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Popular pub near Carlisle up for sale for £2.5 million
Popular pub near Carlisle up for sale for £2.5 million

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Popular pub near Carlisle up for sale for £2.5 million

A popular pub near Carlisle is up for sale for £2.5 million. The Fleece at Ruleholme, which is located just off the A689 between Carlisle and Brampton, has been made available to purchase on a freehold basis for offers in excess of £2.5 million and has been listed by Edwin Thompson. The pub, which is 25,295 square feet and sits on a 1.21-acre site, features 23 bedrooms that vary from classic and superior rooms to larger suites and three dedicated dining areas that include over 300 covers. Writing on their website, Edwin Thompson said: "The property has undergone an extensive redevelopment in recent years, with planning permission being granted in 2018 for the new 23-bedroom venue with improved restaurant and function facilities, which replaced the previous 9-bedroom venue on site. "The premises are currently held under a lease agreement to the landlord's management company, which can be separately acquired as part of the transaction. "The Fleece at Ruleholme has been built out and finished to a high specification, with a particular focus on high-quality local materials being used on the two-storey building, both externally and internally. READ MORE: Pub near Carlisle reopens after two-month closure due to 'storm damage' The listing of the pub comes just over a month after it reopened under new management after a two-month period of closure due to damage caused by Storm Eowyn in January. During this period of closure, the pub was able to carry out outstanding maintenance work and remedy damage caused by the storm, which included cracked glass and damaged solar panels.

College women die in gas explosion in coal mine in 1887
College women die in gas explosion in coal mine in 1887

Yahoo

time26-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

College women die in gas explosion in coal mine in 1887

Minnie M. Keiter invited a college friend, Verlista Shaul, home to Saint Clair on Easter break in 1887. Both were students at Vassar College, a prestigious institution of higher education for women — only the second in the U.S. to grant degrees to women at the time. They were seniors, scheduled to graduate in six weeks. Miss Shaul was the valedictorian of the Class of 1887. Miss Shaul had heard stories about the anthracite coal mines in her classmate's hometown. The natural curiosity of an intelligent young woman demanded that she visit one. It was not unusual in the day for women to tour a coal mine. Indeed, Minnie had been in mines, and was anxious to show one to her friend. Arranging a tour was no problem. Mr. Hiatt, a principal in the mining firm of Thompson, Hiatt and Co., lived next door and was glad to oblige the request. Harry Short, a popular young man, considered it his duty to accept when asked to escort the young women. Edwin Thompson, brother of the company's senior partner, agreed to act as guide during a visit to the mine. A new mine on the Chamberlain tract, it had not been worked for four days. It was not in operation on April 16, the day chosen for the tour, and there was no danger from mining operations. 'Down the street they walked, gay and smiling,' Walter S. Farquhar, a Pottsville Republican columnist, wrote in his Musings column. On the way, the party met a friend of Mr. Short who had wanted to be taken into a mine. The friend declined an invitation to join the party, however, saying he had no protective clothing. It was about 3:30 p.m. when the party entered the mine. 'Miss Shaul smiled when she saw the dinky little cars, and laughed when she was bundled into one,' Farquhar wrote. 'She may have felt a tremor as the car was lowered down the incline and darkness closed in all about.' At the bottom of the slope was the Little Tracy vein, and the party disembarked to walk a short distance into the tunnel. They were met by Edwin Thompson, who led them through the tunnel to the Big Tracy vein. Thompson walked ahead, about 150 yards or so, to a door about 150 yards from the mine's face. 'It was then that Miss Shaul saw a strange sight,' Farquhar wrote. 'It seemed to be a ball of fire coming from in front, just as the rising sun comes up, but red and angry like the setting sun.' Look, what's that light coming up, Miss Shaul asked. 'Quick,' shouted an experienced miner accompanying the party. 'Fall on your faces in the gutter.' Daniel Thompson, a senior partner working in another part of the mine, felt a strong rush of air and immediately recognized what had happened — there had been a gas explosion. With others, he rushed to the area where the party had been, well aware that rescue work had to be done before the setting in of deadly afterdamp, a mixture of gases that follows an explosion. Miss Keiter was found, bleeding but conscious. Harry Short was unconscious. Miss Shaul was found next, alive but badly injured. Edwin Thompson was alive, but lapsed into unconsciousness. Dr. A. P. Carr was called to the scene. Miss Keiter died that night. Mr. Short died three days later. A disfigured Miss Shaul hovered between life and death for two months. Only Mr. Thompson survived. 'Strong men wept whenever they recalled the accident,' Farquhar wrote. 'There have been mine disasters in which many more persons lost their lives, but none was more unique or more fearfully recalled.' The Saint Clair Splinter, a weekly newspaper, called the accident the most distressing and intensely sad item of local news the paper had ever published. Walter Farquhar simply called it the 'Chamberlain horror.'

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