The owner of Newby Hall has expressed ‘great relief and gratitude’ at receiving a £450,000 government grant to ensure the popular attraction remains open to the public into 2021 and beyond.
The money has come from a £103m Cultural Recovery Fund for Heritage, aimed at safeguarding the future of heritage venues such as Newby, which have been hit hard by coronavirus restrictions.
2020 has seen all major events, weddings and corporate events cancelled at Newby Hall. While the gardens opened to the public in early June, visitor numbers are down by around 75%.
Owner Richard Compton said without the funding there was a “real threat” that Newby could close to the public.
He said:
“Our business model, relying on day visitors and events, has allowed us to stand alone financially and add a little each year in terms of restoration and improvements. Covid and 2020 has shattered all plans and posed a real financial threat to Newby.
“This funding has allowed the business model to be rebuilt for 2021, thus safeguarding the wonderful house and the award-winning gardens for future generations of visitors to enjoy.”
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Black Lives Matter: Newby Hall uncovers links to slave trade
Dig out your treasures: BBC’s Antiques Roadshow comes to Newby Hall
BBC One’s Antiques Roadshow has confirmed it will be returning this summer, with Newby Hall named as one of its 8 locations.
Viewers are being asked to contact the Roadshow team with any hidden gems and stories to tell. A form is available on their website where owners can fill out details of their objects.
For the first time in the show’s history, the series will be filmed on a closed set with only a small audience invited. This is to ensure the safety of guests, the production team and the wider public.
Read more:
- Harrogate jewellery expert Susan Rumfitt on being part of the Antiques Roadshow team
- Fascinating facts about the BBC Antiques Roadshow
Presenter Fiona Bruce has been at the forefront of Antiques Roadshow for 13 years.
“Normally we welcome around 5,000 people to each Antiques Roadshow, but of course in these extraordinary times we will have to do things very differently. We’ve come up with a new way to safely film the show yet still bring you amazing items and stories. I can’t wait to see what treasures you have hidden in your homes.”

The Roadshow normally sees around 5,000 visitors at each venue.
The show was first broadcast in 1979 and has since become one of the most popular programmes on BBC One, with around 6 million viewers tuning in every Sunday evening.
Robert Murphy, BBC Studios Series Editor said:
“To keep everybody safe and comply with current government and WHO regulations, we have planned our filming days very differently this year…Our team of experts are looking forward to seeing your heirlooms and finds, so do go to our website and let us know about your treasures.”
Some of the Roadshow’s most remarkable finds have included a hand written document signed by Elizabeth I and a ring containing a lock of author Charlotte Bronte’s hair.
If you have a hidden treasure you wish to uncover, share your story at www.bbc.co.uk/antiquesroadshow.

Newby Hall has been named as one of 8 venues for this summer’s series.
Independent jewellery specialist Susan Rumfitt told The Stray Ferret that she is delighted BBC One’s Antiques Road Show is coming to Newby Hall this summer.
Susan joined the team of specialists on the Roadshow in 2006. As well as being on the show, she is also a Freeman of the Goldsmiths’ Company and has her own gallery in Harrogate.
In an interview with The Stray Ferret, Susan reflected on some of her favourite pieces she has seen as well as voicing her excitement for the upcoming show at Newby Hall.
Read more:
- BBC One’s Antiques Roadshow announced Newby Hall as venue
- Fiona Bruce answers questions about her time presenting the Antiques Roadshow
- 10 fascinating facts you didn’t know about the Antiques Roadshow
When asked what it is like to work for the Antiques Roadshow, Susan told The Stray Ferret:
“Working for the show is just great fun and although we are all individual specialists with our own areas of expertise, we work really closely as a team, from production, through to camera men, through to specialists. It’s about everyone putting in 100% to get the effects that everybody sees on the television.”

Susan Rumfitt pictured with a client at Buckfast Abbey.
Despite the current climate, Susan said that the show may look a bit different but will still have the superb Antiques Roadshow charm. She told The Stray Ferret:
“From a clients perspective coming to the show, they will still get the same attention as they normally would do. We are all looking forward to doing it in whatever format we are able to. The fact that it is coming back to Yorkshire at such a beautiful spot will showcase our area so well…I am delighted it is coming to Newby Hall.”
Susan was approached by the team at the Roadshow two years before joining, due to her extensive background in antique jewellery. Since then she has seen a number of fascinating pieces, with one of her favourite’s being a gold bracelet originally belonging to Queen Victoria.
BBC’s Fiona Bruce on unearthing treasures on the Antiques Road ShowThe BBC’s Antiques Road Show is set to come to Newby Hall this summer – sadly the show is closed to the public due to coronavirus.
In this Q and A presenter Fiona Bruce answers some questions about the fun of uncovering hidden treasures and other memorable moments
What has been your personal highlight from working on Antiques Roadshow?
I feel incredibly lucky to have spent the last 13 years working on the Antiques Roadshow. I love doing it and I’ve had so many highlights from over the years. My personal favourite would probably have to be when a man of the cloth turned up with a painting, which he thought might be a Van Dyck. I looked at it – and I was making a programme about Van Dyck at the time – and I thought it had the look of the genuine article. And so we had it examined and my hunch turned out to be right. It has been proven to be the case and it is now being exhibited as a Van Dyck. I can’t imagine that will ever happen to me again in my lifetime and it’s definitely a highlight for me.
Why do you think the show continues to be so popular?
I think it’s amazing that the Antiques Roadshow is essentially the same as it has been for more than four decades and it’s still hugely popular. What makes it eternally popular is probably what I love about it – that we all hope that we could have something gathering dust on the mantelpiece or in the attic that either turns out to be very valuable, or has an amazing story. It happens week-in, week-out and you’d think that the well would begin to run dry and it hasn’t. We still find amazing things every week. You can never predict what will turn up once a visitor brought along a vanity set that had been on Donald Trump’s yacht. It was as tasteful and restrained as you might expect – that’s to say it was fabulously bling.
What is your earliest memory of the Antiques Roadshow?
I still remember watching Antiques Roadshow as a child with my parents, on a Sunday night, sitting in our 1970s living room. I gradually came back to it as an adult and then I was asked to present it which I had no idea was coming! I was absolutely thrilled. It’s not often that you get asked to work on a programme you’ve watched for so long and genuinely watch at home.
Read more:
- Fascinating facts you may not know about the Roadshow
- Susan Rumfitt says Newby Hall is a “superb venue” for the show
Has any of the experts’ knowledge rubbed off on you?
I’ve certainly learnt more about antiques. I have my own collections. I have paintings. I collect things called “samplers” which are Victorian pieces of needlework usually done by children in a workhouse to show that they have a skill, which can be used in service, stitching household linen or that kind of thing. I think they’re very humble and very beautiful. But our experts are like walking Wikipedias! They’re incredible. And they just fish knowledge out of their brains, which is a marvel to behold.
What is the most surprising item someone has brought to a valuation day?
If I had to pick the most unusual thing that’s turned up in the time that I’ve been working on the show – could it be the man that turned up with an case full of loo chains, just a small sample of his collection? Could it be the man that turned up not once, but twice with a foetal membrane dried onto a piece of A4 paper that had belonged to his great-grandfather. It’s called a “caul” and it used to be a talisman against drowning and it used to have some value! Or could it be the lady who brought along a potty that had a picture of Hitler on the bottom and when you did a little “tinkle” into it, it played its own little tune. And because it was rare, I think it was worth over £1000 from memory.
What are your most memorable moments whilst working on the series?
Some of the most moving stories stick in my mind, many I will never forget, such as the man who brought along a set of GI medals from the Second World War. His story began with his finding a cache of love letters written to his mother by an American GI who had had an affair with her while his father was away serving in the Second World War.
The letters revealed that his mother had had a baby with this man and it became apparent to him that he was that child. He tracked down the GI’s family in Virginia who welcomed him with open arms and filled in the gaps. They told him that his father had agreed to forgive the infidelity and bring the baby up as his own – and indeed loved him as such all his life – and the American GI decided reluctantly to stay away so as not to make a delicate situation even more difficult. The GI’s descendants knew all about the baby being brought up in Britain and were thrilled to meet him at last. It was a very moving experience for all of them.
The man came to the Roadshow with his American GI father’s war medals, which the family had decided should go to his newly discovered son. As the man told me this story he was moved to tears – and who can blame him?

Fiona Bruce pictured outside Castle Howard.
Is there anywhere that you still yearn to take Antiques Roadshow to?
New Zealand! We would find extraordinary things there; I’m sure from antiques belonging to British settlers to Maori culture.
What are your hopes for the future of Antiques Roadshow?
That it continues to be as popular as it is now, continues to find extraordinary items and continues to have a place in people’s hearts.
Tea pots and glass bottles: fascinating facts about the BBC’s Antiques RoadshowThis summer BBC One’s Antiques Roadshow will be returning to our screens, with Newby Hall named as one of the eight venues.
This will be the roadshows 43rd series, but the show may look a little different to previous years due to measures put in place. For Fiona Bruce, this is her 13th year presenting the show.
Read more:
- Fiona Bruce answers questions about her time presenting the Roadshow
- Jewellery specialist Susan Rumfitt reflects on her time on Antiques Roadshow
Here are 10 fascinating facts you may not know about Antiques Roadshow:
- There have been five hosts of Antiques Roadshow; Bruce Parker, Angela Rippon, Hugh Scully, Michael Aspel and Fiona Bruce.
- The Roadshow has featured many celebrity owned objects; a diamond bracelet from Rita Hayworth, Marc Bolan’s guitar, even a loo roll rejected for use by the Beatles. A jacket once worn by JFK and valued on the show for £2-3,00,000 will come up for sale in the USA soon.
- Legend has it that the greatest let down in Roadshow history was the evaluation of a glass bottle which the owner had paid handsomely for but was in fact an olive oil bottle from Tesco. The embarrassment was not shared on camera.
- The highest audience figure for an Antiques Roashow was 15 million in the 1990’s. Even today a loyal 6 million regularly watch the show.
- Perhaps the most moving object seen on the series is a small ring that was kept hidden under the tongue of Zedenka Fantlova who survived four concentration camps in World War II.
- Graffiti artist Banksy’s donation to a Bristol boys club was valued by Rupert Maas and was later sold for more than £400,000 to a private collector.
- The Roadshow has visited numerous international venues including Canada, Australia and major European cities. Even at the Australian events the Roadshow’s most dedicated follower, John Dallimore, clocked up the 9,500 miles to attend.
- An important lost work by artist Richard Dadd came to light at the Roadshow in 1986. It was eventually sold to the British Museum for £100,000
- A family teapot brought in by avid Roadshow fan Norah Ambrose during the programmes early years proved a life changing moment when she bought her council house on the proceeds of the sale.
- Between 15 and 20,000 items are scanned at each show by the experts from which 50 are filmed for inclusion in the two shows made at each location.
The team at Antiques Roadshow invite you to uncover your hidden treasures for this summer’s series at Newby Hall. To get in contact, visit www.bbc.co.uk/antiquesroadshow.

The Antiques Roadshow normally welcomes thousands of visitors to each venue.
Newby Hall has uncovered its connections to the slave trade, leading its current owners to say that we must “recognise, take serious note and learn” from the past.
It is the first time that the Compton family, who are current residents, have spoken publicly about Newby Hall’s links to slavery and follows in the footsteps of many stately homes in England.
The family made the announcement after The Stray Ferret pointed out that the Weddell family, of which the Compton family are direct descendants, invested in the South Sea Company.
Richard Compton has updated the history page on Newby Hall’s website to detail its connections to the slave trade and highlight its work with the BAME community.
“It is known that the South Sea Company had significant financial involvement with the slave trade. It is not known to what extent this contributed to Thomas Weddell’s wealth but we do know that what was acceptable in the 1700s is abhorrent now.
“Newby is a modern and inclusive business and we have supported the BAME community. There is lots more we can do and post-Covid we look forward to renewing our links. The past is something we cannot change. We need to recognise it, take serious note and learn.”

“BLM” has been left near the war memorial in Harrogate.
The Newby Hall revelation comes in the wake of George Floyd’s killing and a wave of protests around the world. The Black Lives Matter movement believes systemic racism dates back to the slave trade.
Read more on this story
- Meet the new Black Lives Matter group in Harrogate
- See what happened at the Black Lives Matter protest
What is the South Sea Company?
South Sea Company was a public-private corporation that supplied slaves to the islands in the “South Seas” and South America.
Some historians estimate that the company set out to transport just over 34,000 slaves but around 4,000 slaves died on the voyage.
Others found that investors ended up with substantial returns if they got out before the “South Sea Bubble” burst in 1720. Thomas Weddell was one of those investors.
Thomas Weddell was the great-uncle of William Weddell and left him with a legacy that Thomas used to buy Newby Hall.
No plans for a review into Harrogate’s past
This week, a statue of Queen Victoria in Leeds has been sprayed with graffiti relating referring to slavery and Leeds City Council has said it is reviewing its statues. However, Harrogate Borough Council said that it has no plans to launch such a review.

The Queen Victoria statue in central Harrogate
Many councils in England are reviewing their memorials after protesters in Bristol toppled the Edward Colston statue and dropped it in the harbour.
There has also been pressure on other authorities and organisations to remove statues of people with links to the slave trade, such as Cecil Rhodes, whose statue in Oxford has drawn criticism because of his links with imperialism and colonialism.
Harrogate Autumn Flower Show cancelledThe North of England Horticultural Society has cancelled this years Harrogate Autumn Flower Show, set to take place from 18-20 September at Newby Hall.
The decision has been taken due to the ongoing uncertainty as to when the government will allow large public gatherings. It comes after the Harrogate Spring Flower Show at the Yorkshire Show Ground was also cancelled – both events attract up to 100,000 visitors between them.
Nick Smith, the show’s director said:
“Naturally we are very disappointed that 2020 will go down as the year there were no Harrogate Flower Shows to open and close the gardening season, but the safety of our visitors, exhibitors and the wider public must come first.
Read more:

This is the first time the autumn flower show has not taken place since during the Second World War.
The organisers have informed those who had tickets for the show that they will receive a full refund by the end of July. For more information visit the Harrogate Flower Show website – https://www.flowershow.org.uk/
Newby Hall gardens re-open in full bloomNewby Hall has re-opened it’s grounds to visitors.
The award-winning gardens will be open from today, June 3 for season ticket holders, and from Saturday, June 6 for the general public.
Guests have to book tickets in advance and pick a time slot, which will stagger arrival times. A maximum of 450 people will be allowed into the grounds per day, which compares to a usual capacity of 1200. Additional safety measures are also in place for visitors, including more toilets.
Visitors will be able to walk around the gardens and buy takeaway snacks and drinks, or enjoy their own picnic within the grounds. Its other attractions, including the railway, restaurant and teddy bears exhibition, will remain closed for now.
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Stuart Gill who is the Commercial Director at Newby Hall told the Stray Ferret:
When people arrive they will receive a warm welcome, but there will be extra precautions in place. Such as extra toilets, screens between staff and visitors and increased cleaning. It is a huge relief that we are able to re-open. It’s been a difficult time for us, we only have a 6 month season so weve only got 4 months now to keep us going gor the rest of the year. Can anywhere be 100% safe at the moment I don’t know but we are certainly doing all we can to make sure Newby is an enjoyable safe place to be.
Phil Cormie, who is Head Gardener at Newby Hall has been hard at work preparing to re-open:
The rest of the gardeners were furloughed until recently so I have been doing as much as possible to keep the garden going… were actually in the process today of planting up all of the autumn garden… we’ve been sweeping the footpaths, the lawns have been cut, the grass has been edged. We hope our visitors now come and enjoy the outdoors and appreciate all the hard work that has been done, as despite lockdown, nature carries on and the garden here at Newby is blooming.
The garden will still be closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, but it is hoped that the other attractions will be able to re-open within the next few weeks.

A one-way system and additional staffing will be implemented to enable Grewelthorpe’s Himalayan Gardens and Sculpture Park to re-open tomorrow.
The visitor attraction – named Yorkshire in Bloom Tourist Attraction of the Year in 2018 and 2019 – features more than 80 outdoor sculptures around its grounds. Operations manager Naomi Hutchinson said it could only open if visitors follow social distancing guidelines:
“We believe that being outdoors and in beautiful gardens is restorative and important for people’s wellbeing. It can be a source of much-needed tranquillity in these super anxious times, and with 45 acres, the Himalayan Gardens offers the open space needed.
“We are however mindful that the safety of visitors and our staff is our number one priority. We’re pleased to welcome visitors and that they won’t miss out on the final blooms of spring, but our re-opening depends on all following the social distancing rules.”
The gardens’ new one-way system has been created using natural materials including stones, plant pots and wooden signs. While public toilets will be open, with social distancing in place, and plants will be on sale, the tea rooms will remain closed for the first week.
A booking system will also be in place to control numbers, so visitors will need to book in advance for a specified day via the attraction’s website.
Huge demand
Meanwhile, Newby Hall is set to open its grounds from Wednesday for season ticket holders, and from Saturday for the public. Its other attractions, including the railway, restaurant and teddy bears exhibition, will remain closed, and additional safety measures will be in place for visitors, including more toilets.
Booking will be essential, with slots set to go on sale on Newby Hall’s website on Tuesday, June 2.
Newby Hall and the Himalayan Gardens are the latest tourist attractions to announce they are opening their gates. RHS Garden Harlow Carr last week saw huge demand for access to its grounds as it opened bookings on its website.
The National Trust has not yet opened its properties in the Harrogate district, but slots to visit others around the country sold out quickly last week.
WATCH: Take a look at what might be Harrogate’s first community woodland