With its picturesque setting alongside Fewston reservoir, and famously good cakes, Washburn Heritage Centre is a popular place to visit.
But the centre’s tranquil location belies a harrowing and less well known past that local volunteers have helped to piece together over the last decade.
In 2009 and 2010, before the centre was built alongside St Michael and St Lawrence Church, volunteers worked alongside academics and archaeologist John Buglass to investigate human remains buried in the graveyard.
Child workers were transported from London to the Washburn Valley to work on mills in Blubberhouses in Victorian times. The bodies of many lay unmarked alongside Fewston.
Sally Robinson, chair of the management committee at the centre, who led the team of volunteers, said:
“We knew there were remains, but we didn’t know how many.”
The remains of 154 individuals and artefacts were discovered and now form what has become known as the Fewston assemblage.
The assemblage has assumed international significance for archeologists because of the social history it reveals.
An academic paper published last month detailed how the investigation led by Durham University pieced together the story of forgotten ‘pauper apprentices’ from Washburn Valley. Many were aged between eight and 20 years when they died.
Analysis showed the children were distinctive from locals because of their stunted growth and malnutrition, as well as evidence of diseases associated with hazardous labour.
Examination of the bones and teeth highlighted many had died from tuberculosis and respiratory disease associated with millwork, or from diseases of deprivation, such as rickets.
Lead author Rebecca Gowland, a professor in the department of archaeology at Durham University, said:
“This is the first bioarchaeological evidence for pauper apprentices in the past and it unequivocally highlights the toll placed on their developing bodies. To see direct evidence, written in the bones, of the hardships these children had faced was very moving.
“It was important to the scientists and the local community that these findings could provide a testimony of their short lives.”
The remains were reburied in a ceremony in 2016. Artwork inspired by the analysis and an exhibition are on now on permanent display at Washburn Heritage Centre.
Ms Robinson said:
“It’s easy to forget that the Washburn valley had an industrial past given the beauty of the reservoirs that visitors see today. It was important to us to find out about the children who worked in the mills.
“They were overlooked in life and treated as a commodity — but we hope we have done them some justice by telling their stories and creating a lasting commemoration.”
Read more:
- Swinsty and Fewston parking charges to include ‘season ticket’
- Hollywood star dines at new Harrogate restaurant
Refugee organises Afghanistan Day at Harrogate College
Harrogate College is hosting its first Afghanistan Day next Tuesday.
The college is seeking to shine a light on Afghan culture in a variety of forms. Artwork and traditional dress will be on display, and poems and songs will be performed throughout the day.
There will also be traditional Afghan food available for a small fee to raise money for women’s healthcare and education.
Afghan refugee Sabreyah Nowrozi is organising the festivities.
Sabreyah said:
“I think most people just know about the war and troubles we’ve had in Afghanistan, but this day will be a chance to show the other side and share information about our culture and the country’s positive qualities.”
Sabreyah is currently studying English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) at Harrogate college after being forced to flee the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2021.
She was captain of the Afghan women’s development football team, so was targeted by the Taliban which has banned all women from playing sports.
Sabreyah said her escape was fraught with danger due to the numerous Taliban checkpoints. She managed to flee with help from former captain of her team Khalida Popal, Leeds United F.C and a flight funded by Kim Kardashian.
She has since managed to continue her footballing career at Harrogate Town AFC Women.
Now with herself and her family settled in the UK, she has set her sights on a psychology course at the University of York.
Afghanistan Day on 13 June comes just before refugee week beginning June 19. The theme selected for this year is compassion.
If you are interested in booking a free place at Afghanistan Day click here.
Read more:
- Harrogate council wins £2.5m from government to house Afghan and Ukrainian refugees
- Harrogate College sets 2035 carbon neutral target
Free festival for disabled children returns to Ripon
A family friendly festival is returning to Ripon this month.
‘This is Me’ festival seeks to provide a fun, family-friendly environment for children and young people with disabilities
Organised by Nidderdale and Morton children’s resources centres, the festival has run since 2018 and has grown in size year on year.
A number of live musical acts will be performing, including Lily Worth, Freddie Cleary, Rock Choir and Rory Hoy.
The Baked Bean Theatre Company, a drama group based around helping those with learning disabilities, will also be making an appearance.
The day will be rounded out by The Doubtful Bottle, an indie-rock outfit from York. Most members were previously a part of The Conspirators who achieved some success on the UK Indie rock charts.
Cllr Janet Sanderson, North Yorkshire Council’s executive member for children and families, said:
“This is Me was introduced following requests from our young people who wished to attend a music festival. It provides young individuals with a disability an opportunity to attend a festival, which caters to their needs by being fully inclusive and accessible.
“The fun-filled festival, with so much to see and do, sounds like a perfect day out and we look forward to seeing you there.”
Other attractions will include a silent disco, a circus space, an animal petting area, yoga sessions, and arts and crafts.
There will also be stands where information about local and national groups and support networks can be shared.
They have all given thought to the needs of people with autism. This year sees the addition of quieter area and a sensory tent to help cater for all needs.
As well as this, this year will see the introduction of a well-being camp. This will include activities such as massage, free haircuts by an autism-friendly barber, and support from The Sleep Charity.
The event will be held from noon to 6pm, on Sunday, June 25. The event is both held at and sponsored by Ripon Rugby Club.
Wristbands for the event are free but donations are welcome. They can be booked online prior to the day by emailing NCRC@northyorks.gov.uk. More information can be found on their Facebook page here.
Read more:
Knaresborough was a sea of colour and joy today as huge crowds turned out for the annual bed race.
The event was first staged in 1966 and appears to be going stronger than ever, judging by the turnout and enthusiasm displayed today.
Ninety teams of seven took part in the 2.4-mile route through the town, which culminated in crossing the River Nidd.
A team representing builders merchants GH Brooks stormed to victory in the men’s race once again, but were pushed close by Ripon Runners. It was the fourth time in succession GH Brooks has taken the title.
Ripon Runners, however, took first place in the women’s race.
Competition was equally fierce in the Best Dressed Team competition just before the race.
A team called The Rocketmen took the accolade for a Jurassic Park-themed bed that featured animatronics.
They then led the parade from the castle through town to Conyngham Hall where the race started and finished. The parade had only just got underway when it had to be temporarily halted due to a person falling ill.
Organised by Knaresborough Lions, a large army of volunteers helped to keep things running smoothly on a day of unbroken sun.
Here are some photos from the day.
Read more:
- Staff sent home as Knaresborough housebuilder seeks urgent investment
- Police alerted after travellers set up camp at Ashville College
Hot Seat: The man bringing international artists to a village near Harrogate
In June every year, something close to a miracle occurs in a small village 11 miles from Harrogate.
Major names in the international arts world converge for 10 days on Aldborough — a beautiful and historic place but hardly known for capturing the zeitgeist.
For arts lovers, however, an annual pilgrimage to the Northern Aldborough Festival has become part of the summer arts scene. They park in fields, drink Pimm’s in a churchyard marquee and get to see the kind of names who usually appear in less soulful venues in Leeds or York.
The festival, which grew out of a fundraising initiative to restore the church organ in 1994, consistently attracts major international talent.
This year’s line-up, from June 15 to 24, includes the likes of South Korean pianist Sunwook Kim, TV historian Lucy Worsley, trumpeter Matilda Lloyd and a singing competition judged by a panel that includes Dame Felicity Lott.
Festival director Robert Ogden, who overseas the programme, is best known locally for running Ogden of Harrogate, the fifth generation family jewellery business on James Street.
But Mr Ogden has strong credentials in the arts world: a former chorister at Westminster Cathedral Choir School in London, he completed a choral scholarship at King’s College, Cambridge before forging a successful career as a countertenor, singing around the world in major productions alongside the likes of Jose Carreras.
Since he became festival director in 2010, the festival line-up has broadened and this year includes spoken word events and jazz as well as classical music and culminates with an outdoor pop music party and fireworks in the grounds of Aldborough Manor.
Mr Ogden says the change reflects his own wide tastes but also acknowledges “we can’t rely on our core audience”.
Festival planning is year-round but he takes a two-week break from the jewellery business to focus fully on the festival in the immediate run-up.
He says things are shaping up well this year ahead of Thursday’s opening night. Asked for his personal highlights, he cites Matilda Lloyd, the opening night Haydn opera double bill, Monteverdi’s Vespers and the new £7,000 singing competition. He says:
“Of all the things we have done in the last 15 years this competition is perhaps the most exciting. I’m certain at least one or two of the semi-finalists will be household names in the next few years.
“There’s nothing a festival wants to do more than to unveil and support new talent.”
How does he persuade occasionally temperamental artists to head to the eastern side of Boroughbridge? He says it’s a combination of the festival’s reputation, the St Andrew’s Church acoustics, the setting and the welcome. Aldborough, he says, is the “perfect chamber music space” and there is something undoubtedly magical about it.
Mr Ogden says he never feels the festival is in competition with the year-round Harrogate International Festivals and thinks there is scope for another local summer arts festival “if it’s marketed well”. Besides Ryedale Festival and Swaledale Festival, competition isn’t fierce.
But it isn’t an easy time in the arts world. Brexit, he says, has denied many emerging artists the opportunities he enjoyed to develop his craft in Europe. The cost of living crisis had had an impact on ticket prices, but Mr Ogden says Aldborough hasn’t made “any major price rises”.
Future festival ideas include live streaming, although digital connectivity in the village isn’t great, and recording music under the Northern Aldborough label.
Read more:
He plans to stay at the heart of things, reporting to festival chairman Sir Andrew Lawson-Tancred:
“As long as I feel I still have that creative urge and impetus I will aim to do it as long as they allow me to.”
What is his message for anyone thinking of attending, perhaps for the first time?
“Aldborough is not far to drive from Harrogate. It’s an oasis of calm, the acoustics are wonderful and the welcome is wonderful. Try something new.”
Further information on the Northern Aldborough Festival is available here.
FoI reveals Harrogate council spent nearly £3,000 on booze for staff partyHarrogate Borough Council spent almost £3,000 of taxpayers’ money on booze for a staff party, a Freedom of Information request has revealed.
The party was held to mark the abolition of the council at the end of March — even though nearly all staff transferred to the new North Yorkshire Council the following day on the same terms.
The Stray Ferret reported last month the party cost £14,910. But a full breakdown of the costs, including the amount spent on alcohol, was not known.
The FoI has now revealed the costs included £1,438 on beer, cider and lager, £630 on wine and £587 on spirits. Just £376 was spent on soft drinks.
The council also spent £4,745 on food, £450 on a DJ, £765 on event staff and £302 on decorations. A further £5,556 went on technical equipment for the event, which was held at the council-owned Harrogate Convention Centre on February 23.
The Stray Ferret was alerted to the party by an unnamed source who said they were “appalled, disgusted and downright annoyed that this amount was spent without the prior knowledge and consent of the people paying for it”.
Conor Holohan, media campaign manager of the pressure group the TaxPayers’ Alliance, added:
“Taxpayers will be shocked to find they were funding parties for council staff.
“While residents were struggling with the cost of living crisis, town hall officials were charging them for dinner and drinks.”
Final day parties
Seven district councils and North Yorkshire County Council were abolished on March 31 to make way for the new North Yorkshire Council.
Harrogate Borough Council’s final day staff party cost the most.
Scarborough was the next highest, spending £9,004, followed by Hambleton at £3,783. Ryedale awarded staff a £148 bonus and spent £3,001 on a party. North Yorkshire County Council did not spend anything.
Staff from the district councils, except the chief executives and a handful of others, transferred to North Yorkshire Council on April 1. It said in a statement:
“The new council for North Yorkshire did not play any part in sanctioning or organising any parties.
“For any further comment you will need to ask the district and borough council decision-makers who were in place at those councils at the time.”
Former Harrogate Borough Council leader Richard Cooper has declined to comment on council business since the authority was abolished.
Read more:
- Harrogate Borough Council spent £15,000 on staff leaving party
- Brew Bar owner opens new Harrogate coffee shop
Knaresborough bed race set for huge crowds and glorious weather
Thousands of people will flock to Knaresborough tomorrow for the town’s busiest day of the year.
The Great Knaresborough Bed Race will see 90 teams of seven tackle a 2.4-mile course through the town’s streets and river.
Knaresborough is looking resplendent with 48 Pride flags displayed to celebrate Pride month, and with the Met Office forecasting temperatures up to 26 degrees centigrade, the town will be buzzing.
People are being urged to bring cash as the limited number of cash machines in Knaresborough are likely to run out of money.
Knaresborough Lions, which organises the event, has arranged a free park and ride bus operated by Connexions from GSPK at Manse Lane and ALM at St James Business Park.
If you wish to park closer, King James’s School is offering £5 all day parking with money going to MacMillan Cancer Support.
Teams will gather at Knaresborough Castle in the morning to be judged for the Best Dressed Team award.
Whoever wins, leads the parade from the castle to Conyngham Hall at 1pm. Each team is allowed up to 20 supporters to parade with them in fancy dress.
The race gets underway at 3pm at Conyngham Hall.
Road closures will be staggered throughout the day, starting at 10.45am in Market Place and surrounding roads. The main A59 is due to close at 12.30pm and roads used for the route will be sealed off at 2.30pm.
Some routes could be closed until 6pm but most are expected to re-open sooner.
Read more:
- Bed race entrants urged to ‘keep your head above water’ when crossing polluted Nidd
- BedFest to add festival feel to Knaresborough Bed Race
- Knaresborough gears up for its biggest day of the year
A diversion to Harrogate will be in place around Briggate/Calcutt/Forest Moor. Buses will use this route while the A59 is shut. Trains will still be running.
The annual bed race was first held in 1966. This year’s theme for the pre-race fancy-dress parade is “That’s Entertainment”.
Martin Brock, chairman of the bed race committee at organisers Knaresborough Lions, said preparation was a “massive undertaking”. He added:
Man admits assault and having knuckleduster in Harrogate bar“We could not put the race on without kind help from our sponsors, our volunteers, the local council and the local media.
“If we planned now to close down the fifth biggest town in North Yorkshire for a day, I doubt we would get permission. However, with the event in its 56th year, people will bend over backwards to help us get it on.
“Almost everyone you see working on the day will be a volunteer, from our divers, to the RayNet radio comms team, to many of the marshals, so give them a smile as you pass by.”
A man has admitted assaulting two women and possessing a knuckleduster in Harrogate.
Adam Smith, 40, pleaded guilty to the charges at Harrogate Magistrates Court yesterday.
Smith, of Bunting Drive, Tockwith assaulted a named woman and a female police officer on The Ginnel on April 15 this year.
He also admitted having a knuckleduster in Manahatta, which is also on The Ginnel.
Magistrates gave Smith a community order, which required him to abstain from alcohol for 120 days and carry out 80 hours of unpaid work.
He was also fined £349.
Court documents said the defendant’s guilty plea was taken into account when imposing sentence.
Read more:
- Bulgarian martial arts experts jailed for dealing cocaine in Harrogate
- Brew Bar owner opens new Harrogate coffee shop
CrossFit gym to open in Ripon
A CrossFit gym is set to open in Ripon.
Mick and Sarah Meegan, who currently run a smaller personal training and fitness studio in the city, will open the facility at Ripon Business Park, which is close to the canal.
The date is yet to be confirmed but the couple expect it to be early next month.
CrossFit Ripon will provide a functional training facility for Ripon, which the couple said the city currently lacked in comparison to nearby Harrogate, Knaresborough, Boroughbridge, York and Thirsk.
Mr Meegan, who is in the last year of 21 years of military service, said the gym would tackle obesity, mental health and wellbeing as well as get people into shape.
CrossFit, which involves constantly varied fitness routines, has grown hugely in popularity over the last 20 years.
The facilities tend to cost more than chain gyms but provide more classes and a more personalised approach, with community at the heart of activities.
Read more:
- Farmers and creditors owed £7m after Ripon firm collapsed
- CrossFit Harrogate prepares for charity challenge
Mr Meegan said:
“Ripon craves a fitness, mental health and wellbeing facility that caters inclusively for all the individual needs of our city, especially those suffering from social isolation and low self-esteem.
“The wide range of variety in terms of classes, one-to-one PT, apprenticeships for future PTs and fitness for kids classes is something Ripon needs as part of Ripon’s Neighbourhood Plan 2030 in-terms of health and well-being.
“Research shows there is somewhat a lower life expectancy in Minster and Moorside Wards than for the district. Child health concern regarding increase in obesity over early school years is considerably higher than in the district whereas for adults this is slightly higher than the district.
“Our new affiliated CrossFit gym will cater for all of the above, our community is absolutely paramount in terms of health and well-being. We are passionate to give Ripon what it’s craved for years and promote fitness is for life.”
Mr Meegan said the couple had battled for nine months to secure planning and many people have told them it won’t work. He said:
“Even when everything seemed against us we persevered and got planning approval. If you believe in something you take risks.”
Crowdfunder launched to keep Knaresborough partying
A crowdfunding campaign has been launched to enable Knaresborough to stage free annual parties in the grounds of the town’s castle.
Party in the Castle will feature a live big screen broadcast of the Glastonbury festival on June 24. People are invited to turn up with a picnic and enjoy the sounds of the likes of Guns N’ Roses, Lizzo and Lewis Capaldi.
Organisers Knaresborough and District Chamber hopes the event will have a similar vibe — and good weather — to the free coronation party at the castle last month.
Chamber member Kelly Young said it will hopefully become an annual event. But she added although entry is free, funds need to be raised for the big screen and to cover other costs such as first aid and insurance.
The crowdfunder therefore aims to raise £2,000 and has already achieved about £1,400. Any surplus will be used on future events.
Cllr Hannah Gostlow, who represents Knaresborough East on North Yorkshire Council, has also applied to the council to allocate £2,500 of her Locality budget on the event. Each councillor receives an annual Locality budget of £10,000 to spend locally.
Party in the Castle will take place from 5pm to 11pm. Anyone wishing to support the crowdfunder can do so here.
Read more:
- Knaresborough’s Conyngham Hall to hold outdoor Pink Floyd classical concert
- Knaresborough’s ex-crime commissioner sells marketing firm