More than 200 children from a Harrogate primary school took part in a peace walk for Ukraine this morning.
Pupils from St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School, on Coppice Rise, walked from the school to St John’s Church on Bilton Lane to raise money and awareness for those fleeing the conflict.
Children were encouraged to come to school dressed in yellow and blue, the colours of the Ukraine flag, for the walk and to make a donation to the UNICEF campaign to support children in the country.
Beforehand, they took part in a liturgy led by pupils from years three and five.

Pupils at St Joseph’s with their banners which they created for the Ukraine walk.
Children sang peace hymns for Ukraine, held prayers and read from passages in the Bible.
Rachel Rouse, headteacher at St Joseph’s, said:
“We do a lot of fundraising for other things.
“We felt as a whole school that we needed to do something for Ukraine.”
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On the walk, pupils were given blue and yellow ribbons and waved banners at passing drivers on Skipton Road.
Once at St John’s, the whole school gathered to sing a hymn to show they were united for Ukraine before returning to finish with further prayers and singing.
You can donate to Unicef’s campaign for children here.
WW2 nurse from Bilton who served in Dunkirk, Africa and HiroshimaSister Florrie Prest from Bilton saw remarkable service in the war, tending to injured service people across three continents.
Florrie served in the Territorial Army Nursing Service and was attached to Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS).
Elizabeth Smith from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission shared her research on the nurse with the Stray Ferret. She is buried at Stonefall Cemetery,
Ms Smith found two historic newspaper reports about Florrie in the now-defunct Harrogate Herald.
According to a report from 1946, Florrie worked as a dressmaker in Harrogate in the years before the war. She then trained as a nurse in London and worked at Harlow Wood Orthopedic in Sutton-in-Ashfield.
When war broke out, Florrie served at Dunkirk, northern Africa, Japan and in the Atlantic and Icelandic waters.
The report says she was of modest disposition and refused to speak about her service but admitted to once saving a person’s life from a blazing building in Iceland.
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Her second mention in the Herald was her obituary a year later. She died in York Military Hospital aged just 46 on October 26, 1947.
Florrie had been assistant matron on the hospital ship Dorsetshire. She was also mentioned in dispatches for service in the Middle East.
Ms Smith suspects this was when she was on the Dorsetshire when it was attacked several times in the Mediterranean despite being a hospital ship.
In North Africa, Florrie was in charge of field dressing station.
A dear sister
Later she was matron on the hospital ship Principessa Giovanna that was seized from Italy by the Royal Navy in 1944.
Her last appointment had been in Hiroshima, Japan before she was flown home.
Her parents lived at Bachelor Gardens in Harrogate and died before her. The personal inscription on her headstone was written by her brother. It reads:
“I HAVE LOST A DEAR SISTER BUT HEAVEN HAS GAINED ONE OF THE BEST THE WORLD CONTAINED.”
Free Stonefall tours
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission runs free tours and events at Stonefall Cemetery throughout the year that give visitors fascinating insights into some of the graves.
The next tours will be during War Graves Week and will shortly be available to book via Commonwealth War Graves website.
Harrogate International Partnership is also organising an ANZAC Day service at Stonefall on Sunday April 24.
It is shaping up to be an interesting event with local dignitaries, representatives from the RNZAF and the RAAF, local cadets, a brass band and potentially a haka.
Plan submitted to demolish Bilton garages for social housingHarrogate Borough Council has lodged plans to demolish 10 garages in Bilton to build two new houses.
The garages are on Woodfield Close, near the iron bridge in the Harrogate suburb.
As part of the proposal, two one-bedroom homes would be built on the site.
A council report in August said there were 24 garages on the site but only 12 were occupied. Of these, four were used by local residents.
The report proposed demolishing seven garages to allow for the new development but the number has now increased to 10.
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The council owns and rents out garages across the district and has increasingly looked at the pockets of land as a way to build social housing.
In planning documents, the council said the development would help to provide “much needed affordable homes”.
The move comes as the council approved plans to earmark the site for housing back in August 2021.
The authority also plans to build a two-bed property for social rented housing on grassland it maintains on the corner of Poplar Crescent and Poplar Grove
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the Woodfield Close plan at a later date.
Bilton bowling club to open new clubhouseBilton Dragon Bowling Club is due to open a new clubhouse next Sunday.
The crown green bowls club was founded in 1909 and has members aged 14 to 93. The club plays on a green behind the Co-op on Skipton Road.
Its first clubhouse was a wooden pavilion erected in 1910 at a cost of £17 and 10 shillings.
The new one has been funded by a £20,000 grant from Sport England and fundraising by members.
The club had hoped to open it last year but it was delayed due to covid.

Players at the club.
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Mayor of Harrogate Trevor Chapman will be there today to cut the ribbon.
The club is also looking for new members. If you’re interested in playing or have any questions, email the club’s chairman Trevor Whincup here or call John Archer on 07715030832.
Mr Whincup said:
New woodland with 2,000 trees planted in Bilton“Bowls is perceived to be an older person’s sport, but we have members of all ages. It’s good exercise and it’s a good game.”
Over 2,000 trees have been planted on the edge of Nidd Gorge to form a new woodland for people to enjoy.
Bilton Conservation Group was helped by employees from Belzona Polymerics as well as members of Knox Valley Residents’ Association and the Scout movement to plant the trees at Bilton Fields during February.
Sixteen native broadleaf species were planted, including a specimen of the rare wild service tree.
The woodland is sponsored and paid for by the Society of the Holy Child Jesus, a Catholic congregation of women that was founded in 1846.

Scout volunteers planting a tree
Four nuns, representing the order, came from Oxford and France to help on the second day.
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Bilton Conservation Group has planted over 20,000 trees in Bilton Fields since 1985.
Keith Wilkinson, of Bilton Conservation Group, said:
Dramatic photos show firefighters saving Bilton tree in storm“We had hoped to plant them last year but the weather and covid got in the way.
“Fringed with blossom species such as wild cherry, crab apple, dog rose, hawthorn, blackthorn and rowan it will be magnificent in years to come, providing food and shelter for birds, butterflies and bees. It will look fantastic.”
Firefighters braved strong winds to activate an aerial ladder platform and prevent a tree in Bilton from falling during yesterday’s Storm Eunice.
The storm uprooted several trees in the Harrogate district, including one that splintered on West Park Stray at rush hour — fortunately not hitting any passing pedestrians or vehicles.
Harrogate fire station was summoned early in the evening “to deal with a tree in a precarious position”, according to a post on the station’s Facebook page.
Despite the winds, the crew took action.
A fire spokesperson said:
“The top of a large fir tree was blown at an angle into an overhead telephone cable and was in danger of snapping and falling onto a house.
“Harrogate’s serial ladder platform was used as a safe platform to work from. It involved using an electric saw to cut the tree trunk above and below the cable so that if it did blow down, it wouldn’t reach the house.”

Pic: GM Tony Peel
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Storm Eunice eases after uprooting trees in Harrogate district
A yellow weather warning is in force across the Harrogate district this afternoon as Storm Eunice brings rain and winds of up to 60mph.
A Met Office yellow weather warning means residents can expect more disruption to roads and public transport and there’s a chance of damage to trees and buildings, such as tiles blown from roofs.
Strong winds are forecast until 9pm today when it is set to subside.
The Met Office has also issued a yellow warning for ice from 6pm this evening until 9am tomorrow.
A yellow warning for rain has been issued for Sunday between midnight and 6pm.
Follow all the latest updates below.
6.30pm: Harrogate town centre traffic lights not working
There are reports the traffic lights at the junction of Station Parade and Victoria Road in Harrogate are not working. It’s not known if it is related to the storm but it is making it difficult to pull out of Victoria Road at the moment.
5.45pm: Trains to Leeds cancelled.
Northern is running a reduced service to-and-from Leeds this evening with several trains cancelled due to the weather.
Trains will be leaving Harrogate Station every hour rather than twice an hour until 20.18. After that, only one more train is scheduled to leave at 23.18.
Visit National Rail for the latest updates.
5.40pm: Father and daughter see tree fall into cabman’s shelter
A father and daughter have told of the moment they watched a tree come crashing down on a cabman’s shelter on West Park Stray in Harrogate.
Colin Reynolds and his daughter, Lauren Reynolds, had just driven around the Prince of Wales roundabout and on to West Park Stray when they noticed the mature tree splinter.
You can read more here.
5.15pm: Tree crashes into cabman’s shelter on West Park Stray
A tree has just come crashing down on to West Park Stray. Traffic is reduced to single lane.
4.59pm: Tree down in Harrogate
Beckwith Head Road.
4.56pm: Gritters out tonight
We are #gritting priority roads across #NorthYorkshire overnight.
Road surface temperatures will widely fall below zero leading to a widespread risk of ice.
Remember gritting doesn't guarantee an ice or snow-free surface.
More info https://t.co/6cnhGrxFu6 pic.twitter.com/itSpVUu2as
— North Yorkshire Council (@northyorksc) February 18, 2022
4.51: North Yorkshire Police issues safety advice
– Check your windscreen wipers and all of your car’s lights are working
– Gusts of wind can unsettle vehicles so keep both hands firmly on the steering wheel at all times
• If a road is flooded, turn around. Never drive through floodwater@HighwaysYORKS for travel updates pic.twitter.com/4YRqTQQCxj— North Yorkshire Police (@NYorksPolice) February 18, 2022
4.35pm: Increase in calls for firefighters
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service has noticed an increase in incidents in the last hour.
We've had a busy day with various incidents but only just getting a few storm related incidents in the past hour – a tree fallen onto a house in #Selby, unsafe chimney stack in #Bentham and a tree blocking the #A162 in #Tadcaster and an unsafe roof in #Harrogate
— North Yorkshire Fire & Rescue Service (@NorthYorksFire) February 18, 2022
4.15pm: Tree down in Weeton
A tree has fallen in the wind on Weeton Lane in Weeton and is blocking the road.
3pm: Tarpaulin in Bilton
A roof tarpaulin has landed on a driveway in Bilton this afternoon.
Plans approved for 264 solar panels at Bilton caravan park
Plans have been approved to install 264 solar panels at Bilton Park Village Farm to produce green electricity for its park homes and caravan.
The owner of the site lodged an application to Harrogate Borough Council for the solar panels which would be capable of producing 90,471 kWh of electricity a year.
The site, on Bilton Lane, is a popular holiday location for people wishing to explore Harrogate and Knaresborough.
Now, the borough council has approved the installation of the panels.
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Planning documents submitted to the authority say the park wants to improve the environmental impact of the business and the solar panels would reduce its carbon footprint by around 31 tonnes of carbon dioxide each year.
The panels would cover 454 square metres of field next to the park.
The documents say that around 30% of the electricity generated will be exported back to the National Grid so it can be utilised by the public.
It adds:
Calls for police in Bilton to tackle ‘yobs on bicycles’“This means that the public can also utilise electricity which has been generated by renewable energy, further reducing the reliance on fossil fuels and power stations.
“The installation of the solar PV system would not solely serve the applicant but would also benefit other households.”
There were calls last night for police to do more to tackle teenagers on bicycles in Bilton who residents say are causing havoc in the Harrogate suburb.
A meeting was held at Bilton Grange United Reform Church and residents asked questions to a panel that included PC Brendan Frith from NYP, Bilton Conservative councillors Matt Scott and Paul Haslam, Liberal Democrat councillor and Mayor of Harrogate,Trevor Chapman, and Julia Stack from Harrogate Borough Council’s safer communities team.
It was chaired by Reverend Alan Crump who invited questions from around 30 residents who were in attendance.
One resident said “something has to be done” about the groups of youths who congregate on bicycles after 10pm.
“On Bilton Lane in the dark these cyclists have no lights on or high vis jackets on, and they have given us the finger.
“Sooner or later someone will get killed.
“There are eight or nine yobs, and I’ve seen them trying car and front doors.
“Something has to be done. It’s dangerous.”
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PC Brendan Frith circulated a leaflet of crime statistics in the Woodfield area of Bilton. It said there had been 11 reports of arson and criminal damage in January 2022, compared with 2 in January 2021 and 5 in January 2020.
He said “a number of arrests” have been made recently linked to anti-social behaviour in Bilton.
He said:
“We are aware of anti-social behaviour problem of kids on bicycles. We think they are linked to trying doors [of cars and houses]. When we are about, we do deal with them”.
Last night’s meeting was the third to have taken place since September 2021. Police were praised by some residents for increasing their presence in Bilton and performing more arrests in recent months on suspected criminals.
The next meeting is set to take place in June.
More roadworks coming to Harrogate’s Skipton RoadMore roadworks will begin on Harrogate’s Skipton Road next week.
Highways authority North Yorkshire County Council will be carrying out improvements at the junctions with Bilton Lane and Woodfield Road.
At Bilton Lane, the pedestrian island will be removed and the island at the end of King’s Road will be widened.
The left turn from Woodfield Road on to Skipton Road will change from being controlled by traffic lights to being a give way to improve traffic flow and air quality.
The lights in the traffic lights at both junctions will be replaced with more energy-efficient LED lights.
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The work will begin on Monday and is due to complete on February 27, when half-term ends. However, temporary traffic lights are not expected to be required until February 19 as the initial work will take place off road.
Lights will initially be in place at the Bilton Lane junction before moving to the King’s Road and Woodfield junctions.
The Stray Ferret asked the council how much the work will cost.
Melisa Burnham, highways area manager, said:
“These works are included in our annual highways maintenance budget of around £55 million, which covers planned maintenance programmes as well as responding to problems as they arise.”