Harrogate & Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones has told a constituent that he feels “anger” over partygate — but would not say whether he has submitted a vote of no confidence in Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
The long-awaited Sue Gray report was published last week and found that many of the parties in Downing Street “should not have been allowed to happen”.
The report included details of vomiting and parties lasting until 4am while the UK was under covid restrictions.
Following the publication of the report, a constituent wrote to Mr Jones. The MP responded in a letter on May 27 with his thoughts on the subject.
The constituent asked not to be named, but shared the letter with the Stray Ferret.
Mr Jones wrote:
“I understand the anger people feel. I feel it too. Most of all I feel intensely depressed that senior people in our political system have pretended, or somehow genuinely believed, that tables groaning with bottles of wine, as we have now seen pictured, were in some way allowed work practices.”
Mr Jones has previously been outspoken over partygate and said in the letter that his “anger is not going to lessen”.
Read more:
- Resign and higher fines: Harrogate district bereaved families react to PM’s lockdown party fine
- Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’
In January, the MP wrote to a different constituent to say if criminal actions were found then “consequences must flow from that”.
In April, the Prime Minister was given a fixed penalty notice for attending a birthday gathering on June 20, 2020. It made him the first Prime Minister to have been found to have broken the law while in office.
However, the letter suggests that Mr Jones now considers the case closed.
He wrote:
“My anger isn’t going to lessen and I am not going to forget this episode in the story of Covid-19. But I won’t be commenting again unless something substantially new comes to light having already responded to hundreds and hundreds of emails and letters on every aspect of this matter.”
The BBC has reported at least 20 Tory MPs have written to the 1922 committee of backbenchers with letters of no confidence in the Prime Minister.
Fifty-four letters are needed to trigger a leadership vote, but Mr Jones would not reveal if he has submitted one, writing:
“This is a matter that will remain between myself and the chair of the 1922 committee.”
The Stray Ferret has asked Mr Jones for his views following the publication of the Sue Gray report, but has not received a response.
From corgis to bollard covers: Harrogate district is getting into jubilee spiritWith just a few days to go before the Queen’s platinum jubilee celebrations begin, signs of the festivities are already appearing across the Harrogate district.
Harrogate corgi Mr Bingley has been posing in front of famous landmarks across the town ahead of the Queen’s platinum jubilee.
With corgis being the Queen’s favourite breed of dog, Mr Bingley’s owner, Molly Fetherston, thought it would be a “bit of fun” ahead of the upcoming weekend of celebrations.
The pictures show the 10-year-old dog outside Bettys tea rooms, by the Sun Colonnade in Valley Gardens, on the Stray, and near the Harrogate picture frame and Slingsby Gin shop.

Photograph: Rozalia Szatanik Photography

Photograph: Rozalia Szatanik Photography
Ms Fetherston said:
“Shockingly, he doesn’t mind dressing up, especially when he gets extra cuddles from people passing by!
“Almost every day when we go on walks, I’m stopped by at least one person telling me they don’t see many corgis or that their grandmother had one, but that they haven’t seen one in years.
“He’s almost like a little nostalgic furball and I love seeing the smiles on their faces. We all had so much fun and Mr Bingley loved all of the special attention from both shop owners and residents alike.”

Photograph: Rozalia Szatanik Photography
Read more:
Meanwhile in Knaresborough, a group of knitters have been busy making bollard covers for the jubilee.
The bollards, on Market Place, are now adorned with colourful covers with toppers of the Queen, corgis and a crown or two.
The knitted covers were commissioned by Knaresborough Business Collective and made by a group of local knitters and crochet artists called KYM.

Photograph: Brian King

Photograph: Brian King
Pret a Manger has been criticised for opening a new shop in Harrogate that is currently inaccessible to wheelchair users.
Customers to the sandwich and coffee chain, which opened on Harrogate’s James Street on Friday, have to walk up two steps to enter.
Pret has said a permanent ramp cannot be fitted due “to the structure of the building”.
It added that a low-level bell has been fitted outside to alert staff to bring out a “purpose-designed portable ramp” when requested but it has not yet been delivered.
Local resident, Jeannine Fisher, contacted the Stray Ferret today after seeing a wheelchair user unable to get inside the shop. She said:
“It makes me very frustrated that we should exclude people from society. It beggars belief that a multinational company, who must clearly be aware of the guidelines, have neglected to create inclusive access.
“With everything else that wheelchairs users have to navigate in the town it feels so unfair that they are unable to do simple things that others can do such as having a coffee with their friends.”
Harrogate charity Disability Action Yorkshire offers accessibility audits to help businesses do all they can to be fully accessible.
Chief executive Jackie Snape said:
“It is very disappointing that Pret had not consulted with disabled people, or a disability organisation, about accessibility to its new James Street outlet. We would be more than happy to speak with the local team as to what they can still do to aid disabled customers.
“We do note, however, that Pret has a digital accessibility policy on its website, it’s just a shame there isn’t a store accessibility policy to match!”
Read more:
- New pharmacy coming to Harrogate’s Beulah Street
- Last remaining Sam Smith’s pub in Knaresborough closes
A Pret spokesperson said:
Harrogate childrenswear brand to launch at Great Yorkshire Show“We know how it important it is for customers in wheelchairs to have easy access to our shop.
“Sadly, in Harrogate we’ve been unable to fit a permanent ramp due to the structure of the building and its listed status. That’s why we’ve had a bespoke portable ramp designed to give our customers step-free access into the shop.”
A new Harrogate based childrenswear brand is due to launch at the Great Yorkshire Show in July.
The high-end country style clothing store will be online, but will also have stands at various country events and shows.
It plans to sell a variety of sustainable products, from tweed coats to hand-knitted cashmere boots.

Eleanor Charles’ tweed range
Mum of two and former solicitor Katie Heptonstall started the plans for Eleanor Charles after the pandemic hit.
After moving from London back to Harrogate when her father-in-law suffered a heart attack, Mrs Heptonstall and her husband chose to stay in the town after the birth of their children, Elle and Charlie, who the business is named after.
She said:
“I am really excited to bring together everything we have been working so hard on over the last few months and to bring Eleanor Charles to life at the Great Yorkshire Show.
“It has been a complete change for me in my career, I have learnt so much over the last few months and I have enjoyed every second of it.”
The shop will launch at the Great Yorkshire Show , which runs from Tuesday, July 12 to Friday, July 15, where the clothing stand will also have a sofa for breastfeeding, a baby changing area, a colouring table and a photo wall.
The Alice Hawthorn pub wins three regional awards for architecture
The Alice Hawthorn pub in Nun Monkton has won three regional RIBA awards for Yorkshire, celebrating its architecture and sustainability.
The hotel and pub won the regional Yorkshire award, the Yorkshire sustainability award and the Yorkshire client of the year award at the ceremony held in London.
Twelve new guest bedrooms were recently designed by De Matos Ryan, with the aim of preventing the pub from closing.
Since four local taverns closed down, The Alice Hawthorn is the only remaining pub in the village.

The new timber frame buildings include the sheds, field barn, stables and tack room
De Matos Ryan director Angus Morrogh-Ryan said:
“We are delighted that this project has been recognised by the RIBA Yorkshire jury in this way.
“It has been an honour to collaborate with such a brilliant client and contractor team, and together ensure that this village pub will continue to sustainably service its community but also welcome visitors from afar.”
The ensuite bedrooms were designed with sustainable elements including timber frame buildings, low energy lighting and a heat pump for hot water and heating.
The Alice Hawthorn has now been shortlisted for the RIBA national awards, which will take place later this year.
Stray Views: Harrogate fire service cuts will cause ‘safety blackspot’Stray 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.
Cuts to fire service will cause ‘safety blackspot’
Harrogate with its many large and old hotels has the largest concentration of overnight accommodation in North Yorkshire.
With only one fire engine at the first attendance the crew have little chance of saving lives, let alone commencing to fight a fire.
These large rambling buildings are a tragedy waiting to happen with no turntable ladder at the first attendance. What has happened to the risk determining the attendance to all properties?
The police and fire commissioner and the chief officer can quote their 26% of fires during the night hours but that is when these hotels are most full of guests and also most at risk and quoting 26% as a reason to reduce to one engine at night only means that Harrogate as a conference centre will not cause sensible companies to want to come here. It will become a safety blackspot.
Brian Hicks, Pateley Bridge
Sun Pavilion Grade-II listing welcomed
The Civic Society welcome the addition of the Sun Pavilion and Colonnade and hope that additional funding may become available to restore the colonnade to its former glory – with glazed roofing and windows to the rear to provide a weather proof facility.
Of course, Valley Gardens are themselves Grade II as a listed Park and Garden.
Stuart Holland, Harrogate
Read more:
- Stray Views: Harrogate potholes ‘worse than Cairo’
- Stray Views: Harrogate Town FC should get a new stadium
New Harrogate Town stadium a good idea
I agree with Pat Marsh’s views on Harrogate Town. Good idea to speak to the council to see what could be done.
Although consultation with Harrogate Borough Council may be obsolete now, it may be necessary to consult with the new North Yorkshire Council I suppose.
Richard Blackshaw, 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.
Harrogate interior designer’s jubilee styling tipsAs we approach the Queen’s platinum jubilee, many of us are starting to scroll through Pinterest and Instagram to get some inspiration on how to decorate our homes.
The monumental royal celebration is the perfect excuse to string up the bunting, blow up balloons and do a spot of baking to host unforgettable parties throughout the long weekend.
We asked Harrogate interior designer Joan Maclean, who has launched a new online course, for some styling tips to help make your jubilee party one to remember.
Use a teapot as a display
“Isn’t tea the most quintessentially British thing? So dig out that old teapot, but use it instead of a vase and fill it with flowers. Here it is sitting on a bread board which is made of oak – the most English of trees.”
Think red, white and blue
“You don’t just have to wave a flag – add a few red, white or blue touches. Here the Union Jacks just add a nod to the celebrations.”
Use a tray as a frame
“A tray is always a great way to contain your pieces – it acts like a frame. Here, alongside some bubbly and champagne flutes, I’m using the coronation glasses and mug for my red, white and blue flowers.”
Start at your front door
“I’ve planted up some perfect red flowers and with the addition of some tall silver branches and a couple of flags in my tall concrete planters, here’s a stylish way to embrace the jubilee spirit at your door.”
Keep it simple – but striking
“If you just want to make a nod to the festivities, then raid your garden for some seasonal leaves or branches. With the addition of some red and white roses, here’s a striking, but simple, display in my hallway.”
Use a cake stand to display treasures
“A cloche or a glass cake stand, with its dome, is the perfect way to display a few treasures. Here are three pieces of coronation memorabilia.”
Raid your attic
“My family has treasures in the attic that don’t often see the light of day. These lead figures, with the incredible gold carriage, are part of a complete set from the coronation that are still in perfect condition.
“This window sill is the perfect spot – in fact window sills are the perfect place to display all kinds of treasures.”
Display memorabilia
“Here’s an old biscuit tin, which has found new life on my mantlepiece.”
“We used to get commemoration mugs and coins from school and here are some little things my mum had squirrelled away at the back of a cupboard.
“Dig out your family’s treasures and put them out – they stir fascinating memories and are a reminder of quite how long it is since 1952.”
Set the table for a traditional British afternoon tea
“A perfect British occasion calls for a fabulous afternoon tea – champagne, anyone?”
Read more:
- How to put on a good Jubilee spread and celebrate in style in the Harrogate district
- Platinum Jubilee Harrogate district: What’s On
Harrogate firefighters free elderly woman from car after crash
An elderly woman had to be freed from her car by firefighters after a crash in the Harrogate district last night.
Both Harrogate crews were called to reports of a two-vehicle collision at Spring Lane, Kearby at about 8.20pm.
According to North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service‘s incident log, two elderly occupants of a Volkswagen managed to get out the car but returned to the vehicle to await the emergency services.
A man in his 20s, who was also involved in the incident, was out of his BMW when the firefighters arrived.
The incident log adds:
“The elderly male then exited the car and after assessment the ambulance crews requested the roof removal of the VW to extricate the elderly female due to suspected injuries.
“All occupants were transported to hospital for treatment mainly for minor injuries. Fire crew used 2 sets of e-draulic cutters, stabilisation blocks, windscreen cutter, sharps kit and crew power.”
Kearby is near Kirkby Overblow, between Harrogate and Wetherby on the fringes of the Harrogate district.
Read more:
- Cuts to Harrogate fire crews would ‘put money before lives’, says ex-firefighter
- Two teenagers arrested after six deliberate bin fires in Harrogate
‘We felt apprehension, but not fear’: Harrogate seaman remembers the Falklands War
The Stray Ferret is publishing two articles this weekend looking back at Harrogate’s links with the Falklands War.
Yesterday, we spoke to Harrogate woman Christina Nelson who was only 22 when her husband Stephen Heyes was killed aboard HMS Ardent aged 21. Read the article here.
“Where’s the bloody Falklands?” was Harrogate sailor Neil Harper’s first thought following the Argentine invasion on April 2, 1982.
The former Harrogate High School pupil was always destined for a career at sea. He spent his formative years as a sea cadet in Harrogate and his dad was in the Royal Marines.
He was 19 when the British government dispatched a naval task force to the islands in response to the invasion.
Mr Harper joined the Navy aged 16 and was an able seaman gunner so knew that his services would be required.
“When it kicked off I was back in Harrogate on leave so it was a case of ‘get back to the ship’.”
After returning to Portland in Dorset, the captain of HMS Argonaut told the crew:
‘I can’t tell you where you’re going, but you’ll have a damn good idea.”
‘Attack after attack’
Mr Harper said the feeling onboard the ship on the 6,000-mile journey “was of apprehension, but not fear”.
He said:
“We were all a bit young and stupid!
“It was finally a chance to do the job were trained to do.”
The sailors encountered the Falklands’ unusual landscape, which Mr Harper described as being like “The Yorkshire Moors without the trees”.
“There are rolling hills, tundra grass and peat bogs. It’s quite bleak and it can be very, very cold. But it can be absolutely glorious down there too. You can see killer whales, penguins, seals and birds that are only found in the Falklands.”
Many hoped the crisis would be solved through diplomacy, but the fighting was fierce.
On May 21, HMS Argonaut faced assault from the sky. Mr Harper remembers “attack after attack” and frantic efforts to save the ship.

An unexploded bomb that was dropped on the HMS Argonaut
He said:
“They hit us with two 1000lb bombs, one in the boiler room and one in the diesel tank.
“Neither exploded luckily, but it caused a fire. We lost all power and were headed towards Fanning Head with no steering or working engines.
“At the time you were too busy to think about what’s going on.”
Two of Mr Harper’s friends, able seaman Iain Boldy and able seaman Matthew Stuart, were killed.
‘Are we gonna win?’
Lieutenant Peter Morgan is credited with saving HMS Argonaut after he dropped one of the ship’s anchors to use as an emergency brake.
The crew worked around the clock to restore power and radars. The captain sent out a signal to the crew to say they couldn’t move the ship, but could still fight.
Over the space of a couple of days, HMS Ardent, HMS Antelope and HMS Plymouth were also bombed.
Mr Harper said:
“We knew the Ardent had been hit. So there were thoughts of ‘what’s going on over there — and are we gonna win?'”
Once-in-a-lifetime assignment
Stray Ferret journalist Tim Flanagan was chief reporter for the Harrogate Advertiser in 1982.
He said the war was the talk of every pub, shop and workplace in the town.
Journalists at the paper kept a close eye on events due to the military connections in Ripon and at Pennypot in Harrogate.

Journalist Tim Flanagan in 1980
Mr Flanagan remembers interviewing Harrogate woman Christina Nelson, Stephen Heyes’ widow, not long after he died. She told him how Stephen’s pet cat Charlie still missed him, which has stuck with the journalist 40 years on.
“For a young woman, she was very poised. She was still in shock. She was courageous and a very brave person to speak about it. She wanted him to be honoured.”
Harrogate soldier Gavin Hamilton was also killed during the war and posthumously awarded the Military Cross for bravery.
Valentines messages
A year after the war was over, the newspaper sent Mr Flanagan to the Falklands. It was a once-in-a-lifetime assignment for a local news journalist who normally didn’t get further than Northallerton.
He stayed aboard HMS Sir Tristram to visit Royal Engineers from Ripon who were helping to rebuild runways and clear mines.
Mr Flanagan took with him some special messages from the wives of Harrogate district servicemen who were stationed there.
“I flew out on Valentine’s Day 1983 and went there with various things. I took messages for sweethearts and three or four Valentine’s cards.
“I got a lot more on the way back from the soldiers, and asked to drop off flowers, chocolate and letters to their wives.”
Legacy of war
The war lasted just 74 days but 40 years on, time has not healed all the mental wounds brought on by the conflict.
The UK government’s treatment of its veterans, and their widows, have made it more difficult for them to receive closure.
Christina Nelson has campaigned for the government to subsidise expensive air travel to the islands so widows can visit their partners’ graves.
She said:
“I’ve not seen Stephen’s grave since the 25th anniversary. The government should do right by us. I’d love to go again, but I will not beg. It should be our right, but they are not bothered.”
Like many veterans, Neil Harper has suffered from PTSD. He left the Navy in 1989.
“We were offered no psychiatric help when we got back. It was a case of ‘man up and get up with it’.”
He returned to the Falklands in 2019 with some fellow seamen who he served with.
He added:
“Like any sort of trained blokes, we try and not shed a tear, but we do. We talk and remember, we’re a support group.
“It was time to go back and put a few demons to rest.”
255 British military personnel died in the war. Three islanders and 649 Argentine soldiers also died.
Rough sleepers and drugs found in Harrogate’s PinewoodsPinewoods Conservation Group has urged people to report anti-social behaviour after rough sleepers and drugs were found in the woodland.
Pictures seen by the Stray Ferret show Harrogate Borough Council staff moving a tent, which had been set up in the woods.
Inside the tents were drug paraphernalia and rubbish left in the woodland, including food and sleeping bags.
Other pictures showed graffiti defacing the Pinewoods map.

The graffiti on the Pinewoods map.
The borough council and North Yorkshire Police were both alerted to the rough sleepers this month.
The tents were later moved, however the Stray Ferret understands the process took longer than expected due to the availability of council street cleansing teams.
Read more:
- Police search of Harrogate’s Pinewoods found nobody with a weapon
- Five Harrogate firefighters could lose jobs in plans to reduce service
A man in the 96-acre woodland was detained by police last week after residents reported gunshots being fired. But he was later released without charge.
A spokesperson for the Pinewoods Conservation Group said it had reported a number of anti-social behaviour incidents in recent months.
They said:
“Whilst the recent reported incident fortunately didn’t materialise into anything serious we are still asking our members and visitors to report anything suspicious and any anti-social behaviour to the police via 101, or 999 if an emergency, and Harrogate council customer services.
“We have reported a number of incidents in recent months from graffiti, illegal campers, groups congregating and setting fires plus clear evidence of drug use. It is only with the help of others we can continue to keep the Pinewoods a safe and enjoyable area for the community.”
A council spokesperson said:
Harrogate nail artist’s guide to creating Union Jack jubilee nails“We have accommodation and support available for all rough sleepers.
“Once we are made aware of someone sleeping rough in the Harrogate district, our housing options team work in partnership with the police and partner agencies in an attempt to persuade them to accept support.
“We have hostels in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough and have most recently opened Fern House in Starbeck, our purpose-built temporary accommodation with 19 self-contained bedrooms. Additional to this, we can offer a complete support package for individuals who are homeless which includes health and wellbeing, support for any mental health issues, financial guidance as well as any further advice or information they may require.
“As a result of this holistic approach it means that we can try to identify the cause of each individual’s circumstances in a bid to help them find permanent secure accommodation.”
Jubilee fever is increasing, with the Harrogate district transforming into a sea of red, white and blue ahead of the celebrations this week.
From costumes to bunting, there are plenty of ways to get into the party spirit.
But if the thought of daubing yourself in face paint or wearing a giant hat is just that little bit too extra, there is a more discreet way to get involved.
We have teamed up with Harrogate nail artist Helen Wren to offer a step-by-step guide to creating the perfect Union flag design for your digits.
Helen, who has a studio at her home on Cold Bath Road, said:
“I’ve definitely noticed people getting excited in the run-up to the jubilee weekend.
“Some are talking about celebrating with friends and family, street party style, and others are using the bank holiday in half-term to get away.
“So appointments have been full and fun. Classic post box red is always on point. Then royal blue and strong white are really popular colours for nails right now anyway – so simple great British colours are perfect.
“Of course you can’t beat a Union Jack. Keep it low key and just pop it on one nail.”
1. Primer/base coat. 2. Blue all over the nail
3. Thick white strip vertically. 4. Thick white strip horizontally
5. Slightly thinner white stripe diagonally through the cross both ways. 6. Go over the white with a fine vertical red line
7. Fine red line horizontally. 8. Fine red lines diagonally and finish using a top coat in either a high shine or matte.
Top tip: If using gel polish and a lamp then be sure to cure in between stages. If using a normal nail polish then leave enough time in between stages to dry a little, otherwise they’ll run.
Read more:
- Princess Anne to visit Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Show
- Timetable of Platinum Jubilee celebrations in Valley Gardens
- How to put on a good Jubilee spread and celebrate in style in the Harrogate district