Kevin Maguire presents awards

A long-running daily and a total newcomer made their own bits of history at the 2007-08 Tom Cordner North East Press Awards in Newcastle on 24 May 2008.

The Journal, 176 years-old, retained the title of Newspaper of the Year and became the first paper to win back-to-back since the award was created in 1990, while the Durham Times (launched April 2007) was named North East Weekly Newspaper in its debut year.

The Journal team carried off a basket of six other prizes: Hard News, Magazine (Culture), Page Design, Arts coverage, the Community Award and Best Picture of the Year. Editor Brian Aitken said it was a tremendous boost for the paper and he was proud of the entire staff.

The Durham Times, edited by Malcolm Warne, is modelled on its veteran stable-mate, the Darlington & Stockton Times, complete with gothic masthead, but, in the words of the judges’ citation, “it has taken an age-old local paper recipe and given it a taste of the 21st century.”

The 27th Cordners event, sponsored by the Campaign for North East England, covers newspapers, magazines and their associated websites from North Yorkshire to the Scottish border. Launched as a tribute by fellow journalists to Tom Cordner, news editor of the Hartlepool Mail when he died in 1976 aged only 38, they developed from a set of group awards with the present-day Northeast Press Ltd to embrace all North East titles and become the largest regional media awards operation in the UK.

A new award for News Website of the Year was won by the Northern Echo. Judges said their final choice reflected an advanced level of content and performance in www.northernecho.co.uk.

It showed the strong editorial hand of the paper and first-class navigation. Updating was impressive, especially in weekend sports coverage. The Echo had a good awards nigh, as Deputy Editor Chris Lloyd was named Journalist of the Year and took the Exclusive prize for getting the sole interview with Tony Blair on the day he finally left Downing Street. The Echo also captured prizes for Sport, Features and Health coverage.

Another award for 2009, for online Newspaper Video Journalism, was announced by Darlington College, sponsors of the Website award. The College has built video production into its NCTJ Preliminary training, and runs in-service courses for a number of news groups.

Kevin Maguire, associate editor of the Daily Mirror, presented the awards and was guest speaker. Born in South Shields, he explained he started his career in far-away Plymouth, after failing to get a job locally. He spoke of the resilience of people in the news trade which was often needed to uphold standards against the commercial pressures on newspapers. He described the Cordner entries on display at the event as ‘brilliant’ and evidence that journalism was in very good shape in the North East.

Latest News

Maguire presents 2008 awards

A long-running daily and a total newcomer made their own bits of history at the 2007-08 Tom Cordner North East Press Awards in Newcastle on 24 May 2008.

Winners 2007-08

The Journal retains its North East crown and
new Durham Times takes weekly honours.

2007 Birthday success for The Journal

It was a birthday night to remember for the staff of The Journal in Newcastle when they picked up the North East Newspaper of the Year title on the exact anniversary of their first issue 175 years ago.

Winners 2006 Awards

Journal staff sweep seven awards.

Presentation of 2005 Awards

Journalist and ex-MP Martin Bell issued a rallying cry for authentic and compassionate journalism at the annual Cordner North East Press Awards, where the Northern Echo took the NE Newspaper of the Year title.