National Spelling Bee
- In full:
- Scripps National Spelling Bee
- Formerly (until 2004):
- Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee
- Related Topics:
- spelling bee
Who is eligible for the National Spelling Bee?
What are the rules of the National Spelling Bee?
News •
National Spelling Bee, spelling bee held annually in the Washington, D.C., area that serves as the culmination of a series of local and regional bees contested by students (mostly American) in grades below the high-school level. It is administered on a not-for-profit basis by the E.W. Scripps Company as an educational promotion.
Although a nationwide spelling competition for children had been contested in 1908 under the auspices of the National Education Association, the idea was not revisited until 1925. In that year the Louisville Courier-Journal, the organizer of a state bee for Kentucky grade-school students, invited other American newspapers to join it in sponsoring students to compete in a national bee. More than two million schoolchildren entered competitions on the local level, and by June the field had been narrowed to nine contestants—one for each participating newspaper—who were sent to Washington. The inaugural champion was 11-year-old Frank Neuhauser of Louisville, who correctly spelled gladiolus to claim a prize of $500. The event proved popular, and the number of participating newspapers (and therefore contestants) soon proliferated. In 1941 the sponsorship of the national bee was assumed by the Scripps newspaper conglomerate, though individual newspapers continued to represent students regionally. Merriam-Webster began an affiliation with the bee in 1958, with its unabridged dictionary emerging as the official arbiter of a word’s spelling; the company also produced a study guide for contestants.
By the late 20th century, the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee (renamed Scripps National Spelling Bee in 2004) had expanded to more than 200 contestants hailing from areas throughout the United States and its territories as well as from several other countries. (In 1998 Jody-Anne Maxwell of Jamaica became the bee’s first non-American winner.) Over the years, the rules of competition were refined and the winnings increased, with champions in the early 21st century collecting more than $50,000 in cash and prizes. Additionally, after having been broadcast on radio and television only occasionally during the first few decades of competition, the national finals began airing annually on ESPN in 1994; in 2022 the national bee moved to television channels co-owned by Scripps.

As the level of competition gradually rose—owing in part to contestants’ increasingly rigorous preparation—observers often remarked that the words at the national bee were more obscure and difficult than those of past years. While an orthographic knowledge of knack was sufficient for an early winner of the contest, champions in the early 21st century were required to correctly spell words such as appoggiatura and Laodicean. (In 2019 an unprecedented eight contestants were named cowinners after organizers ran out of challenging words.) However, this did not appear to diminish public interest in the bee, which was arguably more of a media phenomenon than ever before.
Champions and winning words
National Spelling Bee | |||
---|---|---|---|
*Each contestant spelled a final word correctly, resulting in a tie. **Neither contestant spelled the final word correctly, resulting in a tie. | |||
year | champion | sponsoring organization |
winning word |
1925 | Frank Neuhauser | Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.) | gladiolus |
1926 | Pauline Bell | Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.) | cerise |
1927 | Dean Lucas | Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio) | abrogate |
1928 | Betty Robinson | South Bend News-Tribune (Indiana) | knack |
1929 | Virginia Hogan | Omaha World-Herald (Nebraska) | luxuriance |
1930 | Helen Jensen | Des Moines Register & Tribune (Iowa) | albumen |
1931 | Ward Randall | White Hall Register-Republican (Illinois) | foulard |
1932 | Dorothy Greenwald | Des Moines Register & Tribune (Iowa) | invulnerable |
1933 | Alma Roach | Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio) | torsion |
1934 | Sarah Wilson | Portland Evening Express (Maine) | brethren |
1935 | Clara Mohler | Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio) | intelligible |
1936 | Jean Trowbridge | Des Moines Register & Tribune (Iowa) | eczema |
1937 | Waneeta Beckley | Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.) | promiscuous |
1938 | Marian Richardson | Louisville Times (Kentucky) | sanitarium |
1939 | Elizabeth Ann Rice | Worcester Telegram & Gazette (Massachusetts) | canonical |
1940 | Laurel Kuykendall | Knoxville News-Sentinel (Tennessee) | therapy |
1941 | Louis Edward Sissman | Detroit News | initials |
1942 | Richard Earnhart | El Paso Herald-Post (Texas) | sacrilegious |
1943–45 | not held | ||
1946 | John McKinney | Des Moines Register & Tribune (Iowa) | semaphore |
1947 | Mattie Lou Pollard | Atlanta Journal | chlorophyll |
1948 | Jean Chappelear | Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio) | psychiatry |
1949 | Kim Calvin | Canton Repository (Ohio) | onerous |
1950 | Diana Reynard | Cleveland Press | meerschaum* |
Colquitt Dean | Atlanta Journal | meticulosity* | |
1951 | Irving Belz | Memphis Press-Scimitar (Tennessee) | insouciant |
1952 | Doris Ann Hall | Winston-Salem Journal (North Carolina) | vignette |
1953 | Elizabeth Hess | Arizona Republic (Phoenix) | soubrette |
1954 | William Cashore | Norristown Times Herald (Pennsylvania) | transept |
1955 | Sandra Sloss | St. Louis Globe-Democrat (Missouri) | crustaceology |
1956 | Melody Sachko | Pittsburgh Press | condominium |
1957 | Sandra Owen | Canton Repository (Ohio) | schappe** |
Dana Bennett | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | ||
1958 | Jolitta Schlehuber | Topeka Daily Capital (Kansas) | syllepsis |
1959 | Joel Montgomery | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | catamaran |
1960 | Henry Feldman | Knoxville News-Sentinel (Tennessee) | eudaemonic |
1961 | John Capehart | Tulsa Tribune (Oklahoma) | smaragdine |
1962 | Nettie Crawford | El Paso Herald-Post (Texas) | esquamulose** |
Michael Day | St. Louis Democrat (Missouri) | ||
1963 | Glen Van Slyke III | Knoxville News-Sentinel (Tennessee) | equipage |
1964 | William Kerek | Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio) | sycophant |
1965 | Michael Kerpan, Jr. | Tulsa Tribune (Oklahoma) | eczema |
1966 | Robert A. Wake | Houston Chronicle | ratoon |
1967 | Jennifer Reinke | Omaha World-Herald (Nebraska) | Chihuahua |
1968 | Robert L. Walters | Topeka Daily Capital (Kansas) | abalone |
1969 | Susan Yoachum | Dallas Morning News | interlocutory |
1970 | Libby Childress | Winston-Salem Journal & Sentinel (North Carolina) | croissant |
1971 | Jonathan Knisely | Philadelphia Bulletin | shalloon |
1972 | Robin Kral | Lubbock Avalanche-Journal (Texas) | macerate |
1973 | Barrie Trinkle | Fort Worth Press (Texas) | vouchsafe |
1974 | Julie Ann Junkin | Birmingham Post-Herald (Alabama) | hydrophyte |
1975 | Hugh Tosteson | San Juan Star (Puerto Rico) | incisor |
1976 | Tim Kneale | Syracuse Herald Journal-American (New York) | narcolepsy |
1977 | John Paola | Pittsburgh Press | cambist |
1978 | Peg McCarthy | Topeka Capital-Journal (Kansas) | deification |
1979 | Katie Kerwin | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | maculature |
1980 | Jacques Bailly | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | elucubrate |
1981 | Paige Pipkin | El Paso Herald-Post (Texas) | sarcophagus |
1982 | Molly Dieveney | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | psoriasis |
1983 | Blake Giddens | El Paso Herald-Post (Texas) | Purim |
1984 | Daniel Greenblatt | Loudoun Times-Mirror (Virginia) | luge |
1985 | Balu Natarajan | Chicago Tribune | milieu |
1986 | Jon Pennington | Patriot News (Harrisburg, Pa.) | odontalgia |
1987 | Stephanie Petit | Pittsburgh Press | staphylococci |
1988 | Rageshree Ramachandran | Sacramento Bee (California) | elegiacal |
1989 | Scott Isaacs | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | spoliator |
1990 | Amy Marie Dimak | Seattle Times | fibranne |
1991 | Joanne Lagatta | Wisconsin State Journal (Madison) | antipyretic |
1992 | Amanda Goad | Richmond News Leader (Virginia) | lyceum |
1993 | Geoff Hooper | Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tenn.) | kamikaze |
1994 | Ned G. Andrews | Knoxville News-Sentinel (Tennessee) | antediluvian |
1995 | Justin Tyler Carroll | Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tenn.) | xanthosis |
1996 | Wendy Guey | Palm Beach Post (Florida) | vivisepulture |
1997 | Rebecca Sealfon | Daily News (New York City) | euonym |
1998 | Jody-Anne Maxwell | Phillips & Phillips Stationery Suppliers, Ltd. (Kingston, Jam.) | chiaroscurist |
1999 | Nupur Lala | Tampa Tribune (Florida) | logorrhea |
2000 | George Abraham Thampy | St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri) | demarche |
2001 | Sean Conley | Aitkin Independent Age (Minnesota) | succedaneum |
2002 | Pratyush Buddiga | Rocky Mountain News (Denver) | prospicience |
2003 | Sai R. Gunturi | Dallas Morning News | pococurante |
2004 | David Tidmarsh | South Bend Tribune (Indiana) | autochthonous |
2005 | Anurag Kashyap | San Diego Union-Tribune | appoggiatura |
2006 | Kerry Close | Asbury Park Press/Home News Tribune (New Jersey) | Ursprache |
2007 | Evan M. O'Dorney | Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, Calif.) | serrefine |
2008 | Sameer Mishra | Journal and Courier (Lafayette, Ind.) | guerdon |
2009 | Kavya Shivashankar | Olathe News (Kansas) | Laodicean |
2010 | Anamika Veeramani | Plain Dealer (Cleveland) | stromuhr |
2011 | Sukanya Roy | Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre, Pa.) | cymotrichous |
2012 | Snigdha Nandipati | U-T San Diego | guetapens |
2013 | Arvind Mahankali | Daily News (New York City) | knaidel |
2014 | Sriram Hathwar | Corning Rotary Club (New York) | stichomythia* |
Ansun Sujoe | Texas Christian University (Fort Worth, Texas) | feuilleton* | |
2015 | Vanya Shivashankar | Olathe News (Kansas) | scherenschnitte* |
Gokul Venkatachalam | St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri) | nunatak* | |
2016 | Jairam Hathwar | Corning Rotary Club (New York) | Feldenkrais* |
Nihar Janga | Houston Public Media (Texas) | gesellschaft* | |
2017 | Ananya Vinay | The Fresno Bee (California) | marocain |
2018 | Karthik Nemmani | Scoggins Middle School (Texas) | koinonia |
2019 | Rishik Gandhasri | Bay Area Regional Spelling Bee (California) | auslaut* |
Erin Howard | Adventure Travel (Alabama) | erysipelas* | |
Abhijay Kodali | Dallas Sports Commission | palama* | |
Shruthika Padhy | Rosa International Middle School (New Jersey) | aiguillette* | |
Rohan Raja | Dallas Sports Commission | odylic* | |
Christopher Serrao | Discover Lehigh Valley (Pennsylvania) | cernuous* | |
Sohum Sukhatankar | Dallas Sports Commission | pendeloque* | |
Saketh Sundar | Howard County Library (Maryland) | bougainvillea* | |
2020 | not held | ||
2021 | Zaila Avant-garde | New Orleans Chapter of The Links | Murraya |
2022 | Harini Logan | Brauntex Performing Arts Theatre Association (Texas) | moorhen |
2023 | Dev Shah | SNSB Region One Bee (Florida) | psammophile |
2024 | Bruhat Soma | Rays Baseball Foundation and Rowdies Socer Fund (Florida) | abseil |
2025 | Faizan Zaki | Dallas Sports Commission | éclaircissement |