Following its official unveiling at the end of last month, ‘Ripon’s remarkable replica tank is now on a tour of locations in and around the city.
From the lawns at Ripon Inn, where a large crowd gathered to see it unveiled on April 30 by Lt Col. Perry Bishop, commanding officer of the 21 Engineer Regiment of the Royal Engineers, the life-size model is now relocated and attracting a lot of attention at Tate’s Garden Centre on Studley Road.
It will remain in situ there until May 23, before being moved to Fountains Abbey, where it will be in place from May 24 to June 4.
The life-size model measuring 24-foot long, nine-foot wide and seven-foot high will then be transported by Ripon Farm Services on a low loader trailer to the piazza at Ripon Cathedral on June 5, in time for the D-Day 80th anniversary concert on the evening of June 6 featuring Ripon City Band, The Duchy Belles, The Dishforth Military Wives Choir
and Charlotte Potter.
The event will also celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Royal Engineers being granted freedom of the city and, following the concert at 9.15pm, a D-Day 80th anniversary beacon will be lit on the piazza by Jack Churchill, the great grandson of wartime leader Sir Winston Churchill.
Created from wool and wood by the non-stop knitters of Ripon Community Poppy Project in conjunction with Richard Thomson and Gordon Woods – members of Ripon Men’s Shed, the tank is the stunning centrepiece of Ripon’s D-Day commemoration and celebration events.
Stuart Martin, who co-founded the project in 2017 with Hazel Barker, said:
“We have asked for and received help from individuals, businesses – including Tate’s Garden Centre and Ripon Farm Services – and organisations across the city and all have given their time, materials, labour and logistical advice free of charge.
“It has been a magnificent community-wide project collectively involving almost 100,000 hours of volunteer input and has been made possible because of the generosity of the city’s organisations and businesses.”
Main picture: The ‘on tour’ tank, which can now be seen at Tate’s Garden Centre
First North Yorkshire Council eliminated apostrophes from road signs; now it has started abbreviating them.
Local cyclist Kim Pearson contacted the Stray Ferret after noticing a sign on Harlow Avenue had been replaced by one sating Harlow Ave.
To make matters worse, an older sign opposite it still says Harlow Avenue, which means the two nearby signs for the same street have different lettering.
Ms Pearson said:
“Who decided to use this shortened version of avenue? All to save a few letters on a road sign? It looks awful.
“This road signage could be around for a 100-plus years and we will be judged on our road sign legacy by future generations.
“Not only that but the standards of written and spoken English need to be maintained in our younger children.”
Ms Pearson also cited Eddy Grant’s 1982 number one hit Electric Avenue to reinforce her case:
“Eddy Grant did not rock down to ‘Electric Ave’, did he?”
The move comes after the Stray Ferret revealed last month the council had decided to abolish apostrophes from road signs.
Our story upset the grammar police and was picked up by national media including the BBC and the Guardian but also the New York Times. It even featured on Have I got News For You last Friday night.
One grammar guerrilla even took matters into their own hands by taping an apostrophe onto the sign.
Ms Pearson told the Stray Ferret that abbreviating signs was “even worse”.
The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire Council if the new format was introduced to save money and whether it will be adopted on other signs.
Karl Battersby, the council’s corporate director of environment, said:
“The Harlow Avenue street sign and wooden posts were beyond repair and needed replacing. We have no policy on abbreviations, and this was not a cost-saving exercise.
“The purpose was to provide a like-for-like replacement and was done in good faith. The new sign does not change its meaning.”
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Banking giant bids for almost 800 solar panels at Harrogate offices
Mastercard has applied to North Yorkshire Council to erect 779 solar panels at offices in Cardale Park in Harrogate.
The company owns payment systems provider Vocalink which has a base at the business park off Otley Road.
The building houses Mastercard’s Harrogate data centre, which the company said in planning documents processes data for companies in the financial services sector.
The nature of its operations means that it is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
In the planning application, the firm said solar-powered green energy could generate around 25% of all the electricity used on the site if approved.
The solar panels would be placed adjacent to the offices and the council had asked that a ‘glint and glare’ assessment be provided to assess the potential impact on the surroundings.
This report concluded that throughout the year, car drivers at Cardale Park and nearby residents would be subjected to “minor to moderate” distressful conditions from the solar panels.
It said the glare can be avoided with the help of mitigation measures including planting hedgerows.
A design and access statement attached to the application said:
“The PV (photovoltaics) panels will be used to generate green energy to power the data centre housed within 4 Cardale Park. Mastercard are intending to reduce the emissions generated through their operations onsite and in conjunction with the existing PV panels on the roof of the site, a significant amount of green energy can be produced.
“The fence proposed will secure the field where the PV panels will be sited and be 2.4m in height and green coloured. The colour of the fence will blend in with the planning proposed but will largely be screened from view as a result of the proposed planting.”
North Yorkshire Council will decide on the plans at a later date.
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- Autism school in Harrogate delayed until 2025
Autism school in Harrogate delayed until 2025
North Yorkshire Council has confirmed that the planned opening date for a new school in Harrogate for children with autism has been pushed back until 2025.
The council’s Conservative-run executive approved the creation of the school last year which will be at the former Woodfield Community Primary School in Bilton.
It had pledged the new school would be open in time for the September 2024 term however in an update this morning, a council spokesperson said this will no longer be possible.
They did not give a reason for the delay but said the authority is committed to securing more special educational needs (SEN) provision in Harrogate.
Since 2016, the number of children in North Yorkshire with identified special educational needs and disability and a legally-binding education, health and care plan has increased by more than 110%, leading to a shortage of special school places and numerous children being taught by independent providers.
Independent day sector placements typically cost the public purse up to £70,000 annually and the average cost of a special school placement is about £23,000.
The results of a consultation revealed considerable support for the creation of the school in Harrogate with 86% of 105 responses in favour.
The council has pledged a £3.5 million investment into creating the school.
Amanda Newbold, the council’s assistant director for education and skills, said:
“We are committed to securing more special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) provision in North Yorkshire. The target opening date has been revised to next year.”
Cllr Paul Haslam (Independent, Bilton and Nidd Gorge) told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that he was monitoring developments at the new school.
Woodfield school, which closed in 2022, had large playing fields and Cllr Haslam is urging the council to make it available to the public once the new school is created.
He added:
“I’ve put in a proposal for dual access to sports grounds so it can be used by the local community. That would be a good use of space.”
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Police seek man after woman assaulted in Harrogate
North Yorkshire Police has launched an appeal to find a man after a woman was assaulted in Harrogate.
Michael Craggs, 27, is wanted in connection with burglary and criminal damage as well as assault.
He has been recalled to prison and a warrant has been issued for his immediate arrest.
Police said the assault and criminal damage happened in Harrogate.
Officers said in a statement:
“He has links with a number of areas of West Yorkshire too, including Ilkley, Bradford and Otley, where he is wanted in connection with a burglary.”
Anyone with information about his current location is urged to call 101. If the sighting is immediate, call 999. Quote reference number 12240052245.
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Harrogate Bus Company apologises for Jennyfields and Bilton cancellations
The Harrogate Bus Company has apologised after a number of bus journeys in the Harrogate area were cancelled this morning.
Passengers in the Jennyfields and Bilton areas faced delays and cancellations, especially around the morning rush hour.
The number 2, Harrogate to Bilton, and number 3, Harrogate to Jennyfield, buses were among those affected.
Sylvia Young got in touch to say she and many others were “sick of the bus service”. Ms Young sent this photo of this morning’s cancellations.
She added:
“It’s not now and again it is nearly every day the buses people need for work are cancelled. Two hours of no buses in or out of Jennyfield. It’s a disgrace.”
The cancellations attracted numerous social media comments, with some people claiming the problems were due to problems with the company’s new electric buses, including charging the batteries.
The Stray Ferret put these claims to the Harrogate Bus Company, which is owned by French firm Transdev.
We also asked if services would continue to be affected.
A spokesperson for the company said:
“We are aware of a small number of journeys to Jennyfield and Bilton which were unable to run this morning due to a vehicle-related issue.
“We apologise to any customers affected and remind our customers that they can track their buses in real time using the free Transdev Go app.”
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Harrogate man jailed for Ripon burglary and ABH
A man who burgled a flat at the YMCA in Ripon and then launched a vicious attack on a woman while on bail has been jailed for 19 months.
Ryan Hopper, 21, broke into the man’s ground floor flat in Water Skellgate after smashing a window and then ransacked the property, York Crown Court heard.
He was arrested and released on bail, but within months attacked a named young woman with whom he had a beef, repeatedly punching and kicking her in the head in a park in Harrogate town centre.
He was arrested again and charged with burglary and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
Hopper, from Harrogate but currently of no fixed address, ultimately pleaded guilty to both offences and appeared for sentence today via video link after being remanded in custody.
Prosecutor Brooke Morrison said that Hopper broke into the flat with a named teenager, knowing that the victim would be out as he was working a night shift.
They broke in just after midnight on February 16 last year by smashing the ground-floor window of the property and climbing through the void. After ransacking the flat and causing £221 damage, they left empty-handed and ran off.
Hopper was identified by the victim and staff from CCTV footage at the YMCA. He was brought into custody but exercised his right to silence and was bailed.
Kicked repeatedly in head
On May 14 of that year, a named woman and her male friend were drinking in a park in Harrogate town centre when they were approached by Hopper who “did not get along” with the woman.
Hopper, who had also been drinking, left to get some more alcohol from a local shop but returned 10 minutes later.
Ms Morrison said the woman “doesn’t recall fully” what happened next, “but she does recall that at some point after (Hopper) returned, she was on the floor while being repeatedly attacked by the defendant who was kicking her in the head repeatedly and punching her in the face multiple times”.
As he was attacking the woman, Hopper told her it was because he had been attacked by a “third party” a few weeks beforehand and he blamed her for getting him beat up.
A female witness saw Hopper’s vicious attack on the woman from her back garden and ran up to him telling to stop. She called police and an ambulance and Hopper was duly arrested in the park.
The victim, who suffered bruising to her jaw, eye and forehead, said she didn’t think Hopper would stop.
Following his arrest, Hopper was further charged with assaulting an emergency worker and making threats to kill for which he received an 18-week suspended prison sentence with an alcohol-treatment programme last summer.
14 previous offences
His criminal record comprised 14 previous offences including public disorder, affray, damaging property and carrying an offensive weapon.
Defence barrister Erin Kitson-Parker said the catalyst for Hopper’s offending was drugs and alcohol.
Judge Simon Hickey said it was clear that Hopper had attacked the woman in Harrogate over a “grudge”.
He criticised the defendant for ransacking the man’s flat, leaving it a mess. He added:
“You rifled through his belongings, his drawers were pulled out, his TV was knocked over and glass strewn everywhere from the shattered window.”
Hopper was given a 19-month jail sentence, of which he will serve half behind bars before being released on prison licence.
His co-accused, a youth at the time, received an eight-month suspended prison sentence and was ordered to pay £250 compensation to the burglary victim at a previous hearing.
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Developer to seek costs over Knox Lane housing appeal
A developer behind an appeal to build 53 homes on Knox Lane in Harrogate will seek costs from North Yorkshire Council.
Councillors on the authority’s Harrogate and Knaresborough planning committee rejected plans for the homes off the street in the Bilton area in September last year.
Teesside developer Jomast has appealed to the government’s Planning Inspectorate after it said the plans were recommended for approval by council officers on four separate occasions.
A public inquiry into the matter is due to be held on July 23 and is expected to last for five days. A venue is yet to be confirmed.
The Planning Inspectorate will then make a decision at a later date.
Meanwhile, the developer has applied to be awarded costs as part of its appeal.
In documents submitted to the government, Patrick Stone, of planning agent Spawforths which is representing Jomast, said the authority “demonstrated unreasonable behaviour” during the planning process.
He said:
“The council acted unreasonably in overturning the professional judgement of the case officer that the application was assessed to be in line with local and national policies and recommended for approval.”
The move means the council could face high costs if it loses on appeal.
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The council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough area planning committee rejected the application in September 2023.
A 45-page report by council case officer Andy Hough before the meeting said the application was “considered to now be in compliance with development plan policy” and should be approved.
But councillors cited concerns about land contamination and the lack of a travel plan to go against Mr Hough’s recommendation. The site is alongside a narrow cul-de-sac and not close to a bus route.
Cllr Paul Haslam, who represents Bilton and Nidd Gorge, spoke on behalf of residents at the meeting. He said:
Dog from Ripley becomes first to climb every mountain in England“There have been over 500 objections to this application from residents. Not because they are ‘nimbys’, but because they believe the council is making a mistake.”
A dog from Ripley has become the first to claim every mountain in England, according to its owner.
Jon Birtle, a civil engineer, and Bentley, a nine-year-old Yorkshire Jack Russell terrier, completed the challenge this month.
Mr Birtle said Bentley had become the first dog to ever climb all of the mountains in England.
Their escapades date back to 2019 when Mr Birtle turned 50 and wanted to “do something out of the ordinary”.
So to celebrate his landmark birthday, the pair set out to climb Pen-y-ghent in the Yorkshire Dales. They enjoyed the challenge so much Mr Birtle decided to attempt the other two Yorkshire peaks with Bentley.
After that, Mr Birtle began researching all of Yorkshire’s mountains.
After climbing all 41, he upgraded the challenge to taking on all 180 mountains in England above 2,000 feet (610 metres), which are classed as Hewitts.
The pair battled bad weather, lockdowns, exclusion zones and injuries to complete this feat.
Man and dog averaged a climb every three weeks over five years in an adventure that has taken them from the Yorkshire Dales to the Peak District, the Lake District and Dartmoor.
They trekked over 600 miles and Bentley has recorded over half a million steps. Their climbs have now achieved the equivalent of scaling Mt Everest more than 15 times.
Mr Birtle took a date stamped photo of Bentley on every summit and soon amassed a keen following on social media who watched their journey.
He said:
“Our last summit was a bit emotional. Five years ago I didn’t even like walking now we have climbed every mountain in England. There are plenty of times I have wanted to turn around and Bentley has been running up in front, so we have pushed on.”
“We are going to carry on doing something, I love it and Bentley lives for it. As soon as I get my backpack on, he knows we are going. He is always in front waiting for me up the mountains, it is good for us both. Bentley may be nine, but he is still fit, I’m probably going to have to retire before him.”
After each mountain climb, the pair finished the day in a pub to celebrate with a lager and a treat for Bentley.
Mr Birtle added:
“My favourites have been Pen-y-ghent, because it was our first and was a wonderful experience, and Fountains Fell, which we did twice because I loved it. The most challenging has been the harshness of the North Pennines where there are almost no paths — it is a bit like a maze.
“The mental health aspect has been great, all the pressures of life are left up at the top of the mountain – it is like a soul cleanser.”
Mr Birtle said he is now looking at taking on more long walks and is considering a coast-to-coast route for his next challenge.
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Two arrested after man stabbed in Harrogate
A man was stabbed in the Mayfield Grove area of Harrogate last night (May 12).
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement today it received reports that a man had suffered stab wounds just before 7.30pm last night.
The statement added:
“Officers attended and found a man had suffered an injury to his hand.
“A short time later two men were arrested in connection with the incident. A 27-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of robbery and a 32-year-old man was arrested for wounding with intent. Both currently remain in police custody.
“Following the incident, the victim received treatment in hospital for minor injuries.
Police reassured residents today by describing it as an “isolated incident”.
Superintendent Teresa Lam, senior commander for the Harrogate district, said:
“Thankfully incidents of this nature are extremely rare in Harrogate, and they will not be tolerated. An investigation is now underway to establish the full circumstances.
“I would like to stress that we are treating this as an isolated incident and do not believe that there is any ongoing wider threat to the general public.”
However, it is not the first serious incident in the Mayfield Grove area in recent years.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 37, was jailed at Leeds Crown Court in 2022 for murdering Gracijus Balciauskas in a flat on the road.
In the previous year Daniel Ainsley was sentenced to 22 years in prison for murdering 48-year-old Mark Wolsey at a bedsit on the road.
Police urged anyone with information about the latest incident or doorbell footage to call them on 101 and quote incident number 12240083406 or to contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
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