Stoke
Nub News Logo
Nub News

New Stoke-on-Trent Poet Laureate and Young Poet Laureate named

By Liana Snape   4th Dec 2025

Steven Beattie has been appointed Poet Laureate and Cameron Hart has been appointed Young Poet Laureate (image via Stoke-on-Trent City Council)
Steven Beattie has been appointed Poet Laureate and Cameron Hart has been appointed Young Poet Laureate (image via Stoke-on-Trent City Council)

Stoke-on-Trent has named its new Poet Laureate and its first Young Poet Laureate. 

Steven Beattie has been appointed as the new Stoke-on-Trent Poet Laureate and Cameron Hart has been appointed as the inaugural Stoke-on-Trent Young Poet Laureate.

Steven Beattie, who will take up his role in May 2026, was born and raised in Stoke on Trent and has a deep-rooted understanding of the city's rich industrial heritage which is reflected in his poetry. 

Cameron Hart will take up the post of Young Poet Laureate in January 2026. 

Cameron said: "Young people have wonderful minds, that have so much potential.

"I hold a firm belief in the idea that everyone should have a creative outlet in which they find calm, happiness and release." 

The competition to find the new Poet Laureate and Young Poet Laureate, supported by Stoke-on-Trent libraries, was launched in March. 

The judging panel included:

  • Nick Degg, Stoke-on-Trent's Centenary Poet Laureate
  • Lois Bateman, Hub Manager for The National Literacy Trust in Stoke-on-Trent
  • Gabriella Gay, local author, poet, storyteller and director
  • Stephen Seabridge, inaugural Stoke-on-Trent Poet Laureate
  • Brian Bilston, internationally acclaimed, prize-winning poet who found social-media fame as 'the unofficial poet of Twitter'. 

The roles were created as part of the city's Centenary celebrations and will continue as a lasting legacy, championing poetry and creative writing across Stoke-on-Trent. 

Nick Degg, the current Centenary Poet Laureate, said: "It's great to know that the Council and Libraries are supporting and promoting the Poet Laureateship. 

"It's vital for aspiring poets to know that they will be given a platform to explore way beyond their normal circles.

"To have organisations, arts foundations and the like inviting you to be involved in projects is a wonderful way of expanding not just your writing skills, but to open doors you didn't even know were there. 

"Poetry is a magical art form, and the more people we can reach with our passion and enthusiasm, the better it will be for its future as a vibrant and important strand of literature." 

Cllr Sarah Hill, cabinet member for finance, anti-poverty and corporate services at Stoke-on-Trent City Council, said: "When we made Nick Degg our Centenary Poet Laureate, he said he'd get poetry everywhere and he absolutely has. 

"This year he's performed everywhere from a civic council meeting to the top of a fire engine in Burslem. 

"He's written poetry on everything from the Fenton Mace to all the things you can buy at Tunstall Market and he's possibly the only poet who could get A-ha lead singer Morten Harket into a Centenary poem. 

"I'm excited to see where our new Poet Laureate and Young Poet Laureate will take poetry in the city to next." 

     

CHECK OUT OUR FREE NEWSLETTER!
5 TOP STORIES EVERY FRIDAY!
Click here to sign up: stoke newsletter

     

Join the 1% Less than one percent of our regular readers pay to support our work.

We send messages like this because, honestly, we need to.
We believe the kind of journalism we produce is important.
That’s why we rely on readers like you.

Please consider joining that 1% today.
Monthly supporters will enjoy:
Ad-free experience

Share:

Comments (0)

Post comment

No comments yet!


Sign-up for our FREE newsletter...

We want to provide stoke with more and more clickbait-free news.

     

...or become a Supporter.
Stoke-on-Trent. Your City. Your News.

Local news is essential for our community — but it needs your support.
Your donation makes a real difference.
For monthly donators:
Ad-free experience