Betty Brown, OBE — Post Office justice campaigner, Consett
Elizabeth Brown (Betty Brown) was made an OBE in the New Year Honours list. (Image: Lucy North)
Consett great-grandmother Betty Brown, 92, was the oldest person on the King’s New Year Honours List 2026 after receiving an OBE for services to justice.
She is believed to be the oldest surviving victim of the Post Office Horizon IT scandal, having run Annfield Plain Post Office with her late husband Oswall from 1985 until they were forced out in 2003.
The couple lost around £100,000 of their own money covering non‑existent shortfalls.
One of the original 555 claimants in the landmark group action led by Sir Alan Bates, Betty has become a leading campaigner, fronting national TV interviews and challenging ministers as victims finally secure compensation.
Vera Parnaby — “Mrs Poppy”, Consett
‘Mrs Poppy’ was also named in the New Year’s Honours list. (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
Known affectionately as “Mrs Poppy”, Consett’s Vera Parnaby has been selling poppies for the Royal British Legion for eight decades, raising well over £1m.
She began collecting aged six after her father was killed serving in the Second World War, accompanying her mother door‑to‑door.
Now in her mid‑80s, Vera is the Legion’s longest‑serving poppy seller and leads a dedicated volunteer team in Consett, even introducing contactless machines to keep donations flowing.
Her tireless fundraising has earned her a string of honours and a Pride of Britain regional fundraiser nomination, but she insists she has no plans to stop.
Rhiannon Hiles — Chief Executive, Beamish Museum
Rhiannon Hiles, Chief Executive of Beamish Museum.
Rhiannon Hiles has spent three decades at Beamish, The Living Museum of the North, after joining as a volunteer in 1995 and working through curatorial, commercial and development roles.
She became chief executive in 2021 and has since led the open‑air museum to its biggest ever accolade – Art Fund Museum of the Year 2025, the world’s largest museum prize.
In February, she was named a North East Business Titan for outstanding leadership and contribution to the regional economy, praised for putting people and communities at the heart of Beamish’s success.
She also holds senior roles in European and UK museum bodies.
Hannah Fox — Executive Director, The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle
Hannah Fox, the director of The Bowes Museum.
Appointed director of The Bowes Museum in 2022, Hannah Fox arrived in Barnard Castle with a track record of transforming heritage sites.
In Derby she helped lead the £18m redevelopment of the Silk Mill into the Museum of Making, hailed as the UK’s first museum of its kind.
At Bowes, she has championed community‑led culture and co‑creation, fronting the Durham Creative Community Fellows programme, which supports 17 grassroots arts leaders from across County Durham in partnership with US‑based National Arts Strategies.
Fox regularly cites founder Josephine Bowes’ “tenacity, creativity and ambition” as the inspiration for the museum’s future direction.
Dr Sarah Price — Head of Locomotion, Shildon
Dr Sarah Price (right) with Bishop of Durham elect Rick Simpson. (Image: North News & Pictures Ltd)
Dr Sarah Price made history in 2018 when she became the first woman to lead Locomotion in Shildon, part of the national Science Museum Group.
The museum, on the world’s first public railway route, tells the story of railways and the people who built and worked on them.
Price has spoken about challenging the perception that railways are a male interest, noting that close to half of Locomotion’s visitors are women and girls.
Under her leadership the site has expanded its collection, events and outreach, using the region’s rail heritage to engage diverse audiences in science, engineering and history.