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・ Jane Gomeldon
・ Jane Goodall
・ Jane Goodall Center for Excellence in Environmental Studies
・ Jane Goodall Environmental Middle School
・ Jane Goodall Institute
・ Jane Goodall Institute (Hong Kong)
・ Jane Gordon
・ Jane Gordon (jewelry designer)
・ Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon
・ Jane Gorry
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・ Jane Got a Gun
・ Jane Gough
・ Jane Goulding
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Jane Grant
・ Jane Gray
・ Jane Gray (broadcaster)
・ Jane Gray (stained glass artist)
・ Jane Gray (supercentenarian)
・ Jane Green
・ Jane Green (actress)
・ Jane Green (author)
・ Jane Green (singer)
・ Jane Greenwood
・ Jane Greer
・ Jane Greer (poet)
・ Jane Gregory
・ Jane Grey (actress)
・ Jane Grey (disambiguation)


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Jane Grant : ウィキペディア英語版
Jane Grant

Jane Grant (May 29, 1892 – March 16, 1972) was a New York City journalist who co-founded ''The New Yorker'' with her first husband, Harold Ross.
==Life and career==
Jane Grant was born Jeanette Cole Grant in Joplin, Missouri, and grew up and went to school in Girard, Kansas. Grant originally trained to be a vocalist. She came to New York City at 16 to pursue singing, but fell into journalism when she joined the staff of ''The New York Times'' in the society department.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv91334 )〕 She soon worked her way into the city room as a reporter and became close friends with the critic Alexander Woollcott. As a journalist for the ''Times'' (its first full-fledged woman reporter), she covered women's issues, questioning public figures about their views on the status of women and interviewing women who worked in traditionally male professions. She wrote for the ''Times'' for 15 years.
During World War I Grant, who was also a talented singer and dancer, talked her way onto a troopship to France by joining the entertainment with the YMCA. She joined the American Red Cross and entertained soldiers during shows in Paris and at camps. In France, Woollcott introduced her to the future "Vicious Circle" members, including Harold Ross. Grant and Ross married in 1920. The "Vicious Circle" later became the Algonquin Round Table.〔 She returned to the ''Times'' after the war.
In 1921 Grant, along with Ruth Hale, founded the Lucy Stone League, which was dedicated, in the manner of Lucy Stone, to helping women keep their maiden names after marriage, as Grant did after her two marriages.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://csws.uoregon.edu/?page_id=55 )〕 Although Grant was an advocate for female independence, she still firmly believed in the sanctity of marriage. The group was a vocal group of feminists throughout the 1920s and '30s. (The Lucy Stone League is still alive and dedicated to promoting equal rights for women.)
With the backing of Raoul Fleischmann, Grant and Ross established ''The New Yorker'' in 1925. As editor, Ross is credited with driving the success of the magazine, however Ross is quoted saying the magazine would not have been a success without Jane's contribution. Grant was chiefly a business and content consultant for the magazine and initially helped to gather investments towards starting the magazine. She brought her friend Janet Flanner into the magazine's coterie of correspondents, commissioning her enduring ''Letter from Paris'' column.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://library.uoregon.edu/ec/exhibits/janegrant/human/gallery4.html )〕 The feature continues to be published today, although it now includes many other cities. Grant later produced a special overseas issue for the armed forces during World War II.〔
Ross and Grant divorced in 1929 after nine years of marriage.
During World War II, Grant wrote for several magazines, including Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine and The New Yorker.〔 Grant wrote ''Confession of a Feminist'' for American Mercury in 1943. In the essay, she describes the experience of being a feminist, recounting her early career as a woman reporter among men for the ''Times'' and exploring discriminatory laws and practices.〔Grant, Jane. "Confession of a Feminist." ''The American Mercury'', vol. LVII, no. 240, Dec., 1943, pp. 684–691.〕 Grant continued to be active in feminist causes, reactivating the Lucy Stone League and expanding its purpose. She continued to work for the rights of women into the 1960s, advocating for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment and serving on the National Council of Women.
In 1939, she married William B. Harris, the editor of ''Fortune magazine''. She and Harris moved from Manhattan to Litchfield, Connecticut. The couple founded White Flower Farm out of a barn on their property. In the 1950s, they started a successful mail-order business for home gardening.
In 1968, Grant published a memoir about her life entitled ''Ross, The New Yorker and Me'' (Reynal and Co., 1968 New York City). She was encouraged to do so by her second husband, William Harris, and ultimately dedicated the book to him.
Grant died in 1972 on the Connecticut farm she shared with her husband. Harris sold the nursery to its current owner, Eliot Wadsworth, in 1976.

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