A free exhibition will honour the 1,163 men and women whose names are inscribed on Harrogate war memorial.
The exhibition will open in West Park United Reformed Church on September 1, 100 years to the day after the memorial was unveiled in Prospect Square.
It will run until Remembrance Sunday on November 12.
The memorial bears the names of local men and women who lost their lives in two world wars.
Twenty died on the same day; the youngest was just 15 and one person died after being kicked by a mule.
The multi-media exhibition, called More than a name on a Memorial, will bring their stories to life.
The stories will draw heavily on research conducted by local historian and former army reservist Graham Roberts, who has been researching the names for years.
Local resident Terry Williams, who was responsible for a recent exhibition telling the story of Harrogate’s railways, is curating the exhibition, which is being organised by the newly-formed Harrogate War Memorial Project Group.
The group includes members of various local voluntary organisations, including Harrogate Civic Society, the Royal Hall Restoration Trust and Harrogate and District Improvement Trust.
Nigel McClea, chair of the project group, said:
“Thanks to herculean efforts over many years by local historian Graham Roberts, all 1163 names have been researched and much has been discovered and recorded including military units, war records, photographs, cause of death, date of death and place of burial, although more than 300 of the First World War names inscribed have no known grave.
“This on-going research will form the core of the exhibition but thanks to support from North Yorkshire library service, through Harrogate Library, we are now in a position to seek out family stories and memories.”

Walter Ogden
The research has thrown up many fascinating questions. Mr McClea said:
“For example, would 2/Lt Walter Ogden have joined his family firm Ogden of Harrogate, the town’s historic jewellers still to be found on James Street? We’ll never know, he died in 1917 aged just 19 at the Battle of Cambrai.
“2/Lt Donald Bell VC, the first English professional footballer to join the army in World War I, had signed his first professional contract with Second Division Bradford Park Avenue in 1912 aged 22. Would he have ever played for a First Division club? We’ll never know. He died aged 25 in the Battle of the Somme.
“These are just two stories from 1163. We would love to hear from anyone with an ancestor named on the memorial who might have photographs, or recollections of their experiences which might have been passed on through the generations.
“We would also love copies of things such as letters home or letters they received from home, extracts from diaries, battle orders or telegrams and anything about what these brave people did before going to war.”
Copies of letters, extracts from diaries, written recollections and photographs can be emailed to Harrogate.Library@northyorks.gov.uk with the subject line ‘More than a name on a Memorial’ or taken into the library for copying.
Further details of the war memorial centenary programme of events will be available next month.
Read more:
- Ex-soldier from Harrogate researches 1,000 names on war memorial
- Ex-soldier from Harrogate researches 1,000 names on war memorial
Civic society backs creation of Harrogate town council
Harrogate Civic Society has backed plans to create a Harrogate Town Council.
A second consultation on whether to set-up a town council runs until May 5.
North Yorkshire County Council said in March the move would require 35,000 households to pay an additional council tax charge of between £40 and £60.
However, in its submission to the consultation the civic society said the establishment of a town council would mean key decisions could be made by local councillors “who live in the town”.
It added it would want to see the authority take on more powers over time.

The areas in Harrogate which would fall under the new town council.
Harrogate and Scarborough are the only parts of the county not to have a parish or town council.
The civic society submission said:
“The society aims to celebrate our past, enhance our present and shape our future. We believe that this can best be done with a Harrogate town council, so key decisions will be made by local councillors who live in the town.
“We note the possible remit of the new council set out in the consultation document, but would like to see it have more of a role over time.
“This would enable opportunities to raise income, protect and enhance the key assets of the town, have a greater say in planning and development (through a neighbourhood plan), and promote a vision for the town which makes it a premier spa and floral town.”
Read more:
- Second consultation to be held on whether to form Harrogate town council
- Just 3.5% responded to Harrogate town council consultation
- Liberal Democrats back creation of Harrogate town council
The group added it wished to work with the town council in future to “keep the town the jewel in the crown of North Yorkshire”.
Last week local Liberal Democrats came out in favour of the creation of a town council.
Eight Liberal Democrats, including former Harrogate borough councillors and current North Yorkshire councillors, signed a letter in support.
They said the move would enable locally-elected councillors to take control of assets such as off-street car parks, the Stray, Royal Hall, Sun Pavilion and Valley Gardens.
A total of 75% favoured setting up a Harrogate town council in last year’s first consultation but only 1,250 homes — 3.5% of those affected — responded. The low response rate triggered concerns about the validity of the response.
A second consultation into the creation of a town council will close next Friday (May 5). You can have your say here.
Harrogate’s Parliament House to be converted to flats and shopsPlans have been approved to convert a building in Harrogate’s Montpellier Quarter into eight flats and two retail units.
Parliament House on Montpellier Street is currently home to Harrogate Wines shop and a vacant gym and is spread across three floors.
North Yorkshire Council approved an application to convert the building last week.
Developer ATC Properties said the flats will be aimed specifically at young professionals and key workers who are looking to get onto the property ladder.
Each flat will have an ensuite double bedroom with an open plan kitchen, dining and living area.
Documents attached to the application described the site as an “intrusive utilitarian building” at odds with one of Harrogate’s most architecturally-appealing areas.
They added the conversion provided an opportunity to “significantly refurbish a prominent building of poor architectural quality and detailing”.
Civic society objection
A third floor extension was removed following concerns from Harrogate Civic Society, which objected to the plans.
The conservation group said the remodelling of the building “does not reflect the local historic style of the conservation area.”
Other prominent town centre buildings, including the former post office on Cambridge Street, have seen applications to convert them into flats approved in recent months. However, the civic society’s objection letter raised concerns about the trend. It said:
“In principle we are keen to see sustainable town centre living but
are always concerned that local commercial uses will not make for a low standard of residential amenity.”
Concerns were also raised by local residents and business owners about parking.
However, the council wrote in its decision report that the site
was in an accessible town centre location, close to shops, facilities and public transport connections, and secure cycle storage would be provided within the building.
The plans were ultimately approved by the new council as one of its first acts as the new planning authority for Harrogate, replacing Harrogate Borough Council.
Read more:
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- ‘The council have destroyed 99 years of model boats in Harrogate’
Odeon packed for 90-minute archive film of Harrogate district
A 90-minute programme of archive footage of the Harrogate district has once again packed out the Odeon.
Two extra screenings were fully booked yesterday after tickets for September’s original viewings were also snapped up.
It means almost 1,000 people have watched the curated footage now.
The programme, which features clips held at the Yorkshire Film Archive in York, was commissioned by Harrogate’s Civic Society and FIlm Society.
It shows Harrogate and Knaresborough celebrating coronations in 1937 and 1953, the opening of the Odeon Cinema and Dustin Hoffman in Harrogate during filming of the 1979 film Agatha.

1970s fashion, Harrogate style
It also features the Harrogate Spa in 1930s, local railways in 1962, including the Ripon line that closed six years later, Knaresborough’s zoo and aquarium in 1968, the Knaresborough bed race in 1977, Disability Action Yorkshire, the Harrogate flower show and the Great Yorkshire Show, including a visit by the Queen in 1957.
Some of the highlights are available through the Yorkshire Film Archive website.
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Plan to convert former Harrogate Post Office into holiday flats rejected
A plan to convert the former Harrogate Post Office into holiday flats has been refused.
The Post Office on Cambridge Road controversially relocated to WH Smith in 2019 amid claims by Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones the service was being “downgraded”. The building has stood empty since.
Proposals lodged to Harrogate Borough Council by Leeds-based property developer Priestley Group would have seen the building converted into 23 self-serviced holiday flats.
It would also have seen a commercial unit created on the ground floor.
However, the council has rejected the plan on the grounds the scheme would result in “poor standards” of residential amenity.

How the building used to look.
In a decision notice, the authority said:
“The proposal would result in poor standards of residential amenity for the future occupiers of the serviced holiday apartments.
“The proposed development would have a harmful effect on the living conditions of its future occupiers, with particular regards to privacy, ventilation, enclosing feeling and overlooking.”
It added that there was a lack of information on waste disposal and whether or not the proposal for the retail unit would “result in a significant adverse impact on the vitality or viability of the retail offering”.
The developer said in a statement to the council that the proposal would secure an “active re-use” of the building.
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Two previous proposals to convert the former post office into flats were withdrawn.
In November 2020, Harrogate-based developer One Acre Group submitted plans for 25 apartments and offices on the site but withdrew the application last year.
Its plans had been welcomed by conservation group Harrogate Civic Society although it was concerned about a proposal to build an additional floor.
Meanwhile, in July the Stray Ferret reported that proposals to convert the building into 11 flats had also been withdrawn.
New royal walk created for HarrogateA royal walk has been created celebrating Harrogate’s links with the monarchy.
The route takes people past 18 locations with royal connections, such as the Sun Pavilion, which was re-opened by the Queen in 1998 and the King Edward VII gates to Valley Gardens.
It starts at Cathcart House and proceeds up Victoria Avenue and across Library Gardens to the Queen Victoria memorial.
It then goes down James Street, across to Old Tom’s Cabin, Farrah’s and Victoria Drive and up to the Edward Vll gates, Royal Baths Hospital, Sun Pavilion, Crescent Gardens before finishing at the Crown Hotel.
Walkers are advised to allow up to 90 minutes.
Stuart Holland, chair of Harrogate Civic Society, said:
“The walk is an opportunity to reflect on the many royal connections across the town.”
Read more:
The self-guided walk is accompanied by a leaflet providing information about the route as well as details of royal visits to Harrogate.
The leaflet is available from libraries, the tourist information centre and Mercer gallery, as well as online here.
The walk is a joint venture between Harrogate Dramatic Society, Harrogate Civic Society and Harrogate Borough Council.
The route was devised by Mr Holland and Harry Satloka, who operates Harrogate Free Walking Tours, as part of the Queen’s platinum jubilee celebrations.
Mr Holland and Mr Satloka led an inaugural walk today, which was followed by a one-act play by Harrogate Dramatic Society. Cllr Victoria Oldham, mayor of the Harrogate borough, was among those attending.
Free heritage days revealed for HarrogatePeople will get a rare opportunity to explore Grove House, the former home of Samson Fox, during next month’s Heritage Open Days.
The historic house, off Skipton Road, is one of 23 heritage sites in Harrogate opening their doors for free from Friday 9 to Sunday 18 September for free open days.
It is part of a national scheme celebrating history and culture that enables people to see places that are often closed to the public.
Sponsored by Harrogate Spring Water and coordinated by the Harrogate Civic Society, this year’s festival includes guided tours, talks and music recitals.
There will be the chance to discover Harrogate’s spa history at the Royal Pump Room Museum, explore the Royal Hall, Harrogate library and The Harrogate Club, join a tour of Harrogate Theatre, climb a tower, or take part in one of four different heritage walks.
Seven religious sites will be open, some with special music recitals or talks, and there are tours at Stonefall Cemetery. Plus a castle, a well, a heritage centre, and even a council chamber to explore.
The opening of Grove House and its gardens is one of this year’s new features.
Graeme Lee, chief executive at Springfield Healthcare, which owns the house, has plans to transform the site into a new care project.
Mr Lee said:
“We’re delighted to be part of Harrogate’s Heritage Open Days and share the remarkable heritage of Grove House, the former home of Samson Fox, Harrogate’s famous engineering inventor, benefactor, and mayor.
“When I bought the building I knew we had a unique opportunity to restore this beautiful Grade II listed house and grounds into high quality retirement apartments and a luxury care home for the community, whilst safeguarding the property’s rich heritage.
“We’re looking forward to opening our doors to showcase one of Harrogate’s oldest buildings, share stories of its past and the exciting plans for the future.”
‘Most varied programme for years’
Stuart Holland, chair of Harrogate Civic Society, said:
“This year’s Heritage Open Days programme in Harrogate is the most varied and
interesting for some years, with a fascinating mix of the town’s historical, cultural, civic and religious sites to explore.“The Harrogate Civic Society helps to coordinate participation by local venues in this festival, but all the hard work is done by the volunteers who open the doors, host the tours, and welcome their visitors. They all deserve our thanks.”
Richard Hall, managing director at Harrogate Spring Water, said:
“At Harrogate Spring Water, we have always been immensely proud to continue Harrogate’s rich legacy. From the town’s Victorian spa town heritage to its status today as a hub of culture and hospitality, we are delighted to lend our support to the 2022 Harrogate Heritage Open Days.”
Heritage Open Days, which is England’s largest festival of history and culture, is presented by the National Trust with support from players of People’s Postcode Lottery.
Read more:
- Harrogate’s Grove House set for £15m transformation into care and community facility
- Plans to convert Harrogate post office into flats withdrawn
Obituary: Malcolm Neesam 1946-2022
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.
Music librarian
He did this for three years before going to York, shortly before local government reorganisation in 1974, to become city music librarian.
But when reorganisation changed everything, Malcolm was offered a post by the new local authority as county music librarian, which involved buying music for county library services. Being a great lover of classical music, he was perfectly suited.
He stayed in York until 1996, overseeing new methods of administration, storage and repairs as technology changed and vinyl was replaced by cassettes and then CDs in North Yorkshire libraries. All the time he commuted from Harrogate.
He admired York’s decision to effectively pull out of North Yorkshire local government and become independent in the 1990s. Malcolm hated the trend towards ever more remote forms of local government, which will culminate in the creation of North Yorkshire Council next year and the abolition of seven district councils, including Harrogate Borough Council. He felt the more decision-making left Harrogate, the more the town lost control of its wealth and character.
Read more:
- Tributes paid to ‘Mr Harrogate’ Malcolm Neesam
- Harrogate historian Malcolm Neesam dies
- Harrogate Club honours local historian Malcolm Neesam
In 1996 he received an offer to work for an American company called Alumni Holidays, which arranged holidays for former university students.
He had done some guiding in York, which proved useful in his new role in which he gave lectures on subjects such as Scarborough, York and the Yorkshire Dales, Yorkshire architecture and Yorkshire literature. Alumni Holidays was horrified by his initial omission of James Herriot so the author was eventually added to his list of topics.

Malcolm worked for the company on a freelance basis for 10 years but the Madrid train bombing in 2004 severely disrupted business by leaving many Americans too afraid to travel to Europe.
Full-time writer
In 2006 he decided to concentrate on writing full-time. He had written short stories at school but didn’t let anyone see them. His writing career had begun in 1973 when the Library Association commissioned him to write a guide to children’s sci-fi called Into Space. It went to nearly every library in the country.
A founding member of the Harrogate Society, which later became Harrogate Civic Society, he was asked by local firms such as Ogden, Raworths and William Woods to write books for them. He also undertook research for plaques. His writing career, he said, “grew in stages”.
Harrogate in Old Picture Postcards was published in 1992, followed by Exclusively Harrogate in 1994 and Harrogate: A History of the English Spa from the Earliest Times to the Present in 2001. His works also included a centennial history of Harrogate Grammar School in 2003.
During this time he became, in the words of Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, “the chronicler of our town”.
The two books of which Malcolm was proudest are Harrogate Great Chronicle 1332-1841, which was the product of 40 years work, and Wells and Swells: The Golden Age of Harrogate Spa, 1842–1923, which was published in April this year. His beloved Harrogate Club named its dining room in his honour at the book launch. By then, Malcolm was in the advanced stages of the cancer that would claim his life and it was a deeply emotional occasion at a place that meant so much to him.

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.”
Freedom of the Borough
Malcolm was instrumental in establishing the listing of many buildings in the town and in establishing the first conservation area. He was also the founder historian of the Harrogate Brown Plaque scheme.
He was a member of the Harrogate Club from the 1990s and adored the place and its history. Arthur Conan Doyle once played billiards there.
Harrogate Borough Council awarded him the Freedom of the Borough in 1996 for his services as a historian. He supported numerous local organisations, including Harrogate Dramatic Society and Harrogate Theatre, often sitting on their committees.
Unfailingly polite, he was nevertheless often reserved and diffident in public. He rarely talked about his private life but close friends say he had a keen sense of humour, which could border on the macabre at times, and was an excellent cook.
Besides music, he had a passion for reading, especially non-fiction history and Victorian fiction, such as Dickens, Thackeray and Jane Austin.
But his lifelong passion was Harrogate. He loved its wide streets, the Stray and shops, and felt the population was just about ideal.
He never married. His elder sister, Shirley, who had two sons, died three years ago. Malcolm’s two nephews live in Burnley and East Sussex.
Asked where he was happiest, he said: “It may seem obvious but just sitting on the Stray under a tree.”
Malcolm Neesam, historian and author, born June 28, 1946, died June 28, 2022
Tributes paid to ‘Mr Harrogate’ Malcolm NeesamTributes have been paid to celebrated Harrogate historian Malcolm Neesam, who died yesterday.
Mr Neesam, who wrote some of the most authoritative books about Harrogate, died in the early hours of the morning on his 76th birthday.
He was a founder member of Harrogate Civic Society, whose chairman Stuart Holland described him as “an inspirational source of knowledge about our town”, adding.
“Always a gentleman in manner and appearance, Malcolm had an amazing way of recounting our history as a simple story.
“In his work with the civic society — originally the Harrogate Society — Malcolm was instrumental in establishing the listing of buildings in the town and establishing the first conservation area.
“He had an encyclopaedic memory of facts, people and places which made his presentations at meetings fascinating.
“As author of many books about the town, it was Wells and Swells, covering the golden age of Harrogate, 1842 to 1923, that Malcolm will more recently be remembered for.
“Alongside his research and writing, Malcolm was the founder historian of the Harrogate brown plaque scheme, from presenting plaques on the Tewit Well and Magnesia Well in 1975 to a staggering 92 plaques around the town today.
“The Harrogate Civic Society will keep Malcolm’s name alive by continuing in his footsteps, celebrating our rich heritage and past.”
‘Chronicler of our town’
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones wrote on his Community News website that Mr Neesam made a “profound” contribution to the area. He added:
“As a historian he was the chronicler of our town, and nobody knew more.
“His knowledge had depth and breadth, and he was always so generous in helping others tapping into that well of understanding. Malcolm was also passionate about music, and again his knowledge was huge.
“He cared deeply for Harrogate, its past and its future, using his unparalleled knowledge to inform debate.
“I recall very fondly many long conversations about our area and shared musical interests. As a very near neighbour I would see him regularly, and always enjoyed doing so.
“Malcolm was a Harrogate hero. He leaves a body of work that is impressive and an area much the better for all he did. This is indeed sad news, but we should give thanks as we think about him.”
Freedom of the borough
Harrogate Borough Council awarded Mr Neesam the Freedom of the Borough in 1996 for his services as a historian.
Councillor Graham Swift, deputy leader of Harrogate Borough Council, said:
“Malcolm had an enthusiasm and passion for the town and in 1996 was awarded the Freedom of the Borough for his services as historian of the town.
“On behalf of the borough council, I’d like to offer our deepest condolences and sympathy to Malcolm’s friends and family during this time.”
‘Forever Mr Harrogate’
Judy d’Arcy Thompson, chair of the Stray Defence Association and a friend of Mr Neesam, said:
“We will all be the poorer for the loss of Malcolm, ‘Mr Harrogate’, as he has been called. A true Harrogatonian who had a wealth of knowledge about our beautiful town and its history.
“He had a deep and abiding passion for this town and Malcolm knew more about our wonderful Stray, its origins and history, than anyone else. We will miss his knowledge and wisdom immensely.
“He will never be forgotten but be forever Mr Harrogate.”
Decision on Harrogate town council could take two years
A decision on whether to create a Harrogate town council is unlikely to be made until at least 2024, a meeting heard last night.
Wallace Sampson, chief executive of Harrogate Borough Council, outlined the lengthy legal process to members of Harrogate Civic Society.
Mr Sampson said North Yorkshire Council, which comes into existence on April 1 next year, would have to undertake a community governance review before any changes to Harrogate’s governance can take place.
This would involve two stages of consultation, likely to take place next year, followed by a final recommendation on whether to approve a town council.
If approved, a legal order would be made, followed by other processes before implementation.

Last night’s meeting.
Speaking at last night’s packed meeting, at which he and Councillor Graham Swift, deputy leader of Harrogate Borough Council, discussed local government reorganisation and devolution, Mr Sampson said:
“It’s really difficult to say how long that process will take but our best guess is 15 months to two years. If it happened by 2024 that would be a good timeframe.”
Mr Sampson also said elections for a mayor for the combined North Yorkshire and York regions would “probably” take place in 2024.
Read more:
- Harrogate town council: What is it and what would it cost taxpayers?
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Last night’s meeting discussed the implications of the momentous changes brought about by North Yorkshire devolution and local government reorganisation.
Harrogate Borough Council and six other district councils, along with North Yorkshire County Council, will be abolished next year when the new North Yorkshire Council comes into being on April 1.
8,000 council staff
Eight thousand staff will be brought together into what will be one of the largest councils in the UK, in a move estimated to save about £30m a year.
The loss of Harrogate Borough Council has led to concerns that Harrogate may lack a political voice after the changes, with most key decisions set to be made by North Yorkshire Council in Northallerton.
Last month Pat Marsh, the Liberal Democrat leader for Harrogate and Knaresborough, called for the process to create a Harrogate town council to begin “as soon as possible, within the next couple of months” but this seems unlikely to happen.
Philip Broadbank, the Liberal Democrat councillor for Harrogate Starbeck on North Yorkshire County Council, attended last night’s meeting and said afterwards the party would continue to push for the process “to be done as quickly as possible” but he accepted it would take time.
Cllr Swift told the meeting that Harrogate Borough Council’s civic centre at Knapping Mount “won’t be a white elephant” after the authority is abolished and would continue to be used by staff employed by North Yorkshire Council. He said:
“It’s going to continue to save you £1m a year forever.”