Spofforth celebrated the Queen’s platinum jubilee in style with a party fit for kings and queens.
It was the first knees up the village has had since the covid pandemic and Spofforth Cricket Club was full of families letting their hair down and enjoying themselves.
Spofforth platinum jubilee committee organised a party with a helter-skelter, bouncy castle, biscuit painting, face painting, BBQ, a magician and more.
The afternoon kicked off with a parade of the kings and queens of England where children dressed up as their favourite monarch from history.
Spofforth resident Bernie baked 100 biscuits for children to decorate and take home to eat.
She said:
“It’s been really nice to do something together at last.”
Read more:
- JUBILEE LIVE: Over 1,000 attend Bilton’s Party on the Pitch
- A cake fit for a Queen: Ripon mum wins Bettys Jubilee Bake Off
This evening Spofforth will join other communities across the district in lighting the jubilee beacon. It will begin at 9pm in front of Spofforth Castle and will include music from Spofforth school choir and saxophonist Millie Hope.
Tomorrow there will be a tea party with Prosecco, afternoon tea and music at the Long Memorial Hall, starting at 3pm.
In the evening there will be a party in the castle field from 7pm. There will be circus entertainers, a 50s style band, an oompah band with a disco and a fireworks finale at 11.30pm. For tickets to either of tomorrow’s events email Robyn Farmer at robynfarmer@ymail.com
Some images from today’s party are below:
A chance encounter in a charity shop has led to more than 100 commemorative plaques being put up in Spofforth.
June Geddes, vice chairman of Spofforth with Stockeld Parish Council, was drafted onto the village committee to plan celebrations to mark the Queen’s platinum jubilee.
As well as the events during the bank holiday weekend, she was hoping to put decorations around the village to mark the occasion. She said:
“Our high street is quite difficult: because of the three roads into Spofforth, it’s hard to put bunting up.
“Last November I thought, ‘what about plaques?’ There were none online, and when I went to see a local carpenter, he said it was impossible.”
Ms Geddes thought she would have to abandon the idea and focus on the celebrations instead.
However, while she was working in a charity shop in Wetherby, she got chatting to a customer, Terry Wilcox, and discovered he was a hobbyist carpenter with a workshop in his shed at home near Rotherham. After seeing some of his creations, she asked whether he might be able to create a plaque.
Within a week, he had sent a prototype. Ms Geddes promptly placed an order.
“We started with 70, because I thought that’s fairly optimistic and fits in with the platinum theme and so on.”
Subsidised by the parish council, the plaques were sold for £10 each, to be put on lampposts around the village until after the jubilee, when the owners will be allowed to keep them as a souvenir.
Once they began appearing around the village, demand soared, and Ms Geddes went back to Mr Wilcox to ask for another 20.
Read more:
- ‘Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!’: Knaresborough’s town crier ready for special jubilee weekend
- Ripon City Council proudly presents the biggest free Platinum Jubilee celebration in the north
- How to put on a good Jubilee spread and celebrate in style in the Harrogate district
They soon sold out too, so a final order was placed, bringing the total number of plaques made by Mr Wilcox in his workshop to 130. Ms Geddes added:
“I’m absolutely thrilled. It’s completely individual, you won’t see them anywhere else.”
Spofforth has four days of jubilee events planned. To find out more about them, and others taking place across the Harrogate district, visit our Queen’s Platinum Jubilee What’s On Guide.
Election 2022: Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith candidate previewAhead of polling day on May 5, the Stray Ferret is previewing each of the divisions in the Harrogate district up for election to North Yorkshire Council.
A total of 21 seats will be up for grabs in the district with most of the major parties contesting each one.
Today, we look at the Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith division which will see three candidates standing for election.
Andrew Paraskos, Conservative
The Conservative candidate for the Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith division is Andrew Paraskos.
Mr Paraskos is currently the Spofforth With Lower Wharefdale councillor on Harrogate Borough Council. He also sits on North Yorkshire County Council.
The Stray Ferret asked Mr Paraskos for comment for this preview, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.
A Conservative party spokesperson told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that they were confident in their election campaign and pledged to continue investing in services across North Yorkshire if elected.
A party spokesperson said:
“The Conservatives are fielding an experienced slate of candidates. This is important as we argue the case for local services with settlements from Selby to Richmond and Whitby to Settle.
“That case includes continued investment in local services that has seen a new pool in Ripon and the start of a new pool and leisure centre in Knaresborough.
“We are investing in the Hydro to provide more leisure facilities for local people.
“We need to continue the investment in our conference centre adapting it to the modern conference and exhibition industry. The centre underpins thousands of jobs across the district and brings in an estimated £29m to the local economy.”
Alexandra Marsh, Green Party
Alexandra Marsh is the Green Party candidate for the division on May 5.
Ms Marsh has lived in Cowthorpe for 35 years and runs an organic food business.
She is semi-retired and is currently responsible financial officer for Tockwith with Wilstop Parish Council.
On why she is standing for North Yorkshire Council, Ms Marsh said:
“I want the new NY Council to better support our rural communities, particularly our most vulnerable residents and our hard-hit small businesses, whilst reducing North Yorkshire’s carbon footprint as a matter of urgency.
“The Green Party is the only Party genuinely committed to safeguarding life on this very special planet.”
John Hall, Yorkshire Party
John Hall will be standing for the Yorkshire Party in the division on election day.
Mr Hall lives in Follifoot village near Harrogate and ran his own business for 30 years.
Between work and family time, he also taught cycling proficiency in local schools.
Mr Hall believes that Yorkshire should have “proper, powerful devolution through a regional parliament” in order to tackle issues such as transport.
He said:
“I support green transport and more rail-links. North Yorkshire’s bid for £116 million to fund bus improvements has been denied by Westminster. We’ll keep getting nothing until Yorkshire has proper, powerful devolution through a regional parliament.
“We have the same population as Scotland, an economy 50% larger than Wales, yet the rights and funding of neither.
“Local agriculture needs support during these difficult times but, like so many of Yorkshire’s past industries, Westminster does nothing to help.”
Read more:
- How the Harrogate district’s wards will change ahead of local election
- Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed
Final backing for 72 homes in Spofforth
A plan to build 72 homes in Spofforth has been given final backing by councillors.
Yorkshire Housing Ltd plans to build the housing development on land at Massey Fold in the village.
A government planning inspector approved the homes in October 2021 following an appeal by the developer against Harrogate Borough Council’s refusal.
The developer already had outline permission to build on the site, but councillors turned down an application for appearance and landscaping in November 2020.
A reserved matters application, which includes access to the site, was backed by the authority’s planning committee today.
Cllr Robert Windass, who sits on the committee, said councillors had no choice but to approve the plan.
He said:
“We rejected this at committee and we felt strongly that it would not go ahead.
“The Planning Inspectorate has had a different decision. They [the developer] have now got planning permission. Our hands are tied.”
Meanwhile, Cllr Pat Marsh said:
“In some respects our hands are tied.
“This went to appeal and it was given permission. This is sort of a final legal tie up.
“I am sorry to think that this is going to go ahead. It is something that this committee strongly opposed every time it came here. That is why it went to appeal.”
Inspector backs Spofforth homes
Siobhan Watson, a government planning inspector, gave the go-ahead for the proposal in October after she said she found the design and proposed housing “to be acceptable”.
She also awarded costs against the council after finding that the authority “behaved unreasonably” and that its reasons for refusal were “vague and illogical”.
The decision followed concerns from local residents over the design and that the housing would not be in keeping with the village.
At the time, more than 300 local people and organisations, including Natural England and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, raised concerns about the scheme.
Shirley Fawcett, chairman of Spofforth with Stockeld Parish Council, wrote to Prime Minister Boris Johnson appealing for help in challenging the development.
Charity Corner: the local charity supplying 36,000 wheelchairs worldwideSince setting up in 2003, Wheelchair Foundation UK has shipped more than 36,000 wheelchairs to people around the world who cannot afford them.
The charity was set up by Milton Frary who lives in Little Ribston, near Spofforth. Mr Frary has been part of Rotary Club of Wetherby & District for decades and a rotary conference in Texas sparked the idea.
After hearing from another charity in the US doing this kind of work, he knew his Rotary connections would help him set up something similar in the UK.
The charity has shipped containers full of wheelchairs to African countries such as Kenya, Nigeria and Botswana, as well as to Serbia and Poland in Europe.

An elderly lady in Kitwe, Zambia being brought to a central collection point to receive her wheelchair.
Mr Frary says that with Rotary being an international organisation, he is able to contact groups worldwide to identify local need.
In recent years, Mr Frary has joined forces with PhysioNet. Together the charities send new and second-hand wheelchairs as well as other medical equipment, such as Zimmer frames and hospital beds, to foreign countries.

Some recipients in Mozambique.
He says seeing the smiles on people’s faces and hearing the screams of glee keeps him determined to fundraise more.
“We have delivered to 31 countries now. Wherever there is a need we will do our best to help.
“When we first started the World Health Organisation said there were 150 million people in need of wheelchairs, this is the biggest understatement I’ve heard because they haven’t included the elderly. It’s mind boggling when you understand the need.”

Two boys in Botswana after receiving their wheelchairs and blankets.
Mr Frary said the charity is always seeking donations of second-hand wheelchairs and walking aids, which it can then service and send abroad.
To contact Mr Frary about a donation, email info@wheelchairfoundationuk.org.
Harrogate district MP Nigel Adams to step down at next electionHarrogate district MP Nigel Adams will stand down at the next general election, according to the BBC News.
The broadcaster reported today that the Conservative MP for Selby and Ainsty, whose constituency includes Spofforth, Follifoot, Huby and Weeton, wanted to spend time on other interests.
The next general election is due to take place in 2024.
Mr Adams was first elected in 2010 and has defended the seat in three subsequent elections.
Last September, he was appointed minister without portfolio in the Cabinet Office.
The role does not have responsibility for a specific department but instead helps to coordinate government policy and includes a vote at Cabinet meetings.
A donation to Mr Adams from a Russian businessman came under the spotlight last year. Viktor Fedotov, donated £33,800 to the MP.
Mr Adams was also in the news last year for swearing at anti-Brexit campaigner Steve Bray outside the Commons.
Read more:
- Hot Seat: Farewell to the Harrogate district’s transport chief
- Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed
Teenagers steal equipment from Spofforth primary school
Six teenagers who stole equipment from Spofforth Church of England Primary School are being hunted by police.
North Yorkshire Police is appealing for witnesses to the incident, which happened on Saturday, March 5, at 5pm.
Officers said they believed the teens attempted to break into the school on School Lane in the village, but were unsuccessful.
The suspects then broke into the school’s equipment shed, stole multiple items and caused criminal damage to school property.
Read more:
A police statement added:
Family moves to Rudding Park to escape minus one degree home“We are requesting the public’s assistance to help identify suspects in relation to the incident. Five of the suspects have been described as teenage boys and one of the suspects has been described as a teenage girl.
“Anyone with information that could assist the investigation should contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for PC Fleming.
“You can also email ethan.fleming@northyorkshire.police.uk. Please quote reference number 12220039590.”
A Beckwithshaw family has booked into Rudding Park hotel to escape its freezing home after two days without power.
Sylvia Skipper’s home was among thousands in the district to lose electricity when Storm Arwen struck late on Friday.
Power has returned to most but about 800 properties in the Harrogate district are still affected, according to a live map by Northern Powergrid, the company responsible for the electricity distribution network across the North East, Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire.
Ms Skipper, who lives on Shaw Lane, said her family had been without power since 9.20pm on Friday. There has been no hot water or heating, despite the freezing conditions, and they have been unable to cook. She said:
“Our house yesterday afternoon was minus one degrees.
“We couldn’t take any more and are now staying at Rudding Park. We have no idea whether power will be restored today.
“This is inhumane. We have lost faith as we have been forgotten about.”
Northern Powergrid’s live map shows 660 homes are without power in the Summerbridge and Bishop Thornton area, along with 60 in Spofforth, 30 in North Stainley, 20 in Pannal, 20 in High Birstwith, 20 in Kirkby Malzeard, fewer than 10 in Knaresborough, fewer than 10 in Greenhow Hill.
Ms Skipper said:
“The communication from Northern Powergrid has been dreadful.
“Until this afternoon we didn’t even have a phone signal on top of this so we had to venture in the car so that we could communicate with Northern Powergrid.
“I have seen their Twitter updates about providing hot drinks and support to numerous areas in the North East yet there has been absolutely nothing for us or our neighbours.”
Read more:
- Storm Arwen: More than 700 Harrogate district homes still without power
- Harrogate mum who struggled to feed kids wants to break stigma
Steve Crisp, whose home between Beckwithshaw and Leathley is also without power, said:
“I keep trying to access Northern Powergrid but the website is unreliable and this morning when I rang and confirmed I would like to wait to speak to someone the system just cut me off.
“Patience and Dunkirk spirit being stretched!”
He and his wife were luckier than some because they had a log burner, which provided heat and a means to cook beans on toast.
‘One of worst storms for 20 years’
Northern Powergrid’s latest update at 11pm last night said it had restored power to around 208,000 of the 240,000 customers. About 100 engineers from other power companies had been drafted in to help. It added:
“The scale of damage in some locations is so extensive that in some cases, large sections of overhead lines will need to be rebuilt in order to restore supplies.
“Where it can, Northern Powergrid is deploying temporary fixes that get customers back on supply whilst its teams coordinate the necessary permanent repairs to get the region’s power network back to full strength.
Rod Gardner, Northern Powergrid’s major incident manager, added:
Stray Views: Station Gateway ‘a waste of money’“The impact from Storm Arwen has been one of the worst we’ve experienced in the last 20 years.”
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Traffic concern over Beech Grove
Since the closure of through traffic along Beech Grove, the daily count of (mainly) cars using Victoria Road has increased by over 300%. The Project Engineer attributes most of this increase to cars driving southbound from A61 Ripon Road to A61 Leeds Road using Victoria Road as a cut-through thus avoiding the Cheltenham /Station Parade congestion.
There is now an experimental scheme, about to be installed, which will stop movements from Victoria Road to Otley Road. Hence the extra 300% of cars using Victoria Road will be pushed back on to Cold Bath Road and Cheltenham Parade which are already the subject of complaints about increased traffic.
Richard Wright, Harrogate
Station Gateway “a waste of money”
Having attended the consultation meeting on October 29, I left feeling that the general consensus of attendees was that the project was a gross waste of public money irrespective of the source of that money.
When asked the source and integrity of the data being used to support the scheme the project team spokesperson appeared more coy mentioning ‘social media’ and local surveys without being specific, although the council leader’s strong support of cycling was mentioned by an attendee. The council leader sees a vote of just over a thousand people (mainly cyclists) as being a significant majority vote in support of the planned cycle lane’s scheme incorporated in the Gateway project. The town’s population of over seventy five thousand seemingly being overlooked i.e. Less than 2% appear to support the introduction of many of the proposed changes.
It was indicated that forty thousand survey letters would be sent out shortly but the area of coverage was unknown.
Bearing in mind that the consultation was indicated to be the final opportunity for public comments to be made this seems a little late in the planning process.
In essence as a percentage of the total populace it seemed to highlight how few people were fully aware of the proposed project details or cost of it.
Comments expressed, as a generalisation, was the council do what they want anyway, appearing to endorse seeing the town as their ‘fiefdom’ without cognisance of the ‘silent majority’ Ie. those who are just too weary of the local politics and money wasting schemes over several years to further engage.
John Marsden, Harrogate
Read more:
- Is Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road getting busier?
- Harrogate businesses set for crunch talks on £10.9m Station Gateway
Spofforth homes would be a “disaster”
The site of Yorkshire Housing Ltd’s new development is on a green field site. The field is in a conservation area, and to quote the local news website, The Stray Ferret, “more than 300 people and organisations, including Natural England, Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, have raised concerns about the scheme”.
As well as being in a beautiful setting (where my son and his family live), the roads and infrastructure are not suitable for the increased amount of traffic, not to mention the small bridge that spans the Crimple Beck, which is very narrow and cannot possibly take the strain of the extra HGVs vehicles that the construction would necessitate.
There does not appear to be any proper access/exit roads to the site? The increase of 72 cars plus, would turn this into an ecological disaster and a dystopian nightmare for the residents of the village.
Denis Ffoulkes Standing, Spofforth
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Government approves controversial 72 homes in SpofforthThe government has approved controversial plans for 72 homes in Spofforth. The approval will come as a bitter disappointment to many residents who fought the development.
Yorkshire Housing Ltd has challenged Harrogate Borough Council’s decision to refuse its proposal for the site on Massey Fold.
The developer already had outline permission to build on the site, but councillors turned down an application for appearance and landscaping in November 2020.
Siobhan Watson, a government planning inspector, has given the go-ahead for the proposal.
Ms Watson said in her decision report:
“I find some harm to the character and appearance of the countryside, however, I find the internal layout and detailed design of the proposed housing to be acceptable.”
Read more:
She also awarded costs against the council after finding that the authority “behaved unreasonably” and that its reasons for refusal were “vague and illogical”.
Ms Watson said:
“Given the site’s planning history, I find the council’s refusal of the application and subsequent defence of the case to be both vague and illogical. I consider that the development should have been clearly permitted and that the council produced vague and generalised assertions about the proposal’s impact which are unsupported by objective analysis.
“The council has therefore behaved unreasonably, and thereby caused the party applying for the costs to incur unnecessary expense in the appeal process.”
The decision follows concerns from local residents over the design and that the housing would not be in keeping with the village.
More than 300 local people and organisations, including Natural England and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, raised concerns about the scheme.
Shirley Fawcett, chairman of Spofforth with Stockeld Parish Council, wrote to Prime Minister Boris Johnson appealing for help in challenging the development.
She said in her letter that the village is “a very blue village but which is seeing red thanks to the government’s planning policies”.
Ms Fawcett added that it “will never be the same” if the appeal is allowed and that the “Sword of Damocles” hung over villagers.
The developer said the borough council had “unreasonably delayed development” at the site and that its case “does not contain any objective analysis that justifies the reason for refusal”.
Yorkshire Housing Ltd declined to comment at this stage.