a town in Lancashire, 223 miles from London, in the post road between Preston and Lancaster. It is a large populous place, near a mile in length, but built in a very irregular manner, with dirty streets, and very indifferent houses. The church is a flatly Gothic structure. By the late inland navigation, it has communication with the rivers Mersey, Dee, Ribble, Ouse, Trent, Darwent, Severn, Humber, Thames, Avon, &c. which navigation, including its windings, extends above 500 miles, in the counties of Lincoln, Nottingham, York, Westmoreland, Chester, Stafford, Warwick, Leicester, Oxford, Worcester, &c.