The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Miracle village that banded together to save the pub, shop, library and post office

Fighting spirit of Trawden residents raises hope for communitie­s facing exodus by the big banks

- By Toby Walne

IT is time to raise a glass of mulled wine to the residents of Trawden in Lancashire. This year, they have come together to save their local pub from closure – this triumph after saving the villages’s only shop, post office service, community centre and library. They now also have high street access to cash.

Their fighting spirit has breathed new life into the community. It also sends out a positive message to communitie­s up and down the country – in danger of losing their pubs, bank branches and cash machines – that they can fight back against big city and public institutio­ns which have little or no interest in preserving the infrastruc­ture of small towns and villages.

Earlier this year, the Trawden Arms was destined for the chop after 127 years of serving locals. Plans were afoot to turn the building into flats by developers.

But the 2,000-strong community pulled together to raise £520,000 so that the pub can keep serving the residents of Trawden for years to come. It is the latest in a series of survival ‘miracles’ the villagers have conjured up to keep the fabric of the community intact.

Desperate to find out the secret to its success, I stand at the pub bar in this former cotton mill village in the Pennines with a frothy pint of Pride of Pendle in my hand. The beer is from Moorhouse’s Brewery, eight miles away in the footballin­g town of Burnley.

I get a warm welcome from new landlords Adam Young and partner Jo Stafford, who arrived from Leeds last month. Adam explains: ‘There is something truly about the community spirit here in Trawden. The secret of the pub’s survival is that we are not the only ones running it – there are another 400 landlords living in the village.’

WHAT Adam is referring to is the 400 villagers who bought a share in the inn, paying at least £500 each to ensure its survival. Although not a wealthy community, they managed to raise £460,000. Plunkett Foundation, a charity, handed over a further £30,000 and lent an additional £30,000 to make the purchase possible.

Part of the pub’s appeal is that as part owners, many villagers are keener than ever to use it – even suggesting new ways the pub can be used. I am too early for both the weekly ‘folk music night’ when locals sit by the open fire to sing songs and play music – and a special festive visit from carol singers raising money to fix the village church’s roof.

During the day, activities include Christmas wreath making and willow weaving lessons. It must be thirsty work as the pub is thriving like never before, selling up to 1,000 pints a week, way up on sales pre community ownership.

Joining me for a drink is Steven Wilcock, chairman of the Trawden Forest Community Pub Group. His modest demeanour hides the true

Lancastria­n grit and determinat­ion that was required to transform what was fast becoming a ghost community into a thriving, bustling village.

Steven was instrument­al in the transforma­tion of this community seven years ago when the local district council decided to shut down the community centre. Then the county council shut the library and the Post Office pulled the plug on the village.

Steven says: ‘It was a tough battle. Individual­ly, we are not rolling in money, but there is something about this former cotton mill comspecial

that binds us like a family.’

Out on the village’s cobbled streets, the togetherne­ss is embodied by the tightly packed Victorian terraced houses that were built for mill workers.

Opposite the pub is a shop with an adjoining library and next door a community centre – all having been saved by locals. At the back of the library, a local subpostmas­ter visits every Monday morning – but only because locals were prepared to provide him with premises.

This service enables locals to deposit cash or cheques into their bank accounts or make withdrawal­s. The shop also allows customers to use a cashback service for up to £50 six days a week. Shopmunity pers only need to make a purchase of a few pence to use the service.

A pool of 80 volunteers work twohour shifts to keep the shop open. The pub and shop are run on a commercial basis, with profits ploughed back into the services.

Molly Ralphson is volunteer coordinato­r at the shop and library, which reopened in 2018 after two

Has your community come together to save a vital high street service? Email toby.walne@mailonsund­ay.co.uk

years of fundraisin­g. The aisles are packed with local produce, including irresistib­le homemade walnut cake and brownies. With one eye on the environmen­t, essentials such as coffee, tea, sugar, flour and an array of spices and herbs are sold without packaging. Residents simply bring their own containers.

Nicola Sharples, a local resident and a jeweller, regularly gets £20 cashback from the shop. The 56year-old says: ‘When it comes to budgeting, there is nothing better than having cash in your hand.

‘Paying with cards is dangerous as you never quite know how much you are spending.’ Last week a bank-backed access to cash action group announced that by the end of the year 2,000 shops nationwide will offer a cashback service without customers needing to buy anything. Currently 1,000 offer this service.

It will also roll out shared banking hubs in five new towns – branches where customers (personal and business customers) can do basic banking as well as see a representa­tive of their bank on a specific day of the working week. These are in addition to two hubs – Rochford, Essex, and Cambuslang, South Lanarkshir­e – that have been running since April this year. Eleven free cash machines will also be opened and a further 30 may be installed inside local post offices.

But Molly Ralphson is unimpresse­d. She says: ‘Cashback is hardly a new idea. This is just a smokescree­n for the big banks to continue axeing branches and ripping out free ATMs at an alarming rate.’

Over the past decade, a third of all bank branches have been axed with 4,300 shutting since the start of 2015 – equivalent to 50 closures a month. Some 500 free to use ATMs are being shut every month.

Natalie Ceeney, chair of the action group, says: ‘We know demand for cash is declining – but we are also aware that it continues to play a vital part in the lives of at least five million people in the UK, including some of the most vulnerable.’

She adds: ‘The shared banking hubs in Rochford and Cambuslang have shown there are many ways to meet people’s cash needs. I’m confident our new plans lay the foundation­s for a positive future for cash access right across the UK.’

The Plunkett Foundation provides guidance as well as financial support for those wanting to save community services.

Communicat­ions manager Liz Woznicki says: ‘We provide free support for any community considerin­g a shared ownership project, which includes legal advice.’

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 ?? ?? CHEERS!: Toby Walne, left, with landlord Adam Young and partner Jo Stafford, villagers Stephen Wilcock and Molly Ralphson. Right, Gracey Farthing, three, with her grandmothe­r Emma Haines in the shop
CHEERS!: Toby Walne, left, with landlord Adam Young and partner Jo Stafford, villagers Stephen Wilcock and Molly Ralphson. Right, Gracey Farthing, three, with her grandmothe­r Emma Haines in the shop

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