PawPurrs Halfway House

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PawPurrs Halfway House Cat rescue based in Manchester Pawpurrs Halfway House established charity status in December 2021.
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As a Halfway House, we rescue strays, toms, cats in need and pregnant cats, aiming to socialise and rehabilitate them before they are appropriately re-homed; matching them to the right home with the right owners. All our cats are spayed/ neutered, vaccinated and given flea and worm treatments before moving to their new homes.

This is such a lovely story ###https://www.facebook.com/share/1C3pHsJGxA/?mibextid=wwXIfr
05/01/2026

This is such a lovely story ###

https://www.facebook.com/share/1C3pHsJGxA/?mibextid=wwXIfr

In the autumn of 1952, a thin and hungry tabby cat walked into a classroom at Elysian Heights Elementary School in Los Angeles.

A lesson was already in progress.
The cat calmly entered, sat down in the middle of the room, and began to groom himself.

The students were delighted.
The teacher allowed him to stay.

When the school day ended, the cat quietly left.

The next morning, he came back.
Then he returned again the day after that.

Soon, it was clear this was not an accident.
The cat had chosen the school.

The students named him Room 8, after the classroom he first entered.

Room 8 quickly found his routine.
Each morning, he arrived at school.
During the day, he rested in sunny spots, let children pet him, and moved calmly from room to room.
In the afternoon, he left.

He never disrupted lessons.
Teachers and students noticed his gentle and quiet presence.

Small privileges became important to the children.
Feeding him was special.
So was carefully moving him if he fell asleep in an awkward place.

Over the years, Room 8 became part of everyday school life.
He was there during reading time, math lessons, and art classes.
He did not take part.
He simply watched.

When yearbook photos were taken, Room 8 was often included.
From 1952 through the late 1960s, he appeared in class photos, sitting among the students as if he belonged.

By the early 1960s, his story spread beyond the school.

In 1962, LOOK magazine published a feature about him.
It brought national attention to the school cat.

Soon, fan mail began to arrive.
The letters were addressed to “Room 8, Elysian Heights Elementary School, Los Angeles.”

Children and adults from across the country wrote to him.
Some sent small gifts or drawings.
Room 8 had become a celebrity.

Years later, guitarist Leo Kottke composed an instrumental piece titled Room 8, inspired by the cat.

As Room 8 grew older, his health declined.
By the mid 1960s, he was injured in a fight and later developed pneumonia.

One of the teachers, Virginia Finley, offered him a home.
She lived in a house directly across the street from the school.

From then on, Room 8 spent his nights with her and his days at Elysian Heights.

When he was strong enough, he crossed the street on his own each morning.
As he grew weaker, teachers and students sometimes carried him so he could keep his routine.

On August 11, 1968, Room 8 died peacefully.
His exact age was unknown, but he was believed to be about 20 to 22 years old.
This was very old for a cat who had once lived as a stray.

The Los Angeles Times published a long obituary about him.
It described his years at the school, his national fame, and the love students felt for him.

Room 8 was buried with care.
Teachers, students, and admirers mourned his passing.

In 2006, Virginia Finley wrote a children’s book titled “Room 8: The True Story of the School Cat.”
The book preserved his story for future generations.

Through the book, new readers learned about the cat who slept in classroom windows and sat quietly during lessons.

Room 8 was never trained.
He was never officially adopted by the school.
No one planned for him to stay.

He simply arrived.
And the community made space for him.

For sixteen years, Room 8 was a steady presence in the lives of thousands of children.
He became part of their memories, their yearbooks, and their lessons about kindness and care.

His legacy is not about fame.
It is about belonging.

Sometimes, all it takes to find a place in the world is to walk through an open door and be allowed to stay.

27/11/2025

❤️ PLEASE READ — URGENT HELP NEEDED FOR GARFIELD & GRANDAD ❤️
£4,500 needed for life-saving surgeries

I’m writing this with my heart absolutely in bits as our beloved tomcats, Garfield and Grandad, have just been assessed and the news is a mixture of hope, heartbreak, and urgency.

Please, if you love what I do, if you love our tomcats, if you’ve ever cared about the forgotten street cats of Manchester… I am begging you to read this and help in any way you can. Even £1 will make a difference.

🧡 GARFIELD — the boy with the broken past and the sore eye

Today Garfield had:
• An FIV and FELV test
• A full eye swab for herpes
• A thorough exam of his wounds and long-term facial injuries
• Pain relief and temporary eye medication

His eye has been weeping for years, constantly sore, constantly irritated. We’re lucky it isn’t entropion, but it may be herpes, which is treatable — if we can get the right medication and follow through with his care.

He also needs:
• Two teeth removed (they’re painful and stopping him eating properly)
• A neuter
• Ongoing eye treatment and potentially antibiotics depending on results

Financially, for Garfield alone, we’re looking at at least £850 to get him comfortable, healthy, pain-free, and finally ready to be adopted in the new year. He deserves his moment.

🖤 GRANDAD — my gentle, precious boy who’s been left out in the cold

Where do I even begin with Grandad?

This boy… I can pick him up, rock him like a baby, kiss his head, and he just melts into me. He blinks softly at me with that look of trust that absolutely destroys me because he has lived on the streets for too long. And he’s the softest soul you will ever meet.

I am HEARTBROKEN that I couldn’t pull him in earlier when I saw him back in April. But I’m here now, and I’m not letting him down again.

He wouldn’t allow his FIV test he got too stressed after being poked and prodded in the ear ,but we’ll get it done safely when he’s under for another procedure.

And then… his ear.

We all braced for cancer. Truly. But we’ve been given a glimmer of hope:
When they cleaned away all the green gunk and pus, we found two huge angry polyps blocking his ear canal. They’re causing chronic infection because no air can get in.

It’s treatable. He can be saved.

But he needs:
• Major ear surgery (the same one we raised £2,000 for with Cashew when she was a kitten)
• A dental with removal of two extremely painful upper canines
• A neuter
• Antibiotics and ongoing care
• A later FIV test

Grandad’s surgeries alone will be at least £3,500.
And this boy is WORTH EVERY PENNY. He is grateful in a way that goes straight to your soul.

❤️‍🩹 THE TOTAL WE NEED: £4,500 as soon as possible

As soon as I know the money is coming, I can get dates booked for everything the ear surgery, the dentals, the neuters, the meds, all of it.

Right now, it’s a waiting game, and my anxiety is through the roof.
I cannot leave these boys suffering. They’re finally inside, warm, safe, loved now they need their chance to fully heal.

🤲 PLEASE, I am begging please help me help them

Share this post ANYWHERE. To tomcat lovers, alley cat lovers, animal lovers, friends, family, colleagues — anyone who can spare:
• the price of a coffee
• the price of a packet of crisps
• the price of a Friday night McDonald’s
• the price of a takeaway
• a small donation they won’t miss but these boys desperately need

Every single penny will go straight to Garfield and Grandad’s care.

I want to show you the transformation.
I want to show you how beautiful they’ll look in a few months.
I want you to see them healed, happy, loved, and then placed into their forever homes.

I love them. Truly. I won’t stop fighting for them.
And I am begging , because right now, begging is the only thing I can do for these boys.

Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for caring.
Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for donating if you can.
Thank you for keeping these lads alive.

They deserve everything. And together, we can give it to them. ❤️‍🩹🐾

10/10/2025

I just want to put this out there because it’s honestly driving me mad. I’m currently trying to get our charity shop verified on Google Maps, and it’s become an absolute nightmare.

I’ve sent the videos, the emails, the photos everything they’ve asked for but the verification process keeps looping and I can’t speak to an actual human being to resolve it.

Because of this, I can’t reply to any of your reviews, I can’t post updates, and I can’t even amend the opening hours. It’s basically acting like I’m not the owner of my own shop, which is beyond frustrating when I’m trying my best to get us seen by more people locally.

So please know I am trying to get it sorted. As soon as Google finally accepts that we do exist, I’ll be able to promote the shop properly and keep everything up to date.

If anyone out there has dealt with this before and knows a way around it any tips, tricks or contacts at Google I would be very grateful. Right now, I feel like I’m just banging my head against a brick wall!

Volunteer Clare has been helping me at the shop working hard to get everything ready to open the charity shop.We had to ...
27/06/2025

Volunteer Clare has been helping me at the shop working hard to get everything ready to open the charity shop.

We had to strip a lot of it back and repaint walls put floorboards down in the Tom cat room and honestly it’s really been quite a graft and besides all of that still rescuing and caring for all the cats that I have at my house and the new ones that I have brought in. I’m absolutely shattered.

I’m going to be looking for more volunteers to come and work at the charity shop, but here is a little sneak preview of what is to come. I’m so excited.

I’m also happy actually overwhelmed to let you all know that we will be going public on the BBC for the open day of the charity shop next week on Thursday- great times ahead - all in aid of Rescuing the Cats and making sure we’ve got enough money to cover that bills and pay expenses; honestly if I got paid for the time and effort that I’ve put into this I would be a millionaire, I can’t begin to tell you how emotional it’s been to get this Rescue to Charity status and now to actually opening our own shop.

It wouldn’t happen without the support I have from all of you and knowing that you have faith in me to keep rescuing these cats and giving them the care that they need. Xx 😻😻😻
🐈 The charity shop is located at 7 Ladies Ln, Hindley, Wigan WN2 2QA 🐈

🆘 We are in desperate need for food and funds! 🆘 This was our food stocks today before the evening feed. Please donate w...
16/01/2025

🆘 We are in desperate need for food and funds! 🆘 This was our food stocks today before the evening feed. Please donate where you can or share please 🥺 🙏 🐈 Donation details below 🐾

Thankyou everyone, it's very much appreciated ❤️

Bank Transfer
Name: Pawpurrs Halfway House
Account Number: 79252268
Sort Code: 30-96-26

PayPal
(please select family and friends or PayPal take some of the donation):-
[email protected]

Amazon Wishlist:-
https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/1Z5UBAUNQGCW4

🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘

Address

7 Ladies Street

WN22QA

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