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02
Jul 2022
It is doubtful whether anyone has known more about Harrogate’s people and places than Malcolm Neesam, who died on his 76th birthday this week.
Malcolm, who wrote about a dozen books and numerous other publications about the town, dedicated much of his life to telling Harrogate's story. He did it better than anyone and will be remembered as the town's greatest historian.
He had an encyclopedic knowledge of the buildings and people that shaped Harrogate but he was also gentle and modest, and never boastful or condescending in print or real life.
Underpinning it all was a deep love for the town, and in particular the Stray.
Born in a nursing home on Ripon Road in Harrogate on June 28, 1946, Malcolm's father worked for a rubber company that manufactured soles for footwear.
Sunday afternoon walks with his mother stimulated his interest in history at the age of six or seven. She would often talk about things they passed. "I didn’t need a playground," he once said. "I had the Stray."
He attended St Peter's Church of England Primary School, "a very happy little school", as he described it, and then Christ Church Secondary School for Boys. The school, which was situated between the Empress roundabout and Christ Church on the Stray, amalgamated with St Peter’s Secondary School for Girls to create St Aidan’s Church of England High School more than 50 years ago. Retirement flats now occupy the site.
In his last year at Christ Church, Malcolm's parents noticed an advert for an assistant at Harrogate library and thought his developing interest in history would make him suitable.
Photographed in London in 1988. Pic by Benedict Hess
After three years in that role he accepted a post at Leeds University studying archives and librarianship. He later attributed his thoroughness at gathering source material for books to his training as an archivist.
Malcolm then moved to Hereford for four-and-a-half years to set-up the city's first children’s library service before moving further south to Northwood, in the London borough of Hillingdon close to the Metropolitan line, to work as an archivist for the Duchy of Lancaster.
Malcolm Neesam at the launch of his final book, Wells and Swells.
He started work on a third volume, covering Harrogate's history since 1923, fully aware he was unlikely to finish it.
Before Malcolm, William Grainge, who died in 1895, was considered to be Harrogate's foremost historian. Grainge had published books and short publications about the town in the 1860s and 1870s, but nothing substantial. Malcolm described Grainge's style as "too chatty" whereas he focused more on the history.
He and the late Harold Walker, a historian and one-time editor of the Harrogate Herald, set up the Walker-Neesam archive, ensuring their collective research could stay for ever within the town.
His vast collection of papers and photo library will go to Harrogate's Mercer Art Gallery. Organising them won't be an easy task: thousands of brown envelopes assigned alphabetically by subject took up an entire room at his home.
Malcolm gave a typically modest answer when asked why he only wrote about Harrogate, saying: "Some writers can turn to anything. I can only write about things that interest me."
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