Chevin Cross returns to Yorkshire ridge to mark approach of Easter
The current cross is made from wood salvaged after the Manchester bombing on June 15 1996.
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Your support makes all the difference.Volunteers have raised a wooden cross on a hill overlooking Otley in West Yorkshire to mark the approach of Easter, in a tradition that stretches back more than half a century.
They carried the 30ft Chevin Cross to the top of Otley Chevin, as has happened every year since 1969.
Howard Chaplain oversees the operation and told the PA news agency: āPutting up the cross is easy to organise, we announce it in the local press every year and then people come to help us out.
āWe get big groups coming together to make it happen, some people come every year, but there are always new faces too. Lots of them arenāt Christian.
āMany people also go to their windows to watch it happen from their homes. It definitely brings the whole town together.ā
The cross is put up two weeks before Easter Sunday and taken down again two weeks afterwards.
The current version is made from wood salvaged after the IRAās Manchester bomb attack on June 15 1996.
āThe cross has been going up now for 54 years, itās in a prime spot, where everyone can see it from the town centre,ā Mr Chaplain said.
āThe idea came from a local preacher, who was inspired to put the cross up after spending time in Austria in the hills there.
āHe made the first cross that was destroyed after a number of years. The current cross is made from wood from a Catholic church that was damaged in the bomb attack.ā
Mr Chaplain said even during the pandemic, the town kept the tradition of putting the cross in its current place.
He added: āPeople tell me itās very moving to see the cross rise slowly. We have a Range Rover pull the cross up, but people have to be on the ground to make sure the cross doesnāt twist.
āPatients can see the cross from the local hospital, and Iāve been told that it gives them an inner strength. Iām very proud of that.ā