Stray FM was an Independent Local Radio station serving the western half of North Yorkshire, and sections of West Yorkshire, to the north of Leeds and Bradford, England. The original licence covered the towns of Harrogate and Ripon and the surrounding areas.[2]. From 1 February 2012 the station expanded to cover the Yorkshire Dales. As part of a rebrand, the station was folded into Greatest Hits Radio Harrogate & The Yorkshire Dales on 1 September 2020.

Nearby Places View Menu
Location Image
51 m

Harrogate Carnegie Library

Harrogate Library (or, more formally, Harrogate Carnegie Library) is a Grade II listed public library in Harrogate, England.
Location Image
91 m

West Park United Reformed Church, Harrogate

West Park United Reformed Church is located in the West Park area of Harrogate, England, and is a Grade II listed building. It was designed in Nonconformist Gothic style as West Park Congregational Church by Lockwood & Mawson and completed in 1862 for around £5,000. Along with Belvedere Mansion across the road, it was intended as part of the prestigious entrance to the Victoria Park development (now West Park). For the Congregationalists it was meant to house an increasing congregation of visitors brought to the spa town by the recently built railways. It became a United Reformed church in 1972. Its first minister was the much-loved Reverend John Henry Gavin who died in his prime of tuberculosis and had a big funeral in which many followed the coffin. Sir Francis Crossley laid the foundation stone, Thomas Raffles preached at the opening, and Tsarina Alexandra of Russia later worshipped there. The building has a large Binns pipe organ and the tower contains a single bell cast at Whitechapel Bell Foundry. The gargoyles on the tower have chicks carved on the nest-like capitals below them, and the south wall has twelve carved heads of historical characters, including Isaac Watts, John Bunyan, John Milton and Oliver Cromwell. In July 2025 the church building held a local history display called the Harrogate Story, and it became a community hub for local events. Although still owned by the United Reformed Church, it is now also known as the West Park Centre.
Location Image
108 m

Rogers' Almshouses

Rogers' Almshouses are a historic building in Harrogate, a town in North Yorkshire, in England. The twelve almshouses were commissioned by George Rogers and built on a site now known as Rogers' Square. They were designed by William Andrews and Joseph Pepper and were completed in 1868. The almshouses were refurbished in 1992, by which time there were 14 retirement homes, and in 2018 the central garden was relandscaped. In 2021, the almshouses were configured to provided 15 properties. They are available to residents of Harrogate or Bradford who are at least 60 years old. The building was grade II listed in 1975. The almshouses are built of rusticated gritstone, with a string course, a bracketed eaves course, and slate roofs with coped gables. They have two storeys, in three ranges, around a courtyard. In the centre of the main range is a four-storey clock tower, with a two-light window in the ground floor in an arched recess with a carved tympanum, and a hood mould with an inscription. Above is a bust of the founder, loop windows, gabled clock faces and a pyramidal roof. The windows are paired casements, those in the lower floor with splayed reveals, and in the upper floor with trefoil heads and gables. The doorways are recessed, with fanlights, and bracketed hoods.
Location Image
109 m

Belvedere House, Harrogate

Belvedere House, also known as Belvedere, is a historic building in Harrogate, a town in North Yorkshire, in England.