As raffle prizes go, an 18th-century country home worth £800,000 takes some beating.
Marie Segar, a finance worker, learned on Tuesday that she was the new owner of the house, after purchasing the winning ticket for just £2.
Segar will also receive the title of Lady of Melling, which was raffled off alongside the property. She joked that she would be changing the name on her bank card to Lady Marie.
The six-bedroom semi-detached Melling Manor in Lancashire was raffled off by Dunstan Low, who was struggling to sell it on the open market.
Low, 37, bought the Georgian six-bedroom property, where he lived with his wife Natasha, 32, and their two children Dylan, 15, and Ozzy, five, for £435,000 in 2014 and spent £150,000 on refurbishments. Low received no offers for its asking price of £800,000, so came up with the idea of selling enough £2 tickets to recoup his money.
The draw attracted entries from as far as China, Russia and Mauritius by those hoping to win the mansion, which has a ballroom, cinema room, wood-burning stove, parking for six cars and far-reaching views of the Lake District and Yorkshire Dales.
When he called Segar, from Warrington in Cheshire, to inform her of the good news, she accused him of “winding her up”.
According to the Blackpool Gazette, she told Low: “I’m just in shock. I can’t believe it, I just can’t. I don’t have a plan, I entered and I never thought for a moment ... you know I haven’t even told anybody! Thank you so much!”
The title of Lady of Milling was given to the raffle as a prize by its previous owner, St John’s Hospice in North Lancashire, as a thank you for a £30,000 donation that the Low family gave from their competition earnings.
Low said he has raised almost £900,000 from the raffle and that Segar had purchased 20 tickets for £40.
The graphic designer said he has been inundated with offers from people around the world asking him to raffle their properties for them. He added: “I have no regrets at all about the way we did this – I wouldn’t change a thing. It was stressful but it has been an amazing experience. I want congratulate Marie on her win and I really hope that she enjoys the house.”
£2 to be a lady
£2 to be a lady
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: £2 to be a lady
Such a raffle would be illegal in most states in this country, where gambling is not permitted (except for the hundreds of exceptions to that rule).
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Re: £2 to be a lady
That's right; according to many jurisdictions it must be a 'contest of skill' and that's why so many of the things like this I've see require entrants to submit a 500-word essay on "Why I'd Like To Live Here", for example, when entering, or answer a skill-testing question ("how much is 2 plus 2?") if selected.Long Run wrote:Such a raffle would be illegal in most states in this country, where gambling is not permitted (except for the hundreds of exceptions to that rule).

-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?
Re: £2 to be a lady
I wonder if she'll be feeling so lucky when she's faced with maintenance costs and taxes on a house like that? I read recently that U.K. residents pay more property tax than in any other developed country.
linky
At least she can sell it at any price over 40 pounds and still make a profit.
linky
At least she can sell it at any price over 40 pounds and still make a profit.
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan
~ Carl Sagan
Re: £2 to be a lady
In the Us you would owe income tax on the value of the 'winnings' which would take close to 40% state + federal in Calif
yrs,
rubato
yrs,
rubato