Longstanding Harrogate butchers Addyman has come up with a creative window display tribute to the Queen.
Keith Addyman has traded on Commercial Street for 48 years and his grandfather previously had a pork butchers at New Park.
His wife, Sue, created a ‘cake’ for this year’s platinum jubilee made out of a crown and containers the shop uses to make pork pies for weddings.
Ms Addyman, who once met Princess Margaret, said:
“I did it for the jubilee and when it ended I removed the crown. When the Queen died I put it back on.”

The pork pie wedding cake
The pork pie wedding cake, as it’s known, now adorns the shop window alongside a photo of Her Late Majesty.
Ms Addyman added:
“A gentleman came in and said ‘you’re one of the only shops in Harrogate doing something to commemorate the queen.”
Addyman will be closed on Monday, when the state funeral takes place.
Read more:
- The Queen’s funeral: Harrogate district arrangements for Monday
- No requirement for staff day off on Queen’s funeral, says Harrogate solicitor
Frustration over delays to new Harrogate steakhouse
The team behind a steakhouse which was set to move into an empty Harrogate restaurant almost six months ago, have spoken of their frustration over the delay.
Last November, Tomahawk Steakhouse revealed it was planning to move into the former Solita Food Hall.
It was set to open in April, but the unit on Parliament Street, which was also formerly Jamie’s Italian, has remained empty.
A spokesman for Tomahawk told the Stray Ferret:
“At the moment Tomahawk are tied up with legalities that have unfortunately been completely out of our control.
“We were all prepared and ready to go, but with liquidators from the previous owners comes a lot of red tape. We have had to sit on the sidelines whilst it gets thrashed out between the relevant parties.
“It is a shame because we would love to get going with everything and get open, but it’s completely out of our hands.
“So if the people of Harrogate are wondering what is going on with the venue, we are in exactly the same boat.
“We are, however, hoping this will draw to a close very soon and are waiting for information due to come our way anytime over the next few days.”
The steakhouse had initially planned to move into the empty Bistrot Pierre unit on Cheltenham Parade in January, before deciding to change its location to Solita Food Hall’s space.
Instead Samsons brasserie and bar moved into the Cheltenham Parade site in March. However it is currently shut “for essential works”, according to a spokesperson for the restaurant.
Tomahawk Steakhouse has restaurants in a number of locations, including Chester, York and Newcastle.
Read more:
- New restaurant to open at former Bistrot Pierre site in Harrogate
- Harrogate food hall to close after just six months
Business Breakfast: Knaresborough firms to be quizzed on energy bills
Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
Knaresborough businesses are to be quizzed about the impact of higher energy bills.
Knaresborough Chamber of Trade & Commerce said at its latest meeting it would undertake a survey of local businesses in the coming weeks.
It will attempt to find out how much their bills are increasing by and how much difference recently announced government plans to support them will make.
Peter Lacey, executive member of the chamber, which has about 60 members, said the online survey was likely to go out in the middle of next week and it is hoped members and non-members will respond to provide a fuller picture of the situation confronting businesses in the town.
Harrogate law firm partners with Yorkshire Dales Millennium Trust.

LCF Law staff plant hundreds of trees at their first volunteering day.
Harrogate law firm, LCF Law has entered a partnership with the Yorkshire Dales Millennium Trust.
LCF Law will help the trust, which looks after the Yorkshire Dales, plant 1,000 trees over the next two years.
Simon Stell, managing partner at LCF Law, said:
“We are hugely committed to working sustainably and offsetting our carbon footprint and we also want to leave a long-term legacy.”
Staff at the law firm, which employs 125 people at offices in Harrogate, Bradford, Leeds and Ilkley, will volunteer for the trust as part of the partnership.
In 2021, the trust planted 31,851 trees.
Read more:
- No requirement for staff day off on Queen’s funeral, says Harrogate solicitor
- Queen’s coffin drape supplied by royal flag makers in Knaresborough
Harrogate woman gets suspended prison sentence for ‘appalling assault’
A Harrogate woman has received a suspended prison sentence after being found guilty of assault.
Elaine Manaley, 55, of Dene Park, attacked the woman who was named in court on August 2 last year.
She denied the offence, which occurred at Dene Park, Bilton, but was found guilty at York Magistrates Court on Monday.
Court documents described it as an “appalling assault on a member of the public”.
Manaley was also found guilty of damaging a pair of glasses and a wrist watch worth £120 belonging to the same victim. She denied the charge.
Read more:
A warrant was issued for the arrest of Manaley when she failed to appear in court on Friday last week to answer the charges against her.

York Magistrates Court. Credit: Flickr.
She was subsequently arrested and appeared before magistrates on Monday where she admitted three instances of failing to submit to custody having been released on bail.
Manaley was sentenced to nine weeks in prison, suspended for 12 months.
She was also ordered to pay a total of £894. This consisted of £620 to the Crown Prosecution Service and £274 compensation.
Work begins to create Harrogate’s first mosqueBuilding work has begun to create Harrogate’s first mosque, which could be open in time for Ramadan next Spring.
The building on the corner of Tower Street and Belford Road has stood derelict for several years but Harrogate Islamic Association is bringing it back into use.
Around 100 Muslim worshippers, from a diverse range of backgrounds, currently meet in the Quakers’ Friends Meeting House in Harrogate and Chain Lane Community Hub in Knaresborough.
Unique project
Converting a former hospital, masonic hall and home guard club into a mosque has to be one of the most interesting building projects in Harrogate.
After completing the sale in May, there have been some nasty surprises.
The roof was in a much worse state than previously thought and then partially collapsed, which could have thrown the whole project into doubt.

Interior image of the building
Thankfully, the collapse hasn’t damaged the integrity of the walls, leaving workers able to press on with repairing the roof.
HIA member Zahed Amanullah said:
“There was a concern that the roof was degraded so much that we’d have to replace it, which we hadn’t anticipated and would be prohibitively expensive. Even logistically, we weren’t sure replacing the roof would even be possible.
“But a roofer gave us another opinion that has meant it can be saved. We just needed to progress with removing the actual tiling of the roof, investigating which parts are damaged, then restoring it.”
Read more:
- ‘Over the moon’ as sale completes on planned Harrogate mosque
- Harrogate Islamic Association confident of mosque purchase as deadline looms
Getting it watertight
Scaffolding has now gone up around the building and will remain there for the next two or three months whilst roofers make sure the building is watertight ahead of winter.
Work will also take place to smarten up its exterior and will include adding a new render and restoring the windows.
Mr Amanullah hopes the ground floor will be safe and clean by the end of this year so it can open for some congressional prayers.
He said the HIA may need to fundraise again to complete the upper level of the building, but he is confident all the uncertainty and hard work will be worth it in the end.
He added:
“Developers wanted to demolish it and I don’t think the building would have survived another winter. The collapse was quite dramatic.
“Our main goal is always the next Ramadan in March and April. That would be our goal to open for worship.
“We’re confident. It was a big risk to take.”
Harrogate Islamic Association will be posting updates about the project on its Twitter account.
Fashion retailer Jules B set to open new Harrogate store tomorrowLuxury fashion retailer Jules B is set to open a new store in Harrogate tomorrow.
The boutique, which will be in the former Jaeger unit on Cambridge Crescent, will sell womenswear.
The retailer offers collections by designers including Oska, Holland Cooper, NU London, Rag and Bone and Barbour International.
Owners Julian Blades and his wife, Rhona, opened their first womenswear store in Jesmond in 1984.
Read more:
Mr Blades said its brands “will be perfect for the sophisticated customer demographic in Harrogate and surrounding areas”.
He added:
“After years of planning to find the perfect location, our newest and biggest store in Harrogate is an inspiring womenswear shopping destination that covers two fantastic floors.
“We knew the time was right when the old Jaeger unit became available as it perfectly suits the Jules B aesthetic.”
An official launch event will take place on September 22.
Why is there so much paint on the pavements in Harrogate town centre?Anyone visiting Harrogate town centre recently will have noticed colourful doodles on footpaths by Station Parade, James Street and Cheltenham Parade.
It’s not a conceptual art project and has an important purpose, according to North Yorkshire County Council who painted them.
Paint is sometimes added to footpaths before roadworks take place to help engineers identify underground services such as water pipes, electricity cables or broadband.
The £11.2m Station Gateway scheme is arguably the biggest infrastructure project to come to Harrogate in decades and the sheer scale of the project means there is now “gateway graffiti” splattered in front of many shops, cafes and restaurants.
NYCC said the paint is semi-permanent and will wear off, but it could still be there during Harrogate’s busy Christmas period.
North Yorkshire County Council’s assistant director of highways and transportation, Barrie Mason, said:
“The markings are necessary to identify underground services as part of the planning work for the proposed Harrogate Gateway scheme, if the decision is taken for the project to go ahead, and is routine practice to help avoid problems in many situations where contractors will be working.
“The paint is semi-permanent and will wear off over a matter of months but care is taken to keep its use to a minimum.”
Read more:
- Transport chief denies inflation will lead to ‘cheap’ Harrogate Station Gateway
- Stray Views: Harrogate Station Gateway scheme is ‘long overdue’
When will work start on the Station Gateway?
The project is still yet to be given the final green light.
A third round of public consultation recently ended.
But last night, Cllr Keane Duncan, executive member for highways and transportation at NYCC, told businesses that work is likely to start next year if councillors approve it.
Cllr Duncan also discussed whether inflation will increase the final cost of the project.
No requirement for staff day off on Queen’s funeral, says Harrogate solicitorA Harrogate solicitor has said there is “no legal requirement” for employees to be given a day off for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II.
The government has announced that Monday’s state funeral will be a national bank holiday.
Consequently, many businesses plan to close and give staff the day off. But there is confusion over whether they are legally obliged to do so.
James Austin, from Harrogate-based LCF Law, today clarified the situation.
Mr Austin, who specialises in employment law, said although it was likely many employees would be given time off, it was not a legal requirement for all employers.
He said:
“For example, employees may be eligible if their contract of employment states that they are entitled to say ‘20 days holiday plus bank holidays’. However, if the contract refers to the employee only being entitled to ‘the usual bank holidays,’ this wouldn’t apply.
“In addition, they might not get the day off if, for example, the contract refers to 28 days’ holiday including ‘bank holidays,’ which could mean an employer simply deducts a day’s holiday from the non-bank holiday entitlement.”
Mr Austin added:
“However, this is a unique national moment so we suspect the majority of employers will give staff the time off, which is what we saw with the Jubilee.
“Where employees are entitled to the day off, but the employer wants them to work, the contract will usually state whether the employer can require this and, if so, whether the employee is entitled to extra pay or time off in lieu.”
LCF Law employs more than 125 people at offices in Harrogate, Leeds, Bradford and Ilkley.
Read more:
- The Queen’s funeral to be televised at Ripon Cathedral
- Charles proclaimed king in Ripon and Harrogate
Business Breakfast: Cost-saving expert is on hand to help Ripon businesses
Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
Ripon Business Improvement District is urging businesses who are looking for help or advice with navigating the ever-changing business cost market to get in touch.
Appointments with the BID’s cost-saving expert, Rishi Sood of Place Support Partnership (PSP) were originally planned for September 19, but have re-scheduled to October 20, following the Queen’s death.
BID manager Lilla Bathurst (pictured) said:
“Our aim is to deliver on issues that are important to our member businesses and cost saving in the current economic climate is considered high priority.
“In response to business needs, PSP were commissioned by Ripon BID to support local businesses through our Place Saving Programme focussing on business critical spend areas including energy, telecoms, merchant services and water.”
Appointments can be made via info@riponbid.co.uk or by calling call 01765 530 910.

The new units on Cambridge Street.
Project to bring Harrogate retail unit back into use complete
A project to bring a vacant Harrogate retail unit back into use has been completed.
The boarded-up shop on Cambridge Street was purchased by Broadland Properties in 2020 and the 25,000 sq ft former Topshop store has now been reconfigured into a mixed-use retail and leisure development.
It now includes Cosy Club, Sainsbury’s Local and Skipton Building Society.
Matt Harriman, associate direct at GV&Co which project managed the scheme, said:
“It’s great to see this scheme come to such a successful conclusion, with an impressive line-up of new retail and leisure tenants taking their place on this busy Harrogate high street.
“The unit had been vacant since 2017 and we managed the extensive enabling works to divide the property into separate units, with new services and several structural changes to suit the revised layouts, as well as external refurbishments over three phases. These included new windows, stone cleaning, and stonework repairs.
“Now fully let and brought back to life with Sainsbury’s, Cosy Club and Skipton Building Society all in place, we have thoroughly enjoyed working with a big project team that included engineers, GGP, architects, DLA, RGP building control specialists, Ball and Berry letting agent, Robinson Webster managing agent, Ryden, Brentwood Consulting Engineers, and contractor JP Wild for Broadland Properties.”
Read More:
- Business Breakfast: district’s pubs decide whether to open for The Queen’s funeral
- Business Breakfast: Harrogate business announces first Chinese Board of Directors
Harrogate man banned from keeping animals after cruelty case
A Harrogate man has been disqualified from owning pets for five years after being found guilty of neglecting two dogs.
Charlie Nelson, 28, of Woodfield View, was found to be in breach of the Animal Welfare Act at York Magistrates Court yesterday.
The court heard Nelson did not take reasonable steps to look after a mastiff called Rocco and a lurcher called Smudge at High Street, Harrogate, on March 18 last year.
Court documents reveal he was banned from keeping animals “to ensure no animals suffer at the hands of the defendant during this period”.
They also show an order was made under section 33 of the Animal Welfare Act 2006 depriving him of ownership of a dog and for its disposal.
Nelson was also ordered to pay costs of £200 and a surcharge of £95 to fund victims’ services.
Read more:
- Malnourished dogs found in Harrogate flat covered in faeces and urine
- Harrogate man banned from keeping animals for five years
North Yorkshire Police issued warrants in July for the arrest of Nelson and his brother Robbie Nelson after they failed to turn up in court to face animal cruelty charges.
Robbie Nelson, 24, of Woodfield View, was subsequently banned from keeping animals for five years.
The RSPCA said Rocco and Smudge were malnourished and living in a flat covered in faeces and with carpets soaked in urine.

An RSPCA picture of the flat where the brothers kept dogs.