A retired Harrogate GP who treated patients for three decades has died at the age of 95.
Dr Christopher Watson began working at Moss Healthcare Harrogate in 1959.
The practice, which has sites on King’s Road and Jennyfields in Harrogate and in Killinghall, said in a social media post yesterday that he died on December 6.
Dr Nick Taylor, a senior partner at Moss Healthcare, said:
“Dr Chris Watson served as a GP at Moss for over 30 years; it is with sadness that we announce his death at the age of 95.
“Many of our older patients will remember his kindness and family orientation, he was a wonderful family doctor”
Dr Watson’s funeral will be held at 2.45pm on 19 December, at St Mark’s Church on Leeds Road.
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Doctor from Ripon wins silver at e-cycling world championship
A junior doctor from Thornborough, near Ripon, has won a silver medal in e-cycling at the 2023 UCI E-sports World Championships.
Zoe Langham, who now works part-time as a junior doctor in Birmingham, went one better than last year, where she earned a bronze medal only hours after finishing a shift in A&E as part of her medical training.
E-cycling is a sport rapidly growing in popularity. It consists of cyclists pedalling on stationary bikes, powering virtual avatars moving on a screen.
Zwift, a competitor to Peleton, which provides the e-cycling technology and software for the world championship, has a reported user base of 2.5 million users, including runners as well as cyclists.
Former Ripon Grammar School student Zoe took up the sport to accommodate the demands of her medical training.
She balances her time on the wards alongside road racing and e-cycling. She competes for cycling team Pro-Noctis on the road and Wahoo Le Col in e-cycling.

Zoe studied at Ripon Grammar School before attending the University of Nottingham. Photo: Zoe Langham, Instagram
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The e-cycling world championship featured a new format for 2023, where competitors faced three short, explosive events.
The first event was The Punch, an 13.8km elimination-race where 100 riders competed with only the top 30 moving on the second race. In an interview after the competition, Zoe said:
“If you’d asked me what I’d be happy with coming out there, if I made it past that first race I’d be ecstatic”.
The second event was The Climb, an 8.5km series of hill repetitions which whittled the field down to 10.
The final 10 then went through an event called The Podium, where riders were eliminated one-by-one at a series of intervals until three riders remained, who then raced for the title.
Reflecting on the race, Zoe said:
Tributes to long-serving Harrogate hospital cardiologist“It makes all the long days at work, trying to train in the late evening hours worth it.
“It’s been really hard to juggle the job I do with the training hours necessary, and female cycling in general is just going from strength to strength.
“It’s really lovely to see and be a part of, but it definitely takes its toll. I’ve been lucky enough to be able to go part time now, so I can fit in a bit more training and time to race abroad with my team Pro-Noctis- Heidi Kjeldsen-200 degrees coffee. They’re a fantastic and very experienced team and I’m very excited to see where things go this year with them.”
Dr Hugh Larkin, a retired cardiologist and consultant in acute medicine at Harrogate District Hospital for 39 years, has died.
Dr Larkin, who was 78, died on April 1 following a battle with cancer. He leaves behind wife Lynn, children Hugh, Philip, Samantha, Nicola and Tristan and grandson, Hugh.
He joined the cardiology department at the hospital in 1983 and worked through the pandemic until his retirement in January 2021.
Dr Jacqueline Andrews, executive medical director at Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust (HDFT), said:
“Dr Larkin was one of our longest serving consultants, joining HDFT in 1983 and working with us during the covid pandemic where he returned to support his colleagues and patients at a time of great need.
“He was a kind, caring and talented doctor who was highly respected by colleagues and patients and he will be greatly missed. Our sincere condolences to his family and friends at this very sad time.”
Born in 1943, Dr Larkin grew up in Glasgow, joining the navy at 16 years old and before studying Medicine at the University of Glasgow.
On graduation in 1974, Dr Larkin became a resident at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary before working at the Western Infirmary and Sydney’s North Shore Hospital.
Dr David Earl, deputy medical director at HDFT said:
“Hugh was a gentle and kind man. He was a wonderful teacher, who was respected as a colleague and friend, and most importantly by the population of Harrogate itself.”
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Sammy Lambert, business development, charity and volunteer manager at HDFT said:
“Hugh was an amazing person and highly thought of by so many people. He saved so many lives – including my own father. His passing is such a sad loss, but his legacy will live on not only with the funds raised in his memory, but also through the difference he made to so many people’s lives.”
The Larkin family said in a statement:
“Hugh was a cherished husband and loving father; he was a family man in the truest sense of the word and was happiest when surrounded by his wife and children.
“As a family, we knew how much his work meant to him and we were incredibly proud of everything he did as a doctor. We hope his legacy in cardiology, as well as the positive impact he had on the lives of the people of Harrogate, lives on.”
Dr Larkin’s funeral will take place on Tuesday 19 April at 12pm at Our Lady Immaculate and St Robert’s Catholic Church in Harrogate.
Dr Larkin’s family have asked for donations in his memory to go to the cardiology department at Harrogate District Hospital via a dedicated donation page at https://hhcc.co.uk/hhcc-post/in-memory-of-dr-hugh-larkin/
Starbeck nurses to embark on mammoth charity cycle ride
Starbeck nurses Andy Dennis and Tracey Hill are to embark on a mammoth 2000km charity cycle ride from Amsterdam to Gibraltar.
The trip is to raise money for a charity close to their hearts, which offers vital medical care for those who need it around the world.
The couple hopes the journey will raise £30,000 for Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
An impressive £115,000 has already been raised for the charity to reach their overall target of £200,000, which was set in 2010.
It’s the third major fundraising effort they have undertaken for MSF. In 2011, Mr Dennis walked from Amsterdam to Barcelona and in 2016, the couple cycled across the USA.
Ms Hill said:
“We are raising money to give to MSF so they can use it to help people who are desperately in need of healthcare. That’s relevant right now as MSF are in Ukraine. We’re trying our best to get the word out to raise as much money as we can.”
Ukraine crisis
MSF’s medical teams act fast to save people’s lives in conflict zones, natural disasters and epidemics and go to where they are needed most.
MSF works in over 70 countries and has health workers in Ukraine at the moment.

Mr Dennis has worked in Uganda, South Sudan and Sierra Leone for MSF
Specialist teams are in hospitals in the war-torn country treating wounded people, providing surgical care, emergency medicine and mental health support.
Mr Dennis said donations big or small are greatly appreciated.
“There’s no such thing as a small donation, it impacts someone somewhere.
“£3 can pay for an oxygen mask, for example. We can’t change the world but you can change the life for the person sat in a clinic and bring them healthcare access they wouldn’t normally have.”
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‘All about grit’
The trip will take three months, which they will break up so they have time to rest and connect with local media outlets to promote the fundraiser.
Mr Dennis is an ICU nurse at Harrogate District Hospital and Ms Hill is a dermatology nurse at York Hospital. Both of their employers have supported them by giving them time off with some unpaid leave.
Ms Hill said the endurance trip will be “all about grit”.
“You find out the core of you, you peel back so much and you know how determined you are. It’s all about grit, can you tolerate being dirty every day? If you find a river, you go for it.”

The couple cycling in the USA in 2016.
Mr Dennis added:
“What Tracey described is the every day life of the people we are raising money for. We are choosing to do this to make a bit of difference.”
Proud Starbeck man
Mr Dennis has a reputation in Harrogate as a caring and compassionate member of the local community.
The proud Starbeck man said, “I’m not Bob Geldof”, but wants to show how anyone can make a difference in the world.
He said:
“I was no achiever but I was interested in biology at school and it was the only subject I was good at. Combine biology with compassion you find nursing at the end. It’s an incredible job, it might not look attractive with jaded looking nurses on the TV during covid, but I’ve travelled the world.”
All money raised for the trip, which they have called Ride To The Rock, will go to the MSF and the couple will pay for all expenses themselves. It will start in May.
They are also looking for corporate sponsors too. You can email Andy at andy4msf@pm.me for more information.
Their websites are www.andy4msf.com and www.thecyclingnurse.co.uk
To donate, visit the JustGiving page.
Harrogate’s pioneering woman doctor nominated for county awardNorth Yorkshire’s first woman doctor, who spent much of her life in Harrogate, has been nominated for a county award.
Dr Laura Sobey Veale experienced strong opposition whilst pursuing a career in medicine during the 19th and 20th centuries but overcame this to make a considerable impact on the town.
She has been nominated for the county council’s Great North Yorkshire Sons and Daughters campaign.
The “pioneering woman”
Dr Veale was born in Hampsthwaite in 1867 and studied medicine in London. She later returned to North Yorkshire to work at the Hospital for Women and Children in Leeds.
In 1904 she came back to Harrogate and set up her GP practice on Victoria Avenue. She made history overcoming hostility and continued to pave the way for women’s health, establishing a maternity department at Harrogate hospital and infant welfare and antenatal clinics in the town.
Despite retiring in 1936, Dr Veale was still committed to the town. When there was a need in the Second World War Dr Veale came forward to organise the Harrogate Women’s Voluntary Service leading a campaign to collect scrap metal for the war effort.
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Dr Paul Jennings from Harrogate Civic Society History Group, said:
“She deserves recognition as an important figure in the history of both medicine and feminism and a key figure in medical provision, especially for women and infants, in her native county and more particularly Harrogate.”
“It is as a pioneering woman in the medical profession and through her wider work for the community that she is so important to Harrogate.”
A brown plaque in memory of Dr Veale was unveiled in April 2017 at the site of her surgery. It was put in place to commemorate her contribution to the town and as an important figure of history for medicine and feminism.
Councillor Carl Les, said:
“During the current pandemic, it is important we recognise the hard work of all doctors and nurses across the country. Figures such as Dr Laura Veale are incredibly important to the county. She showed determination and dedication not to give up in difficult times.”

Winifred (left) and her sister Dorothy (right). Photograph: Yorkshire Museum of Farming.
Winifred Jacob Smith
Another Harrogate district nominee is Winifred Jacob Smith. Born in 1911 in Humberton, between Knaresborough and Boroughbridge, Winifred went on the join the Women’s Land Army in 1939 with her sister Dorothy.
Winifred later became the organiser for the Women’s Land Army for the whole of Yorkshire. The ladies’ role was crucial for the war effort with many involved in intensive farm labour to feed the county.
Coming from a long established farming family, on her death in May 2003 Winifred bequeathed what was then Scriven Park to Harrogate Borough Council to be used by her local community. It was officially opened as Jacob Smith Park in 2008.
Details of how to cast votes for the award will be released on the county council’s social media soon.
BMW and handmade scrubs stolen in Harrogate burglaryBurglars made off in a BMW with a first aid kit, a box of face masks and two sets of handmade doctor’s scrubs from a home in south Harrogate.
The Westbourne Avenue home was targeted between midnight and 6.45am on Saturday, June 20, when thieves broke in and took the keys for the grey BMW 220 D, which was on the driveway.
The car was recovered later that day after crashing and being abandoned on the way to Wetherby. However, items from inside the car were stolen.
As well as the face masks, scrubs and first aid kit, they included a child’s car seat, Ray-Ban sunglasses and a make-up bag. A personalised thermometer was also stolen from a doctor’s bag, but the bag was left outside the house.
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North Yorkshire Police is appealing for witnesses and information from the public aboutt he “two-in-one” burglary. A spokesman said:
“In particular, [we] are appealing for information about any suspicious people or vehicles seen in the area, and any CCTV or dash-cam or doorbell footage taken in the area at the time of the offence.
“[We] would also like to hear from anyone who has seen or been offered any of the stolen items for sale under suspicious circumstances.
Anyone with information can contact Elizabeth.Estensen@northyorkshire.pnn.police.uk or call North Yorkshire Police on 101. To report information anonymously, call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12200103910.
For more information about how to protect your home and car from being targeted in a two-in-one burglary, visit northyorkshire.police.uk/2in1burglary.
Across the country, recently retired doctors, nurses and other NHS staff are being invited to return to work.
The government has vowed to relax restrictions for such workers to enable them to help out as medical services face growing demand, and as current staff fall ill themselves.
While they won’t be invited as part of the current scheme, there are also NHS staff who have been on career breaks for other reasons now preparing to offer their services again.
GP Joanne Gregson, who has been off work since having daughter Edie in October 2018, has contacted the Local Medical Committee to find out where she is most needed. For her, work will be very different when she returns than it was when she left.
“We’re all subject to the self-isolation rules too,” she said. “If Edie gets a temperature, I’m out of action for a couple of weeks.
“A lot of practices are doing video and telephone consultations now, trying to limit face-to-face contact. That should help to keep as many of us working as possible.”
Support after career break
Dr Gregson had already been considering a soft return to work through the GP retainer scheme, which offers mentoring to doctors coming back to practice after a break. However, with practices now in need of help to cope with high demand, she may return to work in one of the most difficult periods in the history of the NHS.
“It is anxiety-provoking because I was planning to go back in a very controlled manner,” she said. “As doctors, we’re very conscientious. We don’t want to make mistakes, we’re human and we want to do our best.
“I wanted to do some courses and get back up to speed. Going back as a retainer meant after each appointment I could speak to a mentor and go through things. Now, I know everyone is going to be working at their capacity and as much as people will try to help, they may not be able to find that extra time.”
With colleagues and friends working in front-line NHS care, Dr Gregson said she is hearing stories about their experiences:
“There’s a bit of disgruntlement about social distancing. We aren’t really seeing people doing it. I can understand that, because it seems unreal still, but we’re seeing what’s happening in Italy and it is worrying. The message coming from my colleagues is, ‘do your bit. This is coming and we all have to act responsibly’.”