Train operator Northern has announced a flash sale of £1 tickets from Harrogate and Knaresborough to Leeds and York.
Five million tickets are on sale and people have until 4pm tomorrow (January 5) to purchase.
The tickets are valid for travel between Wednesday, January 10, and Friday, March 1, 2024 ,and must be booked at least seven days in advance of travel.
Mark Powles, commercial and customer director at Northern, said:
“The ‘Flash Sale’ extends to every corner of our network, with £1 tickets up for grabs for both local and longer, cross-country journeys.
“We hope the ‘Flash Sale’ will inspire people to get out and about across the region, for those moments that matter most – days out with the family, catch-ups with friends or for no reason other than to enjoy the beautiful countryside and coastlines our region has to offer.
“As always, customers should book early to avoid disappointment. Once they’re gone, they’re gone.”
People can buy the tickets online, on Northern’s website or its app.
Destinations along the Leeds line eligible for the discount are:
Bradford Forster Square, Carlisle, Chester, Doncaster, Halifax, Harrogate, Huddersfield, Ilkley, Knaresborough, Knottingley, Lancaster, Manchester Victoria, Morecambe, Nottingham, Selby, Sheffield, Skipton and York.
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Ladies’ Day to boost Harrogate footballer’s cancer treatment fund
Two back-to-back football matches will be played at Harrogate Railway this weekend as part of a day of fundraising.
Ladies’ Day will see the women’s reserves play at noon on Sunday, followed by the first team facing Farsley Celtic at 2pm.
Entry will be free for spectators, with a barbecue, raffle and refreshments all on offer as part of the entertainment.
First team coach Rich Burns told the Stray Ferret:
“it’s a celebration of ladies’ football in the club and the region. We’ve gone from one football team to four in the space of two years.
“I’ve been there for 15 years and we’ve only had one senior ladies’ team and various girls’ teams. Since the Euros, where the Lionesses were successful, now the World Cup and the WSL, there’s a real growth and demand for women’s football in the region.”
As well as first and reserve teams, Railway now has an under 18s ladies’ side, offering teenagers the chance to learn, or continue learning a sport they have enjoyed at school.
Rich said it offers a natural pathway into the adult teams too.
And it is for one of the first team players that the day has been organised.
Dee Swales played for the club for around five years, before moving to Farsley Celtic. She returned two years ago, but last year was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Rich said:
“She has been undergoing significant treatment and dealt with the first part really well, but she has unfortunately developed a secondary cancer.
“The NHS doesn’t fund the treatment she needs when it’s for secondary cancer, so you have to raise funds yourself.
“She has been dong loads of stuff and fundraising, but the club really wanted to show our support for this as well.”
Setting a target of £1,000, the club said any money raised that exceeds the amount Dee needs will be split between Macmillan and Cancer Research UK.
Harrogate Railway Football Club on Station View, Starbeck, will host the event
Dee is also planning to join in the fun on the day – though will have more reason than most to play it safe. Rich said:
“She’s a week away from being married. I think the biggest challenge is keeping her off the pitch, because [fiancee] Abi would absolutely kill us if she gets injured for the wedding!”
With women’s football much more popular than ever before, Harrogate Railway are hoping for a big crowd at the event on Sunday.
Rich added:
“Everyone’s aware of Rachel Daly and her ties to the region. She spent a small amount of time with Railway and when she came back from the US during the summers, she used to come to our training sessions.
“It has been really fantastic that the Lionesses have been offering discounted tickets to grassroots clubs.
“We’ve been able to support them a few times and we went to see them at Wembley.
“You don’t get the same level of animosity you can get at the men’s game and it does seem very family-friendly.
“Seeing 87,000 people in Wembley for a ladies’ game was fantastic – it was a celebration of football.”
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Starbeck stages its community day
Starbeck Community Day took place today to raise money for the annual Christmas lights appeal.
The free event, at Harrogate Railway AFC on Station View, included a range of stalls as well as a drinks bar.
There were also donkey rides and live performances from groups including Starbeck Dancing for Wellbeing.
The day also saw the crowning of the annual Starbeck community king and queen. The honours went to Ted Carman, 9, and Celeste Reid, 9.

(from left) Last year’s queen Kya-Mae Goodwin, 11 new queen Celeste Reid and new king Ted Carman.
It is one of four events held each year to raise funds for Starbeck Christmas Lights Appeal.
There is also an Easter fun day, a craft fair and nearly new sale and a Christmas fayre.
Organiser Chrissie Holmes said:
“We have to raise £8,000 a year to keep the lights going. They really brighten up Starbeck and the children love to see them walking to and from school on dark nights.”

Visitors could learn about the plans for Knaresborough Forest Park.
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Meat-pie eating contest to be held at Starbeck Community Day
An annual community event is returning this weekend to raise money for the Starbeck Christmas Lights Appeal.
Starbeck Community Day will include a range of stalls and rides, as well as a drinks bar and live entertainment throughout the day.
Visitors can also enjoy donkey rides, an obstacle course and live performances from Starbeck Dancing for Wellbeing and the Summerbell Dance Academy.
Competitions will be held throughout the day to boost the fundraising efforts, including a meat pie-eating contest for adults and a jelly-eating competition for children.
The 2023/24 Starbeck community king and queen will also be crowned on the day.
Christine Holmes, group leader of the Starbeck Christmas Lights Appeal, told the Stray Ferret:
“We’re raising funds for the Starbeck Christmas lights, it’s to pay for the maintenance or any replacements we need.
“We took it over about nine years ago to keep the tradition going, with prices rising all the time we’re constantly raising funds. We were quite a lot down on donations last year.
“We really need to boost the funds quite a bit. It is a community day and it’s there for everybody to enjoy.”
Last year, the community day raised around £700 as part of the £8,000 required to fund the Christmas lights. The 2023 event hopes to beat that figure.
The event will take place from noon to 4pm at Harrogate Railway AFC on Station View. Entry is free.
A Disney-themed parade from Starbeck Methodist Church to Harrogate Railway AFC will begin the event
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Two footballers who started out on pitches in Harrogate and Knaresborough will be bidding for a place in the Women’s FA Cup final this weekend.
Leah Galton and Rachel Daly have risen from local leagues to play as strikers for two of the biggest clubs in the country.
Galton, who began as a junior with Knaresborough Celtic and then played for Harrogate Railway, has banged in 29 goals for Manchester United Women since she joined them from Bayern Munich in 2018.
She is the joint third highest scorer in the Women’s Super League this season with eight goals.
Manchester United Women will line-up against Brighton & Hove Albion Women at 5.15pm today.
United, who have never won a major women’s trophy but are top of the Women’s Super League, will be fancied to beat lowly Brighton.
Tomorrow, Daly’s Aston Villa Women will take centre stage in the second semi-final against Chelsea Women at 2.15pm.
Daly, who started at Killinghall Nomads and won Euro 2022 with England last year, is second on this year’s leading scorer list with 13 goals.
If Manchester United and Villa win, it could result in the remarkable prospect of two local women playing up front in the cup final at Wembley.
Both semi-finals will be televised live on the BBC.
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Harrogate’s Leah Galton wins WSL Player of the Month
Harrogate-born Leah Galton has won Barclays Women’s Super League Player of the Month for December.
Galton, who plays as a winger for Manchester United, picked up the award after scoring against Aston Villa and Manchester City last month.
The former Knaresborough Celtic and Harrogate Railway forward has found the net for United 23 times since signing in 2018.
It is the third time a Harrogate-born player has won Player of the Month in 2022 after Aston Villa’s Rachel Daly picked up the award for September and November.
Galton, who was a student at St John Fisher Catholic High School, has also represented Leeds United, Sky Blue FC and Bayern Munich in her career.
Meanwhile, United manager Marc Skinner also won Barclays Manager of the Month for the Women’s Super League.
Skinner oversaw an unbeaten month for the club in December, which saw them pick up four points.
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Rail replacement services to operate between Harrogate and York over Christmas
Train passengers between Harrogate and York will face disruption over Christmas as Network Rail carries out track and signalling work.
The organisation will undertake £6 million improvements at York Station from Christmas Eve until January 2, 2023.
It will see 2.7km of track renewed, as well as nine sets of points – the specialist piece of equipment which allows trains to move from one section of track to another.
The work means that passengers from Harrogate and Knaresborough will have to change at Poppleton and board a rail replacement bus to get to York.
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Network Rail has urged people to check services before they travel and have warned that services will take longer than normal.
Sam MacDougall, operations director for Network Rail’s East Coast route said:
“Our teams will be out working hard this Christmas to provide an improved railway for passengers.
“The work at York is crucial to keep trains running reliably and smoothly for years to come. Our engineering work and the impact of planned industrial action will mean changes to some services, so passengers are urged to plan ahead and check before travelling.”
A spokesperson on behalf of train operators on the route said:
“These key upgrades at York will mean changes to services over the festive period and passengers should check their journey before travelling via National Rail Enquires or their train operator.
“We are working hard to keep people moving this Christmas, with rail replacement services and diversion routes, but this means your journey will take longer and may be busier than usual.”
The move comes as LNER cancelled two trains from Harrogate to London King’s Cross today due to a shortage of train crew.
The 9.36am and 5.36pm services have been affected.
Meanwhile, passengers on the 3.36pm service have been asked to travel to Leeds to board the train as a shortage of crew means it will no longer call at Harrogate and Horsforth.
Goalkeeper’s journey from Harrogate Railway to the Champions LeagueBeginning your career at Station View in Starbeck and ending up at grounds like the San Siro, Nou Camp and the Allianz Arena is an unlikely, even implausible, career path, but Jon McLaughlin was tipped for the top from the very start.
The 34-year-old Glasgow Rangers goalkeeper started last night during a 1-0 win over PSV that secured his club’s place in the Champions League group stages for the first time in over a decade.
Rangers were regulars in the competition in the 2000s when McLaughlin was starting out his career at Harrogate Railway.
Back then, he was a lanky 19-year-old student at Leeds Metropolitan University taking his first steps into part-time, non-league football.
‘The Battle of Harrogate’
McLaughlin made his debut for Railway in the Unibond League Cup away at Gateshead in 2006, due to an injury to the first-choice keeper.
He soon cemented his place in the side and stood out during Railway’s second fairytale FA Cup run of that decade. They were eventually knocked out by Mansfield Town in the 2nd round, live in front of the BBC cameras.
Earlier in the competition, fans of both Railway and Harrogate Town fondly remember his performance in a 2-1 qualifying win over a pre-Irving Weaver Harrogate Town.
The two clubs were at a much more even level than today.
It was a blustery October afternoon game that was watched by 1,300 at Station View. In a match report, non-league blogger Paul Kirkwood described the atmosphere, which contrasts wildly to the cauldron of Ibrox that the goalkeeper plays in today.
“The local paper tried to bull up the match as ‘The Battle of Harrogate’ but it was more like a cordial meeting of two old friends at the famous Betty’s Tea Rooms down the road.”
The Scot’s talent was evident, and it was clear Railway had found a gem.
Following Railway’s FA Cup heroics, he was signed by Town in early 2008. At the time, then-Railway boss Vince Brockie predicted the 20-year-old would play for Scotland one day, and he eventually did in 2018.
‘Massive for the club’
Railway’s secretary Dave Shepherd said he was proud to see one of the club’s former players make it to the top of the game
“To have an ex-footballer make it at the very top level is massive for the club.
“He was quiet really, even back then, but he was very dependable. He always turned up for training and games and was never a problem.
“I can remember back then we had a group of lads who came and sang to him, Scotland’s number one, tongue in cheek.”
Harrogate Railway’s vice chairman Lee Holmes said Railway has been a good starting point for many players over the years.
“He was really, really good. I was there for the match against Town and he did well. He was a brilliant player.”
Katherine Swinn, of Harrogate Town Independent Supporters Group, also remembers McLaughlin as a “great keeper, too good for non-league and very highly thought of”.
Up the ladder
After leaving Town after half a season, McLaughlin moved to professional, full-time football with Bradford City. They were then managed by Harrogate resident and fellow Scot Stuart McCall.
His career has included a League Cup final at Wembley and he will be hoping to make the Scotland squad for the Qatar World Cup later this year, but he still credits his time in Harrogate as laying the foundations for his success.
He told the Daily Record in 2020
“I follow all my former teams. Harrogate Town just got promoted and it’s great to see them starting to build.
“When I was at Harrogate Railway before that, the pitches were open to anyone who wanted to walk in but nobody wanted to walk in unfortunately!
“There were a couple of men and a dog watching games so it’s the polar opposite to now.
“It’s great to be where I am now and hopefully it means I’ll never take it for granted.
“I have an appreciation for what I have now. I know first hand the difference between lifestyles from then and now – and the hours you have to dedicate to it.
“I don’t think any of the Harrogate lads are playing pro football now. We’re talking about quite a few levels below the National League in England so it was part-time boys.
“We try to stay in contact but I don’t get down too often. I don’t get the chance to get involved in the reunions but it would be great to go back.”