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Westminster Press (Pearson subsidiary)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Defunct British regional newspaper group owned by Pearson

Westminster Press
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryRegional newspapers
Founded1921
Defunct1997
FateSold toNewsquest
Area served
United Kingdom
Key people
Weetman Dickinson Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray;Patrick Gibson, Baron Gibson;Weetman Harold Miller Pearson, 2nd Viscount Cowdray;Iain Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl
ProductsDaily and weekly provincial newspapers
ParentPearson plc

Westminster Press was a British group of regional and local newspapers withinS. Pearson and Son. The company was founded in 1921 and took its name from the LondonWestminster Gazette. It became the leading publisher of weekly papers in the United Kingdom and ran centres in Darlington, Oxford and Brighton. Pearson agreed to sell the group toNewsquest for about £305 million in August 1996; completion followed in 1997 after competition clearance.[1][2][3]

Origins

[edit]

The firm was formed as a Pearson-controlled holding in 1921 and took its name from theWestminster Gazette, a newspaper in whichWeetman Dickinson Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray was the leading shareholder.[4]

TheWestminster Gazette ran from 1893 to 1928. It switched to morning publication on 5 November 1921 and merged with theDaily News on 1 February 1928 to form theDaily News and Westminster Gazette.[5]

The group expanded by acquiring provincial titles.[6] One example was theStamford Mercury, which "first passed into the hands of a national chain when the then Westminster Press Provincial Newspaper bought it in 1929".[7]

Ownership and leadership

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Pearson family interests directed Westminster Press for most of the twentieth century.[8] Weetman Dickinson Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray, is linked to the group’s origins through his ownership of theWestminster Gazette and development of allied provincial holdings.

Senior figures connected with the group includedPatrick, Lord Gibson, who joined theOxford Mail in 1947 and became a Westminster Press director in 1948,[9] andIain Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl, who served as chairman from 1974 to 1993.[10]

Operations

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Westminster Press ran regional publishing houses that produced a daily and associated weeklies.[11][12][13] Production and printing were increasingly centralised in publishing houses serving multiple titles.[6]

On industry measures Westminster Press ranked first among weekly provincial publishers in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1961, it had 50 titles with weekly circulation of 603,000. By 1974, this had grown to 94 titles and 1,234,000 weekly circulation (derived from the Royal Commission on the Press data).[14]

The company argued that group ownership preserved local identity. The company emphasised "each major community to be covered specifically, under separate editors" and said group ownership was "quite unlike the uniformity of multiple retailing".[7] The company also stated that advertising yield could vary by "as much as 60%" between regions and that each division had to produce "satisfactory financial results within its own market".[6]

Journalism

[edit]

TheNorthern Echo was Westminster Press’s best-known daily. Under editorHarold Evans from 1961 to 1967 it ran campaigns on air pollution on Teesside and on cervical cancer screening that drew national attention.[15]

Industrial relations, 1977–1978

[edit]

In 1977 journalists at the Darlington centre began a dispute over a post-entryclosed shop clause. A closed shop is an agreement under which employees must be members of a specified trade union as a condition of employment.[16] By 1 December 1977The Times reported that the stoppage "affects theNorthern Echo, theEvening Despatch, theDarlington & Stockton Times, and theDurham Advertiser series" and had "lasted nearly six months".[17]

Before Christmas theNorthern Echo appeared with a skeleton staff and "was produced by four executives and a district reporter" while "106 journalists" remained on strike.[18] On 6 January 1978 "a solution... is in sight" and "the original demand for a closed shop will not be conceded".[19] Reuters then reported a vote to end the 32-week stoppage and accept a new pay deal at theNorthern Echo and three sister papers.[20]

Sale to Newsquest

[edit]

Pearson began a sale process in June 1996. At the time it was reported as a "chain of 60 newspapers, including theNorthern Echo, theBrighton Evening Argus and theOxford Mail" and "could fetch up to pounds 300m".[11] On 5 August 1996 Newsquest announced it had bought Westminster Press for £305 million.[1] The Monopolies and Mergers Commission later decided that the acquisition would not be expected to operate against the public interest, and completion followed in 1997.[2] Contemporary coverage noted that Newsquest was backed by KKR, with Cinven taking a significant minority stake after closing.[21][12]

Most titles continued within Newsquest. In 1999 Newsquest was bought byGannett.[22]

Titles

[edit]

The following list summarises titles documented under Westminster Press. It is not exhaustive.

TitlePlace (county)TypeFoundedIn Westminster Press (evidence)One-line history or notable episodeRef.
The Northern EchoDarlington (County Durham)Morning daily1870Listed among Westminster Press titles in 1996 sale reportingKnown for campaigning reporting under Harold Evans in the 1960s[11][15]
Evening DespatchDarlington (County Durham)Evening dailyNamed among titles affected in the 1977 dispute at the Darlington centrePublication suspended during the 1977–78 stoppage[17]
Darlington & Stockton TimesDarlington/North YorkshireWeekly1847Named among titles affected in the 1977 disputePublication disrupted in 1977–78[17]
Durham Advertiser seriesCounty DurhamWeekly series1814Named among titles affected in the 1977 disputePart of the Darlington group during the dispute[17]
Evening ArgusBrighton (East Sussex)Evening daily1880sListed among Westminster Press titles in 1996 sale reportingPrincipal evening paper for Brighton and Hove[11]
Oxford MailOxford (Oxfordshire)Daily1928Listed among Westminster Press titles in 1996 sale reportingDaily for Oxford and district[11]
Stamford MercuryStamford (Lincolnshire)Weekly1695Bought in 1929; later sold in 1951Management centralised toLincolnshire Chronicle; printing moved; sold to EMAP[7]
Lincolnshire ChronicleLincoln (Lincolnshire)Weekly1832In group by early 1950sActed as managerial centre over theStamford Mercury before its sale[7]
Slough Evening MailSlough (Berkshire)Evening daily1969Joint launch with Thomson; counted half to each group in 1974 dataOne of the late-1960s new evenings around London[6]
Telegraph & ArgusBradford (West Yorkshire)Evening daily (later daily)1868Identified with Westminster Press portfolioKey title in Yorkshire; associated weeklies in the Bradford district[23]

Sources and archives

[edit]

Company records are held atThe National Archives under "Westminster Press Ltd" and "Westminster Press Provincial Newspapers Ltd".[24][25] A company booklet,The Westminster Press: Provincial Newspapers (1952) by A. P. Duncum, provides a primary-source overview.[26]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Newsquest Buys Westminster Press For £305m".The Media Leader. 5 August 1996. Retrieved14 August 2025.has bought Westminster Press from Pearson for £305 million.
  2. ^ab"Newsquest To Sell For Westminster Press".The Media Leader. 29 January 1997. Retrieved14 August 2025.the acquisition would not be expected to operate against the public interest.
  3. ^"Pearson Pretax Earnings Drop; Unit Sold Off to Newsquest".The Wall Street Journal. 5 August 1996. Retrieved14 August 2025.agreed to sell its Westminster Press unit to Newsquest Media Group for 305 million pounds.
  4. ^"FOB: Firms Out of Business – Westminster Press".Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas. Retrieved14 August 2025.In 1921 the firm was consolidated as Westminster Press with S. Pearson and Son as the principal shareholder.
  5. ^"The Westminster Gazette".Library of Congress. Retrieved14 August 2025.Became a national morning newspaper with Nov. 5, 1921 issue... Merged with: Daily News...
  6. ^abcdMatthews 2017a, The Corporatization of the Provincial Press.
  7. ^abcdMatthews 2017b, The Deunionization of the Provincial Press.
  8. ^Kynaston, David (27 July 1993)."Empire that struck oil and spread everywhere".The Independent. Retrieved14 August 2025.the basis for Pearson's expansion of the Westminster Press chain of provincial newspapers.
  9. ^"Lord Gibson".The Guardian. 7 May 2004. Retrieved14 August 2025.He joined it in 1947 as a trainee journalist on theOxford Mail... and became a director in 1948.
  10. ^"Obituary: The Duke of Atholl".The Independent. 28 February 1996. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  11. ^abcde"Pearson to sell off Westminster Press".The Independent. 25 June 1996. Retrieved14 August 2025.the chain of 60 newspapers, including theNorthern Echo, theBrighton Evening Argus and theOxford Mail...
  12. ^ab"Newsquest plc – Company History".FundingUniverse. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  13. ^"Newsquest plc".Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  14. ^Matthews 2017a, Table 5.4.
  15. ^ab"Sir Harold Evans, trail-blazing newspaper editor, dies aged 92".The Guardian. 24 September 2020. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  16. ^"Journalism (Closed Shop)".Hansard. 17 June 1977. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  17. ^abcd"Full text of The Times, 1 December 1977".The Times. 1 December 1977. Retrieved14 August 2025.affects theNorthern Echo, theEvening Despatch, theDarlington & Stockton Times, and theDurham Advertiser series... lasted nearly six months.
  18. ^"'Northern Echo' back after dispute".The Times. 17 December 1977. Retrieved14 August 2025.produced by four executives and a district reporter... 106 journalists... remained on strike.
  19. ^"Solution to NUJ strike is in sight".The Times. 6 January 1978. Retrieved14 August 2025.It is clear that the original demand for a closed shop will not be conceded.
  20. ^"Darlington journalists end 32-week strike".The Straits Times. Reuters. 12 January 1978. Retrieved14 August 2025.More than 100 journalists voted... to end a 32-week-old strike... They agreed to accept a new pay deal at theNorthern Echo and three sister papers.
  21. ^"KKR's Newsquest to Buy Subsidiary of Pearson".The Wall Street Journal. 6 August 1996. Retrieved14 August 2025.KKR also said it agreed to sell a 'significant' minority stake in Newsquest to ... Cinven after the transaction.
  22. ^"USA Today owner buys into Britain".The Guardian. 24 June 1999. Retrieved14 August 2025.Gannett swallows regional publisher Newsquest for £904m.
  23. ^"Trinity International Holdings plc and Joseph Woodhead & Sons Ltd".Korea Fair Trade Commission archive (case summary). Retrieved14 August 2025.Westminster Press published a daily newspaper (Bradford Telegraph & Argus) and a series of weekly newspapers.
  24. ^"Catalogue description: Westminster Press Ltd".The National Archives. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  25. ^"Catalogue description: Westminster Press Provincial Newspapers Ltd".The National Archives. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  26. ^Duncum, A. P. (1952).The Westminster Press: Provincial Newspapers. London: Westminster Press Provincial Newspapers Ltd.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Matthews, Rachel (2017a). "The Corporatization of the Provincial Press".The History of the Provincial Press in England. Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Matthews, Rachel (2017b). "The Deunionization of the Provincial Press".The History of the Provincial Press in England. Bloomsbury Academic.
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