Archie Gray has signed his first professional deal with Leeds United.
Gray, who turned 17 last Sunday, agreed the two-and-a-half year deal with the club until the summer of 2025.
The midfielder is yet to make his debut for the club, but was named as an unused substitute for the Whites five times in the Premier League last season.
Gray completed his GCSEs at St John Fisher Catholic High School in Harrogate last year.
He is also great-nephew of Leeds legend, and Kirkby Overblow resident, Eddie Gray.
In a statement following Gray’s signing, Leeds United said:
“Everyone at Leeds United would like to congratulate Archie on signing his first professional deal and we look forward to his future progress.”
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- Harrogate student scores wonder goal for Leeds youth team
Collapsed Harrogate firm Amvoc set to enter administration
An insolvency firm has been appointed to handle the process of placing failed Harrogate firm Amvoc into administration.
Staff at the telemarketing firm were left shocked on Tuesday night when they received a late night email from chief executive Damian Brockway saying “all our offices are closed with effect from tonight”. It went on to blame “covid debts”.
Law firm Aticus Law has now been contacted by 145 former employees as it investigates the circumstances of the company’s collapse and concerns around how the redundancy process was managed, as well as whether ex-staff are eligible to claim for compensation.
Gareth Lewis, director of Leeds firm Lewis Business Recovery and Insolvency, said today it was handling the administration process.
He said:
“I can confirm that following the directors’ decision to make all employees redundant on Tuesday evening, this firm was engaged on Wednesday to assist with the process of placing the company into administration.
“It is anticipated that the company will be placed into administration in the coming days, and we are now collating all financial and employee information to enable us to perform our duties.
“We have contacted former employees through our agents IPERA, who will assist employees with the process of making their claims through the government’s Redundancy Payments Service”.
Founded in Dacre
Mr Brockway set up Amvoc, the trading name of A Marketing Vocation Ltd, from a small office in Dacre in 2010. It sold telemarketing services, initially in the legal sector, and grew rapidly, moving first to Pateley Bridge and then to large offices at New York Mills near Summerbridge.
It opened a new head office on Cardale Park in Harrogate in 2015, a facility in Leeds in 2018 and an office in Manchester in 2022. It also had plans to expand to London.
Amvoc’s clients included BP, Barclays, Virgin Media, Leeds Beckett University, and both the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties.
Its website said it employed 450 staff but the Stray Ferret believes the figure at the time the company collapsed was under 300.
Read more:
- Law firm to represent about 100 staff at failed Harrogate firm
- Hundreds of job losses as Harrogate company goes under
We again attempted to contact Mr Brockway today. An immediate emailed response said:
“I regret to inform you that Amvoc has been forced to cease trading with immediate effect due to financial difficulties.
“We understand that this news may come as a shock to many of you, and we want to assure you that we are doing everything possible to manage the situation.
“We are in the process of contacting all our staff, clients and partners to inform them of the situation and provide any necessary information. We apologise for any inconvenience or disruption this may cause, and we are committed to minimising the impact on our stakeholders as much as possible.”
This story is sponsored by Jespers Bar & Kitchen.
Danish-born Jesper Callisen opened Jesper’s Bar & Kitchen on Station Parade with the aim of creating a unique, cosy space that offers quality delicious food and drink, with amazing service, that will ensure all guests are treated to a fantastic experience.
The venue that was previously run by Filmore & Union and Hustle & Co, now has a bar, with a sophisticated restaurant upstairs serving refined British fare with an international twist in the evenings. In the Spring/Summer there is also the opportunity to enjoy al fresco drinking and dining in the courtyard and pavement seating.
But even though the 36-year-old may seem relatively young to open a 90-cover restaurant staffed by 18 people, he’s no novice to the industry.
“I first became interested in hospitality at the age of four, when I watched my brother practising his bartending skills in the garden. At the age of 7, I started collecting miniature bottles of whisky. “I wanted to be the best bartender in the world. I didn’t quite get there , but my passion for the industry grew and I managed to become pretty good.”

Some of the cocktails and food available at Jesper’s Bar & Kitchen in Harrogate.
Jesper has previously been crowned Denmark’s champion flair bartender three times consecutively and was ranked 8th in the world at the 2011 World Championships.
After opening Ofelia, a “wildly popular” bar for the Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen in 2008, he then took his skills around the world, living and working in the Caribbean, Brazil, France, Spain and the UK. He said:
“I love people and I have worked and studied incredibly hard to be able to have the opportunity to travel, work and experience the hospitality industry in many walks of life.”
“After qualifying as a sommelier, I moved to the Cayman Islands, where I was lucky enough to work with an exquisite amount of fine wines.
“I ran the biggest tasting room in the Caribbean, with over 80 wines available by the glass. That was where I honed my skills and learned how to give people an experience they don’t forget.
“We don’t have quite that many here, but we do have a great deal of specially selected fantastic wines at different price levels, and they’re all superb. We also have lots of unique tipples, including an 1899 vintage cognac – only one exists in the world.
“We strive to create a place that makes you feel good, where you are looked after and the service and product you receive are second to none. A lifetime of stories will come to show on your plate, in your drink and from the service you receive.”

As well as being a champion flare bartender, Jesper Callisen is a qualified sommelier and holds wine-tasting evenings.
Jesper’s Bar & Kitchen marks the start of a long-awaited dream for Jesper, who runs it with his wife, Kelly. He said:
“We have been looking for the perfect place to open something like this for many years. We didn’t want to stay abroad and wanted to find a place where we call home. My wife, who has family that live in the surrounding area, loves the warmth and friendliness of Yorkshire people, so we came here. And she’s right about the people – they’ve made us feel very welcome.”
Jesper’s Bar & Kitchen will be holding events throughout the year, including wine tastings, cocktail masterclasses, live music, themed dinners and lounge sessions, and soon, Jesper’s will be serving street food tapas for lunch and in the bar in the evenings. This will be in addition to the restaurant offering in the upstairs dining area.
“This restaurant means the world to us, and we are just so lucky to be able to share it with such a wonderful community. Some customers have already become friends.”
“This is absolutely what I want to do,” he says. “It started when I was four years old, and now we’re here.
Find out more:
Jesper’s Bar & Kitchen is open every day except Tuesdays; for opening times, visit the website, www.jespersbarandkitchen.co.uk.
To reserve a table or enquire about booking a private function, call 01423 552844 or book online.
Harrogate Spring Water ‘reviewing plans’ to expand bottling plant ahead of new application
Harrogate Spring Water has said it is reviewing plans to expand its bottling plant on Harlow Moor Road ahead of a new planning application being submitted.
Since 2017, the Danone-owned firm has had outline planning permission to expand its factory next to the Pinewoods.
But controversially, this would involve chopping down trees at Rotary Wood, a public woodland that includes trees planted by schoolchildren in the 2000s.
In January 2021, a high-profile reserved matters application that was 40% larger than the outline permission and looked to fell more trees than had been agreed was turned down by Harrogate Borough Council‘s planning committee.
The application generated a public backlash and led to a national debate about how a successful businesses can expand in the area of climate change and plastic pollution.
Following the refusal, Harrogate Spring Water confirmed it was putting together another keenly-anticipated reserved matters application that will show what the new building will look like. Crucially, it will also say where the new trees will be replanted.
The company held a public consultation event at the Crown Hotel in Harrogate last July where representatives, including managing director Richard Hall, spoke to residents about the plans.
Eight months later, the company has still not submitted the reserved matters application but a Harrogate Spring Water spokesperson said it remains committed to doing so.
The application will be decided by the new Harrogate and Knaresborough planning committee on North Yorkshire Council.
A spokesperson for Harrogate Spring Water said:
“Following the public consultation last year, we have and are continuing to review the feedback and develop the scheme.
“We are reviewing our plans in light of feedback we have received and are working towards a solution that will deliver for the people of Harrogate, the town and for Harrogate Spring Water.
“We are currently exploring options to address points raised during the course of our consultation process and remain committed to a detailed public consultation on these plans when we are ready to share the updated scheme.
“We plan to host a public drop-in exhibition, as well as engage with key local groups. As yet, we are unable to put a precise date on when this will take place, but we are working towards achieving this in as timely a manner as possible.”
Read more:
- Harrogate Spring Water investigating new water sources on council land
- Campaigner accuses Harrogate Spring Water of ‘greenwashing’ over expansion plans
At a meeting of the Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee this week, campaigner Sarah Gibbs quoted the council’s own planning policies when she addressed councillors about why she believes the expansion should not go ahead.
As several members of the committee will sit on the new council’s planning committee, including chair Pat Marsh, they did not take part in any debate or ask questions.
Ms Gibbs has organised protests against the plans for several years and previously held a weekly vigil outside the council offices dressed as a tree.
She said:
Harrogate’s ex-Cold Bath Deli owner publishes first novel“Having finally recognised the state of emergency of the planet’s climate, it’s becoming more obvious that nature does not care for our laws policies or planning issues.
“Nature will act. The climate will continue to worsen unless we act, and we must act now. For what we do now is all that matters. What we choose to do now will determine or future, children’s future and future of the planet.”
A BAFTA-nominated investigations journalist who lives in Harrogate has published his first novel.
Peter Woolrich, who along with his wife Tracey used to run Cold Bath Deli on Cold Bath Road, spent 12 years working on A Corroded Soul.
The novel is based on his own life as it tells the story of a 50-year-old journalist with questionable character traits who evaluates himself after his mother’s death.
Mr Woolrich said:
“During my career I had guns, knives and a samurai sword pulled on me. I’ve worked for national newspapers, magazines and television.
“In writing my book, you might say I’ve turned the spotlight on myself rather than criminals.”

Peter Woolrich
The novel is set in a fictional village similar to the one Mr Woolrich grew up in and is the first in a planned trilogy.
A Corroded Soul‘s main character, Daniel Connah, uses his difficult relationship with his mother as justification for multiple character flaws, including stealing and being a social misfit and sex addict.
Mr Woolrich, along with Daniel, said he also felt unloved by his mother. When Mr Woolrich’s mother died after a car crash, he was consumed with anger, abandonment and feeling bereft and the book explores whether emotional neglect can be as damaging as physical.
He said:
“Don’t get me wrong, I wasn’t beaten or sexually abused in horrific circumstances like many youngsters, but it’s amazing how many people feel damaged by being raised in an unloving environment.
“Some readers have said Prince Harry expresses similar sentiments in his book. Perhaps it’s a question of where we think individual responsibility begins and ends.”
A Corroded Soul is available in bookshops and can be viewed/ordered here.
The book launch, which is open to everyone, is being held upstairs at North Bar in Harrogate at 7pm on April 6.
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Blanket 20mph limit across south Harrogate ‘urgently needed’
A blanket 20mph speed limit across the south side of Harrogate is “urgently needed”, a councillor has said.
The proposal would see all streets between York Place and the southern edge of Harrogate limited to 20mph.
The petition has been set up by parents Hazel Peacock and Vicki Evans, who founded the Oatlands Road Safety and Active Travel Campaign. They say it is vital to ensure children can travel to and from school in safety.
The pair presented the case to councillors on Harrogate and Knaresborough constituency area committee yesterday.
Ms Peacock told councillors that the group wanted “safer streets for the community” and pointed out that the petition had already reached 700 signatures.
She said:
“Maximum speed limits of 20 miles per hour have been delivered in other rural and urban areas of Yorkshire and the UK including Calderdale, Cornwall, Oxford, Edinburgh and the Scottish Borders and London with positive effects.”
Read more:
- Pressure grows as politicians join calls for road safety outside Harrogate schools
- Accident reignites calls for safe routes to Harrogate schools
- Hundreds sign petition for 20mph limit across south Harrogate
She highlighted recent crashes on Beechwood Grove and on Yew Tree Lane, where two teenagers from Rossett School were seriously injured and required hospital treatment.
In the wake of the incident on February 2, headteachers from almost every primary and secondary school in the area met at Harrogate Grammar School to urge representatives of North Yorkshire County Council to take action.
During the meeting, Cllr John Mann, who represents Oatlands and Pannal, said he backed the proposal and described it as being “urgently needed”.
He said:
“I support the Oatlands road safety petition.
“I have written to the head of highways and the cabinet member for highways saying that I support the petition.
“I have also called for Yew Tree Lane, Green Lane, Hookstone Road and Beechwood Grove to have 20mph speed limits.
“In my view, as a member for the area, this change is urgently needed to improve road safety and reduce air pollution.”
Melissa Burnham, area highways manager for the county council, said the authority was meeting with the group to discuss the proposals.
Next week, the group is due to meet again – this time at St Aidan’s Church of England High School – and will be joined by a caseworker for Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, as well as the county council’s transport lead, Cllr Keane Duncan, and local councillors whose divisions are affected.
The meeting of more than 30 people will follow a walk around the Pannal Ash area led by the parents, for councillors and school representatives to discuss the issues.
Business Breakfast: Swinton Estate announces staff promotionsIt’s time to join the Stray Ferret Business Club. The third in our series of networking events in association with The Coach and Horses in Harrogate is a lunch event on March 30 from 12.30pm.
Don’t miss out on this chance to network with businesses from across the Harrogate district. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
The Swinton Estate in Masham has announced a raft of staff promotions
Kevin Sansom, John Lawrence and Jordan McPhillips will be taking on new roles as Samuel’s Restaurant manager, head concierge and assistant financial controller respectively.
Meanwhile, Louise Dermott and Helen Pritchard have been promoted to spa guest services manager and therapist trainer within the country club and spa team.
The estate has also hired Nicolay Araujo as Terrace Restaurant manager.
Swinton Estate said on its Facebook page:
“A huge thank you to all the team for their continued hard work and the important part they play in our Swinton family.”
Government minister visits Harrogate Bus Company

Buses minister Richard Holden (second left) at Harrogate Bus Station with (from left) Transdev operations director Vitto Pizzuti; Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones; Transdev commercial manager Matt Burley; and network manager Alex Spencer.
The government’s buses minister paid a visit to Harrogate Bus Company this past week.
Richard Holden visited the firm’s training centre in Starbeck where he spoke with trainee drivers, before visiting the bus station in Harrogate town centre.
The minister also met younger colleagues starting out in the bus industry, as well as older recruits taking up bus driving as a change of career.
Accompanied by Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP, the minister then attended the operator’s headquarters with operations director Vitto Pizzuti, training manager Dale French and commercial manager Matt Burley.
Mr Pizzuti said:
“We’re delighted to have welcomed the buses minister, who saw for himself the lengths we go to during wintry weather to keep our buses on the road serving our customers.
“The minister was also impressed to learn of the success of our government-supported £2 price drop, which has helped us to attract record numbers of motorists to leave their car keys at home and choose the bus instead.”
Mr Holden said:
“Having invested more than £2 billion to support bus services since the pandemic, it’s fantastic to see so many people using the bus here in Harrogate.
“Our £2 bus fare cap is helping to turbocharge the return of passengers, and we will continue to work hard with local authorities and operators like the Harrogate Bus Company to get even more people to hop back onto the bus.”
Read More:
- Business Breakfast: Graveleys fish and chip restaurant opens in Harrogate
- Business Breakfast: National firm acquires Harrogate accountants
- Business Breakfast: Pavilions of Harrogate secures high-end retail events
Funding for Harrogate and Knaresborough cycling projects ‘not guaranteed’
A senior county council officer has said the authority is not guaranteed to receive any funding to improve cycling and walking in Harrogate.
Officials at North Yorkshire County Council have bid for £3 million to fund three schemes across the county.
Their priority scheme is Victoria Avenue in Harrogate, which would see parking spaces removed to create segregated cycleways.
But they also have plans to create cycle lanes on the A59 Forest Lane in Knaresborough from Maple Close to Knaresborough High Bridge.
The government told the council it had an “indicative allocation” of up to £1.08 million, which it could put projects forward for in order to be assessed. It then encouraged the authority to apply for more funding, which led the council to bid for an additional £2.16 million.
A decision on the funding is expected by the Department for Transport tomorrow.
However, at a meeting of the council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee this morning, Cllr Michael Harrison, a Conservative who represents Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate, asked senior officers whether the indicative allocation was guaranteed.
Melissa Burnham, highways area manager for the council, said:
“We have put the bid in for the three schemes, but we are not necessarily guaranteed to get any of them.
“We are hopeful. But until tomorrow, we just don’t know.”
Cllr Harrison said that councillors should measure their expectations ahead of the decision on funding.
He said:
“We need to bear that in mind when we keep promoting things.
“We have to be realistic about what we can deliver and that’s assuming that we get the money.”
Read more:
- Confirmed: second phase of Harrogate’s Otley Road cycle route scrapped
- Harrogate’s Otley Road to be dug up again
- Council bids for £3m for cycling projects in Harrogate and Knaresborough
Value of Harrogate district tourism up by £31m, new figures reveal
Visitors to the Harrogate district are staying longer and spending more than they were pre-pandemic, according to new statistics.
However, the number of visitors over the same 2019 to 2022 timeframe fell by 650,000 from 6.47 million to 5.82 million.
Destination Harrogate, the Harrogate Borough Council tourism organisation, said today visitors contributed £637 million to the local economy last year, compared with £606 million three years previously.
The organisation also said the average length of stay increased from 2019 to 3.5 days, compared with 3.3 days three years previously. This is despite the fact the UCI Road World Championships took place in Harrogate in 2019, leading to high hotel occupancy rates in September that year.
John McGivern, destination events manager at Destination Harrogate said it was “fantastic news for our local businesses and residents”, adding:
“The fact that people are staying longer and spending more aligns directly with our objectives of a sustainable tourism model, attracting more revenue into the local economy, whilst minimising the impact on the environment.
“Together with our partners, with whom we share this achievement, we can celebrate the significant impact that our visitors are making on our local economy and can we look forward to further successes going forward.”
The figures are based on a tourism economic impact modelling process called STEAM that uses local supply-side data and visitor survey data. More information on the Harrogate district data is here.
Destination Harrogate aims to grow the visitor economy to £836.7 million by 2030, however its future is unclear after Harrogate Borough Council is abolished to make way for the new North Yorkshire Council in two weeks’ time.

Rudding Park Spa. Pic: Charlotte Gale
Cllr Stanley Lumley, cabinet member for culture, tourism and sport at Harrogate Borough Council, applauded Destination Harrogate for “boosting the economic impact of visits to the area”. He added:
“Harrogate’s visitor economy is the largest driver of the local economy second only to the property sector, and its value cannot be underestimated.
“With such a positive set of results we can look forward to a prosperous future for Harrogate as a major tourism destination within North Yorkshire.”
Since its launch a year ago, Destination Harrogate has delivered activities including a health and wellbeing campaign under the Visit Harrogate brand to attract higher spending visitors to stay longer for healthy breaks, Harrogate Christmas Fayre; events on the Stray marking the Queen’s platinum jubilee and the return of Harrogate Carnival.
Read more:
- Law firm to represent about 100 staff at failed Harrogate firm
- Bid begins to create new North Yorkshire tourism body
Law firm to represent about 100 staff at failed Harrogate firm
Almost 100 staff at failed Harrogate telemarketing company Amvoc are to take legal action over the way redundancies were managed.
The Stray Ferret revealed yesterday up to 450 people received an email at about 10pm on Tuesday night from chief executive Damian Brockway informing them the firm had ceased with immediate effect.
Mr Brockway said the company had entered administration and blamed “covid debts”.
Based at Cardale Park in Harrogate, Amvoc also has offices in Leeds and Manchester.
Within hours of the news breaking, employment law firm Aticus Law said it had been contacted by 91 people affected.
The firm said it was now in the early stages of investigating the circumstances of the company’s collapse and concerns around how the redundancy process was managed.
It was also looking into whether ex-employees were eligible to claim for a protective award claim against the company.
Aticus said if its clients were able to successfully pursue a claim, those involved would receive up to eight weeks’ worth of pay in compensation, with a cap of £571 per week.
The Manchester-based firm is currently representing over 130 ex-employees to bring a protective award claim against Made.com which entered into administration last year, around a dozen former employees of FlyBe, and more than 50 staff who lost their jobs when BritishVolt collapsed earlier this year.
Edward Judge, a founding partner at Aticus Law said:
“We have now been contacted by 91 individuals who say that they have been affected by job losses following the recent collapse of Amvoc.
“We are in the early stages of investigating those claims, and advising our clients on their options.”
“As is always the case with protective award claims, the individuals who have reached out to us for advice regarding their rights are understandably very anxious and concerned about what the future has in store for them.”
A protective award is compensation awarded by an employment tribunal if an employer fails in its duties.
Mr Judge added:
“The protective award is a vital safety net for so many families in fast-paced redundancy situations that often leave them with no source of income and absolutely no notice.
“However, many people don’t realise that you can only get a protective award payment if you are included as part of the claim and are listed as part of the Schedule of Claimants attached to the tribunal judgment.”
Read more:
Mr Brockway’s email to staff, seen by the Stray Ferret, said:
“We have appointed administrators with immediate effect who will now be responsible for paying wages this week and all outstanding bonuses.
“I am gutted. Words fail me.
“Unfortunately our covid debts were too high and repayments not high enough. We have been issued with immediate request to pay all outstanding within seven days which is impossible.
“I cannot tell you how upset this makes me.”