New President Takes Over Reins
NEW PRESIDENT TAKES OVER REINS
A love of the countryside and a passion for all things equestrian are the characteristics
of the new President of the Yorkshire Agricultural Society.
During a formal ceremony on the last day of the 2007 Great Yorkshire Show, Christopher
Hall took the Staff of Office from retiring President Michael Abrahams.
During his 12 months in office, Mr Hall is keen to further enhance the close
links between the Society and agriculture. The Society organises the Great Yorkshire
Show and its sister event, Countryside Live, which are platforms for the farming
industry and provide an insight for the general public into agriculture and food
provenance. The role is very familiar to Mr Hall as he was the Honorary Show Director
from 1997 – 2006.
He said: “Paramount to me is the Society’s contribution to agriculture and the
rural industry. I see us as standard bearers for farmers in the north of England,
promoting the fantastic job they do in providing our food and caring for the countryside.
“Farming has been completely revolutionised during my lifetime, but what makes
farmers tick is still very much the same as it was 50 years ago. The whole question
of sustainability and conservation is becoming more and more important and we
need to take climate change seriously. Anything that the Society can do to promote
conservation combined with developing the core farm business will gain my full
support,” he commented.
Mr Hall was born into a family with, on one side, centuries-old connections in
York, and, on the other, of yeoman farmers in Kirkbymoorside. The family tannery
business, Henry Hall & Son, was established in York in the 1780s and was an
important factor both in the local economy and in the family’s business life until
changes in the sector nationally resulted in its closure in the early 1950s.
Mr Hall spent his working life supplying equipment to the printing industry,
and saw the transformation of the business, as it moved from an entirely mechanical
process to computerised systems. In the 1980s he established his own company,
Typetronics, based in Wetherby and then Leeds, which was successfully brought
to market in 1997.
In 1996 he followed the family tradition by becoming a Governor of the Company
of Merchant Adventurers of the City of York, a post held by both his father and
grandfather.
Now retired from business, Mr Hall has had a long association with the Great
Yorkshire, working originally as a horse steward before being appointed Honorary
Show Director in 1997.
His seven years as show director were extremely varied, and ranged from hosting
royal visits by both HRH the Prince of Wales and HRH the Duke of York, to dealing
with the cancellation of the Great Yorkshire Show in 2001 due to Foot and Mouth
Disease.
A keen horseman, Mr Hall became one of three Joint Masters of the West of Yore
Hunt in May last year, and he and his wife Jackie keep horses and ponies at their
farm near Ripon. They are both involved with fundraising for the Ripon Cathedral
Development Campaign.

Christopher Hall