The mother of a 15-year-old boy seriously injured in a collision on the way to school in Harrogate has issued an emotional plea for road safety improvements.
Stephanie Talbot’s son Reuben was one of two Rossett School students hit by a pick-up truck on Yew Tree Lane on February 2.
Four months on from the collision, she has given her backing to a campaign to impose a 20mph limit on streets across a swathe of south and west Harrogate.
In a statement read by road safety campaigner and fellow parent Jenny Marks at today’s meeting of North Yorkshire Council‘s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee, she said:
“They were on the pavement [when they were hit]. My daughter was also involved in the collision as her car was hit by the same truck. My youngest son was right behind his brother on the pavement and so witnessed the whole incident.
“My husband and I were right there within a few minutes of the accident happening. Reuben’s body had landed in positions it should never be in.
“Pieces of wall had to be removed from his body and he had eight broken bones: arms, leg and back… I was later told that when the paramedics arrived his stats showed that he could easily have died while on the ground there.
“I will never get over what I saw and heard that day.”
Some members of the committee were moved to tears as Dr Marks continued to read Ms Talbot’s statement.
It said her daughter had never felt safe walking to school in the area and had even been hit by a car near Rossett Sports Centre last September – which also happened while she was on the path.
Ms Talbot said she felt a 20mph network around schools in Harrogate would make children and parents feel safer to walk and cycle around the area, adding:
“Putting action in place should not be done as a consequence to a child’s injury or even death, but this accident should be a wake-up call to all parents, grandparents and the community to know that we need to make a change in our beautiful but busy town to enable our children to feel safe.
“Seventeen weeks on and many aspects of our lives are still on hold because of these injuries. I cannot even explain the pain and trauma that we have all gone through and will live with for the rest of our lives.
“Please be the people that make a difference.”
Petition
Campaigners Hazel Peacock and Vicki Evans presented a petition at the meeting with 924 signatures from people in support of reducing the speed limit to 20mph across the Oatlands, Hookstone, Pannal Ash and St George’s areas, where around 9,000 children attend local schools.
Ms Peacock told the meeting that evidence from other projects around the UK showed the reduction could have a significant impact on the severity of collisions.
She added:
“You have just heard of the devastating effects of the collision on Yew Tree Lane in February, and you are also aware of the collision outside Oatlands Junior School, also on the pavement, in January.
“These awful events coupled with overwhelming evidence of the benefits of 20mph limits demonstrate why change is urgently needed.”
Hazel Peacock handed the petition to North Yorkshire Council last month, with support from councillors and campaigners
While councillors on all sides of the chamber gave their support to the calls for a reduced speed limit, the Conservatives highlighted the fact that a pilot project had already been requested.
North Yorkshire Council is developing a policy on 20mph limits around schools and other urban areas, and Cllr John Mann (Conservative, Oatlands and Pannal) said he was keen to see the results of that work guide how a lower speed limit could be used in the area.
Conservative Cllr Sam Gibbs of the Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate division said:
“I do have one very slight reservation: 99% of the roads that are in this scheme I don’t have an issue with. However, the main roads of Leeds Road and Otley Road would be a slight concern to me if they were brought in to 20mph.”
Read more:
- Blanket 20mph limit across south Harrogate ‘urgently needed’
- Harrogate school road safety petition handed in to council
Cllr Paul Haslam, the Conservative councillor for Bilton and Nidd Gorge, said there needed to be a shift in attitudes and behaviours to make the school run safer, adding:
“We can put in a 20mph speed limit, but at the end of the day it’s all about behavioural and attitude changes to this. When we did the stats on Harrogate in 2018, I think more than 60% of the journeys in this town are less than 1.8km – not even miles, 1.8km.
“Surely we should be able to walk those distances, and a lot of that is to do with school commuting.”
The Liberal Democrats put forward a motion in support of the petition, calling on North Yorkshire Council to deliver a 20mph limit on streets across the area.
The proposal was voted through and will be passed to NYC’s executive.
Liberal Democrat Cllr Matt Walker, representing the Knaresborough West division, added:
Trans-Pennine Run cancelled as organisers seek new Harrogate venue“This is an opportunity that we should not miss and we need to show the executive our views on this.
“This tragedy should not have happened and it’s within our gift to send that message on our views to the executive so that this does not happen to anybody else.”
A popular event that has been held in Harrogate for more than 50 years will not return this summer.
The Trans-Pennine Run, first staged in 1969, sees dozens of historic vehicles driven from Greater Manchester to Harrogate.
Residents and visitors would flock to the Stray along Oatlands Drive to look around the vans, lorries, buses and other vehicles after their arrival.
However, in 2019 the Stray was left unusable by heavy rain, leading the Historic Commercial Vehicle Society, which organises the event, to seek an alternative site.
It found a home at the Yorkshire Event Centre, on the Great Yorkshire Showground, and returned there in 2022 after a two-year break during the covid pandemic.
But this year, event chairman Chris Sant told supporters:
“The management of the Yorkshire Events Centre have informed us that the large area of hard standing that we have in past years used for the finish will not be available this year.
“I contacted them in early January to request the use of the site, and after confirming receipt of my request it [took] over two months to inform us that the area will be unavailable, leaving us too little time to find an alternative.”
Mr Sant said he was hopeful it would be possible to hold the Trans-Pennine Run again in 2024 and was working to find another location for the vehicles to convene at the end of the route.
A spokesperson for the Yorkshire Event Centre said no agreement had been made to use the venue this year, adding:
“We stepped in to help organisers two days before the Trans-Pennine Run in 2019 when their original site at the Stray was waterlogged. The event was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to covid and an agreement was made for it to be held again at the showground in 2022.
“Unfortunately, no agreement was put in place for 2023 and the area is now under offer for another event.”
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Ramshackle phone box transformed into Stray information point
A ramshackle red phone box in Harrogate has been moved and transformed into a history of the Stray.
The disused phone box on the Stray, just off Otley Road, had fallen into a dilapidated state.
So the Stray Defence Association, which safeguards the 200 acres of parkland against building and encroachment, hired a specialist renovation company to uplift it on March 16.
It was restored to its original bright scarlet and moved to a more prominent town centre spot on West Park Stray, where it stood beneath a white cover for several days.
Two children removed the covers at an unveiling ceremony this afternoon to reveal the new-look phone box with panels displaying the history of Harrogate’s Stray and the Stray Defence Association.
Its old position on the Stray, next to Otley Road, has been restored and reseeded to return it to Stray land.

Stray Defence Association chairman Judy d’Arcy Thompson and committee member Syd Bell
Judy D’Arcy Thompson, chairman of the Stray Defence Association, said:
“It is the Stray Defence Association’s hope that it will become a valued part of the West Park street scene and an intriguing and iconic information source for both local people and visitors to Harrogate.”
Today’s unveiling, which was attended by members of the Stray Defence Association, Harrogate In Bloom and Harrogate Civic Society, coincided with the 90th anniversary of the Stray Defence Association, which was formed on May 12, 1933
Cordelia, 7, and Harry, 5, performed the opening by cutting a ribbon to highlight how children are the future custodians of the Stray.
A Stray Defence Association donor paid for the renovation, which was approved by the Duchy of Lancaster and both Harrogate Borough Council and the new North Yorkshire Council.

The phone box being uplifted

Panels on the restored phone box tell the story of the Stray.
Read more:
Cherry trees on Harrogate’s Stray vandalised again
Three cherry trees in Harrogate have been vandalised in the latest incident of its kind on the Stray.
Nearby resident Cheryl Flint was upset to notice the snapped branches on the parkland off York Place this morning.
What appears to be a school tie is hanging from a branch opposite one of the damaged trees.

Another snapped branch
Ms Flint said:
“We wait all year for these beautiful trees to bloom — then some idiots think that it is acceptable for the mindless behaviour.”
The rows of cherry trees are a popular attraction on the Stray, particularly in spring when they blossom. But they have become a magnet for vandals.
The latest damage is less severe than that which occurred in August 2021 when eight trees were affected.
In October 2020, a police officer tweeted about a number of trees “destroyed and killed” on York Place Stray.
Read more:
Floral tribute to King Charles created in Harrogate
A floral tribute to King Charles has been created in Harrogate.
North Yorkshire Council‘s parks team created the eye-catching display on Stray land on Montpellier Hill. It is currently behind railings, which will be removed on Saturday’s coronation day.
The parks team made the royal cypher using a technique called carpet bedding, which involves using plants so compact and tightly knitted that the result looks like a woven carpet. The display will stay in place for 12 months.

Some of the parks team that worked on the display.
A council spokesperson said:
“The display is made up of more than 15,600 plants, including sedum, sempervivum and ajuga, which are all compact plants ideal for this type of display.
“The temporary fencing will be removed first thing on Saturday morning to enable people to enjoy the display fully.”
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- Coronation events: where to celebrate across the Harrogate district
- Fireworks finale will end Ripon’s coronation day celebrations
£29,000 to be diverted from street light budget to pay for Stray lights
A total of £29,190 is to be diverted from the Harrogate district’s street lighting budget to pay for the replacement of decorative lights on the Stray.
The trees line the Stray around West Park, Otley Road, Leeds Road, Montpellier Hill and York Place and are a popular winter attraction.
Last autumn Harrogate Borough Council replaced the old sodium lights with energy-efficient LED bulbs and wrapped them round trunks to prevent them hanging from branches and getting damaged.

The new lighting being installed
In a report due before Cllr Mike Chambers, cabinet member for housing and safer communities at Harrogate Borough Council, council officers are set to request retrospective permission to pay for the lights.
The report says the cost of the new lights “has been partly funded by parks and environmental service budgets” but a £29,000 shortfall remained.
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The report says responsibility for annual maintenance of the Stray tree lights rests housing and property services.
It adds:
“However, parks and environmental services were able to provide one off funds to contribute from the cost of the new lights from underspends in the financial year 2021/22. This left a shortfall in funding of £29,000.
“The housing and property reserve includes £84,680 which has built up over the years in relation to street lighting cyclical works which had not been carried out.
“It is recommended that £29,190 of this should be utilised to fund the cost of Stray lights.”
The report adds the council has only received one complaint about the new lighting.
Boy, 15, robbed by men in balaclavas on the Stray in Harrogate
A 15-year-old boy was left shaken after being robbed by two men wearing balaclavas on the Stray in Harrogate.
Two men stole the boy’s beige tote bag containing spare clothes, a black North Face puffer jacket and wireless headphones.
North Yorkshire Police today issued an appeal for witnesses to the incident, which happened on Milton Way between 6.30pm and 8.30pm on Saturday.
It said in a statement:
“The boy did not suffer any injuries but was left very shaken by the incident.
“Witnesses or anyone who recalls suspicious behaviour in the area on Saturday evening are urged to come forward.”
The suspects are described as about 6ft tall, muscular builds, dark clothing including black puffer jackets with furry hoods. Both were wearing balaclavas.

Milton Way on the Stray leads to Leeds Road.
They ran off towards the Tewit Well area of Leeds Road.
Anyone that assist the investigation can email elizabeth.parry@northyorkshire.police.uk or call 101, select option 2, and ask for Elizabeth Parry.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
Quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230044608.
Stunning crocus displays in Harrogate thanks to planting by volunteersThere may be snow in the forecast, but Harrogate’s Stray is proving that spring is certainly on the way.
A sea of white, shades of purple, and splashes of yellow is carpeting the edges of the Stray as the district braces for a predicted cold snap next week.
Harrogate is well-known for its impressive display of thousands of crocuses each spring – many of them planted in recent years by local volunteers.
Bilton Conservation Group was one of several organisations to help plant the bulbs almost three years ago, along with Horticap and Open Country, in a project organised by Harrogate Borough Council.
Bilton Conservation Group chairman Keith Wilkinson said:
“It’s great news that they’re doing so well this year. It was a good turn-out on the day of the planting.
“The mixture we put in was the Harrogate mix — the pale, white with the vertical purple stripe. It was a special commission from Holland.”
The displays have improved in the years since the bulbs were planted in autumn 2020, and are likely to increase further in future as they self-divide.
Visitors have been enjoying the scene this week as the crocuses get into full bloom.
Young Emma, who turns two on Sunday (pictured above), was staying in Harrogate for a few days with her parents and took the opportunity to explore the flowers – and pose for photos.
Read more:
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Harrogate council refuses plan for 5G mast overlooking the Stray
Harrogate Borough Council has refused plans to erect a 20-metre tall 5G mobile phone mast overlooking the Stray.
5G is the quickest mobile internet connection available and offers up to 20 times faster speeds than 4G. However, the town is currently poorly served by 5G signal, particularly on its southern side.
Reading-based telecoms firm Cignal Infrastructure Ltd hoped to erect a mast at Granby Park, which is adjacent to the section of the Stray by Skipton Road. It said there is an acute need for coverage in the area.
The company reviewed other nearby locations including County Square, Devonshire Place, Sanders Walk and Westmoreland Street but discounted them due to their pavements being too narrow to accommodate the equipment.
It decided the Granby Park location was the best compromise to extend 5G in the area’s “coverage hole”.
But Harrogate Borough Council case officer Emma Howson wrote in her refusal that she had concerns about its visual impact on Harrogate’s much-cherished parkland.
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Ms Howson said the mast would be “highly visible” from the Stray, as well as on Skipton Road and Claro Road.
The plans received 20 objections, including one from from Harrogate Civic Society. There were no letters of support
Henry Pankhurst, from the civic society, wrote that the plans should be refused due to “a negative visual effect on the conservation area and on the Stray.”
Ms Howson agreed and concluded:
“The public benefits of 5G coverage and capacity have been noted however the harm arising from the impact on the conservation area would substantially outweigh this.”
Meanwhile, plans from Cignal to erect a 15-metre mast outside the Co-op on Otley Road have been approved.
The rollout of 5G has led to fears the frequencies emitted from the masts could be dangerous to humans. But during tests in 2020, regulator Ofcom found “no identifiable risks”.
Plans for more Stray protection ‘not needed’ says defence groupThe organisation set up to protect Harrogate’s Stray has said a move to make it common land is “not needed”.
The Stray Defence Association said it was approached by the Open Spaces Society for a number of years about the possibility of changing its official status.
However, SDA chairman Judy d’Arcy Thomson told the Stray Ferret the existing protections for the Stray were adequate and she had not been persuaded that common land status would bring any benefit.
She said:
“There really didn’t seem a great deal of point in what they were trying to do. The whole thing about this is that the Stray is common land in all but name.
“Because it belongs to the people of Harrogate, it’s a sledgehammer to crack a walnut job.
“I’m absolutely behind protecting the Stray but there didn’t seem any point in doing this. We were going round and round in circles. It’s very hard to work out what they are trying to achieve.
“I’m sure they are very well-meaning and what they are do throughout the country, registering common land, is great. It’s laudable, but we don’t need it here.”
Read more:
- Bid to protect Harrogate’s Stray with common land status
- Work starts to reseed the Stray as part of £130,000 repairs
The Stray Act 1985 restricts the number of days on which events can be held on the Stray, as well as the amount of space they can use.
In recent years, special permission has been sought from the government to hold additional events, such as the UCI Road World Championships in 2019.
Heavy rain and large crowds during that event led to the grass on West Park Stray being extensively damaged, causing long periods of closure for repairs and a bill of almost £130,000.
The OSS said being made common land would add an “extra layer” of protection and require additional consent to hold similar events in the future. It also said the move would help to clear up discrepancies in maps of the Stray.
Ms d’Arcy-Thompson said she had worked with the late historian Malcolm Neesam, who had reviewed his maps and plans of the Stray over the last few years. He believed the OSS was working from inaccurate and out-of-date maps.
Before his death last year, he wrote:
“I think the Open Spaces Society is simply trying to find something to keep itself occupied.”
The Stray Defence Association has spoken to the Duchy of Lancaster, which owns the land, and Mrs d’Arcy-Thompson said it too was of the view that the change in status was not necessary.
Consultation period
North Yorkshire County Council’s assistant director for highways and transportation, Barrie Mason, said:
“We can confirm we have received an application from the Open Spaces Society to register the Stray in Harrogate as common land. In the first instance, the application will be considered by the commons registration officer to ensure that it has been made correctly and with the relevant supporting documentation.
“If so, then it will be processed in line with our policy. This will include a formal consultation period in accordance with the Commons Act 2006 requiring notices to be posted around The Stray and on the council’s website for a period of at least 42 days.
“At this early stage, we cannot put a timeframe on the determination of the application.”
