Yorkshire Post

New chief at Great Yorkshire Show

YAS selects stalwart to take over as director

- BEN BARNETT AGRICULTUR­AL CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ben.barnett@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @benbthewri­ter

FARMING: The new public face of the Great Yorkshire Show has spoken of his pride at leading England’s largest farming event after being announced as the new honorary show director.

The Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society has chosen one farmer to replace another, selecting Charles Mills to replace Bill Cowling, who is standing down.

THE new figurehead of the Great Yorkshire Show has spoken of his pride at leading England’s largest farming event into the next decade after being announced today as the new honorary show director.

The Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society (YAS) has chosen one farmer to replace another, selecting Charles Mills, a long-serving member of the society, to take up the prestigiou­s role. The position became available after Bill Cowling announced in October that this summer’s 157th show in Harrogate would be his last following a 10-year stint in the top job.

Mr Mills, who farms near York, faced competitio­n from a host of candidates to take up the role in which he will also act as show director for the Great Yorkshire Show’s sister event, Countrysid­e Live, which is held at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate every autumn.

Speaking to The Yorkshire Post, Mr Mills, of Woolas Grange Farm in Appleton Roebuck, said: “It’s a wonderful opportunit­y and a huge honour which doesn’t come around very often.”

A keen supporter of the show, Mr Mills has been involved in the cattle section for 11 years and became joint chief cattle steward.

Announcing his appointmen­t, YAS chairman Simon Theakston said Mr Mills would continue the “strong tradition of putting agricultur­e and rural life” at the heart of the Great Yorkshire Show and Countrysid­e Live.

A Yorkshirem­an by birth and a third generation farmer, Mr Mills runs a mixed arable rotation operation over 470 acres of farmland with his wife, Jill. They also have a flock of 250 breeding ewes and a small beef finishing enterprise.

The couple have two daughters, New York advertisin­g executive Anna and her younger sibling, Sarah, who has forged a career in sales. Their son, James, is based in Brussels and works for the National Farmers’ Union.

Mr Mills says he loves being a farmer and despite years of involvemen­t with the Great Yorkshire Show, it was the ill-fated show of 2012, when torrential, unseasonal weather saw the event cancelled after the first day, that the gravity of what it meant to him hit home.

“I realised then just what it meant to me,” he said. “It was my first year as a YAS trustee and I remember going up to the main offices and the decision was being made to cancel the show. It was such an emotional thing.

“The show meant so much to so many people and all the work they had put in over the last year had been lost.

“Going to tell the cattle exhibi- tors afterwards is something that will live with me forever.”

Paying a compliment to Mr Cowling, he added: “He has been an incredible show director and has brought it back into being very much an agricultur­al show and he has the team all pulling together. I want it to continue in a similar manner.”

Mr Mills’s first taste of the top job will come at this year’s show, which runs from July 14 to 16, when he will shadow Mr Cowling before accepting the crook of office in the show’s closing ceremony. Mr Cowling will continue to contribute to the show as a member of the cattle committee.

It’s a wonderful opportunit­y and a huge honour. Charles Mills who farms near York.

 ??  ?? CHANGING OF THE GUARD: Charles Mills, left, surveying the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate with outgoing honorary show director Bill Cowling.
CHANGING OF THE GUARD: Charles Mills, left, surveying the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate with outgoing honorary show director Bill Cowling.

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