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Jane Grant and CSWS
As a reporter for The New York Times (she was the first full-fledged female Times reporter), she covered women and women's issues, questioning public figures about their views on the status of women and interviewing women who worked in traditionally male professions. After her marriage in 1939 to Harris, an editor at Fortune, Grant became even more active in feminist causes, reactivating the Lucy Stone League and expanding its purpose. She continued to work for the rights of women into her retirement, advocating for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment and serving on the National Council of Women. She died in 1972 on the Connecticut farm she shared with her husband. In 1974 Harris was approached for an endowment for the University of Oregon and, after a visit to the school and negotiations with Joan Acker and other UO faculty and administrators, he agreed to fund a center that engaged in research on women and gender studies. Upon his death, he left a $3.5 million bequest in his wife's name to establish CSWS. In 1976, Harris donated Jane Grant's papers to the University of Oregon. Visit the online exhibit (co-sponsored by CSWS and designed by FHP research associate Dan Gilfillan): "Talk of the Town: Jane Grant, The New Yorker, and the Oregon Legacy of a Twentieth-Century Feminist." Further Reading "Jane Grant, The New Yorker, and Ross: A Lucy Stoner Practices Her Own Style of Journalism," by Beverley G. Merrick, The Serials Librarian 37 (No. 2, 1999): 59-88.
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