Harrogate Borough Council is set to award a £40,000 contract to create a pet crematorium at Stonefall Cemetery.
The crematorium will be built inside a converted shipping container at the crematorium on Wetherby Road.
The contract would cover the purchase and installation of a cremator, as well as five years maintenance.
Councillors backed plans for the district’s first pet crematorium in March 2022.
Stephen Hemsworth, bereavement services manager at the council, said at the time it was likely to cost about £50 for a rabbit to be cremated and over £200 for a dog.
The contract, which is being advertised on a government procurement website, is expected to start in June this year.
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It says:
“This contract includes the purchase of a pet cremator and container in which the cremator will be housed and operated, including delivery, installation, training and periodic maintenance.
“The anticipated contract value is £40,000.00 for the purchase, delivery, siting and installation of the containerised pet cremator including five years maintenance from the date of installation.”
The move to set up a pet crematorium follows in the footsteps of councils in North East Lincolnshire and Barnsley, which have built similar facilities.
The Harrogate facility will include a “goodbye room” in a converted garage where owners can say final farewells to their pets.
WW2 nurse from Bilton who served in Dunkirk, Africa and HiroshimaSister Florrie Prest from Bilton saw remarkable service in the war, tending to injured service people across three continents.
Florrie served in the Territorial Army Nursing Service and was attached to Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS).
Elizabeth Smith from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission shared her research on the nurse with the Stray Ferret. She is buried at Stonefall Cemetery,
Ms Smith found two historic newspaper reports about Florrie in the now-defunct Harrogate Herald.
According to a report from 1946, Florrie worked as a dressmaker in Harrogate in the years before the war. She then trained as a nurse in London and worked at Harlow Wood Orthopedic in Sutton-in-Ashfield.
When war broke out, Florrie served at Dunkirk, northern Africa, Japan and in the Atlantic and Icelandic waters.
The report says she was of modest disposition and refused to speak about her service but admitted to once saving a person’s life from a blazing building in Iceland.
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Her second mention in the Herald was her obituary a year later. She died in York Military Hospital aged just 46 on October 26, 1947.
Florrie had been assistant matron on the hospital ship Dorsetshire. She was also mentioned in dispatches for service in the Middle East.
Ms Smith suspects this was when she was on the Dorsetshire when it was attacked several times in the Mediterranean despite being a hospital ship.
In North Africa, Florrie was in charge of field dressing station.
A dear sister
Later she was matron on the hospital ship Principessa Giovanna that was seized from Italy by the Royal Navy in 1944.
Her last appointment had been in Hiroshima, Japan before she was flown home.
Her parents lived at Bachelor Gardens in Harrogate and died before her. The personal inscription on her headstone was written by her brother. It reads:
“I HAVE LOST A DEAR SISTER BUT HEAVEN HAS GAINED ONE OF THE BEST THE WORLD CONTAINED.”
Free Stonefall tours
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission runs free tours and events at Stonefall Cemetery throughout the year that give visitors fascinating insights into some of the graves.
The next tours will be during War Graves Week and will shortly be available to book via Commonwealth War Graves website.
Harrogate International Partnership is also organising an ANZAC Day service at Stonefall on Sunday April 24.
It is shaping up to be an interesting event with local dignitaries, representatives from the RNZAF and the RAAF, local cadets, a brass band and potentially a haka.