A retired Harrogate GP who treated patients for three decades has died at the age of 95.
Dr Christopher Watson began working at Moss Healthcare Harrogate in 1959.
The practice, which has sites on King’s Road and Jennyfields in Harrogate and in Killinghall, said in a social media post yesterday that he died on December 6.
Dr Nick Taylor, a senior partner at Moss Healthcare, said:
“Dr Chris Watson served as a GP at Moss for over 30 years; it is with sadness that we announce his death at the age of 95.
“Many of our older patients will remember his kindness and family orientation, he was a wonderful family doctor”
Dr Watson’s funeral will be held at 2.45pm on 19 December, at St Mark’s Church on Leeds Road.
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Yorkshire Tea blender, Warren Ford, dies aged 90
The man behind the blend of Yorkshire Tea, Warren Ford, has died aged 90.
Born in Lewisham, South London, on May 16, 1933, Warren went to school in London before leaving aged 16.
He worked at Tetley’s tea as a senior buyer, before being sought at by Victor Wild, who built up Betty’s tea room in Harrogate, in the 1970s.
By 1976 Warren had been appointed as a director of Taylors and the following year, along with Victor, Jonathan Wild and Eddie Hardie, was one of the original ‘gang of four’ responsible for the creation, launch and early success of Yorkshire Tea.
Warren became fundamental in establishing the foundations for the future growth of Yorkshire Tea. He even suggested the colour orange for the packaging, recognising that it was the most unused colour on the tea shelf.
Jonathan Wild remembers that Warren’s ability gave him confidence in the product.
He said:
“Yorkshire Tea took over our lives and compelled us to stretch ourselves beyond the limits of our experience – and inexperience.
“What gave me confidence was belief in ‘The Tea’ and in Warren’s ability. We rode our luck well and tempered our ambition with stealthy patience, but I’m not sure that at any other moment in time – before or since – we could have created something so unique and ultimately so successful as Yorkshire Tea.”
The brand, Taylors Yorkshire Tea, was launched in 1977 and became popular. It received royal warrant in 2009.
Reflecting on the gang of four and the creation of the brand, Warren recalled:
“it was a team effort from the start: Victor’s creativity and prudent financial control, Eddie Hardy’s relationship with supermarkets and determination that we invest in packaging technology, Jonathan’s youthful energy and ambition, and, of course, all the advantages that I brought: an experienced, integrated approach to buying and blending in which we competed to our advantage by selecting rather than collecting our teas.
“It required all these elements to create success.”
Warren Ford died on June 21, 2023.
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Obituary: Magician Bob McBratney 1955-2023
A magician who once claimed to be lobbying to have magic recognised as a sport in the next Olympic Games has died aged 67.
That episode – which turned out to be a very successful ruse to publicise a magic show in Knaresborough – was just one of many in Bob McBratney’s life, which was marked by kindness and humour.
Born in 1955, Robert McBratney had a varied career, training as a chef and working at the Grand Hotel in Brighton, and later becoming an antiques dealer. At one point he took up sailing, fitting out racing yachts, and as bosun’s mate on the schooner Sir Winston Churchill, he crewed in the Tall Ships Race to America in 1976, sailing the first leg to the Canary Islands, before joining Master Builder for the second leg to Bermuda.
Having conquered the sea, he then took to the air, learning to fly light aircraft and earning his private pilot’s licence. In the 1990s, he worked as general manager of Liverpool Festival Gardens and, of significance in his magical career, Mother Shipton’s Cave in Knaresborough, which was run by his brother Frank and, coincidentally, TV magician Paul Daniels.
When the firm was sold on, Bob, then aged 46, was introduced to magic by a friend, magician Brian Knowles (also known as Brian Le Slie). Bob knew nothing about magic then, and would often say – years later – that he still knew nothing and was just waiting to be found out.
It wasn’t true, though – Bob worked hard, learned the ropes and, performing as Bob’s Your Uncle, became a popular children’s entertainer across Yorkshire and beyond.
Early in his career, Bob joined the Harrogate Society of Magicians which, according to his good friend James Ward, transformed Bob’s life. Mr Ward said:
“He, like me, had great help and encouragement from some wonderful magicians.
“Brian Knowles, George Fowler and Denys Hollis – all sadly no longer with us – were regularly on hand for help and advice, as was the late Mike Coyne, a variety hall performer and star of TV’s The Comedians. We both benefited enormously from their input.”
Performing both for children and as a close-up magician for adults, Bob even put together a compilation of simple tricks for doctors to perform to younger patients, Child’s Play, which proved a sell-out success.
Bob was resident magician at Lockwood’s restaurant in Ripon, a regular at Knaresborough’s annual FEVA Festival, and even ventured into the world of after-dinner speaking and became a great success on the Women’s Institute speaking circuit.
In 2007, Bob became president of the Harrogate Society of Magicians and in 2008 he was elected to The Magic Circle. As President of the Harrogate society, he oversaw its 60th anniversary celebrations and arranged countless shows, dinners, society visits and fundraisers, often ferrying members around in his working car, which members fondly re-named the Bobmobile.
Mr Ward said:
“Bob always had time for others, and was one of the most selfless people I’ve known. He helped me enormously in my own magical career, finding me jobs, lending me props and teaching me the ropes.
“We worked together several times over the years, and always had a blast. The last time we worked together was in 2018 when we entered ‘Ripon’s Got Talent’ as the Famulus Brothers, playing a Morecambe and Wise-style magic double act.
“We didn’t win, but – as always with Bob – we had a barrel-load of laughs.”
Away from the magic, Bob was a tireless worker for local causes and community projects, including village fairs, Harrogate Scouts, the parish council and the church.
Bob was diagnosed with mesothelioma – a kind of cancer – in 2019, but despite not expecting to see the year out, he didn’t give up. He threw himself into working for Mesothelioma Support Yorkshire, performing magic at its get-togethers, taking part in sponsored bike rides and ultimately becoming its ‘poster boy’, ever ready to be interviewed and publicise its work.
He defied the odds, living longer than expected, largely thanks to the care of his wife, Joanne, son Henry and his care team. It was only in 2022, when he suffered a stroke, that he finally began to decline.
He died at St Michael’s Hospice in Harrogate on February 19.
Mr Ward said:
“No one ever made me laugh as much as Bob – even after he was diagnosed.
“There were times when we were on the phone every day sharing our love of TV comedies and films, regularly recalling our favourite lines and insisting on reminding each other what they were.
“I’ve lost some very good friends in magic over the past 20 years, but none as close to me as Bob. I loved him dearly, and my world is an emptier place without him. Rest in peace, old friend.”
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Inspirational former Harrogate woodwork teacher dies
A Harrogate teacher whose passion for wood inspired a generation of carpenters and joiners has died in his mid-nineties.
Bernard Smith, founding head of woodwork at St John Fisher Catholic Secondary School when it opened in 1958 on Ainsty Road in Harrogate, was a perfectionist who encouraged his pupils to share his love for good design and flawless execution.
Inside and outside school, he created many objects that were both beautiful and practical.
A particular beneficiary of his talents was the historic St Joseph’s Church, in Bishop Thornton. To help celebrate the bicentenary of the church in 2009, Bernard produced a superb credence table for use at masses and a series of carved and jointed shelves to embellish the otherwise austere interior of the windows.
Bernard’s funeral will be held at St Joseph’s on Wednesday, December 28 at 2pm. His remains will join his wife Moira’s in the churchyard.
The couple lived for many years off Wetherby Road in Harrogate, where Moira worked as a technician in the pathology department at the old Harrogate General Hospital. They had three daughters.
Pic: Bernard Smith pictured with some of the shelving he made for St Joseph’s Church in Bishop Thornton. PHOTO: Michael Coghlan.
Tributes paid to Hampsthwaite funeral director Roger BowersTributes have been paid to well-known Hampsthaite funeral director, Roger Bowers, who has died.
Born and raised on Hollins Lane in the village, Mr Bowers was the owner of the family-run business W.Bowers Funeral Directors.
He took on the firm, which was founded by his parents William and Josephine in 1945, and grew it to cover two offices in Hampsthwaite and Harrogate and host funerals across the district.
Stephen Hessell, partner of the funeral directors, said Mr Bowers was dedicated to the business even in his later life.
He said:
“He had not given up on the business right until the very end.
“He was always there for us.”
A popular figure in his home village, Mr Bowers was particularly supportive of Hampsthwaite Church of England Primary School, where he organised Christmas carol singing once a year.
He also sponsored bowls tournaments in Dacre and the town crier competition at Knaresborough Feva festival.
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Mr Hessell said giving back to his local community was important to Mr Bowers and was something he continued to do in later life.
He said:
“It meant a lot to him even in those last four years or so.
“One of the things he enjoyed doing was getting a deck chair outside his house and speaking to people who wandered by. He would enjoy that a lot.”

Mr Bowers (left) with Stephen Hessell
Illness and a decline in mobility had prevented Mr Bowers from the day-to-day running of the business since 2018.
He died on December 13, 2022, aged 79.
Mr Hessell said he would remember Mr Bowers as a friend who was always there.
He said:
“I’m going to miss his kindness for sure.
“If you needed to talk to somebody, I would sit with him for an hour. I’m going to miss him terribly.”
A private funeral will be held in accordance with Mr Bowers’ wishes. No details will be published of the service.
Obituary: John Abel, managing director of Harrogate International HotelJohn Abel, the founder and first managing director of the Harrogate International Hotel which is now the Crowne Plaza, has died after a short illness.
The son of a banker, Mr Abel attended Culford School in Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk and subsequently qualified as a chef from the Birmingham College of Food – although he never cooked at home – followed by a hotel management course.
He started his hotelier career in Norfolk, before moving to Harrogate in 1970 to become managing director of the St George Hotel.
Following the sale of the hotel, the money was raised for building the then Harrogate International Hotel. Mr Abel, as its first managing director oversaw the construction of the hotel, which he proudly delivered on schedule and on budget, with it formally opening in January 1985.
Renowned for his genteel nature and sense of fun, he subsequently joined Allott and Associates as a new business manager and is credited with winning lots of new accounts, many of which are still active with the business today. Latterly, he was retained as an associate and oversaw the advertising department.
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Outside work he enjoyed fine dining and horse racing. His passion for horse racing was caught from his wife Vivien and together they spent a lot of their spare time attending fixtures and he was a keen member of York Racecourse for over 45 years.
Ultimately, Mr Abel was a people person. He was passionate about Harrogate and protecting its heritage and where necessary he didn’t hold back from ensuring that those in elected office were aware of his concerns.
He was a church elder at St. Paul’s United Reformed Church in Harrogate and together with Vivien visited elderly people as far afield as Scarborough, to support them.
At home, Mr Abel loved gardening and visiting the eateries and shops in Harrogate.
Mr Abel died on October 4, aged 81. He is survived by his wife Vivien, who he was married to for 52 years, and his younger brother Guy, who lives in New Zealand.
This obituary was written by Philip Allott, founder of Allott and Associates.
Obituary: Malcolm Neesam 1946-2022
It is doubtful whether anyone has known more about Harrogate’s people and places than Malcolm Neesam, who died on his 76th birthday this week.
Malcolm, who wrote about a dozen books and numerous other publications about the town, dedicated much of his life to telling Harrogate’s story. He did it better than anyone and will be remembered as the town’s greatest historian.
He had an encyclopedic knowledge of the buildings and people that shaped Harrogate but he was also gentle and modest, and never boastful or condescending in print or real life.
Underpinning it all was a deep love for the town, and in particular the Stray.
Born in a nursing home on Ripon Road in Harrogate on June 28, 1946, Malcolm’s father worked for a rubber company that manufactured soles for footwear.
Sunday afternoon walks with his mother stimulated his interest in history at the age of six or seven. She would often talk about things they passed. “I didn’t need a playground,” he once said. “I had the Stray.”
He attended St Peter’s Church of England Primary School, “a very happy little school”, as he described it, and then Christ Church Secondary School for Boys. The school, which was situated between the Empress roundabout and Christ Church on the Stray, amalgamated with St Peter’s Secondary School for Girls to create St Aidan’s Church of England High School more than 50 years ago. Retirement flats now occupy the site.
In his last year at Christ Church, Malcolm’s parents noticed an advert for an assistant at Harrogate library and thought his developing interest in history would make him suitable.

Photographed in London in 1988. Pic by Benedict Hess
After three years in that role he accepted a post at Leeds University studying archives and librarianship. He later attributed his thoroughness at gathering source material for books to his training as an archivist.
Malcolm then moved to Hereford for four-and-a-half years to set-up the city’s first children’s library service before moving further south to Northwood, in the London borough of Hillingdon close to the Metropolitan line, to work as an archivist for the Duchy of Lancaster.
Music librarian
He did this for three years before going to York, shortly before local government reorganisation in 1974, to become city music librarian.
But when reorganisation changed everything, Malcolm was offered a post by the new local authority as county music librarian, which involved buying music for county library services. Being a great lover of classical music, he was perfectly suited.
He stayed in York until 1996, overseeing new methods of administration, storage and repairs as technology changed and vinyl was replaced by cassettes and then CDs in North Yorkshire libraries. All the time he commuted from Harrogate.
He admired York’s decision to effectively pull out of North Yorkshire local government and become independent in the 1990s. Malcolm hated the trend towards ever more remote forms of local government, which will culminate in the creation of North Yorkshire Council next year and the abolition of seven district councils, including Harrogate Borough Council. He felt the more decision-making left Harrogate, the more the town lost control of its wealth and character.
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In 1996 he received an offer to work for an American company called Alumni Holidays, which arranged holidays for former university students.
He had done some guiding in York, which proved useful in his new role in which he gave lectures on subjects such as Scarborough, York and the Yorkshire Dales, Yorkshire architecture and Yorkshire literature. Alumni Holidays was horrified by his initial omission of James Herriot so the author was eventually added to his list of topics.

Malcolm worked for the company on a freelance basis for 10 years but the Madrid train bombing in 2004 severely disrupted business by leaving many Americans too afraid to travel to Europe.
Full-time writer
In 2006 he decided to concentrate on writing full-time. He had written short stories at school but didn’t let anyone see them. His writing career had begun in 1973 when the Library Association commissioned him to write a guide to children’s sci-fi called Into Space. It went to nearly every library in the country.
A founding member of the Harrogate Society, which later became Harrogate Civic Society, he was asked by local firms such as Ogden, Raworths and William Woods to write books for them. He also undertook research for plaques. His writing career, he said, “grew in stages”.
Harrogate in Old Picture Postcards was published in 1992, followed by Exclusively Harrogate in 1994 and Harrogate: A History of the English Spa from the Earliest Times to the Present in 2001. His works also included a centennial history of Harrogate Grammar School in 2003.
During this time he became, in the words of Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, “the chronicler of our town”.
The two books of which Malcolm was proudest are Harrogate Great Chronicle 1332-1841, which was the product of 40 years work, and Wells and Swells: The Golden Age of Harrogate Spa, 1842–1923, which was published in April this year. His beloved Harrogate Club named its dining room in his honour at the book launch. By then, Malcolm was in the advanced stages of the cancer that would claim his life and it was a deeply emotional occasion at a place that meant so much to him.

Malcolm Neesam at the launch of his final book, Wells and Swells.
He started work on a third volume, covering Harrogate’s history since 1923, fully aware he was unlikely to finish it.
Before Malcolm, William Grainge, who died in 1895, was considered to be Harrogate’s foremost historian. Grainge had published books and short publications about the town in the 1860s and 1870s, but nothing substantial. Malcolm described Grainge’s style as “too chatty” whereas he focused more on the history.
He and the late Harold Walker, a historian and one-time editor of the Harrogate Herald, set up the Walker-Neesam archive, ensuring their collective research could stay for ever within the town.
His vast collection of papers and photo library will go to Harrogate’s Mercer Art Gallery. Organising them won’t be an easy task: thousands of brown envelopes assigned alphabetically by subject took up an entire room at his home.
Malcolm gave a typically modest answer when asked why he only wrote about Harrogate, saying: “Some writers can turn to anything. I can only write about things that interest me.”
Freedom of the Borough
Malcolm was instrumental in establishing the listing of many buildings in the town and in establishing the first conservation area. He was also the founder historian of the Harrogate Brown Plaque scheme.
He was a member of the Harrogate Club from the 1990s and adored the place and its history. Arthur Conan Doyle once played billiards there.
Harrogate Borough Council awarded him the Freedom of the Borough in 1996 for his services as a historian. He supported numerous local organisations, including Harrogate Dramatic Society and Harrogate Theatre, often sitting on their committees.
Unfailingly polite, he was nevertheless often reserved and diffident in public. He rarely talked about his private life but close friends say he had a keen sense of humour, which could border on the macabre at times, and was an excellent cook.
Besides music, he had a passion for reading, especially non-fiction history and Victorian fiction, such as Dickens, Thackeray and Jane Austin.
But his lifelong passion was Harrogate. He loved its wide streets, the Stray and shops, and felt the population was just about ideal.
He never married. His elder sister, Shirley, who had two sons, died three years ago. Malcolm’s two nephews live in Burnley and East Sussex.
Asked where he was happiest, he said: “It may seem obvious but just sitting on the Stray under a tree.”
Malcolm Neesam, historian and author, born June 28, 1946, died June 28, 2022
Shepherd’s Purse cheeses founder Judy Bell diesThe founder of a North Yorkshire cheese company, which created the award-winning Harrogate Blue brand, has died.
Shepherds Purse, based near Thirsk, announced the passing of its founder Judy Bell MBE, last night.
Judy was well known in the Harrogate district as chair and chief steward of the Cheese Show at the Great Yorkshire Show, as well as chair of Deliciously Yorkshire.
The Yorkshire Agricultural Society, which organises the Great Yorkshire Show, is among those paying tribute.
“We are deeply saddened to hear of Judy Bell’s passing.“We have worked with Judy for a long time at the Yorkshire Agricultural Society and her recent lifetime achievement award by the Guild of Fine Food was thoroughly deserved for her dedication to the industry.“Judy will be sorely missed by all of us here on the showground and we send our sincere condolences to her wonderful family who will continue her incredible legacy.”
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Shepherds Purse announced the news on its social media channels “with great sadness”, describing Judy as “our founder, our colleague and friend”.
The statement added:
“Loving wife to Nigel, proud mum of Caroline, Katie, Justin and the late Jonathan, and a devoted and proud grandmother.
“Judy was an inspiration and continued to give her support generously, not only to us at Shepherds Purse after she handed over the reins to her girls in 2012, but to many others across the cheese, food and farming industries.
“She will be remembered as an ambassador for independent business, a pioneer of the food industry and a champion of all things Yorkshire. A true force of nature.”
Judy’s funeral will take place at Ripon Cathedral on Friday, March 25 at 1pm, followed by a celebration of her life at Solberge Hall, Northallerton.