'I went back to the remote moorland pub I ran in 1961'

Audrey Yeardley and Sue Hanson sit outside Tan Hill Inn, Richmond. The pub is a beige stone building, with a blackboard sign that welcoming customers to "Britain's Highest Inn at 1732 metres". Audrey Yeardley wears a zebra-print black and white blouse, black trousers and a green scarf. She has brown hair ad wears glasses. Sue Hanson wears a blue knitted tank top and blue long sleeved top. She has long grey hair tied back in a ponytail.
Image caption,

Audrey Yeardley (left) and Sue Hanson ran the Tan Hill Inn consecutively between 1961 - 1985.

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"I actually feel that living at Tan Hill Inn set me in the right frame of mind for later challenges that came - you know, if this doesn't beat you, you're going to get through."

Ninety-year-old Audrey Yeardley stops to look around the low-beamed room; the fire is roaring and a steady stream of customers order at the bar of Britain's highest pub.

Outside, rolling hills and vast moorland stretch out as far as the eye can see.

Set 1,732ft (528m) above sea level, Tan Hill Inn is an isolated Yorkshire Dales pub, situated six miles from a main road and often cut off in bad weather.

But for Ms Yeardley and other former landladies and family members who have returned to meet their predecessors for the first time, it represents much more.

That isn't to say they don't all have their fair share of snowed-in stories.

In 1963, Ms Yeardley, her husband and two young sons were trapped in the pub by snow drifts reaching 20ft high, for 13 weeks without electricity or running water.

She describes boiling snow in saucepans and living off potatoes until local farmers could make the treacherous journey across the moorland to deliver supplies.

"It's not been beaten yet," she says, still smiling, about the length of the isolation.

"You just have to do your best to survive it. You have a challenge, it might have you on your knees sometimes but I owe a lot down to character-building."

 The pub is a beige stone building, with a blackboard style sign that welcoming customers to "Britain's Highest Inn at 1732 metres". In the background moorland, a tractor and a car can be seen.
Image caption,

Tan Hill Inn is set 1,732ft (528m) above sea level

Ms Yeardley and her family lived at Tan Hill Inn until 1967, when Sue and Neil Hanson took over tenure until 1985.

The two women have spoken on the phone but never met until today, but they trade stories over the pub's wooden tables like they've been friends for years.

Ms Hanson, 76, describes her experience as "the best of times and the worst of times" but said she wouldn't trade it "for the world, there's not a single regret".

"It's a different time now and it's lovely that the pub is breathing again, it's renewed - it's three times the size that it was when I was here," she explains.

"I've always been fond of the country but this is extreme country, desolate and I couldn't believe there was a place up here.

"The moorland here is different and the people here are different too - they're the best people."

She fondly recalls the sense of community and a feeling that locals would look out for one another, helping whenever was needed.

At this, Ms Yeardley nods emphatically.

"This landscape has an orchestra and the locals know it - if you talk to them and they trust you, they'll say they have the music as well so that's what makes it special," she adds.

Kim Longden stands in front of the Tan Hill Inn pub sign - a large blackboard style sign that has the Black Sheep Brewery logo at the top, and the claim "Britain's Highest, Britain's Best" across it. Kim Longden has short grey hair and wears a grey scarf patterned with animals and a grey top.
Image caption,

Kim Longden lived at the pub with her parents between the ages of two until 22

In another corner of the busy pub, Kim Longden and her schoolfriend have also made the trip up the winding single-track road.

For Ms Longden it's also a trip down memory lane; she lived at Tan Hill Inn until the age of 22 after her parents Alec and Margaret Baines bought the pub in 1985.

"I wouldn't say the childhood I had was a normal childhood but it was definitely a fulfilled childhood," she says.

"Everything happened here; my 18th [birthday], my 21st, various family weddings, karaoke nights - we had good parties."

Ms Longden lives nearby and says she still revisits her old home when she can.

"I'm eight miles away across the moors, and I can see Tan Hill from my bedroom window," she says.

"It's a very homely place for me. I can sit here and envisage what we were doing back in the day, I can walk myself upstairs in my mind and go to my bedroom."

Tan Hill Inn is now run and owned by Andrew Hields, who says the reunion of former landladies and family members is a way to preserve the pub's legacy.

"All the chapters are interesting, and we just feel a responsibility to capture it all now," he explains.

Snow on Tan Hill Inn in the Yorkshire Dales on November 27th 2021. A beige stone building is covered in snow, with several cars parked outside also buried under thick snow. Image source, Nicola Townsend
Image caption,

Tan Hill Inn can get cut off in extreme weather, like during Storm Arwen in 2021

Not all the women gathered today settled as close to the pub as Ms Longden; Ms Hanson lives in Cumbria and Ms Yeardley travelled down from Fife, Scotland.

She says she had "a sudden urge" to return, and called it "magical" to meet others who shared the unique experience of calling Tan Hill Inn home for a time.

"Every mile I got younger in my head, so when I got here I was in my late twenties," she says.

"Every time I come back it's like it was - there's a homesickness for it."

Media caption,

Landladies at UK's highest pub meet for first time

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