
Minehead bus crash: School to reopen for first time since fatal bus crash which killed boy
Minehead Middle School has issued an update three days after one of it's pupils sadly died in a bus crash.
Somerset is set to reopen today, following a tragic bus crash that resulted in the death of one pupil and injuries to others.
The school was forced to close its doors on Friday after a bus carrying between 60 and 70 pupils and staff members crashed on Thursday afternoon. The group was returning from a trip to Exmoor Zoo when the incident occurred.
A 10 year old boy tragically lost his life in the accident, while six children and three adults remain hospitalised. The bus veered off the A396 at Cutcombe Hill near Minehead, overturning and coming to a halt some 20ft from the road down a steep slope. The crash took place between Wheddon Cross and Timberscombe, around 3.15pm.
An off-duty firefighter travelling behind the coach was able to start freeing passengers immediately. Recovery of the vehicle and the investigation are complex, and according to the PA news agency, the road will remain closed until the beginning of next week.
A stream of people visited the school, which has pupils aged between nine and 14, on Friday to pay respects and leave tributes at the gates after the crash. The school was closed, but people left floral tributes and messages at the gates. Many were visibly upset and were hugging and supporting each other.
After the incident, the school's headteacher, Laura Mackie, spoke of the "unimaginable" loss. "Just complete devastation, complete heartbreak for our whole school community," she said, trying to hold back tears. "We're thinking of the student that we lost, their family, their friends, all of their loved ones.
"I'm thinking of my staff team, who are amazing, dedicated. And all of our wonderful students who have been impacted and affected by this." Speaking outside the school gates on Friday, the Rev Philip Butcher, the vicar of Minehead, said the community was in shock.
He said: "It was absolutely numbing, there are no words to describe what happened yesterday. It's an absolute tragedy, and one that's still very much unfolding. We're just standing firm with the school, with the families at this time, just to be with them in this time as a point of support."
A resident in west Somerset organised a GoFundMe for those affected, which has raised more than £21,700 in around a day. A separate fundraiser created to give money to the school has so far raised £1,955. And a third general GoFundMe page to help both families and the school has raised £12,500 so far.
A representative for Beacon Education Multi-Academy Trust, which operates the school, confirmed to PA it would be reopening on today (July 21).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Chard farmers have two of the rarest cows in the country
Two farmers say they are the proud owners of some of the most rare cows in the country. Emma and Andrew Warren, of Beetham Farm near Chard in Somerset, recently bought two Albion cows – a breed that until a few years ago was considered practically extinct following an outbreak of foot and mouth disease in the the cows, Maude and Margo, both have calves – and Maude may be pregnant Warren said she "had no idea they were that rare" when she bought them and that numbers of breeding Albions are "staggeringly low" at around 300 in the whole of the UK. The Albion Cattle Society told the BBC the breed originated from Derbyshire in an area near Bakewell in leant them their original "Bakewell Blues" name which also reflected their slightly blueish mottled appearance. However, in 1921 they were renamed the Blue Mannerings, from the society, said: "It was a bad time, there was a serious foot and mouth outbreak and then an agricultural depression, followed by World War II. "Then in the 1960s, another foot and mouth outbreak [happened], leaving just a few very stubborn farmers stuck in their ways and keeping the Albions going but well under the radar." And in what she calls serendipity, she said her father was "the last of the serving crew on the deployment of HMS Albion before it was sent to the great shipyard in the sky".A footplate from the Royal Navy ship, which shares the rare breed's name, sits on the entrance to the couple's conservatory.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Wiveliscombe Pool project will allow it to open over winter
A historic lido should be able to stay open over the winter months when the construction of a new heated pool house is Pool in Wiveliscombe, Somerset, was given planning permission for a £250,000 development - which will include a cafe, toilet and space for lifeguards - on 25 proposals were approved despite some objections over the impact the development could have on the look of the neighbouring war memorial recreation ground.A Somerset Council planning officer said the benefits to the community outweighed the harm the development could cause in the conservation area. The pool's trustees hope the project will be finished by spring 2026. Mike Davis, a trustee at the community pool, said there was "a big call for cold water swimming" and the new development would extend the pool's swimming £233,000 of a £250,000 target for the project has been raised so far, Mr Davis said. He added: "It's a great achievement, it's a community pool so we have a lot of activities. "It's great to see kids come in, we teach them to swim and later on they become lifeguards."Work on the project is due to start over the winter.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Somerset farm's homeless hostel is 'like my family'
A farm that has converted an old dairy house into a homeless hostel has had "above average success" helping people rebuild their lives."Farms are mainly places we grow food," says farmer Rob Addicott, "but they are also incredibly therapeutic."The hostel, in Somerset, is home to seven people at a time who are recovering from drug or alcohol problems and have been sleeping rough, usually in the one of the residents, describes the project as "like a family to me now, it's beautiful". Set in the Mendip Hills near Stratton-on-the-Fosse, Manor Farm is picture postcard Somerset. A walk along the old dry stone walls with the wind in your face attracts thousands of imagine sheltering under that wall at night, like those who sleep rough in the rural rough sleepers, a busy hostel in a town or city is often also a scary and Suzanne Addicott decided they wanted to share their farm buildings with those without a bed. And they have done so professionally, with the local council and a charity who provide social work are given intensive help to get their lives back on track. They also help out in the kitchen garden, growing veg, fruit and flowers for a box where I found Dan, picking tomatoes in the polytunnel."I love it," he smiled. "I love nature, so it is for me. All the staff are so lovely, and to work with the plants is beautiful." The garden is managed by Lily O'Dowd, who not only has to grow a full kitchen garden of produce, but also has to schedule jobs for the residents and keep everyone busy."No matter how they come to the session," she says, "they always leave with a smile."It's great to see them working together, teasing each other. They always leave with joy from the session. And the satisfaction of having grown something, from a seed all the way through to harvesting it."The residents work alongside volunteers in the gardens, who also deliver the veg boxes and cook a community meal once a I visited, they had made most of the lunch from the tomatoes, courgettes, cucumbers and onions from the cooking and eating a meal together is part of the therapy, as support worker Kate Dixon says: "For a lot of people coming out of homelessness and into recovery, they've lived in a very selfish way. Part of the healing is to learn to live with other people, and know there are people there for them too."The house and gardens are now run as a stand alone Community Interest Company, Roots Connections. For Farmer Rob, who still farms the fields around the project, the Dairy House has been a real says: "People have gone on to earn their own house, or sustain a tenancy, and find meaningful work."A lot of people end up volunteering back in this sector, working with nature, because they want to give back to what they've come from."And that is exactly what Dan plans to do, once he has found his feet and a new home."I'd like to volunteer in a project like this, or maybe with horses and animals. I love nature, and it's what I know, so it suits me fine," he smiles.