Janny Scott

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NationalityAmerican
AlmamaterHarvard University
Period1977–present
GenreJournalism, biography
Janny Scott
NationalityAmerican
Alma materHarvard University
Period1977–present
GenreJournalism, biography
Notable worksA Singular Woman: The Untold Story of Barack Obama's Mother
The Beneficiary: Fortune, Misfortune and the Story of My Father
Notable awardsPulitzer Prize, 2001, for national reporting
SpouseBill Ritter (divorced)
PartnerJoseph Lelyveld (2005–2024, died)
Website
jannyscott.com

Janny Scott (born 1954–1955) is an American journalist and biographer. She won a 2001[1] Pulitzer Prize for national reporting as part of a New York Times team on race in America.[2]

Scott was born to a prosperous blue blood family living outside Philadelphia. Her ancestors included a railroad baron, socialites, a congressman, and a financier. Her grandmother, Hope Montgomery Scott, has been said to be the inspiration for Katharine Hepburn's Tracy Lord in the film and play The Philadelphia Story.[3] Her father, Robert Montgomery Scott, was a philanthropist and president of the Philadelphia Museum of Art; a civic leader in Philadelphia, he was called the quintessential Philadelphian.[4] Her maternal grandfather, Colonel Robert L. Montgomery, went into finance to "replenish the family coffers" and founded the investment firm Janney Montgomery Scott.[5] The Montgomery family magazine states that no American family can claim a more distinguished or ancient lineage than theirs, including an ancestor who is claimed to have commanded an advance division of the Norman army at Hastings in 1066.[6] Her great-grandfather, Thomas A. Scott, helped build the Pennsylvania Railroad from a "struggling experiment" into what was then the largest corporation in the world, twice over; another ancestor, Horace Binney,[7] served in Congress[8] and was known for his public speeches as well as the founding of the Hasty Pudding Club at Harvard.[9]

Scott grew up on Ardrossan, an 800-acre estate on the Philadelphia Main Line.[8] She lived there until age 14,[2] when her father transplanted the family to England. Her family eventually returned to Ardrossan to live, but she never did. He had been appointed special assistant to the ambassador to England, Walter Annenberg, a fellow Main Liner. She continued her education at an all-girls boarding school in the countryside.[10]

She attended Harvard University, graduating in 1977, describing her time there as a turning point in her life. She reports that she had "a very good time," finding it "nice to be with men," meeting a different crowd, including radicals, and experiencing the intellectual environment.[10] She began her writing career there "on almost a whim." She wrote for The Harvard Crimson, describing it as her main activity while in school. She also wrote for The Real Paper, a weekly alternative, and continued writing for it after graduation.[11]

Writing career

Personal

References

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