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Mary StottOBE (born Charlotte Mary Waddington) (18 July 1907 – 16 September 2002) was a British feminist and journalist. She was editor ofThe Guardian newspaper'swomen's page between 1957 and 1972.[1]
Charlotte Mary Waddington was born inLeicester, the only daughter and third child of Robert Guy Waddington and his wife, born Amalie Bates. Robert and Amalie Waddington were both journalists. In 1937, she married Ken Stott, who was a journalist for theNews Chronicle.[1]
In November 2005 she was posthumously included (one of just five women) in thePress Gazette's 40-strong 'gallery' of most influential British journalists.
Archives
editPapers of Charlotte Mary Stott are held atThe Women's Library at theLibrary of the London School of Economics, ref7CMS
References
edit- ^abLena Jeger (18 September 2002)."Obituary - Mary Stott".A great campaigning journalist, she founded the Guardian women's page and gave a liberating voice to a generation.The Guardian, London. Retrieved10 May 2018.
Sources
edit- BBC Radio 4 programme on Mary Stott - listen online:http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00xpp68
- Lena Jeger, Obituary - Mary Stott,The Guardian, 18 September 2002.
- M. Stott, 1975,Forgetting's No Excuse (London, Virago).
- M. Stott, 1985,Before I go. (Autobiography part 2)
- Eleanor Mills With Kira Cochrane, "Cupcakes and Kalashnikovs"
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