The Royston Crow
The Crow takes pride in being the community newspaper and website of Royston
and the surrounding area.
The Crow in now more than 150-years-old - but it has remained true
to the spirit of John Warren, the man who originally started The Crow in
1855.
He wanted to create a local newspaper and in spite of the every
changing world of newspapers The Crow is still seen as "the people's
local".
A recent independent survey showed The Crow is the leading local
newspaper.
The Crow's website site is updated with local news each day and carries a range of photo
galleries from events around the area.
Crow editor Darren Isted said: "A newspaper with the reputation of
the Royston Crow holds a great deal of responsibility for keeping
readers in the area informed and entertained. We do this with our print
edition but also with our online offering which responds to breaking
news and sets a different agenda. Either way the Crow has always been
number one and we will continue to serve our readers and customers with
the product which they have come to know and love."
Crow History Milestones
- January 1 1855: First edition of the Royston Crow
published as a monthly newspaper.
- September 1876: The Crow became a weekly newspaper
and announced that it would now cost ONE PENNY after previously being a
free newspaper.
- 1878: The title Herts & Cambs Reporter was
added to The Crow masthead to show the extended area the newspaper was
covering.
- 1884: John Warren, the man who had first published
The Crow, died and his son, Robert Warren, took over as co-editor along
with Alfred Kingston, the author of The History of Royston.
- 1903: Ebenezer Henderson became chief report and
remained with The Crow for the next 35 years.
- 1909: Frank Willmott joined The Crow as a
compositor in the print works and in 1949 became editor until his
retirement in October 1967.
- 1926: During the General Strike, The Crow produced
a number of special editions. Items for the strike special editions
came from "wireless reports and other sources".
- 1930: Joseph Cooke purchased The Crow and remain
chairman of the company - Warren Brothers and Cooke - until his death in
August, 1972.
- 1967: Frank Willmott retired as editor after 58
years with The Crow. Fred Sillence, who had spent the previous two years
as co-editor, took over as editor and remained at The Crow until his
retirement in October, 1981.
- 1969: The Crow moved to new premises in King
Street, Royston.
- 1972: Joseph Cooke died.
- 1974: Warren Brothers and Cooke set up a new
company, the Herts & Cambs Reporter and Royston Crow with Joseph
Cooke's son, Michael Cooke as managing director and his wife, Dorothy,
as a director.
- January 1978: Bill Beets acquired controlling
interest in The Crow. The Crow expanded by going into the typesetting
business.
- January 1979: Terry Grote became assistant editor
of The Crow.
- Jan 1980: The Crow celebrated its 125th
anniversary.
- October 1981: Fred Sillence retired as editor and
was succeeded by Terry Grote.
- 1986: Terry Grote became managing director of the
Capital Newspaper group and was succeeded as editor by Robin
Davidson-Lungley, who remained with The Crow until April 1989.
- May 1989: At the age of 25 Elaine Bishop became
group editor. She was the first woman to be editor of The Crow and the
youngest. She remained until March 1991.
- 1990: The Crow - which was then part of Mid-Anglia
Newspapers and included the Saffron Walden Reporter and the Dunmow
Broadcast - was purchased by the East Anglian Daily Times.
- November 1993: Mike Almond became managing editor
of Mid-Anglia newspapers.
- 1995: The Crow and other titles of Mid-Anglia
Newspapers became part of Eastern Counties Newspapers which subsequently
became the present Archant group.
- January 1 2000: Les Baker appointed editor of The
Crow after being chief sub-editor for the Archant Anglia (West) group of
newspapers.
- 2008: Les Baker retires, and Darren Isted takes
over as Editor. Darren is also editor of The Comet Newspaper.