A petition to honour England footballer Rachel Daly in Harrogate has been submitted to North Yorkshire Council after attracting more than 700 signatures.
There are now hopes it will be debated by the Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee, and local councillors can push officers for action.
The petition forms part of a campaign by Killinghall Nomads, backed by the Stray Ferret, to ensure the Lioness was recognised after playing in the World Cup Final.
As well as being available online, paper copies were signed by attendees at the club’s World Cup watch party last weekend.
Her former football club has called for Harrogate’s Hydro leisure centre to be named after her.
Following a 16-month refurbishment, it is set to open next week under its new name, Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre.
North Yorkshire Council has said it is “urgently” looking at creating a policy for recognising successful local people.
Ripon’s new leisure centre has already been named after the city’s Olympic gold medal winner, diver Jack Laugher.
Read more:
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- Petition launched calling for Harrogate to honour Rachel Daly
Killinghall Nomads, which has honoured Daly by naming its cafe after her, said it is important that there is a public recognition.
That sentiment has been echoed by her former school.
While Rossett School will name its sports centre’s 3G pitches after her, both the headteacher, Tim Milburn, and her former coach, Mike Sweetman, said a civic honour was needed.
Mr Sweetman added:
“Killinghall Nomads have done their bit and we are doing our bit. I still feel the council needs to do something for her.”
Daly was a crucial member of the England squad, playing in all of the group stage matches, as well as the last 16, quarter final and semi-final matches.
She played the first half of the final against Spain, before being substituted at half time. The Lionesses went on to lose 1-0, finishing as runners up in the tournament.
Young Rachel Daly fans from Killinghall Nomads watch the World Cup Final
Sports pitches in Harrogate will be named after former pupil and England star Rachel Daly, Rossett School has confirmed.
Headteacher Tim Milburn said the decision was a “no brainer” after Daly was part of the Lionesses team which reached the World Cup Final last weekend.
He told the Stray Ferret:
“I’ve only been here a relatively short time, apart from when I was a pupil, but the association with her has been quite close.
“As everything has ramped up, with winning the Euros and now getting to the World Cup final, to talk about your former pupil like that is incredible.
“The messaging we can give to young people about whatever you dream, you can go on to do, has been phenomenal.”
Mr Milburn said the Football Association had promised to invest in pitches in honour of each Lioness after the team won the European Championships last summer.
However, that had “failed to materialise”, he said, so the school will rename its 3G pitches at Rossett Sports Centre in her honour.
While the school is investigating the potential for funding to be given by the FA or the Department for Culture, Media and Sport towards the renaming, Mr Milburn said the school would proceed regardless.
“it’s a quite straightforward, simple thing for us to do, given that she spent many hours in that area of school, honing her skills.
“It’s a really great visual reminder for our students that you can dream big and go on to achieve it.”
Mr Milburn said he had hoped to get Rachel back to join Rossett School’s 50th anniversary celebrations at the end of September, but she will be playing for her club, Aston Villa, at that time.
However, the school is planning to organise another date when an official opening of the newly-named pitches can be done with Rachel as guest of honour.
Early promise
Among those on the guest list at both events will be Mike Sweetman, the former football coach at Rossett School who first spotted Rachel as a promising young player.
Now retired, has spent the last week being interviewed by news organisations around the country, all keen to hear more about England’s number nine.
He told the Stray Ferret:
“I was head of recruitment at the school in year 7, so I used to go round the primaries to get them to come to Rossett.
“Really, it was just an excuse to secure the best footballers.
“Someone said, ‘there’s this kid, Rachel Daly, she plays for Killinghall Nomads’. I went down there and I stood on the sidelines and I saw this blonde-haired kid up front who was great, but I couldn’t see any girls, so I thought, ‘I’ve missed the game’.
“Someone came up to me afterwards and said, ‘you haven’t missed her, you watched the match’. I said, ‘don’t tell me it was the blonde-haired kid up front!’.”
After starting at Rossett aged 11, Rachel was soon selected for the under 16s – the only girls’ team at the school at the time.
But over the following years, Rossett gained an impressive reputation for its girls’ football, so much so that promising young players chose to go there so they could be part of it.
Mike Sweetman with Rachel Daly
Mr Sweetman was so sure he had a future star on his hands, he rang the FA to bring her to their scouts’ attention while she was still at school.
A representative came to a game where Rossett won 5-0, with Rachel scoring two of the goals. A few weeks later, she was invited to an England training camp.
Yet even he lists her achievements with a sense of wonder.
Rachel has been shortlisted as PFA players’ player of the year, as well as winning the golden boot in the WSL last season, before playing in the World Cup Final.
Mr Sweetman added:
“I felt proud when she was playing in my school team, never mind playing for Villa or England.”
Backing the campaign
While they’re keen to honour Rachel at school by naming the pitches after her, both Mr Milburn and Mr Sweetman believe more should be done for the wider town to recognise her achievements.
The Stray Ferret and Killinghall Nomads have been pressing North Yorkshire Council to do so, such as by naming the newly-opening Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre after the town’s Lioness.
A petition in support of the campaign has attracted more than 600 signatures.
Mr Milburn added:
“The town is clamouring for something to have in her honour. The Hydro probably fits that bill – a place that inspires people to get fit and active.”
Read more:
- Council ‘urgently’ considers policy on recognising local people
- Petition launched calling for Harrogate to honour Rachel Daly
- World Cup hero Rachel Daly in line for player of year award
Students celebrate GCSE results across Harrogate district
Thousands of students across the Harrogate district have collected their GCSE results today.
The teenagers, whose preparations for the exams over the last two years were impacted by the covid pandemic, have been celebrating their achievements at schools around the area.
At Harrogate Grammar School, 83% of the 284 students sitting exams this year gained five standard passes in English and maths.
Headteacher Neil Renton said:
“We celebrate the success of all our students. Their remarkable achievements reflect not only their drive for success, but our emphasis on providing a broad and balanced curriculum that meets the differing needs of all our learners.
“These exceptional outcomes recognise the hard work, resilience, and determination of our students and we thank them for all their efforts.”
Harrogate Ladies’ College students performed well in sciences, with more than 75% of results graded 9-7.
Across all subjects, 57% of grades were 9-7 and 36% were 8 or above, while more than 60% of pupils at the school achieved five or more 9-7 grades.
All results in French were 8 or above, and almost 90% of grades in textiles were at that level too. Seven of the school’s textiles pupils were individually congratulated by the exam board for being among the highest performers in the country.
Other high achievers include Maisy Lindley and Ella Marshall, who both achieved a clean sweep of 9-7 grades.
Principal Sylvia Brett said:
“Our results were excellent across all subjects, but as a girls’ school, I’m particularly pleased that we’re leading the way in STEM [science, technology, engineering and maths], an area where women are still hugely underrepresented in the careers market.
“If we want to change this, we need to inspire and encourage girls while they are still at school.”
Harrogate Ladies’ College students Hattie Dixon, Chloe Homer, Ella Marshall, Maisy Lindley and Amelie Coyle.
At Ripon Grammar School, more than 90% of grades were 9-5, the equivalent of A*-B, while 57.3% were 9-7, or A* and A.
The 122 students in the year group achieved a total of 432 top grades of 8 and 9.
Headmaster Jonathan Webb said:
“I am delighted so many of our GCSE students have done so well this year. With the regrading of results to pre-pandemic levels there has been a degree of national uncertainty as overall pass rates have fallen.
“Our year group have worked through adversity and disruption to achieve a strong set of results which now allow them to access their chosen pathway for further study.”
Rossett School‘s students were also celebrating after 63% of the year group achieved five standard passes including English and maths.
Among those achieving grades 9 to 7 across the board were Sam Barker, Arlo Collins, Harry Duffy, Maya Dunmore, Daniel Golding, Danni-Mae Hampson, Robyn Heywood, Henry Hull, George Park, Abbie Ramsden, Mariia Sorokina and Adam Taverner.
Headteacher Tim Milburn said:
“It’s been lovely to see our students this morning and to hear how well they’ve done. The results they have collected today are a real testament to their resilience, commitment and dedication.
“Young people have faced unprecedented disruption to their education over the last three-and-a-half years but that only makes these results more remarkable.”
Among Ashville College‘s high-scoring pupils was Rhys Wolf, who achieved 10 grade 9s and is staying on for sixth form at the school, before setting his sights on a degree in maths or economics.
The school has not released its overall results. Headteacher Rhiannon Wilkinson, said:
“Every success has been incredibly well deserved, and we are proud of what our Year 11 pupils have achieved both in and out of the classroom. They can now focus on the future and the opportunities that lie ahead in our sixth form.”
Queen Mary’s School, between Ripon and Thirsk, has also not released details of its results, but headteacher Carole Cameron said:
“It is truly heart-warming to witness long-standing Queen Mary’s pupils achieving outstanding grades after many years of dedication.”
St Aidan’s Church of England High School in Harrogate has not released its results, but interim headteacher David Thornton said:
“Our students have been there for each other, supporting their friends and classmates.
“St Aidan’s is a close community with parents, carers, staff and students all working together to ensure each student achieves their potential. We all celebrate with them and are immensely proud of each and every one of our students.”
The Stray Ferret contacted all other schools in the Harrogate district for their results and comments, but had not received responses by the time of publication.
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Ex-Rossett student publishes war-time novella set in Harrogate
A former Rossett School student has recently published a novel that takes place in early 20th Century Harrogate.
Gary Baysinger lived in Harrogate more than 30 years ago and has now written a war-time novella set in the town.
In the space of just ten days, he lost his mother and was diagnosed with skin cancer so took up writing “as a distraction”.
The book, A kind of Homecoming, was inspired by the 1969 film, “Oh What a Lovely War” – a musical about World War One.
A scene in the film depicts the Christmas truce of 1914, during which a German soldier tells a British solider about his love for a British girl he left behind when he went to fight.
Mr Baysinger said:
“The scene left me with more questions than answers; who is this young man? Who is the girl? Did he survive the war? Did they end up together?
“I decided to write a story and answer those questions — I set it in Harrogate because I am fond of the place.
“I think we all sometimes wonder what would have happened if life had gone different at a young age.”
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Mr Baysinger’s family moved to Harrogate in the late 1970s, where his father took a position at Menwith Hill. Despite his short stint in Yorkshire – moving back to America in 1981 – he said he “wouldn’t want to be anywhere else” at the time.
He told the Stray Ferret:
“I spent my weekdays at Rossett High School, my Saturdays at Elland Road, and my Sundays kicking a football around a muddy pitch in Hampsthwaite, or on the Stray”.
Mr Baysinger is hoping Harrogate library will keep a copy so locals can read the war-time novel.
“I recently visited Harrogate for the first time in nearly three decades.
“I met up with some old friends and was astounded by the warmth and hospitality they showed me.”
A Kind of Homecoming is available to buy now on Amazon.
Harrogate schoolboys crash: man appears in courtA man appeared in court today charged with causing serious injuries to two Harrogate schoolboys while driving.
Benjamin Oakes, 46, of Tewit Well Avenue in Harrogate, is accused of careless / inconsiderate driving of a Vauxhall Astra on Yew Tree Lane on February 2 this year.
Two 15-year-old Rossett School students, who were walking to school at the time, had to be rushed to hospital following a collision, which occurred at 8.46am.
Today’s brief hearing at Harrogate Magistrates Court was adjourned when it emerged Mr Oakes was only made aware of proceedings yesterday due to a postal problem.
Prosecuting, Melanie Ibbotson said the papers involved in the case were “extensive” and she had no objection to the defence lawyer’s request for an adjournment.
The case is now due to be heard in Harrogate on August 11, when Mr Oakes is expected to enter a plea.

Mr Oakes (left) leaving court today.
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Man charged over collision that seriously injured two Harrogate teenagers
A man has been charged in connection with a collision on Yew Tree Lane in Harrogate that left two teenagers seriously injured.
The 15-year-old Rossett School students who were walking to school at the time, were taken to hospital following the collision at 8.46am on February 2.
Benjamin Oakes, 46, of Tewit Well Avenue, Harrogate has been charged with two counts of causing serious injury by careless driving in a Vauxhall Astra.
He is due to appear at Harrogate Magistrates Court this morning.
Police said a second man who was interviewed under caution will face no further action.
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Accident reignites safety concerns near Harrogate schools
A road accident this afternoon has reignited safety concerns for children walking to school in Harrogate.
A red Fiesta mounted the pavement on Yew Tree Lane — the same street where 15-year-old Rossett School students Fraser and Reuben were taken to hospital with serious injuries following a collision with a vehicle in February.
No further details of today’s incident are known — the Stray Ferret has asked North Yorkshire Police to provide some information.
But the sight of a car on the pavement prompted the father of one of the teenagers who was injured in February to get in touch to say it reinforced the need for safer roads around schools.
He said:
“A lot of people are campaigning for a 20 mph speed limit on roads near schools.
“The issue feels very close to home when I see something like this so near to where my son’s accident took place.”
The Yew Tree Lane area is particularly busy because it caters for children attending three secondary schools — Ashville College, Harrogate Grammar School and Rossett School – as well as primary schools, nurseries and pre-schools.
But the parent said 20 mph “should be the limit outside all schools”, including small village primary schools.
A petition calling for a 20 mph limit to be imposed on streets across the south of Harrogate was handed to North Yorkshire Council last month.
Hazel Peacock, who delivered the petition on behalf of the campaigning parents, said the limit would “change people’s attitudes in regard to comfort around walking, cycling and mobility users”.
Read more:
- Mum of boy seriously injured on school run in Harrogate issues plea for 20mph limit
- Child airlifted to hospital after collision outside school near Ripon
Harrogate student among top achievers in national physics contest
A Harrogate teenager attended a national awards ceremony in a historic venue after achieving one of the highest scores in a prestigious physics competition.
Patrick Fleming, a year 12 student at Rossett School, achieved a ‘gold’ in the British Physics Olympiad senior challenge.
As a result, he was one of just five students from around 6,000 entrants to be invited to the annual awards ceremony at the Royal Society in London.
Patrick said:
“Visiting The Royal Society was really inspiring, especially looking around the many portraits of previous fellows and heads of the society since it was founded in 1660.
“It was also amazing to talk to other young physicists and receive such a prestigious award. “
Patrick is currently studying maths, physics, computer science and further maths at A level, and was joined in the competition by a number of other talented students.
The Olympiad, hosted by the University of Oxford, aims to encourage younger students to study physics and recognises excellence among them through a series of competitions.
The senior challenge saw students sit a one-hour paper designed to test their problem-solving abilities.
Rossett School physics teacher Stephanie Hunt said:
“Well done to all our students who took part in the Olympiad, and congratulations to Patrick for his exceptional achievement – we are incredibly proud of him.”
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Teachers back plans for specialist autism school in Harrogate
Schools across the Harrogate district have given their backing to plans for a specialist school for students with autism.
The proposal for the site of the former Woodfield Primary School will be discussed by North Yorkshire Council leaders today – and teachers are urging them to support it.
Samina O’Brien, special educational needs coordinator (Senco) and inclusion manager at Ripon Grammar School, said a specialist facility for students with autism across the Harrogate district was badly needed.
She told the Stray Ferret:
“We are getting so many more diagnoses of autism and a lot of these students can’t cope, to the point where they stop coming to school.
“When they come back, the school can’t change. The students can’t cope with the routine, the rigidity of the rules, and even when we make allowances they still struggle.”
Mrs O’Brien said schools did their best to help children with autism, but did not receive adequate funding to deliver the right support, such as one-to-one help or quieter rooms to work in.
She said Ripon Grammar School was not as badly affected by the situation as some schools because it was selective based on academic ability. However, she said many autistic students were highly academically able, but were unable to reach their full potential because they could not cope with the school environment.
When that was the case, specialist provision was often a significant distance away, she said, and students were not always able to make the journey.
There were private specialist schools students could attend, but cost was a barrier for most families. She added:
“There’s some stereotyping about the students in North Yorkshire, but the problems are the same wherever you are in the country. They don’t just change because you’ve crossed into an area that’s perceived as more wealthy or more rural.
“We’ve got a few students here who we know would be so much more suited to [a specialist school]. It would still be academic, but we would reduce the amount of stress the students went through.
“Our biggest concern is how unhappy some of those youngsters are. I think it would be so beneficial for all those students that are struggling.
“If this goes ahead, for some parents and more importantly the children, this will be what saves them and puts them back into mainstream where they should be and can thrive.”
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The proposal for the former Woodfield site is for a school catering for students aged between 11 and 19. It would have capacity for around 80 children, who would not need to have a formal diagnosis of autism.
Rossett School is also in favour of the proposal. Newly-appointed headteacher Tim Milburn said:
“It is so pleasing to see significant investment being proposed for specialist provision in the area. This is such welcome news for children and families who have been seeking this support for a number of years.
“I will be really interested to hear how the investment will support children and families for whom mainstream education is the most appropriate setting.”
Liz Zoccolan, Senco and assistant headteacher at Harrogate Grammar School, added:
“Any increase in provision which will meet the needs of the growing number of students with education, health and care plans is to be welcomed in the area. This would further enable potentially vulnerable young people and their families timely access to specialist support if that is their choice.
“We would be keen to work alongside and collaborate with the proposed provision so that as many students as possible may benefit.”
If the plans are approved by NYC’s executive member for children and young people’s services and corporate directors today, a consultation could be launched in two weeks’ time, running until late July.
Rossett School to meet parents to discuss sixth form merger concernsRossett School leaders are to meet parents next week to discuss concerns about the sixth form merger with Harrogate Grammar School.
Students planning to join Rossett sixth form in autumn were informed last week they will be taught at nearby Harrogate Grammar School instead. Current Rossett sixth form students are unaffected.
The move took pupils and parents by surprise, with some questioning why they weren’t consulted and unhappy at the potential disruption.
About 65 Rossett students will be affected and school leaders held a media briefing yesterday to provide more details about the merger and the reasoning behind it. They revealed:
- The number of sixth form students at Harrogate Grammar School is expected to remain at about 650 despite the influx of Rossett students because “grade inflation” caused by covid is expected to ease, thus reducing the number of eligible students.
- Sixth form students will attend all their lessons at Harrogate Grammar School but teachers will move between the two schools.
- Rossett’s former sixth form buildings will be used as a teacher recruitment and training hub by the Red Kite Learning Trust. Rossett is due to become the trust’s 14th school in September. Harrogate Grammar School already belongs to it.
Richard Sheriff, chief executive of the trust, said collaborative sixth forms were a proven model in Harrogate, citing St Aidan’s Church of England High School and St John Fisher Catholic High School.
Mr Sheriff added there had been a long-term vision for Rossett and Harrogate Grammar School to collaborate more closely and the merger would not only achieve this but also improve education for students.
Read more:
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He said better children’s outcomes was the main driver for change but acknowledged cost was also “absolutely part of this”.
Rossett’s income, which is based on student numbers, has decreased significantly in recent years due to pupil numbers falling by roughly a third from 1,500 to 1,000.
Mr Sheriff said the decline in pupil numbers was due to fewer students from Leeds attending because of higher bus fares and improved schools in Leeds as well as Rossett’s ‘requires improvement’ rating by schools inspector Ofsted.
He said the Ofsted assessment “weighed heavily” on Rossett and the merger would demonstrate the school’s commitment to improve.
Mr Sheriff added building a new joint sixth form building was a long-term dream. He said:
“It’s hard for any school to survive on their own these days. It’s not a safe place to be.”
‘We have to be realistic’
Rossett consulted with governors about the merger but not parents — why not? Mr Sheriff said:
“What would we do with the outcome of the consultation if parents said ‘we’d like to keep things as they are’?
“If we did that the school would be bankrupt next year. We have to be realistic and genuine with parents.”

Harrogate Grammar School
Tim Milburn, who will formally take up the headteacher’s role at Rossett in September after previously being deputy headteacher at Harrogate Grammar School, hopes next week’s meeting will reassure parents. He said:
“There’s been some questions and concerns but we have tried to respond to them quickly.
“The news will have come as a shock and we acknowledge there are concerns but we have thought long and hard about how we can make the best provision for children. We want Rossett to be a thriving, growing school again.”
What about special needs students that might be particularly anxious about the unwanted change of environment?
Pete Saunders, the current acting headteacher at Rossett, said:
“In that scenario, special educational needs co-ordinators will get together with parents and students and discuss what provision they need to make the transition successfully.”
Mr Saunders added another advantage of the move is that Rossett sixth formers will be able to take advantage of Harrogate Grammar School’s broader curriculum, which includes subjects such as medical science that otherwise would not be available.