in Preston he was exceedingly well
liked; and when he left the town, a vacuum seemed to
have been created. He was a missed man; his value
was not found out until he had gone; and it was determined mainly
amongst a pious, enthusiastic section of working people to
get him back again if possible. And they went
about the business like sensible people
decided not to root out his predecessor at St. James’s,
nor to exterminate any of the sundry clerical beings
in other parts of the town, but to build him a new
church. They were only poor men; but they persevered;
and in a short time their movement took a distinct
shape, and the building, whose erection they had in
view, was prospectively called “The Poor Man’s
Church.” In time they raised about 200
pounds; but a sum like that goes only a little way
in church building sometimes doesn’t
cover those very refreshing things which contractors
call “extras;” a number of wealthier men,
who appreciated the earnestness of the original promoters,
and saw the necessity, of such a church as they contemplated,
came to the rescue, and what they and divers friends
gave justified a start, on a plot of land between
Walker-street and Elizabeth-street. On the 21st
of September, 1846, the foundation-stone of the church All
Saints was laid by the late Thomas German,
Esq., who was mayor of Preston at that time.
The building, which cost about 2,600 pounds, was not
consecrated till December, 1856, but it was ministerially
occupied by the Rev. W. Walling on the 23rd September,
1848, and he held his post, earning the respect and
esteem of all in the discharge of its duties, till
October 10th, 1863, when death suddenly ended his
labours. When the church was consecrated there
was a debt of about 750 pounds upon it; but in a few
years, by the judicious and energetic action of the
trustees, it was entirely cleared off. The present
trustees of the church are Dr. Hall, Messrs. J. R.
Ambler, F. Mitchell, and W. Fort. The successor
of the Rev. W. Walling was the Rev. G. Beardsell,
who still occupies the situation; but before saying
anything to the point concerning him we must describe
the church and its concomitants.
All Saints’ is a good substantial-looking
church. It is built in the Ionic style of Greek
architecture; has a massive pillared front; is railed
round, has an easy and respectable entrance, and getting
worse as it gets higher is surmounted with
a small bell turret and a chimney. Other things
may be put upon the roof after a while, for space
is abundant there. The church has a square, respectable,
capacious interior is roomy, airy, light;
doesn’t seem thrown together in a dim foggy
labrynth like some places, and you feel as if you
could breathe freely on taking a seat in it. It
is well-galleried, and will accommodate altogether
about 1,500 human beings. The pews are good,
and whilst it is impossible for them to hold more
people than can get into them, they are charged for
as if one additional person could take a seat in each
after being full! This is odd but quite true.
In the case of pews which will just accommodate five
persons, six sittings are charged for; those holding
four are put down in the rent book for five; and this
scale of charges is kept up in respect to all the
pews, whether big or little. The rents go into
the pocket of the incumbent. At the southern
end there is a small chancel, which was erected at
the expense of the late J. Bairstow, Esq. It
is ornamented with several stained glass windows,
and has an inlaid wooden canopy, but there is nothing
startling nor remarkable about the work. Beneath
the windows there is painted in large, letters the
word “Emmanuel;” but the position of it
is very inconvenient. People sitting above may
see the name fairly; but many below have a difficulty
in grasping it, and those sitting in the centre will
never be able to get hold of more letters than those
which makeup the mild name of “Emma.”
Names--particularly great ones should
never be put up anywhere unless they can be seen.
On each side of the chancel arch then is a small tablet;
one being to the memory of the Rev. W. Walling, and
the other to that of the late W. Tusón, Esq.,
who was one of the original wardens. The church
is clean and in good condition; but the windows would
stand re-painting. There are about 400 free seats
in the building, and they are pretty well patronised.
The general attendance is tolerably large; between
700 and 800 people frequent the church on the average;
but the congregation seems to be of a floating character,
is constantly changing, and embraces few “old
stagers.” Formerly, many who had been at
the church from the first might be seen at it; numerous
persons recognised as “fixtures” were
there; but they have either gone to other churches
or died off, and there is now a strong ebb and flow
of new material at the place.
The congregation is of a complex description;
you may see in it the “Grecian bend” and
the coal scuttle hood, the buff waistcoat and the
dark moleskin coat; but in the main the worshippers
are of a quiet well-assorted character partly
working class, partly middle-class, with a sprinkling
of folk above and below both. The humble minded
and the ancient appear to have a liking for the left
side range of seats; the swellishly-young and the
substantially-middle class take up a central position;
people of a fair habilimental stamp occupy the bulk
of the seats on the other side; whilst the select and
the specially virtuous approximate the pulpit one
or two in the excelsior category get even beyond it,
and like both the quietude and the dignity of the
position. The galleries are used by a promiscuous
company of worshippers, who keep good order and make
no undue noises. The tale-tellers and the gossips for
they exist here as in the generality of sacred places are
distributed in various directions. It would be
advantageous if they were all put in one separate
part; for then their influence would not be so ramified,
and they might in the end get up a small Kilkenny affair
and mutually finish off one another. Late attendance
does not seem to be so fashionable at All Saints’
as at some churches; still it exists; things would
look as if they were getting wrong if somebody didn’t
come late and make everybody turn their heads.
When we visited the church, the great mass were present
at the right time; but a few dropped in after the
stipulated period; one put in an appearance 30 minutes
late; and another sauntered serenely into the region
of the ancient people just 65 minutes after the proceedings
had commenced. At a distance, the reading desk
and the pulpit look oddly mixed up; but a close inspection
shows that they are but fairly associated, stand closely
together, the pulpit, which is the higher, being in
the rear. There is no decoration of any sort in
the body of the church; everything appears tranquil,
serious, straightforward, and respectable. The
singing is of a very poor character, is
slow, weak, and calculated at times to make you ill.
Pope, in his Essay on Criticism, says
Some to church repair,
Not for the doctrine, but the music there.
Probably they do; but nobody goes
to All Saints’ for that purpose. No genuine
hearty interest seems to be taken in the singing by
anybody particularly. The choir move through their
notes as if some of them were either fastened up hopelessly
in barrels, or in a state of musical syncope; the
organist works his hands and feet as well as he can
with a poor organ; the members of the congregation
follow, lowly and contentedly, doing their best against
long odds and the parson sits still, all in one grand
piece, and looks on. The importance and influence
of good music should be recognised by every church;
and we trust in time there will be a decided improvement
at All Saints’. A church like it a
building of its size and with its congregation ought
to have something superior and effective in the matter
of music.
We have already said that the Rev.
George Beardsell is the minister of All Saints’.
He has been at the church, as its incumbent, about
five years. Originally Mr. Beardsell was a Methodist; a
Methodist preacher, too, we believe; but in time he
changed his notions; and eventually flung himself,
in a direct line, into the arms of “Mother Church.”
Mr. Beardsell made his first appearance in Preston
as curate of Trinity Church. He worked hard in
this capacity, stirred up the district at times with
that peculiar energy which poor curates longing for
good incumbencies, wherein they may settle down into
security and ease, can only manifest, and with many
he was a favourite. From Trinity Church he went
to St. Saviour’s, and here he slackened none
of his powers. Enthusiasm, combined with earnest
plodding, enabled him to improve the district considerably.
He drew many poor people around him; he repeatedly
charmed the “unwashed” with his strong
rough-hewn orgasms; the place seemed to have been
specially reserved for some man having just the perseverance
and vigorous volubility which he possessed; he had
ostensibly a “mission” in the locality;
the people of the district liked him, he reciprocated
the feeling, and more than once intimated that he would
make one or two spots, including the wild region of
Lark-hill, “Blossom as the rose.”
But the period of efflorescence has not yet arrived;
a “call” came in due season, and this carried
the ministerial florist to another “sphere of
action.” Mr. Beardsell was translated to
the incumbency of All Saints’, and he still holds
it. When Mr. Walling was at this church the income
was about 260 pounds a year; taking everything into
account, it is now worth upwards of 400 pounds.
Mr. Beardsell is not a beautiful,
but a stout, well-made, strong-looking man, close
upon 40, with a growing tendency towards adiposity.
He has a healthy, bulky, English look; is not a man
of profound education, but, makes up by weight what
he may lack in depth; thinks it a good thing to carry
a walking-stick, to keep his coat well buttoned, and
to arrange his hair in the high-front, full-whig
style; has a powerful, roughly eloquent voice; is rather
sensational in the construction of some of his sentences;
bellows a little at times; welters pathetically
often; is somewhat monotonous in tone; ululates too
heavily; behaves harshly to the letter “r”
sounds it with a violent vigour, and makes it fairly
spin round his tongue end occasionally; can sustain
himself well as a speaker; is never at a loss for
words; has a forcible way of arranging his subjects;
is systematic in his style of treatment; and can throw
into his elucidation of questions well-coined and emphatic
expressions. He likes perorations used
to imitate Punshon a little. He has a good analogical
faculty; takes many of his illustrations from nature,
and works them out exceedingly well; is a capital
explainer of biblical difficulties; is peculiarly fond
of the travels of St. Paul; piles up the agony easily
and effectively; many times gets into a groove of
high-beating, fierce-burning enthusiasm, as if he
were going to take a distinct leap out of his “pent-up
Utica,” and revel in the “whole boundless
continent” of thought and sacred sensation;
is a thorough believer in the “My brethren”
phrase we recently heard him use it nineteen
times in twenty minutes, and regretted that he didn’t
make the numbers equal; delights in decking out his
discourses with couplets and snatches of hymns; has
a full-blown determined style of speaking; reads with
his gloves on, and preaches with them off, like one
or two other parsons we have seen; makes his sermons
too long; is a good platform man, and would make a
fair travelling lecturer; has a great predilection
for open-air preaching, and has spells of it to the
Orchard; might with advantage work more in and less
out of his own district; wouldn’t commit a sin
if he studied the question of personal visiting; shouldn’t
think that his scripture reader a really
good, hard-working man can perform miracles,
and do nearly everything; can talk genuine common
sense if he likes, and make himself either very agreeable
or pugnacious; is an Orangeman, with a holy horror
of Popery; can give deliciously passionate lectures
about the Reformation; considers money a very important
article, and is inclined to believe that all people,
particularly parsons, should stick to it very firmly;
will have his own way in church matters; likes to
fight with a warden; has had many a lively little brush
over sacrament money; might have got on better with
many of the officials if he had been more conciliatory;
is a man of moderate ability, of fair metal, of strong
endurance, but would be more relished if he were less
dogmatic, were given less to wandering preaching,
and threw himself heart, soul, purse, and clothes into
his own district. Near the church, and occupying
good relative positions on each side of a beerhouse,
called “The Rising Sun,” are All Saints’
schools. One of them that now occupied
by the boys was, according to a tablet
at the outside, erected several years ago by our old
friend Captain German “as an affectionate tribute
to the memory of Thomas German, Esq.” About
five years since, two class-rooms were attached to
it, at the expense of J. Bairstow, J. Horrocks, R.
Newsham, and T. Miller, Esqrs. The other school,
set apart for the girls, was erected after that built
by Captain German. Both of the schools are very
good ones are large, lofty, and commodious.
That used for the boys is, scholastically, in a superior
condition. The master is sharp, fully up to his
duties; and, according to a report by the government
inspector, his school is one of the best in the district.
The average day attendance at the boys’ school
is 150; whilst at the girls school the regular attendance
may be set down at 330. The schools are used
on Sundays, and their average attendance then is 800.
Much might be written concerning them; but we must
close; we have said enough; and can only add that
if all are not saints who go to All Saints’ they
are about as good as the rest of people.