Jeannette Leonard Gilder

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Jeannette Leonard Gilder

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Queens, Queens County, New York, United States
Death: January 17, 1916 (66)
Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States (stroke)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Rev William Henry Gilder, Sr and Jane Gilder
Sister of William Henry Gilder, Brevet Major (USA); Richard Watson Gilder; Joseph Benson Gilder; John Frances Gilder and Robert Fletcher Gilder

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Jeannette Leonard Gilder

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeannette_Leonard_Gilder

Jeannette Leonard Gilder (3 October 1849 – 1916) was a pioneer for United States women in journalism.

Biography

She was a daughter of the clergyman William Henry Gilder. She was connected from 1869 with various newspapers in Newark and New York. She also worked for The Boston Evening Transcript writing under the pen name "Brunswick." Gilder was the New York Correspondent of the Transcript. In 1881, she helped to co-found The Critic, a literary magazine that was merged with the third incarnation of Putnam's Magazine in 1906.

Gilder was associated with her brother, Richard Watson Gilder, in the editorship of Scribner's Monthly (later called the Century), and was joint editor with her brother Joseph Benson Gilder of the Critic from 1881 to 1906. Another brother was the explorer William Henry Gilder.

Publications

Representative Poems by Living Persons (1886)

Pen Portraits of Literary Women (1887)

Essays from the Critic (1882)

Authors at Home (1889)

Why I am opposed to woman suffrage. Boston: Massachusetts Association Opposed to the Extension of Suffrage to Women, [1894?].

The Autobiography of a Tomboy. New York: Doubleday, Page, & Co. (1900)

The Tomboy at Work (1904)


"Born on October 3, 1849, in Flushing, New York, Jeannette Gilder grew up there and in Bordentown, New Jersey. In 1864 she went to work to help support her large family, left fatherless that year by the Civil War, with a job in the office of the New Jersey adjutant general. In 1865-66 she attended the Bridgeton Female Seminary in southern New Jersey. In 1868 she joined the staff of the Newark Morning Register, which had recently been established by Richard Watson Gilder, destined to be the most famous of her five talented brothers. She later became an editor of the paper, and for a time she was Newark correspondent for the New York Tribune. In 1875 she moved to New York City and secured a job as literary editor of James Gordon Bennett's New York Herald. Before long her reviews and criticism of music, drama, and literature made her a central figure in the cultural life of the city, and she numbered many of the leading writers, artists, and actors of the day among her friends. In January 1881 she and another brother, Joseph B. Gilder, established the Critic, a biweekly (later weekly) journal of criticism and review that enjoyed a long life and earned for itself an important place in American cultural affairs. She contributed a regular column, "The Lounger," and helped edit the Critic, becoming the sole editor in 1901.

For several years up to 1906 Gilder also edited the monthly Reader. During this period she contributed columns to Harper's Bazaar, the New York Commercial Advertiser, and the London Academy, and under the pen name "Brunswick" she was a New York correspondent for the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette and later the Boston Evening Transcript; she also corresponded at various times with newspapers in Philadelphia, Chicago, and London. In 1906 the Critic was absorbed by Putnam's Monthly, of which she was associate editor until it in turn was absorbed by the Atlantic Monthly in 1910. Her gift for editorial work also produced several books, including Essays from "The Critic," with Joseph Gilder (1882), Representative Poems of Living Poets (1886), Pen Portraits of Literary Women, with Helen Gray Cone (1887), Authors at Home, with Joseph Gilder (1888), Masterpieces of the World's Best Literature, in eight volumes (1905), and Heart of Youth, young people's poetry (1911). Her attempts at literary creation met with indifferent success.

Gilder wrote several plays, including Quits, produced in Philadelphia in 1877; Sevenoaks (1878), based on Josiah G. Holland's novel of that name; and A Wonderful Woman (1878). In 1887 she published a novel, Taken by Siege, about literary life in New York. Her Autobiography of a Tomboy (1900) and The Tomboy at Work (1904) were more successful. For many years she served in addition as New York agent for a number of authors and publishers. In later years she supplied book columns to McClure's magazine, Woman's Home Companion, and the Chicago Tribune. She died in New York City on January 17, 1916."

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Jeannette Leonard Gilder's Timeline

1849
October 3, 1849
Queens, Queens County, New York, United States
1916
January 17, 1916
Age 66
Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States