A woman who went missing from her care home in Harrogate last summer was found two weeks later just metres away from a police search area, an inquest heard today.
Judith Holliday was 73 when she left her care home in Harrogate on the morning of Saturday, August 27.
Her body was found two weeks later, on Saturday, September 10, along the railway embankment at Weeton.
At an inquest held in Northallerton this morning, coroner Jonathan Heath heard a post-mortem was unable to ascertain a cause of death. However, the pathologist who carried it out said it was likely she died from hypothermia not long after she was last seen.
The inquest heard the alarm was raised after Ms Holliday, who had a condition affecting her brain after suffering two haemorrhages since 2015, left Harcourt Gardens around 10.30am on Saturday, August 27.
She said she was going to visit her niece, who lived nearby, but she never arrived, and police were contacted later that day. Mr Heath said:
“The reason that she left and signed herself out will, regretfully, never be known.”
The inquest heard a member of staff at Harrogate Bus Station saw an appeal for information and quickly passed CCTV footage of Judith passing by to North Yorkshire Police.
Further footage of her on Station Parade was then found, but the trail went cold after that.
Ms Holliday was seen on CCTV along Station Parade
Over the following days, as the appeal for information reached more people, a number of sightings of Judith were reported in North Rigton.
She had flagged down a car in south Harrogate around 2.40pm and the occupants had given her a lift to the village. The front-seat passenger, who was named in court, said Ms Holliday told them she was going to meet her friend, but later that she was going to visit her grandparents.
In a report read out during the inquest, the passenger said:
“She seemed very calm, quiet and composed when she got into the car.”
The occupants dropped her at the Square and Compass pub, where a waitress also reported seeing her at about 3.30pm.
Ms Holliday was reported to have walked through the pub and back out of the door, staying around two minutes. The waitress did not see which way she went after leaving.
Read more:
- Police use drone in search for missing Harrogate woman Judith
- Inquest opens for Harrogate woman who went missing for two weeks
The new information moved the police search to centre around the pub. Over the following days, the search expanded, following paths and routes away from the village and stretching down as far as the A658, which runs adjacent to the railway line south of the village.
During the inquest, Ms Holliday’s family said they were grateful for everyone’s help in the search, but asked why it had not extended further, to include the railway line.
PC Dan Preston, a specialist search advisor, said research showed that physical barriers in the land often stop people who are missing and unsure where they are. He said the road was 500m from the pub where she was last seen, adding:
“We have to draw a line and unfortunately that’s the line we draw at that point. I can’t offer you more than that, unfortunately.
“We got so close because of all the statistics we have… I understand you want the answers. It’s frustrating, because we were so close.
“I don’t think it would have changed the outcome, unfortunately.”
Meanwhile, a woman who saw the appeals for information to trace Ms Holliday made a report to police in the week following her disappearance.
She said she had seen a woman on the embankment adjacent to the railway near North Rigton around 6.20pm on the Saturday, as she travelled on the train from Kings Cross to Harrogate. In a statement read out at the inquest, the passenger said:
“I guessed she must be picking blackberries, though I did think it was strange she was in that location.”
However, officers who had been involved in organising the search told the hearing they had not been passed the details of that reported sighting.
The Dunckeswick Lane level crossing. Photo: Roger Templeman/Geograph
On Saturday, September 10, another passenger on a train between Harrogate and Leeds called police to report seeing what they believed was a body in the undergrowth.
Officers arrived and found Ms Holliday’s body around 200m west of the level crossing at Dunkeswick Lane.
She had moved into Harcourt Gardens in early June, where the inquest heard she had settled well. Mr Heath added:
“She had a loving and supportive family and, regretfully, in the latter part of her life she had had some health issues that meant that, effectively, she couldn’t live on her own.
“It would appear from what I’ve read that that was a good move for her, in that she quickly settled, she found friends and her communication skills improved.”
Mr Heath delivered a narrative conclusion, used when there is no clear evidence of a single cause of death.
He said the cause of Ms Holliday’s death was unascertained, but that it was confirmed when she was found by the railway line at Weeton on September 10, after she went missing on August 27.
Garden centre near Harrogate to reopen after eight yearsA horticultural nursery near Harrogate is to reopen after almost eight years.
Cliff Bank Nursery at North Rigton was run for years by Joe Maiden, who appeared on radio gardening shows for 40 years until his death in 2015.
Ben Preston, who was previously head gardener at York Gate Garden, and NHS worker Laura Kennedy have spent a year restoring the Harrogate Road site, which will re-open on Saturday, May 27.
The nursery will specialise in rare woodland plants, unusual perennials and ornamental grasses as well as offering a yearly selection of hardy annuals.
Mr Preston and Ms Kennedy, both 35, took on the challenge to bring the derelict nursery back to life in March last year.

Ben Preston and Laura Kennedy
They have cleared the overgrown site, installed new polytunnels and created selling space. A derelict glasshouse has also been refurbished.
The couple plan to grow everything at Cliff Bank by propagating from seed, cuttings and divisions.
Mr Preston, who is originally from Boston Spa, worked at gardens across the UK, including Goldsborough Hall, near Knaresborough, before overseeing the expansion of York Gate Garden as head gardener fro 2017 to 2022. He is also a lecturer at Yorkshire School of Garden Design.
Ms Kennedy has worked in the NHS for nine years.
Mr Preston said:
“We’re really happy to be re-opening the gates at Cliff Bank. It has seen many horticultural chapters over the years and hopefully we’ll be here for many years to come growing unusual plants and providing inspiration and knowledge for gardeners.
“Being a local lad and having a passion for plants, it has been a dream to open our own nursery so close to where I grew up. Our aspiration is to become a popular local nursery with a national reputation for growing interesting and unusual plants here in Yorkshire.’

The greenhouse pre-renovation

The renovated greenhouse
Ms Kennedy added:
“We’ve got huge plans for Cliff Bank and I can’t wait to see them come to fruition, but in the meantime, we look forward to welcoming the gardeners of Leeds and Harrogate over the summer.”
Cliff Bank will open Wednesday to Saturday from 9am to 4:30pm until October.
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Inquest opens for Harrogate woman who went missing for two weeks
The inquest of Harrogate woman Judith Holliday, who died after going missing for two weeks last summer, was opened today.
Ms Holliday was 73 when she left her care home in Harrogate on a Saturday morning last September.
When she did not return, her family alerted the police and a search began. Over the following days, the search involved mountain rescue services and the use of drones to try to locate her.
Her family made repeated appeals to try to trace her movements, and sightings were confirmed at Harrogate bus station and on the way to North Rigton.
However, after two weeks of searching, Ms Holliday’s body was found adjacent to the level crossing on Dunkeswick Lane, Weeton.
North Yorkshire assistant coroner Alison Norton opened the hearing in Northallerton this morning.
She confirmed Ms Holliday was born in Zimbabwe in July 1949, and died in Weeton on September 10, 2022.
The coroner said a post mortem found the cause of death was unexplained. The inquest was adjourned to a date to be confirmed.
Read more:
- Police searching for missing Harrogate 73-year-old woman find a body
- ‘Help us get Judith home’ – plea from family of missing Harrogate woman
Two people taken to hospital after North Rigton collision
Two people were taken to hospital after a collision on the A658 near North Rigton last night.
The collision happened around 8pm last night, at the junction with Hall Green Lane, and involved two cars.
Sgt Paul Cording, of North Yorkshire Police‘s roads policing team, posted images of the damage to the cars on social media, adding:
“Amazingly no serious injuries although two taken to hospital by our [Yorkshire Ambulance Service] colleagues.
“Huge thanks to the off duty student nurse who stopped to help.”
Emergency services remained on the scene to deal with the situation for some time.
A flying start to the nightshift too as we turned out straight away to a 2 vehicle RTC on the #A658 near North Rigton. Amazingly no serious injuries although two taken to hospital by our @YorksAmbulance colleagues. Huge thanks to the off duty student nurse who stopped to help pic.twitter.com/mGGytqlZWR
— Sgt Paul Cording BEM (@OscarRomeo1268) February 3, 2023
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Pilates instructor in 18-hour marathon to help fight husband’s cancer
A Harrogate pilates instructor will embark on a personal mission later this month to strike back at the cancer that saw her husband rushed to A&E, fighting for his life.
Eugenie Keogh will hold a marathon 18-hour pilates session on Zoom from her studio at North Rigton, to raise awareness of the symptoms of leukaemia, a cancer of the blood which kills around 13 people every day in the UK.
“The early diagnosis of leukaemia remains elusive because the symptoms are often overlooked, and the disease only diagnosed when a person ends up at A&E department struggling for life,” she said.
Eugenie’s husband Stephen was rushed to Harrogate A&E last summer with a combination of classic leukaemia symptoms: shortness of breath, extreme fatigue, a skin rash, an ulcerated mouth, frequent nose bleeds and night sweats. The couple were left “completely traumatised” when the aggressive blood cancer Acute Myloid Leukaemia (AML) was diagnosed.
In the weeks before, Stephen had sought medical help about individual symptoms, but these had not been linked or resulted in a blood test.
Eugenie said: “This resulted in a late diagnosis for Stephen, which is why I am supporting the campaign to raise awareness among GPs about blood cancer symptoms. The earlier the disease is spotted, the better the chance of effective treatment, prognosis and quality of life.”
Stephen has responded well to the treatment regime for AML and is now awaiting a bone marrow stem-cell transplant.
“This is the only chance for me to achieve complete remission and hopefully a cure,” he said.

Eugenie Keogh is a qualified APPI instructor and operates one-to-one and Zoom online classes from her Body & Soul Pilates studio in North Rigton near Harrogate.
As well as raising awareness, Eugenie’s pilates marathon on Zoom on January 29 will also raise funds for Leukaemia UK, a charity that works to fund innovative research and support those affected by leukaemia blood cancers. Well-wishers can support her campaign at her Just Giving page.
Anyone making a donation will also be invited to keep Eugenie company by logging on at any time for any of the pilates sessions, which will start on the hour every hour from 6am, with the last session ending at midnight.
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Firefighters rescue horse after collision in Killinghall
Firefighters came to the rescue when a horsebox left the road in Killinghall today.
Crews from Harrogate and Ripon were summoned to the village at 12.07pm after a 7.5 tonne horse box left the road following a single vehicle collision.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service’s incident log said:
“Crews stabilised the vehicle to allow the owner to remove the horse from the rear of the vehicle. Incident then left with police.
“Crews used a tirfor winch and stabfast stabilisation equipment.”
Five minutes after the Killinghall call, Harrogate firefighters attended flooding in the basement of a house in Beckwithshaw.
The incident log said:
“Crews pumped water from basement and gave advice to owner. A light portable pump and hard suction were used at this incident.”
The incidents were part of a busy day shift for the Harrogate crew, which at 8am dealt with a reports of a diesel leak on a road in North Rigton.
Firefighters carried out an investigation and requested a highways gully-sucker to unblock a surface water drain.
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