The North Yorkshire coroner’s office is appealing for help to locate the next of kin of 53-year-old Craig Fryer from Harrogate.
Mr Fryer died at his home in Woodfield Road, Bilton on March 15 and officers have been unable to trace his next of kin.
It is believed he has two daughters, one in Australia and one in the south of England. However, it is unknown exactly where.
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement today:
“If you are Craig’s daughter or have information that could help find them, please contact our coroner’s office via email to coroner@northyorkshire.police.uk.”
Police said there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding Mr Fryer’s death.
Read more:
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- Police close house in Harrogate after man dies
Harrogate bars call on council to allow tables on Stray land
The owners of three Harrogate bars have teamed up to call on Harrogate Borough Council to approve their request to put tables and chairs on the Stray.
Outdoor dining will restart under the government’s roadmap on April 12 but three Harrogate bars are still unsure if they can use much of their space outside.
Harrogate Borough Council approved the use of tables and chairs on Stray land last summer but is yet to decide whether to give the bars the green light this time around.
Simon Colgan, who runs the Blues Bar and The Empress with his wife Sharon Colgan, told the Stray Ferret:
“It makes a massive difference for our capacity, when we have the tables on the Stray it more than doubles for both of our bars
“We will still open if we can just have the six tables on the pavement. We will fight it because we have got customers who are desperate to come back.
“Without a doubt I would say this is critical for our business. It really is important, especially after another of three months of lockdown.”
David Dresser, who owns Fashion House Bistro, also told the Stray Ferret:
“It would be disappointing for us if we were not able to have outdoor dining back on the Stray land.
“That is on the basis that if we have some bad weather days then those days are right offs. This would help us on good days to make sure that business is stable.
“So it would affect our turnover but if we got those tables and chairs on the grass it would give us a boost.”
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Both Simon Colgan and David Dresser approached Harrogate Borough Council with their request when Boris Johnson set out his roadmap last month.
However, a spokesman for Harrogate Borough Council told the Stray Ferret:
“We are currently awaiting feedback from the Duchy on the proposed approach, prior to a consultation starting.”
The Duchy of Lancaster owns the Stray and Harrogate Borough Council are its custodians.
We asked the council about its timeline for a consultation but did not receive a reply by the time of publication.
34 jobs at risk as Bettys closes York cafeBettys has confirmed that it will not reopen its Stonegate cafe in the centre of York.
Speculation started to grow when it was not included in Bettys reopening map before multiple sources told the Stray Ferret that it was closing with job losses.
The famous Harrogate based company has said that it will reopen the shop but not the cafe at “Little Bettys.”
As a result of the closure there are 34 jobs at risk. Bettys is hoping to redeploy staff where possible.
Simon Eyles, managing director of Bettys, said the closure came with a heavy heart:
“We’ve been welcoming customers to a café on Stonegate for over 50 years. We’re incredibly grateful for the loyalty and kindness of York’s residents and visitors over that time, and for the talent, commitment and dedication of our colleagues at the branch.
“We haven’t taken this decision lightly, but we know it’s the right choice for the long term. Bettys is a 100-year-old family business and our history has shown us that we need to adapt and change.
“You may well know that our Stonegate café is the smallest of our cafés, housed in a unique, historic building, full of charm and quirks.
“This character and layout, much loved by customers, has become an increasingly challenging environment to work in.
“The back-of-house kitchen area is very small and the behind-the-scenes space for our people is very different to the working conditions we offer elsewhere.”
Read more:
- Bettys to start reopening from end of the month
- Bettys to close shops and takeaways ‘until further notice’
The Bettys Stonegate is the least commercially viable of the six existing branches, Mr Eyles added.
Many businesses have struggled financially during the pandemic.
Famous names like Debenhams and John Lewis have either had to close completely or reduce store numbers.
As part of its reopening plans the tea house in RHS Harlow Carr will open first for takeaway food and drinks from March 29.
Bettys shops will then open to visitors on April 12, which is the earliest that non-essential shops can re-open under the government’s road map.
All Bettys cafes will then re-open on May 17, except for the Stonegate branch.
Boris Johnson urged to support Harrogate Town’s Wembley campaignHarrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones today urged the Prime Minister to support Harrogate Town’s bid to rearrange the date of its trip to Wembley so fans can attend.
The Football Association has said last season’s postponed FA Trophy final between Harrogate and Concord Rangers will take place behind closed doors at Wembley on May 3, just two weeks before fans can return to stadiums.
It means Town fans will be cruelly denied a trip to the home of English football for the second time in 12 months.
Speaking today at Prime Minister’s Questions, Conservative MP Mr Jones described a Wembley cup final as the “holy grail” for supporters of smaller clubs. He said all four MPs of affected clubs backed the campaign to move the date and asked:
“Will the Prime Minister join us in encouraging those scheduling the matches to do all they can to move the date so that fans can attend?”
Boris Johnson replied:
“I hope very much that the Football Association will listen to carefully to what my honourable friend has to say and that they do what they can.”
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The FA previously said the game would be rearranged when fans can return. Town fan Rob Nixon told the Stray Ferret supporters should be rewarded for their patience.
“After missing out on Wembley last year, we had a lot of good faith in the FA after they suggested a final we could attend this season. I think it’s only fair they honour this and reward the fans for our patience.”
A petition set up by a Harrogate Town fan to move the fixture now has over 1,100 signatures.
Phoebe Graham to promote women and girls at Harrogate Cricket ClubProfessional cricketer Phoebe Graham has agreed to become Harrogate Cricket Club’s ambassador for women and girls’ cricket.
Graham, who is contracted to Yorkshire County Cricket Club and the Northern Diamonds, will provide regular girls coaching.
She will also act as a consultant to the club on how to expand its number of female players and grow the game in the Harrogate district.
Graham, who is a fast bowler and qualified coach, will advise the club on formulating a schools’ programme to encourage more girls to take up cricket and help it work with other clubs in the area to promote women and girls’ cricket.
The club currently includes about 25 girls, whose season is due to start next month.
For the first time ever, Harrogate’s girls’ section has entered a team in to the Nidderdale under-13 boys league this summer.
Graham, who also runs a gender equality consultancy, will now build on work done by head junior coach Andy Hawkswell, along with Nat Crossland and Tim Robinson to further develop the girls’ section.
Club chairman Steve Clark said:
“This new partnership is an incredibly exciting one. We hope it will be a long-lasting relationship that ensures that women and girls’ cricket continues to grow and thrive in Harrogate.”
Graham said:
“Providing women and girls with opportunities to play sport is something that I am extremely passionate about and I love Harrogate’s commitment and long-term ambitions to grow the female section.”
Read more:
- Fire, bankruptcy and coronavirus: Harrogate Cricket Club adapts to survive
- Cricket club to benefit from major Bilton Hall refurbishment
Harrogate cycle groups back one-lane Station Parade plan
Cycling and climate change groups have backed measures to reduce traffic on Station Parade to one lane and fully pedestrianise James Street in Harrogate.
Harrogate and District Cycle Action (HDCA) and Zero Carbon Harrogate issued their comments as part of the consultation on the town’s £7.9 million Station Gateway proposals, which ends today.
Business organisations, including Independent Harrogate and Harrogate Business Improvement District, have expressed concern at some of the plans and rejected the one-lane option.
But both HDCA and Zero Carbon Harrogate support creating a single lane for traffic on Station Parade, which also includes cycle lanes.
Read more:
- Harrogate Civic Society calls for Station Gateway to remain two lanes
- Harrogate BID “urges caution” over Station Gateway project
- Independent Harrogate fears Station Gateway could damage economy
HDCA said in its response to the plans:
“We are in favour of the one-lane option, which reduces Station Parade to one lane. Through traffic is routed along Cheltenham Mount, Bower Road, East Parade, and over Station Bridge back to Station Parade.
“The two-lane option does much less to achieve the objective of creating a more welcoming environment for people arriving at the station, and the cycle provision on Station Parade has a missing link in that version.”

A proposal to pedestrianise James Street in Harrogate is being consulted on as part of the Station Gateway plans.
The two groups also support the pedestrianisation of James Street to improve cycling and walking in the town centre.
‘Safer and more pleasant’
Zero Carbon Harrogate said pedestrianisation, combined with a single lane of traffic on Station Parade, would reduce town centre traffic. It said:
“Sustainable travel will become safer, more convenient and more pleasant, whilst travel by private car will become a little less convenient.
“We anticipate that the latter point will generate some opposition but believe that both sides of the equation must be addressed in order to achieve traffic reduction.”
The proposal for James Street has also been backed by Paul Haslam, a Conservative who represents Harrogate Old Bilton on Harrogate Borough Council.
Cllr Haslam, who has worked as a retail director and lecturer for the last 24 years, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that it would be “the best thing that could ever happen to it”.
He said:
“I very much welcome the pedestrianisation of James Street although I am understanding of the concerns and misgivings from some businesses.
“The decline of high-street retail has become more and more true for Harrogate, and it has now been accelerated by covid, which has ultimately been the kiss of death for some businesses.
“One of the things we have got to stop this hollowing out of the town is the town centre plan. Within that we have the Gateway project, but also the conference centre refurbishment and more regular trains running from places like London to bring more people in.
“These are all part of a bigger picture and I believe the pedestrianisation of James Street will absolutely fit in and be perfect for the gateway project.”
Business concerns remain
The government’s Transforming Cities Fund, which aims to encourage sustainable transport, is funding the gateway scheme.
A partnership between North Yorkshire County Council, Harrogate Borough Council and West Yorkshire Combined Authority is delivering the initiative.
Businesses remain concerned that any measures to reduce traffic could harm trade.
Andrew Goodacre, chief executive of the British Independent Retailers Association and a former Harrogate resident, said the measures included in the project would have a “negative impact” on its members’ businesses.
Sandra Doherty, chief executive of Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce, said a “well thought out plan” was needed for the town centre, which takes into the account the views of businesses, local people and visitors from further afield.
Six-month planning wait ruins Starbeck micropub planPlans to open a new micropub called the Office Ale House in Starbeck have fallen through.
IT consultant Kevin Jones previously said he hoped to get the venue at 67d High Street up and running by May, subject to planning permission.
He applied for a change of use planning permission on September 22, but nearly six months later Harrogate Borough Council was still to consider the application.
Mr Jones said the landlord of the building has now decided to offer the building to a different tenant.
He said he was “seriously upset about it” and criticised the council’s planning department:
“Starbeck has lost what would have been a community asset.”
“Now all the money I have spent on it has been wasted.”
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A council spokesperson blamed the covid pandemic for the delay:
“We would normally endeavour to determine an application for a change of use within eight weeks. This can sometimes take longer should revisions to a scheme be needed and/or further information required.
“But, like all local authorities, the planning application process was disrupted considerably last year due to the on-going global pandemic and the numerous lockdown and social distancing measures introduced.
“Once remote meeting were introduced, along with government measures for carrying out the planning process safely, we have successfully reinstated this process. However, as a result of the aforementioned issues, some application decisions are taking longer to determine.”
A different building on Starbeck High Street will be turned into a pub called the Waiting Room, after Harrogate Borough Council’s licensing sub-committee granted it a licence to sell alcohol last month.
The premises was previously occupied by Greenalls and Your Factory Bed Shop.
Harrogate Neighbours walk 36 miles for Alzheimer’s SocietyCare charity Harrogate Neighbours has hosted a walk and talk memory walk to raise money for the Alzheimer’s Society.
Tenants, staff, relatives and friends of Harrogate Neighbours, which provides housing and meals for older people, took part in the walk on Saturday.
The walkers, who ranged in age from 18 months to 95 years, completed a combined 36 miles by performing 144 laps of The Cuttings, which is an extra care housing scheme run by Harrogate Neighbours.
Nearly half of Harrogate Neighbours’ tenants and residents live with Alzheimer’s, which is why the event was held in support of Alzheimer’s Society.
The walk encouraged those suffering with social isolation to talk to others.
Sue Cawthray, chief executive of Harrogate Neighbours, said:
“We’ve only recently been allowed to welcome children outdoors on site, so it was wonderful to see the smiles and interaction of the tenants.
“Running an event like this is a great way to support not only a charity close to all of our hearts, but the wellbeing of our residents, tenants and staff by bringing everyone together to walk and talk in a covid-safe way.”
The group reached 36 miles on Saturday and ranged in age from 18 months to 95 years.
Further donations are expected to come in this week. To support the organisation click here.
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- Charity Corner: Making ‘Time Together’ the priority
- A Harrogate Apple repair shop has refurbished 60 iPads for local school children
Cat shot in Markington ‘on the brink of death’
The RSPCA is appealing for information after a cat called Timmy was found with a shot wound on his shoulder in Markington.
RSPCA officers found the seven-year-old ginger tomcat in the village, which is between Ripon and Harrogate, after a resident alerted the animal welfare charity.
Timmy was rushed to the vets where an X-ray revealed an entry wound from a pellet had shattered his shoulder.
The cat had shrapnel all over his body, and the RSPCA said it was “lucky” the pieces missed his vital organs.
Timmy is now recovering well and the RSPCA has launched an investigation.
The vet believed the shot was fired by a shotgun at close range meaning “someone really wanted to hurt Timmy”.
RSPCA inspector Natalie Taylor said:
“This poor cat would have been in terrible pain from the gun wound. Poor Timmy was on the brink of death before the vets operated on his shoulder and saved him.
“His owners are understandably distraught, this was a callous and horrible act of cruelty against him.
“It is very distressing to think that people take pleasure in causing such horrific injuries to defenceless animals. These are deliberate and brutal acts of cruelty.”
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Ms Taylor said cats and wildlife were often victims of shootings because they are out in the open.
Airgun attacks are most commonly used but the shrapnel suggested a shotgun had been used in this case.
Anyone caught deliberately injuring an animal can face up to six months in prison. They could also be ordered to pay an unlimited fine, if found guilty under the Animal Welfare Act.
If you have any information you can call the RSPCA inspectorate appeal line on 0300 123 8018.
Harrogate dentist drops plans to stop NHS servicesA Harrogate dentist has dropped plans to stop providing NHS services after patients raised concerns.
Chatsworth House Dental Clinic proposed in August transferring NHS patients to Starbeck Dental Centre.
The provider never made a formal approach to the NHS and has now confirmed it has no intention to stop the service.
The owners of Chatsworth House Dental Clinic said in a statement to the Stray Ferret:
“At the time, the practice was merely seeking opinion from our patient base about the possible merging of NHS services with another practice in the locality.
“We decided not to pursue this any further after feedback from our patients and the logistics of such a proposal.
“We have no intention of ceasing NHS services and the practice is fully committed to providing NHS services for the long-term future at its current location.”
The decision surprised the management team at Starbeck Dental Centre, which was set to take on the NHS contract.
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- ‘Shocking’ waits for NHS dentists in Harrogate district
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Jonathan Campbell, group operations manager at Starbeck Dental Centre, said:
“I can confirm that the transfer to Starbeck Dental Centre is not happening following the unexpected withdrawal from the owners of Chatsworth House Dental Clinic.
“At Target Dental Group our aim is to provide the best possible care to the patients to both NHS and private patients of Harrogate and surrounding areas.”
Investigation into NHS dentist provision in Harrogate district
It comes after an investigation by the Stray Ferret found that just two NHS dentists in the Harrogate district are currently accepting patients and they have a waiting list of at least two-and-a-half years.
We looked into the availability of free NHS services at the 18 district dental practices listed on the NHS website.
Many have not updated their information for years. But they all fall into one of three categories: they have a long waiting list; they have such a long waiting list that they are not taking on new patients; or they no longer hold an NHS contract.
Of the 18 practices, only MyDentist in Knaresborough and AW Jones Dental Practice in Boroughbridge are taking patients — with waiting times of two-and-a-half years and three years respectively.