The new banking hub in Knaresborough will be located at 15 Kirkgate, Bowling Green Yard, it was announced today.
The hub will offer a counter service operated by the Post Office, where customers of all major banks and building societies can carry out regular cash transactions.
However, an opening date is still yet to be revealed.
It will also provide a community banker service where customers can talk to their own banking provider about more complicated issues, from Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm.
Community bankers will work on rotation, with a different bank or building society available on each day of the week. They are usually provided by the banking providers with the most customers in the local area.
Cash Access UK, the organisation set up to protect nationwide access to cash, revealed details of the hub today following longstanding concerns about bank closures in Knaresborough.
The process of finding a banking hub in Knaresborough has taken a while to come to fruition. There were hopes it would happen last year.
Gareth Oakley, chief at Cash Access UK:
“We know the new banking hub has been eagerly anticipated by the local community and so we’re delighted we’ve now been able to secure a fantastic location for you in the heart of the community.
“This brings us a significant step closer in being able to deliver improved access to cash services to individuals and businesses in Knaresborough”.
Nick Garrett, of the community benefit society Knaresborough Connectors: said the hub would reduce financial exclusion, adding:
“Many of Knaresborough’s frail residents tell us they prefer services, especially financial ones, to be face to face as online services aren’t accessible.”
Read more:
- Knaresborough banking hub could open this year
- Bank machines to be fitted in Knaresborough Library building
Andrew Jones, MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough said:
“When the hub opens it will be invaluable to residents of Knaresborough, especially to those who rely on cash and face-to-face banking.”
Charlotte Gale, of Knaresborough and District Chamber said:
“Better banking and cash access within the town is something chamber are very passionate about. This is something we’ve long campaigned for and we’re thrilled that a site has now been secured.”
Cash Access UK is owned and funded by 10 of the UK’s biggest banking providers: Bank of Ireland, Barclays, Danske Bank, HSBC UK, Lloyds Banking Group, Nationwide Building Society, NatWest Group, Santander, TSB and Virgin Money.
These firms have come together to provide shared services available to all their customers.
Knaresborough festival to return with town crier contest this weekend
A new town crier will be chosen for Knaresborough this weekend as the community comes together to build new connections.
Knaresborough Community Festival is being held for the third time to offer groups and organisations around the town a chance to spread the word about what they offer.
Visitors will be able to enjoy taster sessions, ask questions and sign up for everything from Guides and Scouts to dance classes, theatre groups, Parkrun and even the town council.
A total of almost 40 organisations will be represented, along with live music and other entertainment.
Matt Read of Knaresborough Connectors said:
“We did the first community festival nearly three years ago at Knaresborough House as we came out of lockdown. We had about 25 community groups then.
“Knaresborough Connectors was the community support organisation for Knaresborough in the pandemic. We ran the festival to help people reconnect.
“There were a number of community groups that lost three-quarters of their membership and others had to close. It was a case of reconnecting people and joining the dots in the community.”
Town crier contest
An unusual feature of this year’s event will be a competition to find the next town crier, after Roger Hewitt announced his retirement from the post he has held for the last eight years.
It will see three candidates put through two rounds in front of the crowd, who will be encouraged to cheer for their favourites.
The contest will be judged by Mr Hewitt and the Mayor of Knaresborough, Cllr Kathryn Davies, with the winner to be announced at a later date.
Charlotte Gale of Knaresborough and District Chamber, which has organised the competition, said:
“Roger, the current town crier, has written a cry that they will be reading out in the first round. They have also been asked to prepare their own original cry for the second round. It should be a fun competition.”
Knaresborough Community Festival runs from 10am to 4pm at Meadowside Primary Academy on Halfpenny Lane tomorrow. The event is free and visitors are invited to bring picnics, or to buy food provided by the school’s PTA.
Full details are available on the Knaresborough Connectors website.
Read more:
- Knaresborough Pure Gym confirms May opening date
- Knaresborough Forest and Long Lands Common campaigns to join forces
Knaresborough to hold contest to find new town crier
Knaresborough residents will get a rare opportunity to audition for the role of town crier next month.
Roger Hewitt, who is part of a lineage dating back to 1680, is to step down from the role after eight years at the end of May.
Potential successors are invited to pitch for the role at the annual Knaresborough Connectors‘ community festival on April 22 at Meadowside Academy on Halfpenny Lane.
Contestants will announce town news and events, deliver proclamations and ring a bell to capture the attention of the public. There will be a pre-prepared shout for all participants and they will also be asked to prepare an original shout.
It will be judged by Mr Hewitt and the mayor of Knaresborough.
Knaresborough and District Chamber member Charlotte Gale said:
“We are seeking a talented individual with a strong, clear voice and a passion for communicating important messages to the community.”
“Don’t miss this opportunity to showcase your talents and become a key part of our town’s heritage.”
The town crier shouts at the town’s ancient Wednesday market as well as other markets and at community and charity events in the town. Knaresborough and District Chamber member manages the role and provides the uniform.
Mr Hewitt offered some words of advice to anyone interested in succeeding him:
“You have to shout but a big voice is not enough. You have to be able to write your own stuff, it has to be engaging.
“It’s all about intonation, accuracy, engaging your audience and doing your best. It’s a good thing that volume isn’t the main thing!”
You can register to take part in the contest by emailing hello@knaresboroughchamber.org and including a brief introduction stating why you would make a great town crier and your connection to Knaresborough.
Top rotary award for Roger

(left to right) Knaresborough Rotary president David Kaye, Roger Hewitt and rotarian Bob Weddall
Knaresborough rotarians surprised Mr Hewitt by presenting him with a Paul Harris Fellowship after he gave a speech to the group.
Paul Harris founded Rotary and the award is the highest which can be given by rotarians.
Rotarian Bob Weddall said:
“Roger is, as town crier, the personification of Knaresborough. A brilliant ambassador for the town he enjoys chatting to visitors and has played a major role in recent events celebrating the platinum jubilee and proclaiming the Queen’s passing and the accession of the new King.
“His unfailing good humour and willingness to serve the community make him a worthy recipient of a Paul Harris Fellowship”.
Knaresborough and District Chamber member Charlotte Gale added:
“Roger has been an exemplary town crier and is a hugely popular and recognisable figure in the town.
“For the past eight years his regular and often witty cries have kept townsfolk informed about all the latest Knaresborough news and he has also opened countless town events and welcomed many new businesses to the town.
“Everyone at chamber would like to extend a huge thank you to Roger for eight years of dedication to the role and wish him well in his retirement.”
Roger’s life and times

Pic: Charlotte Gale
Born in Bradford in1948, Mr Hewitt moved to Knaresborough in 1976.
At 21 he started to train as a teacher but changed his mind and instead joined the scientific civil service but in 1988 he resumed his teacher training and after a spell in Bradford he spent 23 years at Harrogate Grammar School.
Appointed as a chemistry teacher, he taught physics and biology at key stage 3.
After retiring, he was appointed as town crier by the chamber of trade and town council in 2015.
His main task is to open the market at 11am each Wednesday wearing the splendid regalia made in Knaresborough by Gill Ford.
In town crier competitions, he has twice won the trophy for best dressed crier.
In the 1980s Roger was a member of Knaresborough Players and also performed as Father Christmas at school events and at the town Christmas market.
For one very challenging Christmas market he was both Father Christmas and town crier, doing quick changes in the stock room of the old chemist shop.
Knaresborough Connectors aim to bring community together in ‘living rooms’A community organisation in Knaresborough is hoping to bring people together for mutual support through the cost of living crisis.
Knaresborough Connectors is establishing a number of “public living rooms” – a home from home offering a comfortable, warm space to be.
Rather than inviting the elderly or vulnerable to sit in them, though, the group is keen to ensure the whole community comes together through the rooms for everyone’s benefit.
Director Nick Garrett said:
“We aren’t going for the idea of welcoming in poor people from the cold. All the evidence says if you target towards frail, elderly people, they don’t come. This is for anyone and everyone.
“The rooms will be like someone’s living room at home: warm and comfy and with nice furnishings.
“[Knaresborough councillor] Hannah Gostlow’s background is in interior design. She’s designing some really cool-looking living rooms for us.”
The first community living room will be in Knaresborough Library‘s chill-out zone, which is currently being designed and transformed by volunteers.
A further two will follow at Chain Lane Community Hub and Gracious Street Methodist Church. There will also be a co-working space at 8 York Place.
The aim is for people to use them as a social space. They might go there to knit, to have a cup of tea or watch TV, or to play board games or read books. While there, they might meet others who want to learn to knit or play a game, or who might simply want someone to talk to.
Read more:
- Knaresborough gets into the spirit of Halloween with spooky window displays and scarecrow trail
- Cost of living crisis fund launched for North Yorkshire
Mr Garrett said the community living rooms would run alongside support from Resurrected Bites, which runs a community grocery and a pay-as-you-feel cafe in the town.
Knaresborough Connectors is also using social prescribing, encouraging people and businesses in the community to refer others to its team to access what they need.
He said:
“There was a hairdresser in Knaresborough who was cutting a customer’s hair and he told her he was on the brink of homelessness. She contacted us through someone else and he’s now been rehoused.
“There will be lots of people like that coming out of the woodwork because they can’t afford things. There’s also lots of support and advice from Knaresborough Connectors.”
The group is now urging everyone in the town to get involved in one of three ways: engaging with people simply by saying hello, using talents and gifts to help others, and sharing what they can, such as donating to local charity shops and community organisations.
Mr Garrett said research showed reducing social isolation also helped to relieve pressure on the NHS as people were less likely to visit the GP or be admitted to hospital if they were well supported in the community.
By engaging people who are struggling to be part of the network of support, Mr Garrett said everyone could make a difference for each other.
For more details, visit the Warm and Welcome page of the Knaresborough Connectors website.
Knaresborough survey reveals key issues for local peopleSpeeding, mental health and activities for young people are among the main issues concerning Knaresborough residents, according to a new survey platform.
Multiple town groups set up Knaresborough Voice this year to give local people the opportunity to discuss what matters to them. With devolution looming, the groups wanted a platform for people to discuss where investment in the town should go.
Knaresborough Chamber of Trade, Knaresborough Connectors and North Yorkshire County Council are among those supporting the venture.
The platform uses technology called Polis – an artificial intelligence-driven software designed to find communities’ complex views.
People offer anonymous responses or agree and disagree with other people’s statements on certain topics.
Three conversations so far
So far, the platform has been used to start three conversations:
- What’s most important in making Knaresborough an even better place to live and work?
- Should there be a default speed limit of 20mph – rather than 30mph – in the town and in residential areas?
- The state of mental health in the area after the two years of covid.
The conversation about what’s most important in Knaresborough is the first to be completed.
It generated 116 responses, which received almost 5,700 votes.
Read more:
- The new anonymous voting tool to find Harrogate’s consensus on key issues
- Harrogate council to sell restored Knaresborough flats for £879,000
Over 80% of respondents agreed there needed to be more opportunities for young people; that the town should welcome diversity; that there is a need to fill the gaps in the town centre offer; that pavements needed to be kept tidy and safe and that more needed to be made of York Road car park.
The groups behind Knaresborough Voice hope it will become a well-used platform for debate that can impact decisions made by local councillors.
Peter Lacey, a chamber committee member, said:
“The platform was set up in the light of devolution to collect views and connect community groups. A conversation starts by a someone suggesting a topic and we work to shape the statements and post the survey.”
The findings will be taken to Knaresborough Town Council next month in the hope they will be used to shape its decisions.
Meet the showground heroes boosting Harrogate’s vaccine programmeAbout 20,000 people are expected to receive booster jabs at Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground between December 6 and 22. Another 35,000 are set to follow in the New Year.
Most people who go agree it’s a slick, well-run operation. That it works so well is down to the efforts of 50 staff and 60 volunteers behind the life-saving operation.
The Stray Ferret spoke to some of those on site this week. The 60 volunteers are divided into four teams of 15 volunteers a day supplied on alternate days by community groups Boroughbridge Community Care, Harrogate and District Community Action, Nidderdale Plus and Knaresborough Connectors.
The Boroughbridge team, led by volunteer coordinator Jan Seymour, was on duty when we visited.
Ms Seymour was holding a box of chocolates, donated by a patient. All such gifts get shared between the helpers. She jokes:
“The people we like most are the ones that bring us chocolate and cake!

Jan Seymour
The set-up at the Yorkshire Event Centre is the same as it was from February to August this year when some 120,000 first and second dose vaccines were administered.
The volunteers remain relentlessly cheerful and helpful but there is a wearier feel to the place than there was in spring. Ms Seymour says:
“When we opened in February everyone was absolutely desperate to get it. Now the attitude is ‘I’m a bit busy today, can I come tomorrow?'”.
Volunteers typically do half a day each, either from 8am to 1pm or 1pm to 6pm. They meet and greet people, direct traffic and take people to one of the 16 vaccination pods, which can cater for up to eight vaccinators. Ms Seymour says:
“During lockdown it was easy to get volunteers but recently it’s become harder. Some people are back at work and many volunteers are older people who have childcare duties.
“The majority of patients are absolutely wonderful. They could not be more thankful. We get the odd one who isn’t. One guy had a go at me on Monday when he said ‘why can’t I go to my doctor for this? But that’s unusual. Most people are great.”
Staffing fatigue
Yorkshire Health Network, which is a federation of the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district, manages the vaccination sites at Harrogate and Ripon racecourse.
Tim Yarrow, operations manager for the network, says the Harrogate site can handle greater numbers of walk-in patients because of its size and abundant parking.

Tim Yarrow
The quietest time, he says, is early to mid afternoon, then numbers soar towards the end of the day as many people try to get in at the end of their working days. The decision to allow walk-ins this week sparked a surge of visitors with queues of up to an hour at peak times.
Mr Yarrow says:
“We set this up in one-and-a-half days. It was easier second time round. We knew the snagging points from last time.
“The main challenge is staffing fatigue. During lockdown we had a lot of people with not a lot else to do. As people have gone back to their day jobs their availability has become more sparse.”
Yorkshire Agricultural Society, which owns the site, has “bent over backwards to enable it to happen”, says Mr Yarrow. When the site re-opens in January, jabs will take place in another building at the showground so the society can resume holding events in the Yorkshire Event Centre.
Moderna provided
Barnaby Roe, general manager of Yorkshire Health Network, oversees the operation at the showground.
In a makeshift office on site, he explains that the 50 staff are comprised of GP practice staff, who are helping for free on their days off, members of Yorkshire Health Network, pharmacists, pharmacist technicians and nurses. Half work the morning shift and half work in the afternoon.
“This programme will be for 20,000 to December 22 then going forward we think it will be another 35,000.”

Barnaby Roe
The site is giving doses of the Moderna booster but also administers some Pfizer jabs to children from immunosuppressed families.
“The people who work here have done it for some time and it’s down to a fine art.”
Booster appointments can be booked at the showground here. The site provided some walk-in appointments this week for over-18s who were eligible for jabs and has yet to decide whether they will be available next week.