logo
Community-owned pub Lion at Ickleton holds grand reopening

Community-owned pub Lion at Ickleton holds grand reopening

BBC News20 hours ago

Residents have raised a toast at the grand reopening of the last remaining pub in their village after raising £440,000 to save it.The Ickleton Lion - now known as the Lion - near Cambridge and Saffron Walden in Essex, was put up for sale by Greene King in 2023.A community benefit society was set up to buy the pub, which first opened in 1728, and an effort to refurbish the building got under way in December.Betty Willmott, 93, who has lived in Ickleton all her life, said she hoped the pub would continue to be "the life and soul of the village".
The pub had previously begun serving drinks for limited periods of time, so it could "test the taps".Rachel Radford, chair of the community group, said everybody was "really excited" for the pub to open properly."It's just been an amazing community get-together," she said."It's going to be a gradual opening as we manage to recruit staff, and it will build and build and build, but we are so thrilled."Organisers said about 400 members of the community group and Ickleton residents went along to the official opening day.
Ms Willmott, who helped pop the cork to mark the official reopening, said while the village was "quite busy" nowadays, it was still "a lovely place to live".Toasting the opening of the pub, she said: "It's always been the hub of the village - even going back to during the war."I hope it will continue as the life and soul of the village."
Roland Perry, a supporter of the campaign to reopen the lion, said: "Pubs like this, as a community asset, are so, so important."Too many of them have been turned into family homes and they really ought to continue as pubs - particularly if it's the last pub in the village."
Pippa Heylings, the Liberal Democrat MP for South Cambridgeshire, was also helping to pull pints on the opening day.She said: "Working on community projects like this - I can't imagine anything else that I would much rather be doing when I'm out in the constituency."Volunteers spent hundreds of hours restoring the Lion since getting the keys just before Christmas.It comes after 415 people invested in the pub, including from overseas, to raise more than £440,000 in 10 weeks to buy the building, which had sat empty for more than a year."They just want to own a bit of an English pub – who wouldn't?" added campaign chair Ms Radford.The pub is expected to open to the public from 12:00 BST on Wednesday.
Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Secrets of Britain's biggest Wetherspoons. It can fit 1,400 people and has 100 beers on tap. Now HARRY WALLOP exposes exactly what goes on... and why they constantly need to change the carpet
Secrets of Britain's biggest Wetherspoons. It can fit 1,400 people and has 100 beers on tap. Now HARRY WALLOP exposes exactly what goes on... and why they constantly need to change the carpet

Daily Mail​

time33 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Secrets of Britain's biggest Wetherspoons. It can fit 1,400 people and has 100 beers on tap. Now HARRY WALLOP exposes exactly what goes on... and why they constantly need to change the carpet

Nearly 75 years ago, George Orwell wrote that the pub was part of 'something distinctive and recognisable in English civilization', a place where all types could gather. Is that still the case? Orwell was writing as Nazi bombs fell on Britain and he felt it was important to celebrate all that made this country special.

People Fixing the World  The traffic lights tackling poverty
People Fixing the World  The traffic lights tackling poverty

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

People Fixing the World The traffic lights tackling poverty

Despite a lot of progress in the last few decades, more than a billion people still live in acute poverty, according to the UN. Many don't have access to basic needs like food, water, shelter and clothing. We look at an innovative project in Paraguay where people identify their own needs using a traffic light system and are then linked up with businesses, NGOs and government bodies who they work with to improve their lives. People Fixing The World from the BBC is about brilliant solutions to the world's problems. We release a new edition every week for most of the year. We'd love you to let us know what you think and to hear about your own solutions. You can contact us on WhatsApp by messaging +44 8000 321721 or email peoplefixingtheworld@ And please leave us a review on your chosen podcast provider. Presenter: Myra Anubi Reporter/producer: Jane Chambers Editor: Jon Bithrey Sound mix: Annie Gardiner (Image: Person looking at Poverty Stoplight survey, Poverty Stoplight)

Will Lynx be freely roaming Britain in two years' time? Natural England chief says they should be
Will Lynx be freely roaming Britain in two years' time? Natural England chief says they should be

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Will Lynx be freely roaming Britain in two years' time? Natural England chief says they should be

The chair of Natural England has renewed calls for Lynx to be reintroduced to Britain. Tony Juniper, the chair of Natural England, said he would be 'absolutely delighted' if the re-introduction of the cats could be achieved during his two-year term. However he admitted debates about the release of the animals remain 'polarised' and said more engagement with the public was needed. The Lynx UK Trust has submitted a draft application for a trial return of lynx to Kielder forest in Northumberland, England's largest forest, using wild animals which have been rescued from Sweden, The Guardian reported. The Labrador-sized cats, live in forests and mainly prey on rabbits and dear and do not pose a threat to humans. The Eurasian lynx was once native to Scotland but was driven to extinction some 500-1000 years ago through hunting and habitat loss. It has since been reintroduced back in several parts of Europe, including in areas used for farming, hunting, forestry and tourism. The predator could help control booming numbers of roe deer, supporters of the plan have argued. Officials at Natural England have told the Lynx UK Trust that a trial has been halted because the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) rules it illegal under the Dangerous Wild Animals Act. The charity's chief executive Paul O'Donoghue has called for environment secretary Steve Reed to make the necessary legal tweak to solve the problem, however has not been able to arrange a meeting with Mr Reed. Mr Juniper said he hoped a cross-border conversation with officials in Scotland could help boost the chances for a return of the Lynx to the UK. He said: 'Lynx do need big areas of habitat and there could be some opportunities to combine nature recovery over parts of northern England with what's going on in southern Scotland' 'It is still quite polarised and some of these things will remain divided no matter how much effort you put in, but we need more engagement to understand how communities that would be living with these animals would be able to continue with what they do. There are in some places still serious doubts about that.' Paul O'Donoghue hit back saying calls for more engagement were a 'waste of time'. He said: 'Unless he has been living under a rock for the past 30 years, Tony Juniper must know that sheep farmers will never change their position on lynx reintroduction, making more calls for more engagement utterly sad and stark truth is that currently the government are actively blocking any legal attempt at lynx reintroduction.' Two other charities are also working to try and get the cats reintroduced into Britain. The Missing Lynx Project is also working towards a reintroduction project in Keilder, while the Lynx to Scotland charity recently published a 100-page report on a potential return to the Cairngorms. The report sought to address concerns from sheep farmers, recomending payments for losses and a rapid-response system for farmers whose flocks were being targeted. Four Lynx were illegally released into the Cairngorms in January. Three were recaptured and re-homed while another died in the wild. Many believe the animals were released from a private collection and were too tame to survive in the wild. Mr O'Donoghue preferred the introduction into Kielder, arguing it offers a spacious area that most benefits the animals, in a forest with few sheep farmers. He argued the move would also generate millions of pounds to the local economy, bringing sustainably jobs to the area. He claimed a reintroduction in Harz in Germany was so successful that a second one is being planned. Asked about a potential legal challenge over the latest lynx reintroduction application, a Defra spokesperson said: 'This government is absolutely committed to restoring and protecting nature and we support species. We will continue to work with Natural England on species re-introductions in England.' The government is understood to want more evidence before any reintroduction is considered.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store