The Scripps Howard Awards, formerly the National Journalism Awards, are $10,000 awards in American journalism given by the Scripps Howard Foundation.[1] Awardees receive "cash prizes, citations and plaques."[2]

Scripps Howard Awards
Awarded forExcellence in journalism
CountryUnited States
Presented byScripps Howard Foundation
Formerly calledNational Journalism Awards
First awarded1953

As of 2023, the categories are:

  • Excellence in Audio Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard
  • Excellence in Coverage of Breaking News
  • Excellence in Business/Financial Reporting
  • Excellence in Environmental Reporting, honoring Edward W. “Ted” Scripps II
  • Distinguished Service to the First Amendment, honoring Edward Willis Scripps
  • Excellence in Narrative Human-Interest Storytelling, Honoring Ernie Pyle
  • Excellence in Innovation, honoring Roy W. Howard
  • Excellence in Local/Regional Investigative Reporting
  • Excellence in Local Video Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard
  • Excellence in Multimedia Journalism
  • Excellence in National/International Investigative Reporting, the Ursula and Gilbert Farfel Prize
  • Excellence in National/International Video Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard
  • Excellence in Opinion Writing
  • Excellence in Visual Journalism
  • Impact Award
  • Teacher of the Year
  • Administrator of the Year

History

edit

Origins: Ernie Pyle Award

edit

What became the National Journalism Awards were launched in 1954 with the Ernie Pyle Award (originally supported by the Ernie Pyle Memorial Fund). The award is given annually to reporters who "most nearly exemplify the style and craftsmanship for which Ernie Pyle was known".[3] The award was administered by the E. W. Scripps Company until the 1962 formation of the Scripps Howard Foundation.[4] The Ernie Pyle award was later named the "Human Interest Writing Ernie Pyle Award" and is now presented as "Excellence in Narrative Human-Interest Storytelling, Honoring Ernie Pyle."

1960s and '70s

edit

In 1966, Scripps-Howard Newspapers conservation editor Edward J. Meeman died, and the company created the Edward J. Meeman Foundation to support journalism and conservation through grants and awards.[5] Beginning in 1968, the Edward J. Meeman Environmental Reporting Award became the second annual award given by Scripps-Howard. Previous winners of the environmental reporting award include Ken Ward Jr., Sam Roe, Bruce Ingersoll, James V. Risser, Larry Tye, and Craig Flournoy. In 2022,[6] the award was renamed as "Excellence in Environmental Reporting, honoring Edward W. 'Ted' Scripps II."[a]

In the 1970s, three more awards became part of the roster of journalism prizes. First, in 1972, was the Public Service Reporting Award, honoring long-time Scripps executive Roy W. Howard. The public service award was originally divided into a newspaper division and a broadcast division. In 1986, the award was restructured to recognize newspapers only, and divided into two categories — under 100,000 and over 100,000 circulation. In 2004, the circulation divisions were eliminated altogether; the award was discontinued after 2016.

In 1974, the Editorial Writing Walker Stone Award, joined the list. Currently known as the "Walker Stone Award for Opinion Writing," it was named in honor of Walker Stone (1905–1973), editor-in-chief of Scripps-Howard Newspapers.[8]

In 1977, the First Amendment Edward Willis Scripps Award was inaugurated. "Given to the editor of the winning newspaper for distribution to the individual or individuals on the staff who contributed most significantly to the cause of the First Amendment guarantee of a free press,"[9] the award is now known as "Distinguished Service to the First Amendment, honoring Edward Willis Scripps."

By the end of the 1970s, the Scripps Howard Foundation was presenting a total of five annual journalism awards.

1980s

edit

In 1980, Scripps Howard added the College Cartoonist Charles M. Schulz Award, which was "funded by United Features Syndicate ... to honor Charles M. Schulz on the 30th anniversary of his comic strip, Peanuts;" Schulz himself served as a judge in the award's early years.[10] After being presented for 30 years, the award was discontinued in 2011 "due to the lack of entries to merit its continuance."[11]

In 1985, the Jack R. Howard Broadcast Awards for Public Service Programming began being represented. A broadcasting award, it was divided into radio and television, with each format broken into two sub-categories — large market and small market; so, four new awards. In 1991, the TV division was renamed "TV/Cable" and in 2004, the Broadcast Awards did away with the market categories, reducing the prizes awarded each year to two. After 2008, the public service programming award was restructured/eliminated.

In 1987, the Scripps Howard Foundation, in commemoration of its 25th anniversary, officially dubbed the awards the National Journalism Awards and distributed them at a banquet held in April. The total amount of cash prizes and plaques given out was worth $41,000.[12] That same year, the Literacy Charles E. Scripps Award, began being presented, given "to any daily broadcast and/or newspaper or local cable system in the U.S. or its territories for most outstanding effort ... to overcome illiteracy in its community."[13] The separate awards for broadcast and newspaper outlets were abandoned in 1997 (reducing two prizes to one), and the literacy award itself was discontinued after 2003.

1990s

edit

In 1998–1999, Scripps Howard added five new categories to the National Journalism Awards (three of which have since been discontinued).

First, the Commentary award lasted from 1998 to 2014; while the award for Excellence in Photojournalism, also launched in 1998, was renamed in 2017 as "Excellence in Visual Journalism" ("the visual documenting of some of the year’s most complex issues and events").[14] As of 2022, it is currently awarded as "Visual Human-Interest Storytelling."

In 1999, a new award debuted: the Business/Economics Reporting William Brewster Styles Award, recognizing "the long-time business editor for The Cincinnati Post."[15] The award is currently called "Excellence in Business/Financial Reporting."

2000–2008

edit

The year 2000 saw two new awards join the list: Editorial Cartooning and Web Reporting;[16] both of which have since been discontinued. Editorial Cartooning lasted from 2000 to 2011, while Web Reporting lasted from 2000 to 2008.

The period 2004–2008 saw the addition of five new categories of awards (and the retirement of one, the Literacy Award).

In 2004, in partnership with the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, two new categories joined the roster: Teacher of the Year and Administrator of the Year. Also joining the list in 2004 was the Investigative Reporting Ursula and Gilbert Farfel Prize (now given as the "National/International Investigative Reporting, the Ursula and Gilbert Farfel Prize").[b]

In 2005, Scripps-Howard took over the administration of the Raymond Clapper Memorial Award, which had previously been given at the annual White House Correspondents' Association dinner. Renaming it the Washington Reporting Raymond Clapper Award, the prize was presented through 2011, when it was discontinued.

2009–present

edit

The period 2009–2012 saw the elimination of a number of awards, including those for Public Service Broadcasting (2009), Web Reporting (2009), the Raymond Clapper Award (2012), the two cartooning awards (2011 and 2012, respectively), and Commentary (2014).

In 2010, the National Journalism Awards were renamed the Scripps Howard Awards. In addition, two new prizes joined the roster: Coverage of Breaking News and the Jack R. Howard Award for In-Depth Radio Coverage, later amended to "Excellence in Radio/Podcast Coverage, honoring Jack R. Howard." In 2022, the award was renamed "Excellence in Audio Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard".

In the period 2013–2017, eight new prizes joined the Scripps Howard Awards roster. First was the Digital Innovation award, now known as "Innovation, honoring Roy W. Howard." 2016 saw four new awards, including two for video storytelling: the Jack R. Howard Award for Television/Cable In-Depth Local Coverage (currently known as "Local Video Storytelling, honoring Jack. R. Howard") and the Jack R. Howard Award for Television/Cable In-Depth National and International Coverage (currently known as the award for "National/International Video Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard"). Also debuting in 2016 (in partnership with the Google News Lab) was the Scripps Howard Award for Community Journalism (now known as the award for "Local/Regional Investigative Reporting"). The final new award to debut in 2016 was the Topic of the Year Award; now known as the "Impact Award", the "winner is deemed to have had the greatest impact from the list."[17]

The newest award category in the Scripps Howard Awards is Multimedia Journalism, which debuted in 2018.

List of awardees

edit

Excellence in Audio Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard

edit

Formerly known as the Jack R. Howard Award for In-Depth Radio Coverage and then Excellence in Radio/Podcast Coverage, honoring Jack R. Howard.

Year Winner/organization
2009 Alix Spiegel, National Public Radio
2010 NPR
2011 WLRN, Miami Herald News
2012 WBEZ, Chicago Public Media
2013 This American Life
2104 Chicago Public Media, Serial: Season One
2015 Aleem Maqbool, BBC News
2016 Michigan Radio
2017 Laura Heaton and Michael Ma, NPR's Rough Translation
2018 Michigan Radio
2019 Lynn Arditi, Sally Eisele, James Baumgartner, The Public's Radio, Rhode Island
2020 Invisible Institute, The Intercept, and Topic Studios
2021 NBC News
2022 American Public Media

Coverage of Breaking News

edit
Year Organization
2009 Associated Press
2010 CNBC
2011 The Arizona Republic
2012 The Denver Post
2013 The Arizona Republic
2014 St. Louis Post-Dispatch
2015 The Post and Courier, Charleston, SC
2016 East Bay Times
2017 San Francisco Chronicle
2018 South Florida Sun Sentinel, Deerfield Beach
2019 The Washington Post
2020 Star Tribune, Minneapolis, MN
2021 The Tennessean, Nashville, TN
2022 The Washington Post

Business/Financial Reporting

edit

Formerly known as the Business/Economics Reporting William Brewster Styles Award and the William Brewster Styles Award for Business/Economics Reporting.

Year Individual Winner Organization
1998 Richard Read The Oregonian, Portland
1999 Tom Hallman Jr. The Oregonian, Portland
2000 Doris Hajewski Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
2001 The Wall Street Journal
2002 Chicago Tribune
2003 Clint Riley The Record, Hackensack, New Jersey
2004 The Wall Street Journal
2005 The Seattle Times
2006 Steve Everly The Kansas City Star, Missouri
2007 The Wall Street Journal
2008 Farah Stockman The Boston Globe
2009 Sarasota Herald-Tribune, Florida
2010 Paige St. John Sarasota Herald-Tribune, Florida
2011 ProPublica
2012 Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
2013 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, Center for Public Integrity
2014 Rita Price and Ben Sutherly The Columbus Dispatch
2015 The Wall Street Journal
2016 Center for Public Integrity, McClatchy, and the Miami Herald
2017 Brian Grow and John Shiffman Reuters
2018 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, NBC News Investigative Unit, Associated Press, and more than 50 media partners
2019 Dominic Gates, Mike Baker, Steve Miletich, and Lewis Kamb The Seattle Times
2020 The New York Times
2021 ProPublica
2022 Los Angeles Times[18]

Environmental Reporting, honoring Edward W. "Ted" Scripps II

edit

Formerly known as the Environmental Reporting Edward J. Meeman Awards.

Year Division Individual winner Organization
1967 James Ryan St. Petersburg Times, Florida
1968 Betty Klaric Cleveland Press
1969 Tom Brown Anchorage Daily News, Alaska
1970 Detroit Free Press
1971 Gordon Bishop Newark Star-Ledger, New Jersey
1972 Harry V. Martin Napa Register, California
1973 George F. Neavoll[19] The Journal Gazette, Fort Wayne, Indiana
1974 David Cay Johnston Detroit Free Press
1975 Kenneth Robison Idaho Statesman
1976 Tom Turner Arizona Daily Star, Tucson
1977 Bruce Ingersoll Chicago Sun-Times
1978 John Hayes Oregon Statesman
1979 The Philadelphia Inquirer
1980 Minneapolis Star
1981 Under 100,000 Circulation Arizona Daily Star, Tucson
Over 100,000 Circulation Newsday
1982 Over 100,000 Circulation Jonathan Harsch The Christian Science Monitor
Under 100,000 Circulation Floyd Rogers Winston-Salem Journal, North Carolina
1983 Over 100,000 Circulation Orange County Register, California
Under 100,000 Circulation The Star Democrat, Easton, Maryland
1984 Over 100,000 Circulation James V. Risser The Des Moines Register
Under 100,000 Circulation Montgomery Advertiser, Alabama
1985 Over 100,000 Circulation The Philadelphia Inquirer
Under 100,000 Circulation Jane Kay[2] Arizona Daily Star, Tucson
1986[12] Over 100,000 Circulation The Seattle Times
Under 100,000 Circulation The Morning Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
1987 Over 100,000 Circulation Natalie Forbes The Seattle Times
Under 100,000 Circulation The Charleston Gazette, West Virginia
1988 Over 100,000 Circulation Dennis Anderson St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch, Minnesota
Under 100,000 Circulation The Charleston Gazette, West Virginia
1989 Over 100,000 Circulation The Boston Globe
Under 100,000 Circulation Sam Atwood The Sun, San Bernardino, California
1990 Over 100,000 Circulation Orlando Sentinel
Under 100,000 Circulation The Alabama Journal
1991 Over 100,000 Circulation The Times-Picayune, New Orleans
Under 100,000 Circulation Poughkeepsie Journal, New York
1992 Over 100,000 Circulation Orlando Sentinel
Under 100,000 Circulation The National Law Journal
1993 Over 100,000 Circulation The Dallas Morning News
Under 100,000 Circulation Mobile Register, Alabama
1994 Over 100,000 Circulation Los Angeles Times
Under 100,000 Circulation The Charleston Gazette, West Virginia
1995 Over 100,000 Circulation The News & Observer, Raleigh, North Carolina
Under 100,000 Circulation Tony Davis The Albuquerque Tribune, New Mexico
1996 Over 100,000 Circulation Mobile Register, Alabama
Under 100,000 Circulation Ken Ward The Charleston Gazette, West Virginia
1997 Over 100,000 Circulation The Sacramento Bee
Under 100,000 Circulation Cape Cod Times, Hyannis, Massachusetts
1998 Over 100,000 Circulation The Seattle Times
Under 100,000 Circulation Yakima Herald-Republic, Washington
1999 Over 100,000 Circulation Sam Roe The Blade, Toledo, Ohio
Under 100,000 Circulation Mike Dunne The Advocate, Baton
2000 Over 100,000 Circulation Michael Grunwald The Washington Post
Under 100,000 Circulation Sherry Devlin Missoulian, Montana
2001 Over 100,000 Circulation Julie Hauserman St. Petersburg Times, Florida
Under 100,000 Circulation Scott Streater Pensacola News Journal, Florida
2002 Over 100,000 Circulation Sam Roe Chicago Tribune
Under 100,000 Circulation Cañon City Daily Record, Colorado
2003 Over 100,000 Circulation The Washington Post
Under 100,000 Circulation Naples Daily News, Florida
2004 The San Bernardino Sun, California
2005 Ken Ward The Charleston Gazette, West Virginia
2006 Los Angeles Times
2007 Seth Borenstein Associated Press
2008 Susanne Rust and Meg Kissinger Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
2009 Charles Duhigg The New York Times
2010 The Times-Picayune, New Orleans
2011 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
2012 Los Angeles Times
2013 Craig Welch and Steve Ringman The Seattle Times
2014 Paul Rogers and Lisa M. Krieger San Jose Mercury News
2015 Neela Banerjee, John H. Cushman, Jr., David Hasemyer, and Lisa Song Inside Climate News
2016 Rob Davis The Oregonian/OregonLive
2017 Kale Williams The Oregonian/OregonLive
2018 National Geographic
2019 Rob Davis The Oregonian/OregonLive
2020 The Post and Courier
2021 ProPublica
2022 ProPublica, The New York Times Magazine

Distinguished Service to the First Amendment, honoring Edward Willis Scripps

edit

Formerly known as the First Amendment Edward Willis Scripps Award.

Year Winner
1976 The Honolulu Advertiser
1977 Sun Enterprise Newspapers
1978 Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester
1979 Ledger-Star, Norfolk, Virginia
1980 Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky
1981 The Des Moines Register
1982 Ledger-Enquirer, Columbus
1983 Times Leader, Wilkes-Barre
1984 Riverside Press, California
1985 The Commercial Appeal, Memphis[2]
1986 Indianapolis News[12]
1987 The Kentucky Post
1988 The Eagle-Tribune, Massachusetts
1989 San Francisco Chronicle
1990 Corpus Christi Caller, Texas
1991 Times Leader, Wilkes-Barre
1992 Miami Herald
1993 Tribune Chronicle, Warren, Ohio
1994 The State, Columbia, South Carolina
1995 El Vocero de Puerto Rico, San Juan
1996 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
1997 The Palm Beach Post, Florida
1998 Seven Indiana newspapers
1999 Knoxville News Sentinel, Tennessee
2000 The Des Moines Register
2001 Orlando Sentinel
2002 San Francisco Chronicle
2003 Dayton Daily News, Ohio
2004 The Dallas Morning News
2005 Post Register, Idaho Falls, Idaho
2006 San Francisco Chronicle
2007 Knoxville News Sentinel, Tennessee
2008 Josh Margolin, Ted Sherman; The Star-Ledger, Newark, New Jersey
2009 No winner named
2010 The Burlington Free Press, Vermont
2011 Yancey County News, Burnsville, N.C.
2012 The Wall Street Journal
2013 Better Government Association, Chicago
2014 Carol Rosenberg, Miami Herald
2015 Todd Wallack, The Boston Globe
2016 Eric Eyre, Charleston Gazette-Mail, West Virginia)
2017 The Kansas City Star
2018 The Dallas Morning News
2019 Jennifer Berry Hawes, Stephen Hobbs, Glenn Smith, and Seanna Adcox; The Post and Courier, Charleston, SC
2020 NPR
2021 The Arizona Republic
2022 Insider

Innovation, honoring Roy W. Howard

edit

Formerly known as Digital Innovation.

Year Individual Winner(s) Organization
2012 The New York Times
2013 NPR
2014 The Wall Street Journal
2015 Stephen Stirling NJ Advance Media
2016 ProPublica
2017 The Arizona Republic with the USA Today Network
2018 BBC
2019 Jake Godin, Jennifer Smart, and Zach Toombs Newsy
2020 The Washington Post
2021 The Outlaw Ocean Project
2022 The Markup

Local Video Storytelling, honoring Jack. R. Howard

edit

Formerly known as the Jack R. Howard Award for Television/Cable In-Depth Local Coverage and then (until 2022) Excellence in Broadcast Local Coverage.

Year Individual Winner(s) Organization
2015 KNXV-TV, Phoenix
2016 Lee Zurik, Jon Turnipseed, Tom Wright, and Greg Phillips WVUE-DT, New Orleans
2017 Brendan Keefe WXIA 11Alive, Atlanta
2018 KNTV, San Jose, California
2019 David Schechter and Chance Horner WFAA-TV, Dallas
2020 KING-TV, Seattle
2021 KUSA (TV) and KARE (TV)
2022 KUSA (TV), Denver

Local/Regional Investigative Reporting

edit

In partnership with Google News Lab. From 2015 to 2019, known as the Scripps Howard Award for Community Journalism.

Year Individual Winner(s) Organization
2015 The Post and Courier, Charleston, SC
2016 Gregory Pratt Daily Southtown
2017 Bristol Herald Courier, Virginia
2018 Knoxville News Sentinel, Tennessee
2019 Kyle Hopkins, Loren Holmes, Bill Roth, and Marc Lester Anchorage Daily News and ProPublica
2020 Tampa Bay Times
2021 Miami Herald
2022 John Archibald, Ashley Remkus, and Ramsey Archibald AL.com[20]

Multimedia Journalism

edit
Year Organization
2017 The Washington Post
2018 Frontline, PBS, and The GroundTruth Project
2019 Vox
2020 The New York Times
2021 Frontline (PBS)
2022 The New York Times

National/International Video Storytelling, honoring Jack R. Howard

edit

Formerly known as the Jack R. Howard Award for Television/Cable In-Depth National and International Coverage and then (until 2022) Excellence in Broadcast National/International Coverage.

Year Individual Winner(s) Organization
2015 Dan Edge PBS Frontline-WGBH
2016 Vytenis Didziulis, Catalina Gómez Ángel, Mikhail Galustov and Keith Summa Fusion
2017 Debora Patta, Sarah Carter, and Meshack Dube CBS News
2018 MSNBC
2019 Abby Ellis, Kayla Ruble, Jacob Carah, and Sarah Childress Frontline PBS
2020 CBS News
2021 ABC News
2022 Frontline, the Associated Press

Narrative Human-Interest Storytelling, honoring Ernie Pyle

edit

Formerly known as the Human Interest Writing Ernie Pyle Award and (until 2022) Excellence in Human Interest Storytelling, honoring Ernie Pyle.

Year Winner Organization
1953 Jim G. Lucas Scripps Howard
1954 Eldon Roark Memphis Press-Scimitar, Tennessee
1955 Andrew F. Tully Scripps Howard
1956 Gordon S. Thompson Evansville Press, Indiana
1957 Walter Wingo[21][22] Washington Daily News
1958 Don Dedera The Arizona Republic
1959 Henry J. Taylor Scripps Howard
1960 James O'Neill Jr. Washington Daily News
1961 Guy Wright News-Call Bulletin, San Francisco
1962 Richard Starnes Scripps Howard
1963 Jack Steele Scripps Howard
1964 Jim G. Lucas Scripps Howard
1965 Tom Tiede Newspaper Enterprise Association
1966 Billy E. Bowles News & Courier, Charleston, South Carolina
1967[23] Martin Gershen Newark Star-Ledger, New Jersey
William Thomas Memphis Commercial Appeal, Tennessee
1968 Jerry Bledsoe Greensboro Daily News, North Carolina
1969 Kent Pollock The Palm Beach Post, Florida
1970 Jerry Bledsoe Greensboro Daily News, North Carolina
1971 Clettus Atkinson Birmingham Post-Herald, Alabama
1972 Bill Stokes The Milwaukee Journal
1973 Jim Wooten[19] The Philadelphia Inquirer
1974 William D. Montalbano[24] Miami Herald
1975 Robert Hullihan The Des Moines Register
1976 Carol LeVarn McCabe Providence Journal-Bulletin, Rhode Island
1977 Stephen Smith The Boston Globe
1978 Frank Rossi Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri
1979 Bob Morris The News-Press, Fort Myers, Florida
1980 Richard Ben Kramer The Philadelphia Inquirer
1981 Mike Royko Chicago Sun-Times
1982 Linda Wilson The Daily News, Longview, Washington
1983 Rheta Grimsley Johnson The Commercial Appeal, Memphis
1984 Bill McClelland St. Louis Post-Dispatch
1985 Ray Jenkins[2] Baltimore Evening Sun
1986 Greta Tilley[12] News & Record, Greensboro, North Carolina
1987 Steve Lopez The Philadelphia Inquirer
1988 John Kifner The New York Times
1989 Rose Post Salisbury Post, North Carolina
1990 Elizabeth Leland The Charlotte Observer, North Carolina
1991 Chris Hedges The New York Times
1992 Blaine Harden The Washington Post
1993 John Woestendiek The Philadelphia Inquirer
1994 Lisa Pollak The News & Observer, Raleigh, North Carolina
1995 Christine Bertelson St. Louis Post-Dispatch
1996 John Lang Scripps Howard News Service
1997 John Balzar Los Angeles Times
1998 Gary Pomerantz The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
1999 Helen O'Neill Associated Press
2000 Tom Hallman Jr. The Oregonian, Portland
2001 Ken Fuson The Des Moines Register
2002 Paula Bock The Seattle Times
2003 Kelley Benham St. Petersburg Times, Florida
2004 Davan Maharaj Los Angeles Times
2005 Brady Dennis St. Petersburg Times, Florida
2006 Lane DeGregory St. Petersburg Times, Florida
2007 Julia O'Malley Anchorage Daily News, Alaska
2008 Sean Kirst The Post-Standard, Syracuse, New York
2009 Steve Esack The Morning Call, Allentown, Pa.
2010 Wright Thompson ESPN.com
2011 Corinne Reilly The Virginian-Pilot
2012 Michael M. Phillips The Wall Street Journal
2013 Andrea Elliott The New York Times
2014 David Abel The Boston Globe
2015 N. R. Kleinfield The New York Times
2016 Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times
2017 John Woodrow-Cox
2018 The New York Times and ProPublica
2019 Eli Saslow The Washington Post
2020 Stephanie McCrummen The Washington Post
2021 The Boston Globe
2022 The New York Times Magazine

National/International Investigative Reporting, the Ursula and Gilbert Farfel Prize

edit

Formerly known as the Investigative Reporting Ursula and Gilbert Farfel Prize.

Year Winner Organization
2003 Asbury Park Press/Gannett
2004 Los Angeles Times
2005 Robin Fields, Evelyn Larrubia, Jack Leonard Los Angeles Times[25]
2006 Charles Forelle, James Bandler, Mark Maremont, Steve Stecklow The Wall Street Journal[26]
2007 Walt Bogdanich, Jake Hooker The New York Times[27]
2008 Miami Herald
2009 Philadelphia Daily News
2010 Las Vegas Sun
2011 The New York Times
2012 Spencer S. Hsu The Washington Post
2013 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
2014 The Arizona Republic
2015 Aram Roston and Jeremy Singer-Vine BuzzFeed News
2016 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
2017 The New York Times
2018 Reuters
2019 Craig Whitlock The Washington Post
2020 Frontline PBS
2021 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, The Washington Post
2022 Frontline, the Associated Press

Opinion Writing

edit

Officially known as the Walker Stone Award for Opinion Writing; formerly known as the Editorial Writing Walker Stone Award.

Year Winner Organization
1973 Michael Pakenham The Philadelphia Inquirer
1974 John R. Harrison[24] The Lakeland Ledger, Florida
1975 David Bowes The Cincinnati Post
1976 John R. Harrison The Lakeland Ledger, Florida
1977 Michael Pakenham The Philadelphia Inquirer
1978 John Alexander Greensboro Daily News, North Carolina
1979 Barbara Stanton Detroit Free Press
1980 Tom Dearmore San Francisco Examiner
1981 Jay Ambrose Rocky Mountain News, Denver
1982 Lance W. Dickie Statesman Journal, Salem, Oregon
1983 Jim Wooten The Atlanta Journal
1984 Albert (Hap) Cawood Dayton Daily News, Ohio
1985 Paul Greenberg[2] Pine Bluff Commercial, Arkansas
1986 Mary Cantwell[12] The New York Times
1987 Maura J. Casey The Eagle-Tribune, Massachusetts
1988 Ann Daly Goodwin St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch, Minnesota
1989 Ann Daly Goodwin St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch, Minnesota
1990 Lanny Keller Shreveport Journal, Louisiana
1991 Maria Henson Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky
1992 Robert Friedman St. Petersburg Times, Florida
1993 Richard Aregood Philadelphia Daily News
1994 Jay Bookman The Atlanta Constitution
1995 Tom Dennis Times Leader, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
1996 Michael G. Gartner The Daily Tribune, Ames, Iowa
1997 Daniel P. Henninger The Wall Street Journal
1998 David V. Hawpe The Courier-Journal, Louisville, Kentucky
1999 John C. Bersia Orlando Sentinel
2000 Debra Decker The Dallas Morning News
2001 Kate Stanley Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota
2002 John P. McCormick Chicago Tribune
2003 Tom Philp The Sacramento Bee
2004 Randy Bergmann Asbury Park Press, Neptune, New Jersey
2005 Tony Biffle Sun Herald, Biloxi, Mississippi
2006 John Diaz, Pati Poblete, and Caille Millner San Francisco Chronicle
2007 Sonni Efron Los Angeles Times
2008 David Barham Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Little Rock
2009 Robert Greene Los Angeles Times
2010 Linda Valdez The Arizona Republic
2011 Jamie Lucke Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky
2012 Tim Nickens Tampa Bay Times
2013 Tony Messenger and Kevin Horrigan St. Louis Post-Dispatch
2014 Kathleen Kingsbury The Boston Globe
2015 Nancy Kaffer Detroit Free Press
2016 Stephen Henderson Detroit Free Press
2017 Melinda Henneberger The Kansas City Star
2018 Palestine Herald-Press, Texas
2019 Kyle Whitmire Alabama Media Group
2020 Derrick Z. Jackson Union of Concerned Scientists and Grist.org
2021 Heather Knight San Francisco Chronicle
2022 Erika D. Smith and Anita Chabria Los Angeles Times[18]

Visual Human-Interest Storytelling

edit

"The visual documenting of some of the year’s most complex issues and events."[28] From 1997 to 2016 known as the award for Excellence in Photojournalism, and from 2017 to 2022 as Excellence in Visual Journalism.

Year Winner Organization
1997 Martha Rial Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
1998 Patrick Davison Rocky Mountain News, Denver, Colorado
1999 George Kochaniec, Jr. Rocky Mountain News, Denver, Colorado
2000 Marc Andrew Piscotty Rocky Mountain News, Denver, Colorado
2001 Aristide Economopoulos The Star-Ledger, Newark, New Jersey
2002 Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times
2003 Brian Vander Brug Los Angeles Times
2004 Jim Gehrz Star Tribune, Minneapolis
2005 Damon Winter Los Angeles Times
2006 Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times
2007 Matt McClain Rocky Mountain News, Denver
2008 Michael Robinzon Chávez Los Angeles Times
2009 Rodrigo Abd Associated Press
2010 Lisa Krantz San Antonio Express-News
2011 Lara Solt The Dallas Morning News
2012 Lisa Krantz San Antonio Express-News
2013 John Tlumacki The Boston Globe
2014 Daniel Berehulak The New York Times
2015 Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times
2016 Daniel Berehulak The New York Times
2017 Leah Millis San Francisco Chronicle
2018 Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times
2019 Rodrigo Abd Associated Press
2020 Newsday, Long Island, NY
2021 Associated Press
2022 San Francisco Chronicle

Impact Award

edit

From 2015 to 2019, known as the Topic of the Year Award.

Year Winner Organization
2015 Rachel Aviv The New Yorker
2016 Alec MacGillis "The Breakdown", ProPublica
2017 Elle Reeve, Tracy Jarrett, Josh Davis, and Joe LoCascio Vice News
2018 Vice News
2019 NPR and University of Maryland Howard Center for Investigative Journalism
2020 The New York Times Visual Investigations Team
2021 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, The Washington Post
2022 American Public Media

Teacher of the Year

edit

Officially known as the Charles E. Scripps Journalism and Mass Communication Teacher of the Year Award; formerly known as the Journalism Teacher of the Year Charles E. Scripps Award. Awarded in partnership with the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC).

Year Winner Organization
2003 Debashis "Deb" Aikat University of North Carolina
2004 Sandra F. Chance University of Florida
2005 Dr. Louis A. Day Louisiana State University
2006 Robert Richards Pennsylvania State University
2007 Elinor Kelley Grusin University of Memphis
2008 Charles Davis University of Missouri
2009 Chris Roush University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
2010 Joe Saltzman University of Southern California
2011 Douglas B. Ward University of Kansas
2012 Jennifer George-Palilonis Ball State University, Muncie, Ind.
2013 Cindy Royal Texas State University
2014 Carol Schwalbe University of Arizona
2015 Carolina Acosta-Alzuru University of Georgia
2016 Allan Richards School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Florida International University
2017 Jinx Broussard Manship School of Mass Communication, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge
2018 No award given
2019 Jennifer Thomas Howard University
2020 Kathleen Bartzen Culver University of Wisconsin–Madison
2021 Dr. Nicole Smith Dahmen University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication
2022 Rachel Young University of Iowa

Administrator of the Year

edit

Officially known as the Charles E. Scripps Journalism and Mass Communication Administrator of the Year Award; formerly known as the Journalism Administrator of the Year Charles E. Scripps Award. Awarded in partnership with the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC).

Year Winner Organization
2003 John M. Hamilton Louisiana State University
2004 Will Norton Jr. University of Nebraska–Lincoln
2005 Thomas Kunkel University of Maryland
2006 Shirley Staples Carter University of South Carolina
2007 David M. Rubin Syracuse University
2008 Marilyn Weaver Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana
2009 Christopher Callahan Arizona State University
2010 Paul Parsons Elon University
2011 John Lavine Northwestern University
2012 Tim Gleason University of Oregon
2013 Lori Bergen Marquette University
2014 Albert R. Tims University of Minnesota
2015 Michael Bugeja Iowa State University
2016 Maryanne Reed Reed College of Media, West Virginia University
2017 No award given
2018 Diane McFarlin College of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida, Gainesville
2019 Susan King University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
2020 Lucy Dalglish University of Maryland
2021 David Boardman Temple University Klein College of Media and Communication
2022 David Kurpius Missouri School of Journalism

Discontinued awards and awardees

edit

College Cartoonist Charles M. Schulz Award

edit

In 1997 the Award included a $2,000 prize.[29] In the 2000s, the prize was $10,000.[30]

Year Winner
1980 Richard Codor[10]
1981 Paul Kolsti[10]
1982 Harley Schwadron
1983 Frank Pauer
1984 Richard Orlin
1985 Thomas Cheney[2]
1986 V. Gene Myers[12]
1987 Michael L. Thompson
1988 Christopher Kalb[31]
1989 Nick Anderson
1990 Kerry Soper
1991 Steve Breen
1992 no award given
1993 John de Rosier
1994 Duk Cho
1995 Drew Sheneman[32]
1996 Jody D. Lindke
1997 Brian Farrington[29]
1998 Audra Ann Furuichi
1999 Ryan Pagelow
2000 Barry Deutsch
2001 Nate Beeler
2002 Steven Olexa
2003 Nathaniel R. Creekmore
2004 Nathaniel R. Creekmore
2005 Russell Gottwaldt
2006 Erin Russell
2007 William Warren
2008 Grant Snider[33]
2009 Christopher Sharron
2010 John Vestevich[11]

Commentary

edit
Year Winner Organization
1997 Donald Kaul The Des Moines Register
1998 R. Bruce Dold Chicago Tribune
1999 Susan Anne Nielsen The Seattle Times
2000 Dennis Roddy Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
2001 Leonard Pitts Miami Herald
2002 Frank Cerabino The Palm Beach Post, Florida
2003 John Kass Chicago Tribune
2004 Connie Schultz The Plain Dealer, Cleveland
2005 Steve Lopez Los Angeles Times
2006 Chris Rose The Times-Picayune, New Orleans
2007 Jason Whitlock The Kansas City Star, Missouri
2008 Paul Krugman The New York Times
2010 Laurie Roberts The Arizona Republic
2011 Brian McGrory The Boston Globe
2012 James Carroll The Boston Globe
2013 Danny Westneat The Seattle Times
2014 Stephen Henderson Detroit Free Press

Editorial Cartooning

edit

Discontinued after 2011.

Year Winner Organization
1999 Ed Stein Rocky Mountain News, Denver
2000 James Casciari Vero Beach Press Journal
2001 John Sherffius St. Louis Post-Dispatch
2002 Clay Bennett The Christian Science Monitor
2003 Walt Handelsman Newsday, Melville, New York
2004 Steve Sack Star Tribune, Minneapolis
2005 Michael Ramirez Los Angeles Times
2006 Stephen Benson The Arizona Republic
2007 Steve Kelley The Times-Picayune, New Orleans
2008 Mike Luckovich The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
2009 Alexander Hunter The Washington Times
2010 Mike Thompson Detroit Free Press
2011 Jack Ohman The Oregonian, Portland

Jack R. Howard Broadcast Awards for Public Service Programming — Radio

edit

Restructured in 2009.

Year Market Organization
1985[2] Small WWVA, Wheeling, W. Va.
Large KMOX, St. Louis
1986 Small WJYY, Concord, N.H.
Large KMOX, St. Louis
1987 Small WWVA, Wheeling, W. Va.
Large WSM, Nashville, Tenn.
1988 Small KTAR-AM, Phoenix, Ariz.
Large No award given
1989 Small KWTO, Springfield, Mo.
Large WSM, Nashville, Tenn.
1990 Small WKSU-FM, Kent, Ohio
Large WCBS, New York
1991 Small KNPR-FM, Las Vegas, Nev.
Large Minnesota Public Radio, St. Paul, Minn.
1992 Small Barrett Golding, KGLT-FM, Bozeman, Mont.
Large WHAS-AM, Louisville, Ky.
1993 Small Samuel Hendren, WUAL-FM, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Large KINK FM, Portland, Ore.
1994 Small KGLT-FM, University of Montana
Large KGO-AM, San Francisco
1995 Small WUAL-FM, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Large WHAS Radio, Louisville, Ky.
1996 Small KNAU-FM, Flagstaff, Ariz.
Large WCBS, New York
1997 Small Alabama Public Radio, Tuscaloosa
Large Westwood One-Mutual/ NBC, Arlington, Va.
1998 Small WAMC, Northeast Public Radio, Albany, NY
Large WTN Radio, Nashville, Tenn.
1999 Small High Plains News Service, Billings, Mont.
Large American RadioWorks/Minnesota Public Radio, St. Paul, Minn.
2000 Small KCSD-FM, Sioux Falls, S.D.
Large American RadioWorks/Minnesota Public Radio, St. Paul, Minn.
2001 Small KOSU-FM, Stillwater, Okla.
Large Latino USA, National Public Radio, Los Angeles, Calif.
2002 Small KOSU-FM, Stillwater, Okla.
Large American RadioWorks/Minnesota Public Radio, St. Paul, Minn.
2003 Small South Dakota Public Radio, Rapid City
Large WBEZ, Chicago
2004 Chicago Public Radio/WBEZ “This American Life”
2005 BBC World Service, Public Radio International and WGBH Boston
2006 No award given
2007 Alix Spiegel, National Public Radio
2008 National Public Radio

Jack R. Howard Broadcast Awards for Public Service Programming — Television

edit

Became known as Electronic Media — Television/Cable in 1991. Restructured in 2009.

Year Market Organization
1985[2] Small KGBT-TV, Harlingen, Texas
Large WCVB-TV, Boston
1986[12] Small WBRZ-TV, Baton Rouge, La.
Large WXFL-TV, Tampa, Fla.
1987 Small WBRZ-TV, Baton Rouge, La.
Large KXTV, Sacramento, Calif.
1988 Small WBRZ-TV, Baton Rouge, La.
Large WFAA, Dallas
1989 Small KARK-TV, Little Rock, Ark.
Large WCBS-TV, New York
1990 Small KVUE-TV, Austin, Texas
Large KCNC-TV, Denver
1991 Small WUFT-TV, Gainesville, Fla.
Large KCNC-TV, Denver
1992 Small WTOC-TV, Savannah, Ga.
Large KSTP-TV, St. Paul, Minn
1993 Small WBOC-TV, Salisbury, Md., Lynn Giroud
Large Steve Burgin, WLKY-TV, Louisville, Ky
1994 Small WBRC-TV, Birmingham, Ala.
Large KTRK-TV, Houston
1995 Small KXLY-TV, Spokane, Wa.
Large WSOC-TV, Charlotte, N.C.
1996 Small WWSB-TV, Sarasota, Fla.
Large WCPO-TV, Cincinnati
1997 Small WANE-TV, Fort Wayne, Ind.
Large WABC-TV, New York
1998 Small WANE-TV, Fort Wayne, Ind.
Large NewsChannel 8, Washington, D.C.
1999 Small No winner
Large New England Cable News, Newton, Mass.
2000 Small WSET-TV, Lynchburg, Va.
Large KHOU-TV, Houston, Texas
2001 Small KTUU-TV, Anchorage, Alaska
Large WFLD-TV, Chicago, Ill.
2002 Small KEYE-TV, Austin, Texas
Large KHOU-TV, Houston
2003 Small KTUU-TV, Anchorage, Alaska
Large WCNC-TV, Charlotte
2004 CNBC, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
2005 WCCO-TV, Minneapolis
2006 WTHR-TV, Indianapolis
2007 WJLA-TV, Arlington, Va.
2008 Downtown Community Television Center, New York

Literacy Charles E. Scripps Awards

edit

Originally separated into Broadcast and Newspaper divisions.

Year Division Winner, Organization
1986[12] Broadcast WXYZ-TV, Detroit
Newspaper El Paso Herald-Post, Texas
1987 Broadcast New Jersey Network
Newspaper Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky
1988 Broadcast KOCO-TV, Oklahoma City
Newspaper Lesher Communications
1989 Broadcast WFSB-TV, Hartford, Connecticut
Newspaper San Antonio Light, Texas
1990 Broadcast No winner selected
Newspaper Knoxville News Sentinel, Tennessee
1991 Broadcast WGHP-TV, High Point, North Carolina
Newspaper The Daily Reflector, Greenville, North Carolina
1992 Broadcast Bud Wilkinson, KTSP-TV, Phoenix, Arizona
Newspaper Anderson Independent-Mail, South Carolina
1993 Broadcast No winner selected
Newspaper Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, Georgia
1994 Broadcast WDEF-TV, Chattanooga, Tennessee
Newspaper Naples Daily News, Florida
1995 Broadcast WDEF-TV, Chattanooga, Tennessee
Newspaper The Blade, Toledo, Ohio
1996 Broadcast WTHR-TV, Indianapolis
Newspaper The Gaston Gazette, North Carolina

Reorganized in 1997 to honor an individual and an organization (not necessarily related).

Year Individual winner Winning org.
1997 Betty J. Frey (Tucson, Arizona) Knoxville News Sentinel, Tennessee
1998 Betty Williford (Elberton, Georgia) The Baltimore Sun
1999 Sonia Gutierrez (Washington, DC) Naples Daily News, Florida
2000 The Bakersfield Californian
2001 Paul Riede The Post-Standard, Syracuse, New York
2002 Orlando Sentinel
2003 Rochelle Riley Detroit Free Press

Public Service Reporting Roy W. Howard Award

edit

Originally divided into a newspaper division and a broadcast division.

Year Division Winner/Organization
1972 Newspaper St. Louis Globe-Democrat
Broadcast WABC-TV, New York[34]
1973 Newspaper William Blundell, The Wall Street Journal[19]
Broadcast KGW-TV, Portland, Ore.
1974 Newspaper Milwaukee Journal[24]
Broadcast WABC-TV, New York
1975 Newspaper Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal
Broadcast KGW-TV, Portland, Ore.
1976 Newspaper San Francisco Examiner
Broadcast KMOX-TV, St. Louis
1977 Newspaper The Philadelphia Inquirer
Broadcast KOY-Radio, Phoenix, Ariz.
1978 Newspaper The Philadelphia Inquirer
Broadcast WBBM-TV, Chicago
1979 Newspaper Deseret News, Salt Lake City, Utah
Broadcast KOCO-TV, Oklahoma City
1980 Newspaper The Charlotte Observer, N.C.
Broadcast KTMC-AM, McAlester, Okla.
1981 Newspaper The Seattle Times
Broadcast WTHR-TV, Indianapolis
1982 Newspaper The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, Miss.
Broadcast WTSP-TV, St. Petersburg, Fla.
1983 Newspaper Dan Biddle, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Broadcast WBRZ-TV, Baton Rouge, La.
1984 Newspaper Hartford Courant, Conn.
Broadcast KOMO-TV, Seattle
1985 The Philadelphia Inquirer[2]

Restructured to recognize newspapers only, and divided into two categories — under 100,000 and over 100,000 circulation.

Year Circulation Winner/Organization
1986[12] Under 100,000 The Lakeland Ledger, Fla.
Over 100,000 The Pittsburgh Press
1987 Under 100,000 The Albuquerque Tribune, N.M.; Boulder Daily Camera, Colo.
Over 100,000 The Charlotte Observer, N.C.
1988 Under 100,000 Anchorage Daily News, Alaska
Over 100,000 The Philadelphia Inquirer
1989 Under 100,000 Charleston Gazette, W. Va.
Over 100,000 Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Texas
1990 Under 100,000 The Tucson Citizen, Ariz.
Over 100,000 The Boston Globe
1991 Under 100,000 The Republican-American, Waterbury, Conn.
Over 100,000 New York Newsday
1992 Under 100,000 The Albuquerque Tribune, N.M.
Over 100,000 Seth Rosenfeld, San Francisco Examiner
1993 Under 100,000 The Albuquerque Tribune, N.M.
Over 100,000 Chicago Tribune
1994 Under 100,000 The Virgin Islands Daily News
Over 100,000 New York Newsday
1995 Under 100,000 Ken Ward Jr., The Charleston Gazette, West VA.
Over 100,000 The Orange County Register, Calif
1996 Under 100,000 Maureen Magee, Ventura County Star, Calif
Over 100,000 Alison Young, Detroit Free Press
1997 Under 100,000 Pensacola News Journal, Fla.
Over 100,000 Asbury Park Press, Neptune, N.J.
1998 Under 100,000 The Charleston Gazette, W. Va.
Over 100,000 The Philadelphia Inquirer
1999 Under 100,000 Colorado Daily, Boulder, Colo.
Over 100,000 Chicago Tribune
2000 Under 100,000 Chronicle-Tribune, Marion, Ind.
Over 100,000 The Detroit News
2001 Under 100,000 York Daily Record, Pa.; The York Dispatch/Sunday News, Pa.
Over 100,000 The Seattle Times, Wash.
2002 Under 100,000 The Albuquerque Tribune
Over 100,000 The Baltimore Sun
2003 Under 100,000 Argus Leader, Sioux Falls, S.D.
Over 100,000 The Seattle Times

Circulation divisions eliminated; award discontinued after 2016.

Year Winner/Organization
2004 Hartford Courant, Conn.
2005 South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale
2006 Bloomberg News
2007 Chicago Tribune
2008 Las Vegas Sun[35]
2009 Meg Kissinger and Susanne Rust, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
2010 Los Angeles Times
2011 California Watch and The Center for Investigative Reporting
2012 Patricia Callahan, Sam Roe, and Michael Hawthorne; Chicago Tribune
2013 Guardian US
2014 The New York Times
2015 Tom Vanden Brook et al., USA Today Network
2016 Houston Chronicle

Washington Reporting Raymond Clapper Award

edit

Reporter and Scripps Howard columnist Raymond Clapper died in 1944 during World War II while covering the U.S. invasion of the Marshall Islands. Following his death, the Raymond Clapper Memorial Association was incorporated on March 10, 1944, in Washington, D.C. "to perpetuate the memory of Clapper"[36] through the Raymond Clapper Memorial Award,[37] which was presented annually "to a journalist or team for distinguished Washington reporting."[38] The White House Correspondents' Association, and sometimes the American Society of Newspaper Editors, distributed the Raymond Clapper Award from 1944 to 2003, at which point it passed to the National Journalism Awards.[38] Under Scripps Howard, the Washington Reporting Raymond Clapper Award was presented from 2004 to 2011, at which point it was discontinued.

Year Winner Organization
2004 Greg Jaffe[39] The Wall Street Journal
2005 Chris Adams and Alison Young Knight Ridder Washington Bureau[40]
2006 Wes Allison St. Petersburg Times, Florida[41]
2007 Marisa Taylor, Margaret Talev, and Greg Gordon[42] McClatchy Washington Bureau
2008 David Willman Los Angeles Times[43]
2009 Thomas Frank USA Today[44]
2010 Adam Liptak The New York Times[45]
2011 Damian Paletta The Wall Street Journal

Web Reporting

edit

Discontinued after 2008.

Year Winner Organization
1999 APBnews.com Asia-Pacific Broadcasting
2000 MTVi News MTV
2001 USAToday.com USA Today
2002 The Sun The San Bernardino Sun, San Bernardino, California
2003 Times Union Times Union, Albany, N.Y.
2004 DallasNews.com The Dallas Morning News
2005 roanoke.com The Roanoke Times, Virginia
2006 washingtonpost.com The Washington Post
2007 washingtonpost.com The Washington Post
2008 Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Awards timeline

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Edward W. "Ted" Scripps II (1929–1987) was the grandson of E. W. Scripps (and the son of Robert Paine Scripps [1895–1938]). After serving as a reporter for many years, at the time of his death he was a trustee of the Scripps Howard News Service.[7] "He was a conservationist with interests in environmental issues and changing technologies in the communications industry."[6]
  2. ^ "Ursula and Dr. Gilbert Farfel created an endowed scholarship at Ohio University, Ursula’s alma mater, to support establishment of this award. Presented in cooperation with the Scripps College of Communication at Ohio University...."[6]

References

edit

Citations

edit
  1. ^ Davis, Molly. "2021 Scripps Howard Awards: The Tennessean's coverage of Waverly floods earns national journalism award". The Tennessean. Retrieved July 28, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "JOURNALISTS ARE GIVEN AWARDS". The New York Times. April 3, 1986. p. 9 (section B).
  3. ^ "Ernie Pyle Award Goes To Writer Jim Lucas". The Pittsburgh Press. Vol. 70, no. 190 (Home ed.). Scripps-Howard Service. December 31, 1953. p. 2. Retrieved March 17, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Turnbloom, Dean P. (March 1, 2012). "Scripps Howard National Journalism Awards". Prizewinning Political Cartoons (2011 ed.). Pelican Publishing Company. p. 64. ISBN 9781589808881.
  5. ^ School of Journalism and Electronic Media: College of Communication and Information. "Edward J. Meeman". University of Tennessee. Archived from the original on July 13, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c "Individuals Behind the Awards" (PDF). Scripps Howard Awards 2021: Honoring the Best in American Journalism. June 2022. p. 6.
  7. ^ Scripps Howard News Service (June 16, 1987). "NEWS GROUP TRUSTEE EDWARD SCRIPPS II". Chicago Tribune.
  8. ^ "WALKER STONE, 68, SCRIPPS OFFICIAL". The New York Times. March 19, 1973.
  9. ^ Walter, Claire (1982). Winners, the Blue Ribbon Encyclopedia of Awards. Facts on File, Inc. p. 129.
  10. ^ a b c UPI ARCHIVES (March 28, 1982). "Paul Kolsti of the Dallas Morning News won the..." United Press International.
  11. ^ a b Gardner, Alan (April 12, 2012). "Scripps Howard discontinues Charles Schulz Award". The Daily Cartoonist.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i "FOUNDATION AWARDS GO TO 8 NEWSPAPERS AND 5 BROADCASTERS". The New York Times. AP. April 22, 1987. p. 26 (Section D).
  13. ^ "Scripps Howard Foundation Charles E. Scripps Award". Editor & Publisher. Vol. 126, no. 52. December 25, 1993.
  14. ^ Wethington, Kari (March 6, 2018). "Scripps Howard Awards announce winners of top prizes, $170,000 in prize money" (PDF) (Press release). Cincinnati: Scripps Howard Foundation. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  15. ^ "FOUNDATION NAMES NATIONAL JOURNALISM AWARD JUDGES" (Press release). Scripps. February 12, 1999.
  16. ^ "FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES NATIONAL JOURNALISM AWARDS WINNERS" (Press release). Scripps. February 22, 2000. Two new categories – Web reporting and editorial cartooning – were added to the competition this year.
  17. ^ Wethington, Kari (April 21, 2021). "Scripps Howard Awards announce 2020 winners, recognize excellence in journalism" (PDF) (Press release). Cincinnati: Scripps Howard Foundation. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  18. ^ a b "The Times Earns Scripps Howard Awards for 'Rebuild, Reburn' and 'Legal Weed, Broken Promises'". Los Angeles Times. October 24, 2023.
  19. ^ a b c "Journalism Awards Given to 4 Newsmen By Scripps‐Howard". The New York Times. May 1, 1974. p. 48.
  20. ^ Bryant, Joseph D. (October 23, 2023). "AL.com journalists win Scripps Howard Award". AL.com.
  21. ^ Ewald, Laura. "100 years of the Hatchet". GW Magazine. George Washington University. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
  22. ^ "The Scramble into Space". Science News. November 30, 1963. Retrieved May 1, 2019.(subscription required)
  23. ^ "2 Get Ernie Pyle Award". The New York Times. February 9, 1968. p. 24.
  24. ^ a b c "SCRIPPS FUND GIVES REPORTING PRIZES". The New York Times. April 22, 1975. p. 532.
  25. ^ "Scripps Howard Foundation: What's New". Archived from the original on July 16, 2011.
  26. ^ "Scripps Howard Foundation: What's New". Archived from the original on January 5, 2009.
  27. ^ "Scripps Howard Foundation: What's New". Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  28. ^ Wethington, Kari (March 6, 2018). "Scripps Howard Awards announce winners of top prizes, $170,000 in prize money" (PDF) (Press release). Cincinnati: Scripps Howard Foundation. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  29. ^ a b Smith, Susan Hill (December 16, 1997). "Show me the money; How to find scholarships for college". The Post and Courier. Charleston, South Carolina.
  30. ^ Janovy, C.J. (November 6, 2014). "Grant Snider, Cartoonist/Orthodontist, Able To Conquer Self-Doubt With A Single Pen". All Things Considered. NPR. KCUR. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  31. ^ "Yale: Campus Cooking: 'Edible Complex,' Not Mystery Meat". Campus Life. The New York Times. February 2, 1992. p. 43. Mr. Kalb won the 1988 Charles M. Schulz award, a national journalism award given by the Scripps-Howard Foundation to the most promising college cartoonist in the country.
  32. ^ "Scripps Howard Foundation Announces 1996 National Journalism Award Winners". Scripps Howard Foundation. The E.W. Scripps Company. March 19, 1996. Archived from the original on May 1, 2009. Retrieved December 20, 2009.
  33. ^ "Grant Snider wins Charles M. Schulz award". The Daily Cartoonist. March 16, 2009. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
  34. ^ "WABC‐TV WINS PRIZE FOR PUBLIC SERVICE". The New York Times. April 20, 1973.
  35. ^ "Sun wins national award for construction deaths reporting". Las Vegas Sun. March 13, 2009.
  36. ^ "Raymond Clapper Memorial Association Is Created". St. Petersburg Times. March 10, 1944. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  37. ^ "(untitled brief)". Indiana Gazette. Pennsylvania, Indiana. April 5, 2001. p. 25. Retrieved March 2, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.  
  38. ^ a b Journalism Institute. "Raymond Clapper Memorial Award winners (1944 to 2011)". National Press Club. Retrieved November 15, 2023.
  39. ^ "Reporting on National Defense Prize 2009". Gerald R. Ford Foundation. June 1, 2009. In 2002 and 2005, Jaffe won the Raymond Clapper Award for Washington coverage.
  40. ^ "Knight Ridder wins journalism honors". Knight-Ridder Newspapers. March 10, 2006. The award committee judges said the investigation, 'Discharged and Dishonored,' showed that the Department of Veterans Affairs 'is failing miserably in its service to America's veterans.'
  41. ^ KRAUSS, CLIFFORD (October 14, 2007). "St. Pete Times Invests In In-Depth Reporting". The Ledger. New York Times News Service. [The St. Petersburg Times] ... won the Raymond Clapper award for Washington reporting last year.
  42. ^ "McClatchy cited for exposing U.S. attorney scandal". McClatchy Newspapers. March 8, 2008.
  43. ^ "Charles Davis Named National Journalism Teacher of the Year by the Scripps Howard Foundation" (Press release). Missouri School of Journalism. March 13, 2009. David Willman of the Los Angeles Times receives $10,000 and the Raymond Clapper award for revealing the FBI and Justice Department's botched anthrax investigations that ended with a suicide rather than an arrest and a trial. Finalists: Carolyn Lochhead, San Francisco Chronicle; and the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times.
  44. ^ "Sarasota Herald-Tribune wins National Journalism Award biz reporting prize". TBN. March 12, 2010. Thomas Frank of USA Today receives $10,000 and the Raymond Clapper Award for Washington Reporting for "Under the Radar," an investigation of a little-known Federal Aviation Administration tax on airline passengers' tickets that revealed how billions of dollars in proceeds are used to fund the world's largest private aviation network.
  45. ^ "Scripps Howard Foundation: What's New". Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved April 11, 2012.

Sources

edit
edit