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Murder of Grace Brown : ウィキペディア英語版 | Murder of Grace Brown Grace Mae Brown (March 20, 1886 – July 11, 1906) was an American skirt factory worker whose murder caused a nationwide sensation, and whose life inspired the fictional character Roberta Alden in the Theodore Dreiser novel, ''An American Tragedy'', as well as the Jennifer Donnelly novel, ''A Northern Light''. Shelley Winters was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance inspired by Grace Brown, with the name changed to 'Alice Tripp' in ''A Place in the Sun. The facts of the real murder are laid out in the two non-fiction books: ''Adirondack Tragedy: The Gillette Murder Case of 1906'', written by Joseph W. Brownell and Patricia A. Wawrzaszek, and ''Murder in the Adirondacks: An American Tragedy Revisited'', by Craig Brandon. == Childhood == Brown grew up in South Otselic, New York, the daughter of a successful Chenango County farmer. She was reportedly given the nickname "Billy" because of her love of the contemporary hit song ''Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey''; Brown often signed her love letters "The Kid," after the Western outlaw Billy the Kid. She attended grammar school in the village, and became close friends with the teacher, Maud Kenyon Crumb, and her husband. In 1904, she moved to nearby Cortland to live with a married sister, and went to work at the Gillette Skirt Company.〔(ovcs.org ) -Retrieved 2011-02-18〕
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