A man has been arrested after reports that a member of staff at a shop in the town centre was assaulted last night.
Police were called to Cambridge Street at 9pm after being told a man had stolen alcohol from a shop and threatened and assaulted a member of staff.
A statement by North Yorkshire Police today said:
“Officers quickly located a suspect nearby and arrested him on suspicion of assault, theft, criminal damage and possession of an offensive weapon.
“The man, who is in his 30s, currently remains in custody and the investigation is ongoing.”
Read more:
- Police warn of increase in house and car thefts in Harrogate
- BID launches campaign to increase reporting of crime in Harrogate town centre
Children to set up shop in street to raise money for Saint Michael’s
A group of community-minded children will set up shop in the streets of Harrogate tomorrow to raise money for Saint Michael’s Hospice.
The children will sell cakes they’ve baked along with bric-a-brac for what has become an annual event on Valley Mount.
It was started in 2015 by sisters Yasmin and Louisa Stokes when they were aged five and three respectively. Last year’s event generated £647.
In 2019 the group was invited to visit Saint Michael’s headquarters at Hornbeam Park to see where their funds had gone.
Yasmin and Louisa will be joined at this year’s sale by friends Ben and Chloe Annett and Annalise Plummer-Rooke.
It will take place from about 9am on Valley Mount until the cake sells out.

Presenting a cheque to Saint Michael’s in 2019.
Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
A Harrogate business specialising in maternity products has raised £2m to help grow the company.
My Expert Midwife offers 19 products designed to help women prepare and recover during pregnancy, birth and early parenthood, as well as midwife-developed webinars, antenatal classes and ebooks.
Its products are sold online and in Boots, John Lewis, Ocado, JoJo Maman Bébé and Next.
The £2m fundraise was led by Pembroke, which invested £1.5m alongside existing shareholders and private investors.
Lesley Gilchrist, registered midwife and co-founder of My Expert Midwife, said:
“Our driving vision is to help all parents-to-be on their journey to parenthood, every step of the way, from preconception, through pregnancy and birth, to recovery and caring for their new baby, whether that be through our expert information guides and ebooks, our midwife-developed products or our antenatal education services.”
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New coffee shop opens in Harrogate
A new coffee shop called Espresso House has opened in Harrogate.
The shop is on Beulah Street in a unit that was previously home to Subway.
It joins a flurry of new food and drink openings on Beulah Street over the past year, including Turkish cafe Sirius, which is over the road from Espresso House.
Harrogate town centre shop closes as business continues to tradeA shop in the centre of Harrogate has closed suddenly this week.
The former Dizzy Duck shop in Albert Street is now being advertised to let by FSS at £22,000 per annum.
A sign in the window says the estate agency re-entered the premises on Monday, on behalf of the landlord. It adds:
“As a consequence of the re-entry, the lease is forfeited and the premises have been secured.”
However, Dizzy Duck continues to trade online and owner Louise Chesters has been posting on its Facebook page frequently this week.
The business had a stall at Ripon market today, and has posted about plans to attend markets in Masham and Thirsk next week.
It changed its business address and phone number before 9am on Monday to remove the Albert Street details.
The Stray Ferret contacted Dizzy Duck about its departure from the shop. The owner declined to comment, but said there would be news coming soon about the business.
Read more:
- Harrogate YMCA shop to close after just two years
- Harrogate sandwich shop re-opens after 2 year closure
- Harrogate bookshop Imagined Things set to move
Knaresborough ecommerce firm acquired by Leeds agency
A specialist e-commerce firm in Knaresborough has been acquired by a digital marketing agency in Leeds.
Three members of staff from Audere Commerce have joined Ascensor as part of the deal, including managing director James Withers.
He said:
“The Audere Commerce team and I are very much looking forward to joining a larger, more established digital agency.
“Ascensor share our values of delivering advanced digital technology to clients looking to grow through conversion.”
It is the third acquisition for Ascensor in the last 12 months. Managing director Andrew Firth said:
Report says former Harrogate Debenhams buildings should be saved“This is a very exciting deal for Ascensor, and presents an opportunity to build further our ecommerce client base. We will be able to extend the range of services offered to the new clients.
“The skills base represented by this acquisition complements our existing strengths.
“Audere Commerce are ecommerce software specialists, they’ve developed a specialism in B2B ecommerce.
“We will be able to provide the new clients with marketing services, and they’ll benefit from our focus on conversion rate optimisation, that helps website owners to generate the maximum possible value from their digital assets and grow through return on investment.”
A report from the national charity SAVE Britain’s Heritage has named the former Debenhams buildings in Harrogate as one of 18 former ‘cathedrals of commerce’ that should be spared from demolition and repurposed.
Wetherby-based property company Stirling Prescient is behind a proposal to demolish the three buildings on Parliament Street and replace them with 50 flats and two commercial units.
The site on Parliament Street has been home to different retailers for over a century. Before Debenhams, it housed the Buckley’s and Busby’s stores.
But the developer has said there is no market for the building to be reoccupied as a department store, and the 1902 and 1920-era buildings should be torn down.
Departing stores
The report, called ‘Departing Stores’, sounds the warning klaxon for a group of former department stores across the UK that are at serious risk of being permanently lost.
As well as Harrogate’s Debenhams, it includes large empty buildings in Liverpool, Bristol and London.
The report says:
“In a new era when large-scale retail is no longer sustainable, these fine structures are at risk of dilapidation or even demolition. And as these hubs of daily life are erased from the map, local communities feel increasingly disenfranchised.
“Protecting and reviving these buildings is not only a matter of preserving precious and distinctive architecture; it is an opportunity to restore a sense of place.”
The report says the demise of Debenhams alone left a hole of 1.3 million square metres of space across the country, with 90% of stores still empty a year later.
Read more:
- Harrogate council conservation officer ‘cannot support’ Debenhams demolition
- Plans submitted to demolish former Harrogate Debenhams
A new fate
The developer Stirling Prescient said in planning documents that there was no scope to convert the Harrogate Debenhams into smaller units “due to its internal layout and the age of the building”.
It said its new plan will “strengthen the town’s vitality and viability, increasing footfall and contributing to the local economy.”
However, the report includes 14 case studies of former department stores that have been successfully regenerated.
These include Bournemouth’s former Debenhams building that closed as a department store in May 2021 and is now home to a wide range of community activities:
“Developers Verve Properties have been imaginative in their ideas for keeping the building in active use. Besides retail, the store now houses an art gallery, beauty parlour and Bobby’s, Bournemouth local makers’ market.
“Later this year a food hall and rooftop terrace bar will open. Several spaces have a social function, hosting knitting meet-ups and children’s entertainers. The varied mix of community-focussed uses seems most faithful to the original department store – a place where people from all walks of life can gather and enjoy themselves.”
Read the full report here.
Shop will close tomorrow after 25 years in HarrogateA longstanding fixture on Harrogate’s high street will close for good tomorrow.
Orvis, which sells outdoor clothes, fly-fishing gear, dog accessories and walking items, has been trading in town for about 25 years,
It opened on Parliament Street in the 1990s before moving to its current five-storey unit on West Park.
But the American owners have decided to move the business mainly online
The company, which has a closing down sale, employs around eight people who have now all found jobs elsewhere.
On its penultimate day today, there was an overwhelming sense of sadness at the site of the last few garments hanging on racks.
There were also items of store furniture and plastic shoe blocks scattered around for sale for just a few pounds.

The store’s stock is depleted now after a month of major discounts.
Staff were sad to see the store go and hoped another retailer would take on the building.
The future of the unit remains unknown. The Stray Ferret has contacted the retail agent, Stapleton Waterhouse, but has yet to receive a reply.
Read more:
Orvis has 18 shops in the UK and all but one, at Stockbridge near Reading, will close. The company will instead focus on online sales, particularly fly-fishing equipment.
Orvis was founded in Vermont in 1856 by Charles F Orvis.

The upstairs rooms are now completely bare.
Harrogate might be famous around the world for its tea, but a new kid on the block called bubble tea has arrived with the opening of Sweet Pearl House on Commercial Street.
Bubble tea originated in Taiwan and has gone on to become one of the nation’s best-loved and most recognisable exports with takeaway cafes in cities across the UK.
The drink blends a milk or fruit tea base before the signature “bubbles” are added. The bubbles are made from chewy tapioca pearls, also called boba, that sit at the bottom.
Bubble tea is particularly popular among teenagers and is sucked through an especially large straw, which has enough room to hoover up the bubbles.
The family-run Sweet Pearl House was opened last week by Candy Yip and her husband Man Wong. The couple and their daughter moved to Harrogate from Hong Kong last year.
Ms Yip said she spotted a gap in the market and wanted to share their love of bubble tea as well as traditional Hong Kong egg waffle snacks.
“I think Harrogate loves tea, but I didn’t see any bubble tea places here.
“We love drinking tea so much. We opened the shop to share popular Taiwan tea and Hong Kong traditional eggettes snacks culture to people in Harrogate.”
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- Caffeine boost: The rise of the independent coffee shops in Harrogate
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Sweet Pearl House offers customers different milk or fruit tea bases, including brown sugar milk, strawberry, matcha, jasmine and oolong.
These are combined with fruity toppings including peach, passion fruit and mango, which are served with the tapioca bubbles.

Pearl Sweet House
Most of the drinks can be served hot or cold. Opening hours are from 11.30am to 5.30pm Tuesday to Saturday and from 10.30am to 4.30pm on Sundays.
Almost all the ingredients are imported from Taiwan directly, which Ms Yip says ensures their drinks have the authentic bubble tea taste.
She added:
Harrogate’s quirky 53 Bo Grove closes“The bubble milk tea is a unique taste. There really is no other drink like it.”
A bohemian Harrogate cafe, antiques and garden centre has closed after more than two years of business.
53 Bo Grove, on Grove Road, just off Kings Road, caught the eye of passers-by with its front yard filled with antiques and salvaged items.
The business became a vital hub for residents during the early coronavirus lockdowns by remaining open to sell food at a time when many supermarkets were struggling for stock.
Over the last year, the Stray Ferret has reported owner Kyrensa Bentley’s attempts to improve business by opening a pancake shack and a farm shop on site.

Bo Grove at Oxford Street.
Read more:
- Foxy Antiques wins Harrogate Christmas Shop Window Competition
- Popular Harlow Hill fruit and veg shop to reopen in February
Ms Bentley, who opened the business in September 2019, told the Stray Ferret she made the decision to close after struggling on a number of fronts:
“I am sad to have to close but it was a difficult location.
“I struggled with Harrogate Borough Council, coronavirus has also had an impact and we were short on staff in the kitchen.
“However, I now have a business on Oxford Street, which I can completely focus on. I have also had the chance to go back to my roots more and get some great antique finds for that shop.”
Ms Bentley opened Bo Grove at Oxford Street in November 2020. It currently sells an eclectic mix of interiors, antiques and furniture and she plans to open a cafe on the site soon.
Woman wanted after fraud scam in Harrogate shopNorth Yorkshire Police has appealed for information to identify a woman spotted on CCTV in a Harrogate shop after a fraud was committed.
Cash was taken from the One Stop on Crab Lane Harrogate at 10.30am on October 22.
The woman entered the shop and asked for cash to be changed into different notes and coins. The scam known as ‘ringing the change’ involves the scammer asking for various different notes and coins to confuse the cashier into giving them extra money.
Anyone who recognises the woman in the image is asked to contact the police.
If you have information contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2 and ask for Brendon Frith or email Brendon.Frith@northyorkshire.police.uk. Quote reference number 12210226719.
To remain anonymous call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
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- Three men arrested after laptop worth £1,800 stolen from Harrogate store
Well known Harrogate clothing retailer moves to new premises
One of Harrogate’s best known clothing retailers, Paul Lown, has just relocated his latest store to Swan Road.
Prey Four opened four years ago on Parliament Street but moved to its new site this week.
The shop sells a range of women’s and men’s clothing and also has an interiors area.
The move was prompted by his previous tenancy coming to an end and Mr Lown admitted he was apprehensive about heading further out of the town centre. But he hoped his committed client base will follow.
He said that after 40 years of trading in Harrogate he has men aged in their 40s coming into his shop who bought clothes off him in their teens.

Inside the shop on Swan Road, across from Fashion House Bistro
Many local residents will remember Mr Lown from his time owning the clothing store Leopard.
Leopard was based in multiple Harrogate units during the 1980s and 1990s, including what is now McDonald’s and the site on which Victoria Shopping Centre now stands.
After leaving Harrogate in the late 1990s for a short period, he returned and went into partnership to open Owl Store in Montpellier. But now he is focused on his own project, Prey Four.
Read more:
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He said the past 18 months had “been like no-one could have predicted” in his long career and that he could now see the high street changing with more people heading to certain shops rather than to browse.
“People aren’t wandering around aimlessly anymore; you know what you’re getting and from where.
“People need to support the independents if they want them to stick around. Whatever they sell, people need to support them. Covid has really hurt all of us.”

The shop has interior pieces for sale downstairs