Update: Police have now identified the man pictured in the CCTV.
A teenager has been arrested following a serious assault in Harrogate town centre that left a man in hospital with multiple injuries.
It happened in the alleyway at the rear of Primark on Oxford Street at around 5.20pm on Friday (19 August).
Police want to speak to a man pictured by CCTV as officers believe he may have information about the incident.
The victim, a man in his 20s, was taken to hospital where he was treated for a fractured eye socket, black eye, lacerations to his face and cuts to his hands.
A 17-year-old male has been arrested following the incident.
A statement by North Yorkshire Police today said:
“Police are requesting the public’s assistance to help establish the full circumstances surrounding the incident as well as identifying a second male pictured by CCTV.
“Anyone with information that could assist the investigation should email graham.truman@northyorkshire.police.uk. You can also call North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for PC1563 Truman.
“If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
“Please quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12220147511.”
Read more:
- Police plea to Ripon parents after anti-social behaviour complaints
- Police seize drugs, knife and machete from car near Harrogate
Yorkshire Water giving out free bottled water at Ripon’s Market Place
People in the Ripon area have woken up to a water outage for the second time in a week.
North Road in Ripon is flooded, with pictures of it on Blow Your Horn Facebook page prompting comments by people in Ripon, Melmerby, Dishforth and Sharow they have no water.
Ripon and surrounding villages were hit by an outage last Thursday after a pipe burst on North Street.
In Harrogate, a burst main in Otley Road has cut water to some homes in HG2.
Follow our live coverage below.
5.45pm – Engineers ‘recharging the system’
The Stray Ferret asked a Yorkshire Water spokesperson if the burst main could leave some households without water into tomorrow.
He was unable to give any timescales but said engineers are working to ‘recharge the system’ which should restore the water supply. However, he said this needs to be done carefully to manage water pressure.
The spokesperson said he expects water will be ‘back on soon’.
5.20pm – Still no water for parts of Ripon
There is still no water for some properties in Ripon following this morning’s burst water main on North Street.
Yorkshire Water has arranged a bottled water station in Market Place, where anyone is free to come and collect bottles of water.
2.00pm – Yorkshire Water pumping water into Ripon network
Yorkshire Water is currently pumping water into its network via tankers. It’s so the city centre remains with water whilst engineers work to fix the burst main. No time has been given for when water will return back to normal.
The company is also looking for somewhere in the city for customers to collect bottles of water.
A Yorkshire Water spokesperson said:
“We are on-site fixing the issue and working hard to restore water supply as soon as possible.
“Our teams are delivering bottled water to customers on our priority service register, additional vulnerable customers and care homes. We’re also working with our partners to deliver bottled water to rural communities and set up a bottled water collection point for customers in Ripon. We will update as soon as we have a location for that.
“We’ve also put measures in place – such as tankering into our network – to make sure we can restore supply to as many customers as possible, as quickly as possible.”
12.05pm – Water restored in Harrogate, but Ripon awaiting a fix
A Yorkshire Water spokesperson has said the burst water main in Otley Road, Harrogate has now been fixed with customers back to their normal supply.
However, in Ripon engineers are still working to fix the burst pipe on North Street. It happened because last week’s burst, also on North Street, weakened another part of the pipe today causing it to burst.
Bottled water is being delivered to vulnerable customers and a bottled water station will be set up soon.
“Last week there was a burst on a 12-inch main on North Street, Ripon – we fixed the issue on the same day, but unfortunately it weakened another area of the pipe, which burst this morning. The new burst is around 20m away from the original burst.
“We’re on site working on the fix this morning – with temporary traffic lights and the same diversion still in place. We’re currently delivering bottled water to vulnerable customers, care homes and those on our priority services register. We will be setting up a bottled water station for other customers shortly.”
10.05am – Works on Otley Road
This is the current scene on Otley Road near to the junction with Pannal Ash Road where work is being carried out to restore water in the HG2 area.
9.55am – Ripon residents pitch in to prevent flooding

Barry Dolan, who helped to clear the drains.
A group of residents of North Road whose houses are beyond the clock tower junction when heading out of the city, ensured that their gardens and those of neighbours across the road, were not flooded for long, as they worked to unblock drains full of straw debris and fallen leaves.
Barry Dolan (pictured) said:
“The reason that the gardens were flooded by the water from the burst main, was because of the blocked drains (see photo) that get jammed up with straw that comes off passing trailers whose loads get caught by overhanging branches.
“When we woke to see what had happened a number of us joined in to clear the blockages and the water subsided.”

One of the blocked drains on North Road, Ripon.
Mr Dolan added:
“Because the drains are not cleared out regularly, we also get flooding along this section when there is heavy rain.”
9.45am – Ripon retirement apartment manager hopes water can be restored quickly

Yvonne Mulholland, outside McCarthy and Stone’s Dawson Grange.
For the second time in four days, Yvonne Mulholland, the manager of McCarthy and Stone’s Dawson Grange retirement apartments on North Street (pictured) had to call Yorkshire Water for an emergency supply of bottled water.
She told the Stray Ferret:
“We have residents in 28 apartments, some of whom are vulnerable and needing to keep hydrated.
“Yorkshire Water were very good last week and supplied us with 40 bottles to give to residents and I have spoken with them again this morning.
“With the burst main immediately outside our premises, I just hope that the problem can be sorted out quickly and with the minimum of disruption to our residents and neighbours.”
9.40am – Temporary lights on Pannal Ash Road
Temporary lights have been put in place between the junction of Pannal Ash Road and Pannal Ash Drive.
Yorkshire Water said this morning that technicians were on site to carry out repairs and return water to residents.
8.45am – Water could be off for up to six hours
Yorkshire Water is reporting on its social media that water in Ripon could be off for between four to six hours.
The company added that it will “aim to get the water back as soon as possible”.
https://twitter.com/YWHelp/status/1561596914608619521?s=20&t=a4N3hfvun0oDwQWv6NjV-g
8.20am – Technicians on Otely Road
Yorkshire Water has confirmed that technicians are on site at Otley Road to try and get water back on for residents.
https://twitter.com/YorkshireWater/status/1561608712887930880?s=20&t=RJa7hFCYZHV6nTLeUeZ1tQ
8.10am – Pictures from North Street
This is the current scene at North Street in Ripon, where a burst pipe is causing a water outage for residents in the area.
7.55am – Yorkshire Water confirms burst pipe
Yorkshire Water has tweeted this morning to say a burst pipe on North Street is causing the outage in Ripon.
⚠️ #HG4 #Northstreet ⚠️ I am sorry to inform. Customers may have low pressure or no water due to a repair of a main needed due to a burst pipe. Apologies for any inconvenience. Updates to follow. -Laura pic.twitter.com/jAqfVMoKmr
— Yorkshire Water Help (@YWHelp) August 22, 2022
7.52am – Ripon resident: ‘This is ridiculous’
One resident in Ripon has got in touch with the Stray Ferret to report the outage.
They said:
“The burst water main in North Street has gone again, this morning it’s flooding the road again. We live on a residential park on Palace Road and had no information the first time.
“This is ridiculous, how are pensioners supposed to carry four litres of water to their homes.”
7.48am – Bishop of Ripon reports outage
The Bishop of Ripon, Helen-Ann Hartley, tweeted to Yorkshire Water:
“No water in Ripon again. Any idea how long this time? Will more bottled water and information be forthcoming, especially to outlying villages please?”
7.45am – Reports of water outage
Reports have come in from Harrogate and Ripon of a water outage and low pressure in the areas.
Yorkshire Water said on its website:
“Customers may have no water or low pressure due to a burst main. We are working to restore supplies back to normal as soon as possible.”
In Harrogate, a burst main n Otley Road has cut water to some homes in HG2.
One person affected received the following response from Yorkshire Water:
“Our technicians are on site dealing with the repair, however it could be 4-6 hours before the water comes back on and when it does it may be a little cloudy and discoloured.”
Read more:
TV presenters join Harrogate mayor at jurassic golf
The Mayor of Harrogate borough and former presenters from ITV Calendar took part in jurassic golf in Harrogate town centre last weekend.
Duncan Wood and Christine Talbot joined Cllr Victoria Oldham to take on the nine-hole course.
The course has been set up outside the Victoria Shopping Centre until Saturday, August 28.
Alongside the course, a Dino Trail has been set up in the town centre.
As people complete the trail, they will also be collecting letters that form a simple, themed anagram. Users can then submit the anagram/answer via the LoyalFree app for an additional chance to win a prize draw.
Read more:
- Knaresborough shop owner’s appeal brings support after tough summer weeks
- The Farm Dairy takes main prize at Knaresborough Business Awards
Matthew Chapman, manager of Harrogate Business Improvement District, which has led on the initiative, said:
“In addition to coming into town to shop, eat and drink, visitors can now add mini-crazy golf to the list. The crazy golf in the Valley Gardens is incredibly popular, and we are confident our jurassic golf will be a roaring success.
“And once you have completed the challenging nine-hole course, there’s a dinosaur-themed themed trail to follow around town. A great way to spend an hour or two before or after visiting Harrogate’s great shops, bars and restaurants.”
Those wishing to play a round of golf can turn up on the day or book on the jurassic golf website here.
The cost is adults £3, children £2.50, family of four (two adults and two children) £10 and one adult and one child £5.
Kex Gill realignment cost increases to £68mThe cost of a county council project to realign the A59 at Kex Gill has increased to £68.8 million.
A North Yorkshire County Council report said the authority faces a £7.2 million shortfall on the cost due to a rise in inflation.
The project will see a diversion built west of Blubberhouses on the stretch of road, which has been blighted by a history of landslips. The A59 is the main route between Harrogate and Skipton.
County council officials originally estimated that the scheme would cost £61.6 million.
Of that figure, £56.1 million worth of funding has been granted by the Department for Transport and the remaining cost will be covered by the authority.
However, in a report due before an executive meeting on Tuesday, the council has now said it faces a further shortfall of £7.2 million in funding for the scheme.
Read more:
- £60m Kex Gill contract to be awarded
- Delayed A59 Kex Gill reroute now set to start next year and finish in 2025
It means the council has had to increase the funding it is allocating to the scheme to £12.7 million.
As a result, the council intends to use £7.2 million from its Brexit reserve account in order to fund the scheme.
It said:
“Should alternative funding resources be secured, whether in part or in full, the reserve provision will be relinquished.”
Council officials expect work to start on the scheme next year and continue until 2025.
North Yorkshire County Council previously said it hoped the reroute would start in autumn last year and take 15 months.
Ahead of appointing a contractor for the scheme, a full business case will be submitted to the Department for Transport.
Stray Views: Starbeck should support KFC expansionStray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Starbeck should support KFC expansion
Thank you for your recent coverage of the KFC expansion. I’m saddened by the responses of Starbeck residents to the expansion of a successful business, and the demonisation of the industry as a whole.
Starbeck has rightly or wrongly become a refuge for the care system, the homeless, and people needing supported and sheltered accommodation. These people don’t have the incomes to support lovely deli’s and independent retail units that some residents loudly protest we should have. The businesses in Starbeck need to survive in a tough local environment. However, they can use the strategic location between Harrogate and Knaresborough to reach a massive local market and we should support them in doing so.
Empty shops bring disasters like McColl’s burnt out shell and feed a vicious cycle of crime and poverty. On an evening, our high street is a hive of activity and there is a real hustle and bustle thanks to our takeaways and food outlets. We should be leaning into this to create a real foodie destination to bring more jobs and improve Starbeck’s reputation.
Any one of us could take over these empty shops and start a business. If they believe there is a genuine demand for smaller retail shops, then I would challenge them to put their money where their mouth is.
William Powell, Starbeck
Read more:
- Stray Views: Noisy cars in Harrogate should be monitored at weekends
- Stray Views: Station Gateway ‘will degrade things’
Stonefall Cemetery deserves more care
Stonefall Cemetery has traditionally been kept beautifully and was always cared for. However it seems this year the grass cutting is rough, careless and damaging.
I have noted now that the last five cuts have been made with heavy machines which aren’t really suitable for delicate areas. The cut grass is being left and is now preventing new growth, leaving the plots looking awful. I’m sure the council realises this is a graveyard and not a roadside verge. Our families deserve more care and respect.
I contacted Stonefall and they were sorry to hear my complaint but told me that the council had changed the garden team before Christmas.
I also frequent Harrogate Valley Gardens in Harrogate, which is beautifully cared for. Shouldn’t we provide the same care for our dearly departed?
Mark Anthony Taylor, Harrogate
Gateway correspondence response
In response to last week’s Stray Views letter regarding Station Gateway being “long overdue”, I note that the correspondent lives in Knaresborough.
Gillian Long, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
‘Everybody matters’: Marie Curie’s UK medical director on why she has the ‘best job in the world’When Dr Sarah Holmes was on a hospital ward round and it became clear a long-term patient was dying, a consultant said they didn’t need to see her anymore.
“Outraged” at this, Dr Holmes, who had only recently qualified, snuck away and went to see her.
It was at this moment she realised she wanted to pursue a career in palliative medicine.
Now, just over 20 years later, she is a consultant in this field and is the medical director of Marie Curie Hospice Bradford, where she has worked since 2007.
In July 2020, she became UK medical director for Marie Curie, and combines this role with her ongoing clinical work in the hospice.
‘There is loads we can do to make life better’
Dr Holmes, who is set to move to Harrogate in the coming weeks, told the Stray Ferret:
“I just really wanted to make sure that people are looked after right until the end of their lives, not just if an illness is fixable.
“Even if the illness can’t be cured, there is loads that we can do to make life better. From working at Marie Curie for so many years, I see that every day.”
Marie Curie is the UK’s leading end of life charity. It provides frontline nursing and hospice care, a free support line and a wealth of information and support on all aspects of dying, death and bereavement.

Marie Curie Bradford Hospice.
Describing the work of Marie Curie, Dr Holmes explained that the team looked after anyone with a life-limiting illness.
She explained:
“A lot of people think we just look after people with cancer, but it can be any life-limiting illness. So I see lots of people with motor neurone disease or Parkinson’s disease or lung conditions. All sorts of conditions really.
“When you tell people you work with people who have got life-limiting illnesses, they say ‘oh gosh that must be really depressing’. But actually, it’s just an amazing job. It’s the best job in the world.
“It’s all about life and living and getting the most out of life.”
Dr Holmes said there were obviously sad moments, as they were looking after people who were dying.
However, she said there was an enormous sense of satisfaction to know that you had supported a person to die peacefully and comfortably.
Read more:
- Charity Corner: the Starbeck charity that puts mental health at the forefront
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She added:
“You also make a difference to the family afterwards as well. We are here to look after them and make sure they get all the support that they need.
“People are amazing. They let us into their lives at points that are really difficult. It’s just an incredible privilege what they share with us.
“I feel really lucky to be doing this job.”
Nursing service
Dr Holmes said while the Bradford hospice supported that particular population, there was a nursing service in North Yorkshire made up of qualified nurses and healthcare assistants.
She said:
“In the Harrogate area, if someone was at home and dying, one of our healthcare assistants or nurses would go and be with them overnight.
“It gives the family a chance to get some rest because sometimes it can be quite hard work looking after someone all the time at home. So it allows the family members to get some sleep and be confident that their loved one is being looked after.”
Dr Holmes said the work of Marie Curie was vital.
She said:
“I think it is really important actually. Just looking after people at the end of life is really important.
“Whatever advances we have in medical science, we are all going to die at some point. We get care from before we are born, but actually I think sometimes not everybody gets the care at the end of their life that they should get.
“We feel at Marie Curie that we have got a really important role to raise awareness of the importance of that.
“Everybody matters and everybody should be able to get the care and support that they need right up until the end.”
Fundraiser
The Marie Curie Brain Game is returning to Yorkshire for a fourth time on Thursday, January 26 and for the first time in Harrogate in the newly refurbished Majestic Hotel & Spa.
Guests will be treated to a drinks reception before enjoying a gourmet three-course dinner. The celebrity-hosted quiz will run throughout the evening and guests will also have the opportunity to bid for exclusive lots in the live and silent auctions, and win prizes in the grand raffle.
This black-tie event invites companies from across Yorkshire to come and enjoy an evening of brain-teasing entertainment and battle it out in the ultimate corporate quiz to be crowned Yorkshire Brain Game champions.
To book a table, click here.
Kingsley residents suffering construction dust call on council to tackle developersResidents in Harrogate’s Kingsley ward say construction traffic has left them worrying about harmful dust and air pollution — but a “weak” Harrogate Borough Council has done little to clamp down on developers.
Over 700 homes will eventually be built in the ward by five different developers but Kingsley Road and Kingsley Drive are accessed off the busy Knaresborough Road.
This has led to lorries and trucks driving through residential roads to get to the building sites.
Residents say the construction traffic has resulted in vast amounts of dust and dirt from lorries ending up on roads, cars and houses. They say it’s so bad they worry they’ll have to wear masks to protect themselves.
Gary Tremble, from Kingsley Ward Action Group (KWAG), said:
“We have complained for over three years yet to this day the wagons travel down our residential street spewing out dust in summer and dirt in winter, we now even have fully laden uncovered wagons taking dirt into the developments.”
Mr Tremble believes the dust is made up of PM10, an air pollutant typically seen on building sites. When breathed in, it can penetrate deep into the lungs.
Exposure to high concentrations of PM10 has been linked by scientists to asthma attacks, high blood pressure, heart attacks and strokes.
‘We’ve been ignored’
When a development receives planning permission from HBC, conditions are attached that stipulate how housebuilders will minimise the impact of issues including dirt and dust.
This sometimes involves making sure there are onsite wheel cleaners and covering wagons that are carrying materials or waste.
Mr Tremble added:
“We’ve made hundreds of complaints to Harrogate Borough Council but enforcement but are weak. They don’t do anything and we’ve been ignored.”
Read more:
- Calls to tackle construction vehicles who cause ‘misery’ in Harrogate
-
Residents criticise key Harrogate planning document as ‘incoherent’
The issue of how effective the council’s planning enforcement team was raised at a council meeting this week.
Conservative councillor for Old Bilton, Paul Haslam, said he and other councillors had received complaints from KWAG accusing the council’s planning enforcement team of not ensuring that conditions were being upheld.
Conservative councillor for the Washburn ward, Victoria Oldham, asked Cllr Haslam if he thought HBC’s planning enforcement team was acting on complaints from residents “in a timeous manner”.
Cllr Haslam said he was concerned that enforcement officers “don’t have enough support”. He said:
“Quite clearly, guidelines are being flaunted [sic] by the developers. We need to make sure we are seen to protect our residents.”
‘Addressing the concerns’
In response to KWAG, a Harrogate Borough Council spokesperson said:
Starbeck Tennis Club holds fun day“We are aware of concerns relating to dust from HGVs entering and exiting the development(s) on Kingsley Road and have allocated a case officer to address these concerns.
“We have discussed the matter with the county council and the developer and have reminded them of actions they must maintain as per the conditions of the planning permission.
“These actions have been actioned – as well as some further recommendation, including road sweeping – by the developer and we will continue to closely assess this situation to ensure they continue to do so.”
Starbeck Tennis Club is staging a fun day this weekend to celebrate its 65th anniversary.
A vintage tennis tournament, live music, barbecue and bouncy castle are among the planned activities.
The club, which has three all-weather artificial grass courts on Bogs Lane, offers competitive match tennis in the Harrogate and York tennis leagues as well as friendly tennis.
Founded in 1957, it currently has about 100 members.
Club secretary Abbé Steele said:
“We are a really social club and often get around 20 members on our weekly mix-in nights where anyone can come along of all standards and play.
“We are in desperate need of a clubhouse face lift so the money raised on the day will be going towards this.”
Everyone is welcome to attend Sunday’s event, which lasts from noon until 5pm and includes a tournament using vintage tennis rackets.
Read more:
- Ripon Tennis Centre opens new £180,000 padel tennis courts
- Starbeck groups call truce and promise to work ‘positively together’
Exploring the universe in a Harrogate back garden
In his garden in Harrogate, James Clark looks through a telescope to millions of light years away, almost all the way back to the start of the universe.
He explains why astronomy fires his passion:
“It’s the wonder of the universe and how small we puny humans are I suppose, it makes you realise how irrelevant we are.”
Now retired, Mr Clark grew up on Star Trek and even had Professor Steven Hawking as a lecturer when he studied maths at Cambridge University.
He’s only been stargazing for a year but has already captured an impressive line-up of planets, nebulae and galaxies through his telescope.
He said:
“I’ve never done any photography before but I’ve always been interested in physics. I realised the quality of picture you can get from your back garden as the technology has developed to such an extent. Once I started I was hooked.”

The Whirlpool Galaxy
As well as studying the stars from his garden, he enjoys packing up his equipment and heading out to a remote spot far, far away in the outer reaches of the Harrogate district.
His favourite place is Thruscross Reservoir car park due to its pitch black skies. He said:
“Astronomy is really great for mental health and communing with nature.
“Sitting outside listening to the wild animals and spotting the occasional meteor in a dark sky is just heaven.”

Saturn and Jupiter. Credit – James Clark
Read more:
- ‘Serious concerns’ over Swinsty Reservoir parking charges plan
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Mr Clark has been inspired by Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope, which cost billions of dollars and has recently started to beam back lustrous images from space back to earth.
But he said technology for the amateur astronomer is now relatively affordable. He uses the same software as that at Nasa, bought for just a couple of hundred pounds.
“My favourite picture is of the Whirlpool Galaxy, 30 million light years away. We’ve had some printed up and have a few around the house.”

The Moon. Credit – James Clark
He started out using a cheap Canon DSLR but since upgraded to a telescope that cost over a thousand pounds. To help him develop his skills, he interacts with an active community of “astros” on Twitter who support each other.
With so much time spent looking up at the stars, he said he sometimes ponders the age-old question of whether we are really all alone whilst we float in space.
“Absolutely I believe that we are not the only intelligent life out there.”
Whilst most of us are dreading the shorter days and longer nights that come with winter, the budding astronomer is looking forward to being able to spend more time in the darkness, exploring the endless expanse.

The Squid Nebulae. Credit – James Clark
A cyclist remains in hospital more than a week after he was involved in a serious collision with a car on Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road.
A section of Cold Bath Road was closed for several hours following the incident at the junction with West Cliffe Grove on the afternoon of Friday, August 12.
An air ambulance landed on West Park Stray to treat the man, who was taken to hospital.
The crash, on one of the main roads in Harrogate, was witnessed by numerous distressed bystanders, but details since have been scant.
The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire Police for an update yesterday.
A police spokesman said:
“All I can confirm is that the investigation is ongoing and the cycle rider, a man aged in his mid-50s from the Richmond area, continues to receive treatment in hospital.”
Read more:
- Cyclist suffered ‘serious injuries’ in Harrogate crash
- Witness appeal after collision on Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road