Woman found dead and homes evacuated in town fire

Chloe Hughes,West Midlandsand
Charlie Stubbs,in Shrewsbury
St Mary's Church Shrewsbury A fire in the roof of a black and white building. The image shows the roof has been partially destroyed and smoke is coming out of the top.St Mary's Church Shrewsbury
The fire started in a ground floor flat, police said

A woman in her 80s who died after a fire broke out at a ground floor flat in a 16th Century building in Shrewsbury has been named locally as Rose Roberts.

Police, fire and ambulance crews were called to Windsor Place, near Castle Street, at about 03:30 GMT, where she was pronounced dead. Her family have been informed.

West Mercia Police said one other person was reported to have suffered injuries in the blaze, described as "significant", but they were not believed to be serious.

Alex Wagner, deputy leader of Shropshire Council and mayor of Shrewsbury, said: "She was part of the fabric of our town centre community and was well loved by many in Shrewsbury."

Tributes have started to flood in online, with tattoo studio Heart & Arrow saying: "We are absolutely devastated to hear the awful news about dear Rose, our old and first landlady for our first studio."

"If you've been coming to Heart & Arrow for a good few years, you will remember our first place, it was small, down some stairs, underneath an amazing building.

"That building was Rose's pride and joy. We saw some incredible photos and heard some amazing stories from her, when she invited us into her home."

The force added a critical incident had been declared, and the cause of the fire, which was not being treated as suspicious, was being investigated by Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service.

As a precaution, a number of homes were evacuated and people asked to leave nearby buildings. They were taken to Shrewsbury's Guildhalland as of 16:30, the authority said most had returned to their homes.

At the height of the blaze, 10 fire engines were sent to the scene as well as hazardous area response team paramedics, an ambulance, three paramedic officers, a MERIT trauma team and a critical care paramedic.

Shropshire Council set up an emergency phone number for those who have not been able to make contact with anyone from a home evacuated in the early hours as a result of the fire, which has since closed.

A man with brown hair is in a firefighter jacket which is beige with black shoulder details, and a black patch on the front. He is standing in front of a blue and white police cordon with a red and white fire engine in the background. There is a church behind him to his right, and flats behind the fire engine
Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service said staff planned to remain on scene for the rest of the day

Alec Thomas, temporary head of service delivery at Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service, said crews got to the scene in four minutes, and the fire was "well-developed" on arrival.

"In total, fire engines were sent from Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service, we also had support from other appliances from neighbouring fire services because we needed two aerial appliances to tackle the fire from above, as the fire had spread to the roof," he said.

"There's a few neighbouring properties that were affected… those people that did have to evacuate their properties were supported and we're slowly engaging with them to let them know the state of their property and when they can get back in."

He added that the service were planning to be at the scene for the remainder of the day and urged the public to test their smoke alarms.

Two women standing on a street - one in a navy coat and hat with a bobble and one in a pink coat and hat with glasses
The home of Mel Evans (left) was evacuated, as was Rebecca Lee's (right)

Mel Evans was one of those asked to leave her home.

"We had the police knocking on our door this morning at about half past four, evacuating us from our building because there was a fire nearby, and they needed to get people out," she said.

"We were taken to an office nearby to get in the warm and the dry, and the police have been very good at keeping us updated.

"I think they were scared the fire was going to spread, but they managed to get on top of it quite quickly."

She and fellow resident Rebecca Lee said they hoped to be back in their building by lunch time.

A firefighter with a yellow helmet on a ladder against a property. The roof beams are exposed after a fire and they are charred.
Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service is investigating what caused the blaze

From the scene on Tuesday afternoon, Wagner said: "It's a tragedy, and Shrewsbury is one of these places where people know each other, I've already had messages from people with connections to the deceased, so our thoughts and all of our condolences are with the family."

"The teams here couldn't have done more from what we can see.

"Lots of people live along here, you've got over 100 residents on Castle Street… it is a residential area."

He described the building as "one of those 16th Century classic old Shrewsbury buildings".

West Mercia Police Chief Constable Richard Cooper said it had been a "significant fire" and he expected the emergency services to remain at the scene "for some time".

"Unless you have an absolute need to go to that location, don't go," Cooper said.

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