The current crisis has given added impetus to a community group’s on-going campaign to save a village pub in Kirkby Malzeard from residential redevelopment.
Dave Robinson, who is chair of The Henry Jenkins Community Pub Ltd., told The Stray Ferret:
“The coronavirus crisis has served to emphasise the need for rural communities to come together and make best use of their facilities for local residents. We are fighting to preserve something that we see as valuable to a growing parish and this is a prime example of how people are collaborating in an attempt to protect something that they see as belonging to this community.”
He added:
“We are absolutely determined to save this heritage asset ..There are 153 community-owned pubs in the UK and none of them has failed. The common denominator for the success of all such ventures, is the fact that the community wants them and is ready to put its money where its mouth is.”
That view is supported by 179 local people, who have committed to buy community shares at £250 apiece, towards the purchase of The Henry Jenkins Inn, named after a farm worker and butler, who is reputed to have lived to the age of 169 and died in 1669.

The current state of the Henry Jenkins Inn
The Henry Jenkins Inn was more than 200 years old when it closed in 2011 and was subsequently bought by David Fielder of Fielder Holdings, who in April 2016, submitted a planning application to construct four dwellings on the site. The application was refused by Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee – a decision that was upheld at appeal.
In June 2017 the council listed the Henry Jenkins as an Asset of Community Value (ACV), and later in the year a Community Co-op was approved by the Plunkett Foundation, which supports community projects including the buy-out of pubs.
A further planning application for a single dwelling on the eastern half of the site, made by Mr Fielder’s business associate Justin Claybourn, was refused by the council and is now the subject of a planning appeal, which has been postponed because of the coronavirus crisis.
An offer of £200,000 made by The Henry Jenkins Community Pub Ltd. to buy the entire site has so far been rejected by the owners.
What would you like to ask the district’s MPs?
The Stray Ferret asked people in both Harrogate and Ripon constituencies what questions they had for their local MPs.
In Harrogate, the questions centred on how the town centre is going to bounce back after restrictions are lifted and what support is going to be in place for both people and businesses.
Here is what people in the town had to ask Andrew Jones MP.
Phil Argent, CEO of Tenancy Stream, said: “Businesses are going to have to try and start again and are not going to have the footfall that they once did. How exactly is Harrogate going to bounce back from lockdown?”
Jan Bathurst, team leader at Harrogate District Food Bank, said: “Once lockdown is lifted, what support is going to be in place for vulnerable people both in terms of financially and food?”
Kimberley Wilson, owner of The Camberley Hotel and chair of Accommodation Harrogate, said: “I would like to know when we are going to have the Harrogate Convention Centre back and what is going to happen with events going forward?
In Ripon, the questions hit a different tone. There was an anxiety over how vulnerable people will cope and what the government is going to do to address rural poverty which some fear will be worse after lockdown.
This is what the people of Ripon wanted to ask Mr Smith:
Dave Robinson, chair of Henry Jenkins Community Pub Ltd: “The coronavirus crisis has served to emphasise the need for rural communities to come together and make best use of their facilities for local residents. As previously indicated by you, once the crisis is over, can we count on your support in our campaign to save the historic Henry Jenkins Inn in Kirkby Malzeard, reestablishing the Asset of Community Value over the whole site and protecting its status as a community amenity for the three villages in our expanding parish?”
Phil Marley, owner of Marley’s Butchers, Ripon: “The worrying scale of rural poverty in Ripon and surrounding areas, has become even clearer with the coronavirus crisis. We are doing our bit as a business to help families and individuals in dire need, but people cannot rely on charity forever. As I see it, the financial situation can only get worse, particularly as unemployment is likely to rise when small businesses go bust because of the money they have lost. What do you think the government can do to assist places like Ripon in keeping businesses open and helping the poorest in our society?”
Alison Hope, No 12 Greengrocers, Masham: “Local farmers are working around the clock in the crucial role of keeping us all fed. Many are working in difficult circumstances, with concerns for their future. What have you been doing to support our local farming community during the crisis?”
All of these questions were submitted to Andrew Jones and Julian Smith at the end of last week. We are still waiting to hear back from both MPs.
Annette and Nathan’s free Monday meal service helps 45 Ripon householdsAnnette Kite, her husband Nathan and son Jack, were busy over the VE Day bank holiday, preparing meals for 45 households in Ripon.
Every Sunday since the coronavirus crisis meant many people in the city had to go into self isolation, the family has been preparing meals that have been delivered free of charge to pensioners, families with limited income, people caught in food poverty and cancer sufferers.
The Monday evening meals-on-wheels-type service has grown week by week after Annette and Nathan, with assistance from trainee chef Jack, first started helping neighbours in their 90s, who were facing difficulties as COVID-19 saw them stuck at home.
The Stray Ferret joined the couple, as deliveries were made discreetly to avoid any embarrassment for the recipients, and it was clear that the the bags containing hot meals and other food items were most welcome.
Annette said:
“Nathan and I make some of the home deliveries and we also have volunteers who collect packs from us to deliver to their neighbours who are in need of help. We are very careful to ensure that social distancing is observed, both in collections made from our home and deliveries that we and the volunteers make “
The free service has been made possible because of donations in cash and kind; gifts of goods and the support of numerous businesses in Ripon, including Bambuda oriental restaurant, Southgate Fish and Chip Shop, Spa Gardens Cafe, Cafe Tempo, Wakeman House Cafe, Love Boutique, Booths and Morrisons supermarkets, Marley’s Butchers, Appleton’s and Spilmans.
Annette pointed out:
“We would not be able to do this without the fabulous support that we have received, ranging from hot meals provided by Bambuda and Southgate Fish and Chip Shop, production of puddings by Caroline Bentham and baking by Deborah Chalmers and our friends at Cafe Tempo and Wakeman House.”
The demand for the service has grown through word of mouth and posts on Facebook and underlines the fact that the coronavirus crisis has unveiled the scale of food poverty that exists in Ripon and surrounding rural areas.
As previously reported by The Stray Ferret, Marley’s Butchers – which is helping Annette and Nathan with the provision of meat at heavily discounted prices – is running its own weekly delivery of meat packs to families and individuals who are in dire need.
A big thank ewe to the NHS from South Stainley farmersSteve and Clare Walmsley may well be leading the field when it comes to an unusual way of thanking the NHS.
The couple live with their teenage children Heidi and Freddie at Brooklands Farm close to the A61 Ripon to Harrogate Road near South Stainley and have a corner of a field on a raised plain has proved a prime location for catch the eye messages, such as Support British Farming and follow the Tour De Yorkshire.
Now they have taken matters to a whole new attention-grabbing level by placing a sign that reads ‘Thank You NHS’ and putting rainbows on the side of resident ewes Muffin and Milkshake, who munch the lush grass as lorries, cars, motorcyclists and cyclists pass by on the nearby road.
Steve told The Stray Ferret:
“We decided to do this because people are having a tough time at the moment and need something to smile about.”
The rainbows on Muffin, who is a Mule and Texel Cross Milkshake, were put on using an animal marker and are so far on one side of the ewes, but Steve and Clare are planning use the marker colours on the other side of each animal, so the rainbow can be seen whichever way the ewes are turning.
Clare, who has family that work in the NHS, added:
“We are so grateful for what the front line workers are going for us all, that we wanted to find a special way of saying thank you to them.”
Their decision to put the sign in the field with their rainbow sheep is clearly working, as drivers of vehicles passing by could be heard papping their horns as they went past.
Ripon Grammar School choir is in harmony for virtual video tribute to the NHS
Taking part in a virtual choir tribute to NHS and key workers had an added poignancy for Ripon Grammar School student Rafaella Shiers.
Peter Hobson, the 92-year-old grandfather of sixth former Rafaella, who lives in Ripon, is currently in hospital recovering from coronavirus on the COVID-19 ward of a hospital in Lancashire and her mother, Kay, works in the NHS.
That meant that the virtual choral tribute by the Ripon Grammar School chamber choir, organised by the school’s director of music, Michael Barker, had a special significance for the 18-year-old who hopes to study history at Durham University.
Rafaella and 11 other talented singers from the school, who have been missing their weekly chamber choir rehearsals, got together on screen from their own homes for the virtual performance of Daniel Elder’s Ballade to the Moon, which Mr Barker edited and mixed together.
Video courtesy of Ripon Grammar School.
As she took part in the performance, arranged as a tribute to the front line healthcare workers, Rafaella thought about grandfather Peter, who she had been seeing on a regular basis before the coronavirus lockdown.
She said:
“I haven’t seen my grandpa since mid-March and I can’t wait to show him this tribute once I can visit him.”
Rafaella, added:
“Seeing the work and perseverance of the NHS during the crisis has been incredible and my mother, who works in community mental health, really appreciated our singing and loved the dedication to the NHS in the video.”
The Ripon Grammar School chamber choir includes sopranos, altos, basses and tenors and Mr Barker said that in putting together the virtual performance, he was also mindful of the students from years 11 and 13, whose time at the school was brought to an abrupt end because of the enforced early close down.
He said:
Homemade bunting adds to enjoyment of VE Day in Ripon“I hope it provides a lasting memory for those student leavers who didn’t get a chance to finish the year properly or have a last school concert. Singing is a fantastic way to bring everyone together.”
Helping their mother Philippa Disilvestro to make the bunting for the VE Day celebrations at their Ripon home added to the enjoyment of the occasion for six-year-old Sofia and her two-year-old sister Lilliana.
The family, who live in North Street, created a string of flags with VE Day designs on, which the children coloured in and Mrs Disilvestro told The Stray Ferret:
“We wanted to do something to mark the 75th anniversary. Sofia and Liliana had a lot of fun giving me a helping hand.”
With the bunting attached to front garden railings, they added to the patriotic scene witnessed in many parts of the city.
In nearby Princess Road, Margaret McDermott turned flag maker to join in the celebrations. She said:
“I hadn’t realised how difficult it was to get the Union Flag right – it took me quite a while – so I’m going to put it away safely to use again for the next anniversary celebration.”
She added:
“We had been looking forward to a street party and then coronavirus came along!”
As well as the flag, that she painted herself, Mrs McDermott also painted soldiers, following a design she had seen in a national newspaper, creating an impressive display that sums up the emotion and relief that would have been felt by service men and women at news that the war in Europe was at an end.
The VE Day 75th anniversary was celebrated in many shapes and forms across the Harrogate district and perhaps among the most imaginative came in North Stainley, where villagers created a scarecrow trail.
The main road through the village was lined with the painstakingly-produced characters dressed in 1940s clothing, while numerous Union flags fluttered in the light breeze of a sunlit day.
The figures ranged from the scarecrow soldier at North Stainley Primary School, next to a poppy design and the message ‘Lest We Forget’, to a Land Army girl outside a private house and the Vicar, celebrating Victory in Europe in gateway to the church of St Mary The Virgin.
VE Day in pictures – Ripon and the rural areas turn red, white and blueThe coronavirus crisis meant that streets in the city of Ripon and towns and villages in the surrounding rural areas remained largely empty, as people respected the government’s call to maintain social distancing.
However, celebration of the 75th Anniversary of Victory in Europe was still in evidence in red, white and blue window displays and bunting.
Ripon City Council which had planned three days’ of events involving celebration and commemoration, followed its own advice, when Town Clerk Paula Benson put a red, white and blue display in the Ripon Town Hall Windows.
In Masham, the window of insurance brokers R.F. Broadley, featured a rare collector’s item copy of the Northen Echo, dated Tuesday 8th May 2020 declaring ‘Today is VE Day’.
Just down the street, off Market Place, a private house (pictured above) had its V for Victory salute made out of Union Jacks. while two large Union Jacks and garden bunting decorated another private house in Main Street, Kirkby Malzeard.
WATCH: Ripon remembers those who fell with two minutes silence
The Cathedral clock struck 11am and Ripon fell silent for two minutes, as people reflected on those who lost their lives in World War II and specifically the war in Europe.
The city, home to The Royal Engineers and with a proud military heritage dating back to the First World War, remembered its dead both in the streets and houses and through a virtual VE Day ceremony inside the ancient church of St Peter and St Wilfrid’s.
Nestling next to the Cathedral is The Royal British Legion Garden of Remembrance, where small wooden crosses, each carrying a name and a poppy, stand as testimony to those from the city who lost their lives in conflicts.
Jack Middleton, who formerly served with the Army Air Corps and his partner Georgia Nelson, stood in silence with heads bowed.
Both (who feature in this video) have grandfathers who served in the Army and Jack told The Stray Ferret:
“With our families’ military connection, remembrance of those who fought and lost their lives is a tradition we will always observe.”
Following the two minute’s silence, the Cathedral’s virtual service began on YouTube and included a reflection from The Archbishop of York, the Most Reverend Rt. Hon. Dr John Sentamu, along with readings from the Lord Lieutenant of North Yorkshire Mrs Jo Ropner; a lesson from Councillor Jim Clark, the leader of North Yorkshire County Council; and prayers from the Dean of Ripon, the Very Reverend John Dobson.
Music and singing was provided by the Black Dyke brass band; Dishforth Military Wives and Ripon Cathedral assistant organist Tom Coxhead, who gave a fitting finale to the service by playing William Walton’s ‘Spitfire Prelude’ – originally written for the 1942 film ‘The First of the Few.’
Ripon Cathedral to welcome new angels to keep watch over helicopter heroes
The heroes of Yorkshire Air Ambulance (YAA) and other emergency services, are to be recognised in a special way at Ripon Cathedral, through the ‘Wing and a Prayer’ project.
The project will see the creation of origami paper angels, which will become part of an inspiring art installation in the nave, with each covered by requests for prayers, which members of the public can submit on an online form via the cathedral website.
People are being asked to donate ‘an angel’ to be placed inside the cathedral and the prayers that are placed on the angelic figures will be offered up by clergy during services.
Margaret Hammond, development manager at the cathedral, said:
“We are delighted that the Yorkshire Air Ambulance have agreed to partner with Ripon Cathedral to offer a way of individuals praying for their heroes, or remembering loved ones. At the same time, we look forward to raising funds to keep the YAA flying at this difficult time and to support the work of the cathedral in the community.”
The angels created through the ‘Wing and a Prayer’ project will be both downloadable and printable and in a format that can be shared on social media and placed in the windows of homes as a show of support for those who are working on the front line to keep communities safe during the cornavirus crisis and beyond.
Helen Callear, director of fundraising (North East) for Yorkshire Air Ambulance, said:
“This is a project very close to our charity’s heart and with event cancellations and fundraising activities on hold, the YAA needs all the support we can get to keep our helicopters in the air and saving lives across the region.