The Crown Hotel in Boroughbridge has been sold to a national chain.
RedCat Pub Company has bought the 37-room hotel and former coaching inn from Best Western for an undisclosed fee.
It will be run by RedCat’s subsidiary, The Coaching Inn Group, which operates 24 coaching inns in market towns across the UK.
Kevin Charity, chief executive of the group, said:
“We’re pleased to have added The Crown Hotel to our high quality and fast-growing estate. I’m delighted with how The Coaching Inn Group is accelerating its growth with RedCat’s support.”
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The building has been in the town for centuries.
In 1569, it was known as the Manor House and was the meeting place for the Council of the North where local notables, led by the Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland, planned to free Mary, Queen of Scots.
In the 1570s, it was turned into a Mass centre for seminary priests and local families.
22-home ‘affordable’ development in Staveley refusedHarrogate Borough Council has refused plans to build 22 “affordable” homes in Staveley.
Jack Lunn Properties hoped to build three one-bedroom, 13 two-bedroom and six three-bedroom homes on Main Street in the village, which is four miles north of Knaresborough.
The site isn’t in the council’s Local Plan outlining where development can take place in the district, which in normal circumstances would mean it’s highly unlikely the development would be granted planning permission.
However, the application had been brought forward through a rural exception scheme, which allows councils to grant planning permission for affordable housing in the open countryside if a developer can prove there is a need for it.
The government defines affordable as homes sold at 80% of the market rate, homes for social rent or sold through shared ownership schemes.
In the council’s refusal, chief planner John Worthington said there were “no exceptional circumstances” for granting the application and that it did not satisfy the requirements of the affordable housing exception scheme.
A similar plan by the same developer to build 23 affordable homes in Scotton was refused last month.
Carl Wright, director of Jack Lunn, said the company was considering an appeal.
He said:
“We’ve only received a copy of the decision today and have yet to fully digest the same. Suffice to say we are somewhat disappointed that the council have included reasons for refusal that we have not been allowed to comment on or respond to prior to issue.
“Naturally this is disappointing to say the least and we will now take further advice from our consultants prior to deciding whether we ought to appeal or take matters further.”
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Villagers formed a group called SV2 to fight against the plans.
Julie Bowland from SV2 said she was relieved that the council refused the proposal.
Ms Bowland said:
Harlow Hill men’s shed aims to boost mental health“I can only applaud, with a certain level of relief, that planning law has been upheld robustly and with great regard to the potentially catastrophic damage to the Staveley conservation area and the wildlife that proliferates this beautiful village.”
A men’s shed is being set up for Harlow Hill to boost mental health and tackle loneliness in the area.
Men’s sheds are part of a wider organisation of ‘sheds’ that began in Australia. Their goal is to create a space for older men to come together to create and build while making friends. Women are welcome, too.
Sheds have been created over the past couple of years in Harrogate, Ripon and Pateley Bridge.
Harlow Hill’s men’s shed is being set up by local resident John Hart. He told the Stray Ferret he hopes the space will help men become more active whilst sharing how they feel.
He said:
“What has become apparent since covid is with men in particular and mental health issues, we don’t talk much about until we commit suicide.
“We need to do something to try and prevent it.”
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- Ripon Men’s Shed opens door to new friendships
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Men’s sheds have traditionally focused on developing practical skills, such as woodwork or toolmaking.
Mr Hart said the Harlow Hill men’s shed could also offer a variety of activities, from art or rambling to computer literacy.
He is the chairman of the Harlow Hill Community Centre, also known as the Green Hut, which will be utilised as the ‘shed’.
However, Mr Hart is also on the lookout for potential workshops, barns or buildings that could be used too.
He encouraged anyone living locally to give the men’s shed a try:
“Tell your dad, uncle or the bloke down the pub, let’s have a go.”
Mr Hart expects the Harlow Hill men’s shed to begin on Tuesday afternoons from later this month. Anyone with questions or who is interested in joining can contact him: johnrhart@live.co.uk
Harrogate man to compete at Winter Olympics for Trinidad & Tobago bobsleigh teamHarrogate man Axel Brown will compete for the Trinidad & Tobago bobsleigh team in the Beijing Winter Olympics, which kicks off today.
If you ask someone about bobsleigh, most people will recall the 1993 smash hit film Cool Runnings. It featured the trials and tribulations of the Jamaica team as it battled to compete in the Winter Olympics.
Brown was born and raised in Harrogate. He attended Harrogate Grammar School from 2003 to 2011 and excelled at American football and taekwondo before discovering bobsleigh in 2014.
He previously competed for Great Britain but qualified to switch to Trinidad & Tobago because his mum is from Pointe-a-Pierre in the country.
For the uninitiated, bobsleigh is a winter sport where teams barrel down an iced track in an aerodynamic sleigh while racing against the clock.
Brown has a crucial role as the pilot of the team, and sits in the sleigh to steer it along so it can produce the greatest speed.
The Caribbean country hasn’t competed in the games for 20 years, and Brown is hoping their efforts can inspire a new generation.
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Speaking to Trinidad & Tobago Newsday in December, Brown said:
“It is exciting that now all of a sudden the Trinidad & Tobago population is kind of embracing us and what we are able to do.
“Hopefully there are other Trinidad & Tobago teams that are inspired by what we are doing. I think we certainly have the athletic pool from which to choose great athletes from but also the four that we’ve got at the moment are doing incredibly well and I am really excited to see what they can do.”
The Beijing Winter Olympics 2022 opening ceremony takes place today, where Brown will be cheered on from back home.
Brown is a supporter of Harrogate horticulture charity Horticap, which showed its support for him when some of its students held the Trinidad & Tobago flag.
Scandinavian-inspired coffee shop opens on Harlow HillA Scandinavian-inspired coffee shop opened today on Harlow Hill.
Nord Coffee House has moved to a unit at 135 Otley Road that was previously home to cafe, The Kitchen, for five years before it closed last year.
Nord sells artisan coffee, sandwiches, pastries and donuts. A pop-up Nord opened in Knaresborough in December.
Craig Buchan, who is involved with Nord, also co-founded FI:k, which is a Swedish-style cafe in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
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“We’re really proud of what we have created at our new coffee house on Otley Road. Everything starts with the quality of the coffee for us and our whole menu in turn reflects that. We have chosen Dark Woods Coffee from Huddersfield as our coffee provider not only because of the quality of their product, but because of the sustainability story that they have.”“We have taken as our inspiration the beautiful area that we are situated in and we’ve tried to bring the Pine Woods into the interior.”
Harrogate firm Yorkshire Resin Coatings Ltd has ceased trading and gone into liquidation.
A resolution for winding-up the company was posted on the public record website The Gazette today.
The company specialised in resin-bound driveways and patios. Its trading address was Hartwill House, Hookstone Avenue.
Founded in 2005, its customers included Grantley Hall, a luxury hotel near Ripon. Former Harrogate Grammar School student Mark Kennedy was its managing director.
The company’s last accounts posted on Companies House, for the financial year ending July 27, 2020, said it had 12 employees.
The Gazette listing says Manchester insolvency specialists Begbies Traynor has been appointed liquidator.
The Stray Ferret contacted YRC’s public email address for a statement but we did not receive one at the time of publication.
Enquiries about the liquidation can be made to Jo Hudson at jo.hudson@btguk.com
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- Plan to demolish ‘eyesore’ Starbeck building finally approved
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E-scooter rider in Harrogate arrested for suspected drug dealing
Police arrested a man on an e-scooter in Harrogate this week on suspicion of dealing cannabis and ketamine.
According to North Yorkshire Police, the man failed to stop when asked by officers on Monday night.
Two officers found drugs after catching up with the man, who was then arrested on suspicion of possession with intent to supply class A and class B drugs.
A police statement today added:
“Once in custody, tests showed him to be under the influence of drugs, so he was further arrested for a further offence of driving whilst under the influence.
“He’s now been released on conditional bail whilst enquiries continue.”
E-scooters are similar to regular scooters but have small, electric motors.
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Plan to demolish ‘eyesore’ Starbeck building finally approved
Harrogate Borough Council has given the green light to plans to demolish the former McColl’s supermarket in Starbeck, over three-and-a-half years since it was ravaged by fire.
Leeds-based developer Bates & Hemingborough submitted an application in November to demolish it under permitted development rules.
This permits the demolition of a building without the prior approval of the council if it is deemed a safety risk.
The owner hopes to build new retail and housing units on the site, although these plans are yet to be formally submitted.
The plans were put on hold in December after the council asked for safety documents, which have now been provided, addressing how the demolition would impact the adjacent St Andrew’s Church.
The council says the developer now has three years to demolish the building.
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Planning agent Pete Gleave from Zerum Consulting told the Stray Ferret the developer will submit a planning application for the new building “in the coming months”.
“There are currently no timescales for demolishing the building. Our client is however looking to progress the redevelopment of the site as quickly as possible and will be working up a planning application in the coming months.”
The fire-damaged building has frequently been described as an ‘eyesore’ blighting the centre of Starbeck.
Andrew Hart, founder of Starbeck Community Group and owner of Starbeck Post Office, said he hopes things can now finally move forward.
MPs watch: Hedgehogs and Downing Street parties“Starbeck Community Group are pleased that demolition has been granted but we are hoping that the owners will expedite the work quickly, certainly the demolition.
“We also hope that the original stone frontage and the carved ‘Harpers’ stone can be saved and used.”
Every month the Stray Ferret tries to find out what our local MPs have been up to in their constituencies and in the House of Commons.
In January, the Downing Street parties scandal dominated the news whilst covid Plan B restrictions were lifted.
We asked our three Conservative MPs, Harrogate & Knaresborough’s Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon’s Julian Smith, and Selby and Ainsty’s Nigel Adams if they would like to highlight anything in particular that they have been doing this month, but, as usual, we did not receive a response from any of them.
Here is what we know after analysing their online presence.
In Harrogate and Knaresborough, here is what we found on Mr Jones:
- On January 17 Harrogate MP Andrew Jones told a constituent that “lawmakers can’t be lawbreakers” after Prime Minister Boris Johnson admitted attending a party during the first coronavirus lockdown.
- Mr Jones supported the government’s decision to pause the rollout of smart motorways, despite being a key advocate during his time as transport minister.
- The MP backed a campaign for road signs in Starbeck that alert motorists of hedgehogs.
- On January 25, the MP spoke about ‘levelling up’ at the UK Bus & Coach Conference.
- On January 27, Mr Jones signed the Holocaust Educational Trust’s Book of Commitment.
- Mr Jones spoke seven times in the House of Commons during January, including asking a question about the victims of the Tonga tsunami.
- Network Rail remove graffiti from Hookstone Road bridge in Harrogate after a resident reported it to him.
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New gritter tracker shows which roads in Harrogate district are being treated
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Harrogate council ranks in lowest 15% of local authorities for tackling climate change
In Skipton and Ripon, here is what we found on Mr Smith:
- Mr Smith did not update his website during January.
- He did not comment publicly on the Downing Street parties scandal.
- On January 11 Mr Smith spoke at the Skipton & Ripon Area Constituency Committee about the lack of lateral flow tests in Ripon.
- Seven of the MP’s 12 tweets were related to Northern Ireland.
- On Twitter, he paid tribute to Andrew Lupton, of Ripon firm Econ Engineering, who died. He said Mr Lupton had “massive drive and focus. All thoughts & prayers with his family.”
In rural south Harrogate, here is what we found on Mr Adams:
- On Holocaust Memorial Day on January 27 the MP looked back on a trip to Auschwitz six years ago. He tweeted: “We must always honour the memory of those who perished & never turn a blind eye to antisemitism.”
- The MP hit out at Labour who he suggested support the Insulate Britain roadblock protests. He tweeted: “Labour’s mask slipping again by being on the side of those wanting to bring our country to a standstill.”
- On January 26 Mr Adams voted in favour of making trade unions pay 2.5% of their total income to cover the costs of a trade union regulator.
Recent photos have revealed Harrogate’s abandoned railway tunnel and air-raid shelter close to the Stray.
The pictures were taken by an urban explorer who uses the name Venturing Off Limits on social media and agreed to share them with the Stray Ferret. They show the dark and dank brick passage, known locally as ‘The Darky’, with icy stalactites hanging from the roof.
The only evidence of humans being there is a discarded shopping trolley. So what’s the story behind this tunnel?
Abandoned for good
The last train passed through Brunswick Tunnel over 150 years ago.
The tunnel begins close to the current Hornbeam Park station and runs underneath the present-day Langcliffe Avenue, towards St Mark’s Church on Leeds Road.
It served Harrogate’s first railway station, Brunswick Station, which was only in operation for 14 years before the current station was built.
Locals and businesses initially opposed the railway, fearing an influx of people from Leeds and Bradford would lower the tone of the town.
The tunnel was resurrected as an air raid shelter during WW2 before being abandoned for good in 1943.
In 1954, the government surveyed the tunnel to bring it back into possible use, but this idea never materialised.
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Park Drive roundabout
The tunnel runs under where the Park Drive roundabout is now.
When the roundabout was built in the 1960s, workers accidentally dug into the roof of the tunnel not knowing it was there.
Today the only evidence above ground of Brunswick Station, which was made out of timber, is a plaque mounted on a stone at the site, which is close to the Prince of Wales roundabout.
The entrance to the Brunswick Tunnel is on private land and The Stray Ferret does not encourage anyone to try to enter.