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Kali Lindsay

'It's broken a proud man' - Pensioner facing eviction from Northumberland farmhouse he's lived in all his life

A Northumberland farmer faces eviction from his life-long home that has been in his family for three generations.

Walter Renwick, 68, was born at Plankey Mill Farm and is a well-known face to visitors at the much-loved beauty spot, near Hexham, where he runs a campsite.

But Walter has now been served with an eviction notice after battling the landowners to stay at the property.

READ MORE: Northumberland woman knocked out by bullies at school becomes kickboxing sensation

The Jesuits in Britain, who own the land, say the original lease was legally held by Walter's father and after his death they extend the lease to allow Walter time to find a new home.

The church says the last lease extension ran out in 2021 and they have now been granted a court order to have Walter evicted, with bailiffs due to arrive on July 11.

Walter said: "I have been here 68 years, it was in my father's name before I got it and his father's before I got it so we have been here quite a long time. It is a three generation farm.

"They are coming on July 11 to change all the household locks. If I'm in the house, I'm getting chucked out the house.

"I thought I had done everything right, paid everything off but they are determined they are going to sell the property."

Walter said all his memories are from the area and the battle has broken him.

He said: "It has broken a proud man. Years ago I feared nobody but now when there is a knock at my door, and it sounds pathetic, I'm out the back door and hiding in a barn like a stupid little kid and petrified.

"What has happened to me? I have stopped going to the shops now. I feel like I'm not right, I feel like what have they done that's not Walter, where is Walter.

"They have eaten away at my body, they have chip, chip, chipped. I mean some days I could just stay in bed and not get up and that is not me, I worked day and night on the farm. It is not because of my health because I can pace myself around my health."

(Iain Buist/Newcastle Chronicle)

Walter said he can't put his head anywhere else, adding: "I was born here. It is like a tree with roots.

"You know when your roots are here, everything has been put here: my dogs, my rabbits when I was a kid. Every memory I had as a kid, the football, the games when you were a kid when all the campers came. Happiness, there is no happiness now. Happiness is gone.

"I get up and do what I have to do. I haven't had a smile on my face for ages. What are they doing to me?"

A spokesman for The Jesuits in Britain said: "The Jesuits in Britain can confirm that they have applied for a possession order on the Plankey Mill property, which is owned by them.

"This step has become necessary after repeated and fruitless attempts to persuade the son of the original leaseholder to leave the property fifteen years after his father’s death.

"An original lease was held legally by this person’s father, but like similar properties across the UK, there were no clauses in the lease for his children to inherit the rental contract when he died.

"Nevertheless, the Jesuits have agreed to several lease extensions totalling thirteen years up until April 2021, in order to give the illegal occupier time to find a new home.

"In addition, the Jesuits offered to financially remunerate him, to assist him in his move, if he left the property by November 2022. Since the last lease extension concluded in April 2021, this person has been in illegal possession of the property.

"Many of those denouncing the repossession have based their objections on the fact that the son of the leaseholder has been running a paid-for campsite on fields adjacent to the property.

"This campsite was never allowed under the terms of the lease, and did not have planning permission from the local authority. However, the Jesuits have never taken action on this point.

"Over a number of years, the Jesuits have received complaints from both the local council and the National Trust (who own an adjacent property) about the unsocial behaviour of several campers, especially during the pandemic in 2020."

A spokeswoman for Northumberland County Council said they received a complaint in 2020 regarding an unauthorised campsite on Plankey Mill Farm.

She added: "During the investigation, it was discovered that the campsite had been in operation for more than 10 years and is therefore immune from planning enforcement action."

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