My late neighbour left her 1930's wooden bungalow to her granddaughter who has applied for permission to replace it with something not worm eaten, rotten, uninsulated etc etc. the local conservation area planners refused



I have suggested they ought to at least retain access to the pump bore in the new place and have just taken the pump body off the baseplate to store safely and eventually put up as a feature elsewhere in the garden, perhaps to pump from a rainwater catchement sump.
So far so good, I cut the pump rod off as high as possible having snagged it with a rope first (Pump lifted by Weston chain block on my portable garden swing A frame !) Its about 1 3/4" square pitch pine and the tube bore is 3 1/4" dia. so not much clearance on the corners. The pump rod and pump lifted about an inch on the blocks and then stuck fast

Plan B consisted of a bit of I beam, a 10 ton jack and a pile of bricks, Rope broke, chain bit off the top few inches, then the next few, snagged the (just about level with the ground) rod with a noose in a steel cable so next attempt needs to catch it about six inches down the bore all for an inch or two vertical movement.
I'm assuming the pump bore has rusted or scaled above the working position of the piston / bucket, I really thought that with enough force applied the leather would have been pulled through but it hasn't. (it had been out of use for 10 years or so and about 6 yrs back after pouring sunflower oil down to soften the leathers I got it going again for them)
Anyone have any experience of such a problem or know a solution ? I suspect given the lack of clearance around the rod that this may be my last chance to snag it securely enough.............