Cambridge News
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cambridge News | |
---|---|
Type | Daily newspaper |
Format | Tabloid |
|
|
Owner | Iliffe News and Media |
Publisher | Cambridge Newspapers |
Editor | Murray Morse |
Founded | 1888 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | Milton, Cambridgeshire |
Circulation | 28,026 [1] |
|
|
Website: www.cambridge-news.co.uk |
The Cambridge News (also known as the CEN or locally as simply the News, and formally the Cambridge Evening News) is a British daily newspaper published each week day (with afternoon and evening editions) and on Saturdays. It is distributed from its parent company Cambridge Newspapers Ltd's Milton base which was opened in 1991 as a print works, and became the Evening News' main operational hub in 1998. Its current (June 2007) daily circulation is just over 28,000.[1]
The paper was founded by William Farrow Taylor as the Cambridge Daily News in 1888 and after a slow start saw sales rise as an appetite for knowledge of the news and sports grew among the Cambridge public.[2] As its following steadily grew the fledgling paper survived the need for modernisation in the early Twentieth Century (Captain Archibald Taylor, son of the founder, was the first managing director to introduce a standard typeface during this time, for example), the uncertain economic climate during the 1920s and 1930s and the printing shortages of the Second World War. In the 1920s the Taylors sold the paper to the Iliffe family, who sold it in 1938 and then reacquired it in 1959, moving it to a larger premises on Newmarket Road: they continued to turn the paper into a profit making business under the new name of the Cambridge Evening News, starting in 1969. The headquarters moved from Newmarket Road to Milton in 1998. The current owners are Iliffe News and Media.
The Cambridge Evening News also has sister papers with a more local circulation which are delivered free of charge once a week to residents' doors. There are currently 10 such local editions of this 'Weekly News' series - Cambourne, Cambridge, Ely, Haverhill, Huntingdon, Newmarket, Royston, Saffron Walden, St Ives and St Neots. The paper is also active in local community campaigns such as its long running 'Action on the A14' campaign which demands action be taken on the dangerous road that bisects the paper's readership area, and also sponsors numerous local events such as the Village & Community Magazine Awards and the annual Business Excellence Awards, while running its own Community Awards to recognise readers who have made a difference in the area. The current editor is Murray Morse, who joined from the Newcastle Chronicle in November 2004.
[edit] Awards
The Cambridge Evening News was named Daily Newspaper of the Year in the EDF Energy East of England Media Awards in January 2007. The judges said the paper was "punchy, without trying to be too flashy" and "knows where its core readership is, and what it wants to see, and presents content in a clean and sensible way". It also won Community Campaign of the Year after its four-month crusade to deliver free bus fares to the region's 140,000 pensioners ended in victory.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Cambridge Evening News Hold the Front Page. Retrieved 25 December 2007
- ^ The History of the News cambridge-news.co.uk. Retrieved 08 September 2007