A million pound farmhouse near Harrogate could be won for just £10 in a prize draw.
The American company Omaze today announced the 17th century property between Hampsthwaite and Birstwith, which also comes with a guest cottage, as its latest million pound prize draw.
The draws, which take place every two months, raise money for charities and Omaze keeps 20 per cent of net proceeds. The firm said it has raised £13.25 million for charities since its UK launch in 2020.
Omaze’s latest property in Nidderdale, which is its first in the Harrogate district, will generate funds for Blood Cancer UK.
The winner will receive £100,000 in cash as well as the farmhouse, which is estimated to have an annual rental value of almost £50,000.
Blood Cancer UK supporter, Celia Imrie, who starred in the film Calendar Girls, has backed the draw.
She was reunited with original Calendar Girls Tricia Stewart and Lynda Logan, as well as Lynda’s husband Terry, the famous calendar’s photographer – to mark the launch of Blood Cancer UK’s latest partnership with Omaze.
In a promotional video, Lynda joked:
“It’s only 10 minutes away from where I live so I’ll be popping round for a cup of sugar.”
The draw closes on July 30 for online entries and August 1 for postal entries.
James Oakes, chief international officer at Omaze, said:
“By offering this beautiful property, along with £100,000 in cash, we’re giving people the chance to live mortgage and rent free for the rest of their life – as well as raising money for charities whilst introducing them to brand new audiences.
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Labour names candidate for local by-election
Labour has selected 26-year-old Keir Mather to fight the Selby and Ainsty by-election, triggered by the resignation of Conservative MP Nigel Adams.
Oxford history and politics graduate Mr Mather is a former parliamentary researcher who works as a senior public affairs advisor at the Confederation of British Industry.
Mr Mather, who would become one of the youngest MPs, was born in Hull and grew up near Selby.
His candidacy was supported by the unions GMB and Unison.
Many villages close to Harrogate, Knaresborough and Boroughbridge, including Spofforth, Follifoot, Kirkby Overblow, Goldsborough, Little Ouseburn, Nun Monkton, Green Hammerton and Kirk Hammerton, will go to the polls on July 20.
The Conservatives, who will defend a 20,137 in the by-election on July 20, have named Michael Naughton as their candidate while the Greens have selected Arnold Warneken.
It is expected to be a close contest between the Tories and Labour, with political forecasting website Electoral Calculus predicting a 55% chance of Labour victory and a 45% chance of Conservative victory.
A by-election in Boris Johnson’s Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency will also take place on the same date.
Mr Mather said:
“It is an honour to have been selected to fight to represent this brilliant constituency. Whilst the Conservatives are too distracted by their own chaos to deliver, the people of Selby and Ainsty have been left without a voice.
“We are facing the worst fall in living standards in a generation. Mortgages are up, our public services are broken, and the economy is stagnating.”
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Harrogate woman unveils art with final message from family killed in Holocaust
A Harrogate woman has unveiled a giant blanket embroidered with her family’s final message from the Holocaust.
Michelle Green’s grandparents, Gisela and Josef Schwarz, and her uncle Kurt were all killed in a Nazi concentration camp.
With the help of artist Laura Fisher, Michelle has created a piece of artwork to commemorate their communication to their family. She said:
“Holding the blanket felt like hugging the grandma I never met. I really didn’t expect to feel such strong emotions.
“The blanket dominates the room from floor to ceiling and it won’t let you ignore it. It makes you think about a telegram that was once written and had so much love poured into it – a last vestige of hope that a family could one day be together again.”
The Red Cross telegram was sent to Michelle’s aunt Aranka and was the last message they received from her family still in Nazi-occupied Vienna. Translated from German, it read:
“Dearest children,
“(I’m) very worried. Last message in March. Thank God we are well. Hope you are. Message from Papa (received).
“Millions of kisses also from your brother,
“Mama.”
The message was dated November 1943. Shortly afterwards, the family was betrayed by a Nazi informer.
They were held at Camp Malines until the following April before being herd onto a train to Auschwitz.
Michelle’s mother Lili managed to escape to the UK via Belgium and join her sister Aranka in London. They survived the Blitz before relocating to Harrogate after hearing it was “the most beautiful place in England”.
The sisters waited tables at Bettys tea rooms for a number of years, before starting their own business in 1948, the Manor Hotel, which they ran until 1971.
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Michelle, now 70, went on to be head of learning support at Ashville College in Harrogate. This experience taught her that hearing people speak isn’t necessarily enough to embed knowledge.
That understanding inspired her decision to make the blanket.
Artist Laura Fisher created the giant woven blanket as part of an artists’ residency at Holocaust Centre North in Huddersfield. It is on display at the centre until July 27, along with a number of other artworks as part of a free exhibition called Memorial Gestures.
It is open from Monday to Thursday from 10am to 5pm.
Laura said:
New parking arrangements at Nidderdale Showground due “shortly”“When I first visited Holocaust Centre North, I was initially overwhelmed and the scale of the tragedy felt incomprehensible.
“I remember feeling a pit in my stomach, like nothing I could do would possibly be enough. How could I create art that would make those affected feel seen, cared about, witnessed?
“I hope the work I have created as part of Memorial Gestures helps others to understand the depths of what was lost during the Holocaust-what was stolen from families whose lives were irrevocably changed.”
New parking arrangements at Nidderdale Showground in Pateley Bridge are due to be revealed “shortly”.
NIdderdale Agricultural Society, which owns the showground, ended a 21-year lease agreement with Harrogate Borough Council to operate the car park and appointed a private company last year.
The move was controversial because the car park was previously one of three covered by the annual £12 Pateley Bridge parking permit and some people unaware of the change were fined £60 by automatic number plate recognition cameras.
But the cameras are currently not working, and Pateley Bridge Town Council‘s monthly meeting last week heard the agricultural society was “desperately trying to get out of the contract” with the private company.
The council said it had received an email from the agricultural society saying “it had realised what they have done is wrong and has damaged their reputation” and they wanted “a more supportive approach” from the town council. The council sympathised with their situation and agreed.
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Speaking after the meeting Cllr Andrew Murday, a town councillor who also represents Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale on North Yorkshire Council, said it was “an unsatisfactory situation that I hope can be resolved” between the agricultural society and the private company.
A spokesperson for the agricultural society said:
Andrew Jones MP to vote for Privileges Committee recommendations“The current car park system has closed down and we will release a statement shortly with the new plans.”
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has said he will vote to accept the recommendations of the parliamentary investigation into Boris Johnson.
The seven MPs on the House of Commons Privileges Committee today found the former Prime Minster deliberately misled parliament over lockdown parties.
The cross-party committee said the former PM had committed repeated offences and it would have recommended a 90-day suspension from the House of Commons had Mr Johnson not resigned as an MP last week.
MPs are expected to vote on Monday on whether to approve the committee’s recommendations.
Mr Jones said:
“I called for the Privileges Committee investigation into this issue and I have supported its work. I will be voting on Monday to accept their recommendations in full.”
Speaking in a Commons debate on April 21 last year on the referral of Mr Johnson to the committee, Mr Jones said:
“When there are questions about the conduct of any Member in this place, it is right for the Committee of Privileges to take a look at that case. It is right for it to investigate, it is right for it to make a judgment and it is right for that to happen whoever the Member is.”
He added he wanted to “see more focus on standards across parliament”.
Local Lib Dem says Tories in ‘full-blown civil war’
Tom Gordon, the Liberal Democrat prospective parliamentary candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said today voting against the committee’s recommendations would be “an insult to bereaved families who grieved alone while Boris Johnson partied.”
Mr Gordon added:
“This report is completely unprecedented. Never before has a former British Prime Minister been found to have lied to parliament and treated the public with such contempt.
“The Conservative Party is now in a full-blown civil war, while people struggle to afford to pay their mortgage or get a GP appointment.”
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Selby and Ainsty Conservative MP Nigel Adams, a close ally of Mr Johnson, also resigned last week, triggering a by-election.
The Conservatives and Greens have named their candidates to fight the seat, which includes numerous villages close to Harrogate, Knaresborough and Boroughbridge, including Spofforth, Follifoot, Kirkby Overblow, Goldsborough, Little Ouseburn, Nun Monkton, Green Hammerton and Kirk Hammerton.
Labour is expected to name its candidate tonight.
Curzon to close Ripon cinemaThe Curzon cinema in Ripon is to close on July 1.
The company said the Ripon venue faced “specific challenges” and the site “is not suited to the long-term direction we have taken”.
The venue’s nine staff were informed of the decision yesterday.
Curzon confirmed the news to the Stray Ferret this afternoon after a source informed us of the closure.
“Unfortunately, your information is correct, the cinema is due to close on July 1.
“The cinema has specific challenges that have meant it has not recovered as we hoped after the pandemic.
“In recent years, with several new purpose-built cinemas opening in the area, the local audience has been spread too thinly for Ripon to thrive.”
Mr Garriock added:
“The site is not suited to the long-term direction we have taken post-pandemic, driven by increased customer focus on hospitality, for example, the rooftop and pizza kitchen offering at Curzon Kingston.
“I am aware the news is a disappointment to both the staff and the local community, who share a love for the cinema.”
Curzon, which has 17 cinemas, was founded in 1934 and is known for showing art house films. It runs membership schemes that encourage people to watch films throughout the year.
The source that contacted the Stray Ferret urged people in Ripon that any queries resulting from the closure must be dealt with online and that nothing could be sorted in the cinema on North Street.
They appealed to people not to abuse staff.
Mr Garriock said “there will be no issue with customers requesting refunds for memberships they might have taken out” and urged people to call the customer helpline on 01233 555644.
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Co-op submits plans for new store in Boroughbridge
Plans have been submitted to open a Co-op in Boroughbridge.
The 359-square metre store would sell fresh, frozen and chilled products from 7am to 10pm seven days a week.
It would be built on the site of the former Searles Carpets showroom and Saab garage on Horsefair.
A design statement sent on behalf of the applicants to North Yorkshire Council, which will decide whether to approve the development, says:
“The site is located central to Boroughbridge and has stood vacant for several months and is in need to redevelopment.
“The proposal to create a modern format convenience food store is an opportunity enhance the local amenities together with job creation.
The document adds the “traditional looking” building would conform with the requirements of the Boroughbridge Conservation Area.
An accompanying planning statement says the store would have 13 car park spaces, including one disabled bay, and be accessed from Horsefair via a new access route.
It adds the store would be operated by Central Co-Operative, which “is independent from the Co-Operative Group, but are part of the wider co-operative movement”. Central Co-Operative currently trades from some 440 outlets in 19 counties.
The planning statement says the Spar shop on High Street is the only existing town centre supermarket / general store. It adds:
“Boroughbridge is therefore generally considered to be a vital and viable centre, although it clearly provides a relatively limited food retail offer
“It has been clearly demonstrated that the proposals will deliver a high quality form of development that respects the character and appearance of the local area.”
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Leeds Bradford Airport adds new flight to Amsterdam
Leeds Bradford Airport has announced it will host a fourth daily flight to Amsterdam with airline KLM.
The additional direct flight, which is now on sale, will depart every day at 1.20pm from August 28.
Three daily KLM flights currently depart from Leeds Bradford to Schiphol in Amsterdam at 6.20am, 10.05am and 520pm.
Nicola McMullen, aviation director at Leeds Bradford Airport, which is 12 miles from Harrogate, said:
“This new daily flight significantly improves Yorkshire’s global connectivity.
“The added KLM capacity enables passengers to have even more opportunities to travel to the four corners of the globe via Schiphol, one of Europe’s biggest travel hubs.”
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- £3.5m gym for cancer patients to open in Harrogate
£3.5m gym for cancer patients to open in Harrogate
A £3.5 million exercise and wellbeing centre is to open in Harrogate in autumn.
The Yorkshire Cancer Research Centre at Hornbeam Park will offer free, personalised fitness, nutrition and wellbeing support to people with cancer. It aims to help patients prepare for treatment and recover better.
The building will incorporate a café, shop and donation centre and will also become Yorkshire Cancer Research’s new head office. The charity will relocate from its premises at Grove Park Court in Harrogate.
It currently has 70 staff, including those at its seven shops, and expects to have 100 by March next year, partly due to the new centre, which will create 10 new jobs and 40 volunteering opportunities.
Its shop sites include Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough.
People will be able to self-refer to the exercise centre and visit for free, although they will need to sign-up and book.
Most users are expected to come from within 15 miles of Hornbeam Park and up to 1,500 people are expected to use the service in its first three years.
The charity is recruiting fitness instructors with specialist cancer knowledge. Many sessions will be one-to-one.
Everything people do at the centre will be analysed and used to improve understanding of exercise as a treatment for cancer patients.
Yorkshire Cancer Research plans to open at least four new fitness and wellbeing centres across the region in the next 10 years.
Dr Kathryn Scott, chief executive at Yorkshire Cancer Research, said:
“Yorkshire will be at the forefront of exercise as a treatment” and the centre would “inform future cancer treatment in the UK and elsewhere in the world”.
Evidence shows that exercise can increase the success of cancer treatment, reduce side effects and speed up recovery, as well as improving life expectancy.
The programme builds on the charity’s Active Together service in Sheffield, which was launched in February 2022, in partnership with Sheffield Hallam University’s Advanced Wellbeing Research Centre and Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust. So far it has helped more than 370 people with cancer.
Dr Scott said:
Cyclist injured in crash with Mercedes at New Park roundabout“Despite clear evidence that being physically active is safe and has a positive effect for people with cancer, exercise services are not routinely available and most patients are not as active as they could be following a diagnosis.
“Our long-term goal is for these programmes to become a standard part of care embedded in and delivered by the NHS across Yorkshire and beyond.”
Police have appealed for witnesses to a collision involving a cyclist and a Mercedes at a busy roundabout in Harrogate this week.
The cyclist came off their bike at New Park roundabout just after 2pm on Monday.
According to North Yorkshire Police, the cyclist “took action to avoid the black Mercedes SUV, came off his cycle, and sustained minor injuries”.
The victim was travelling east on Skipton Road and the Mercedes entered the roundabout from Ripon Road in the Ripon direction.
A police statement said:
“We are appealing for witnesses to the incident or anyone who recalls seeing the pedal cyclist or Mercedes prior to the collision, to get in touch as soon as possible to assist the investigation.
“If you can help, please contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number NYP-12062023-0659.”
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