Rose Castle Foundation is hiring
We’re pleased to be seeking three new members to join our staff team.
Strategic partnerships and assistant to the founding director
£29,000 to £33,000 FTE (Agile/remote/PT available)
Network engagement
Programmes facilitator
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History being kept alive at Rose Castle
Rose Castle
History is being kept alive within the walls of a Cumbrian castle thanks to help from a specialist upholstery and design firm.
Rose Castle, near Carlisle, is nearing the end of a five-year project to renovate and restore the 800-year-old building so that it is ready to welcome visitors and guests.
Home to the Rose Castle Foundation, the castle is run as a centre for peace and reconciliation by the charity, which is dedicated to helping people struggling with conflict across the globe.
Ghyll House Upholstery and Design, based at Mealsgate, near Cockermouth, has been helping the Foundation by breathing life back into furniture which was in desperate need of renovation.
Ambitious Lochinver redevelopment will give port new hospitality complex By Caroline McMorran Published: 07:06, 30 January 2021
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The new owners of Lochinver Larder have unveiled an exciting plan aimed at creating jobs, attracting visitors and giving an economic boost to the remote north west Sutherland port.
John and Sarah Snyder hope to develop a visitor destination by combining the Larder with next door buildings Ardvar House and the Caberfeidh Pub, which has been closed since 2018.
The new hospitality complex - Lochinver Larder and Boathouse - would offer a pub, restaurant, bistro cafe, delicatessen counter and bakery as well as a small microbrewery and fish smokehouse.
A SERVICE beamed across the country, to remember the lives taken in the Holocaust, was led by a Carlisle charitable foundation. Members of Rose Castle Foundation led BBC Radio 4’s Sunday Worship on January 24 to mark the Holocaust Memorial. Reverend Julia Hedley, chaplain to the Rose Castle Foundation in Carlisle, joined The Archbishop of Canterbury’s special advisor for reconciliation, Canon Sarah Snyder for the special Sunday service. The key message was “be the light in the darkness” as the memorial of over six million lives lost coincided with the UK approaching 100,000 Coronavirus deaths. The Rose Castle Foundation welcomes a variety of faith and political perspectives – the uniting factor being an impetus to reconcile.