Malcolm Neesam

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Malcolm_Neesam an entity of type: Thing

Malcolm George Neesam (28 June 1946 – 28 June 2022) was an English historian and writer specialising in the history of Harrogate, North Yorkshire. He was also a librarian and archivist. His major works were the first two parts of a projected trilogy on that subject: Harrogate Great Chronicle, 1332–1841 (2005) and Wells and Swells: The Golden Age of Harrogate Spa, 1842–1923 (2022). The third part was to remain unfinished when he died, although his research papers are preserved in the Walker-Neesam Archive at the Mercer Art Gallery, Harrogate. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Malcolm Neesam
rdf:langString Malcolm Neesam
rdf:langString Malcolm Neesam
rdf:langString Harrogate, England
xsd:date 2022-06-28
rdf:langString Harrogate, England
xsd:date 1946-06-28
xsd:integer 71842786
xsd:integer 1118750856
rdf:langString Clean-shaven man in his late forties
rdf:langString Freedom of the Borough of Harrogate
xsd:date 1946-06-28
rdf:langString Malcom Neesam, in 1995
xsd:date 2022-06-28
rdf:langString – Wells and Swells: The Golden Age of Harrogate Spa, 1842–1923
rdf:langString – Harrogate Great Chronicle, 1332–1841
xsd:integer 1972
rdf:langString Malcolm George Neesam (28 June 1946 – 28 June 2022) was an English historian and writer specialising in the history of Harrogate, North Yorkshire. He was also a librarian and archivist. His major works were the first two parts of a projected trilogy on that subject: Harrogate Great Chronicle, 1332–1841 (2005) and Wells and Swells: The Golden Age of Harrogate Spa, 1842–1923 (2022). The third part was to remain unfinished when he died, although his research papers are preserved in the Walker-Neesam Archive at the Mercer Art Gallery, Harrogate. For his services as a historian, Neesam was awarded the Freedom of the Borough of Harrogate by Harrogate Borough Council in 1996, when he was also given honorary membership of The Harrogate Club. He was involved in the inception of the Harrogate Brown Plaque Scheme, and was influential in the listing of many Harrogate buildings. He was a founder member of Harrogate Civic Society and assisted other major local organisations where their work required historical input. For thirty years he wrote the weekly "Bygone Harrogate" column in the Harrogate Advertiser, and his published works spanned a period of fifty years.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 22600
xsd:gYear 2022
xsd:gYear 1972
xsd:gYear 1946
xsd:gYear 2022

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