词条 | Judith Palache Gregory |
释义 |
| name = Judith Palache Gregory | embed = | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pseudonym = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth date|1932|2|26}} | birth_place = Chicago, Illinois | death_date = {{Death date and age|2017|1|20|1932|2|26}} | death_place = Jaffrey, New Hampshire | occupation = Writer, counselor, educator, and permaculturalist | language = English | nationality = American | ethnicity = | citizenship = | education = University of Virginia | alma_mater = Radcliffe College | period = 1939–2004 | genre = | subject = | movement = | notableworks = major source on the life of Dorothy Day | spouse = | partner = Rosemary Poole | children = | relatives = Charles Gregory (father), Mary Palache (mother), Charles Palache (grandfather) | awards = | years_active = 1957–2017 | module = | website = | portaldisp = }}Judith Palache Gregory (1932–2017), also known as Judith Gregory, was an American writer, counselor, educator, and permaculturalist, who served as executor for Dorothy Day after lifelong friendship that began with her editing for the Catholic Worker.[1][2][3][4][5][6] BackgroundJudith Palache Gregory was born in Chicago, Illinois, on February 26, 1932.[1][2][5][6] Her parents were Charles O. Gregory, a labor lawyer and law professor, and Mary Palache, daughter of American mineralogist Charles Palache. Her brother was David Gregory.[1][2][5][6] She attended the University of Chicago Laboratory School and Putney School. She obtained an A.B. from Radcliffe College in 1955 and M.Ed. from the University of Virginia in 1962.[1][2][5][6] CareerDuring graduate school, Gregory worked at the Putney Graduate School of Teacher Education from 1957 to 1958, Highlander Folk School in 1958, and at the Catholic Worker from 1959 to 1962. In 1959, Day recorded in Catholic Worker, "Judith Gregory is, at present, in Tennessee, working for a while with Highland Folk School, which is fighting injustice and malice and evil on the interracial front."[7] After completing her M.Ed., she worked at the Harvard College Bureau of Study Counsel from 1962 to 1973.[1][2][5][6] From 1960 to 1970, she served as an editor for the Catholic Worker.[1][2][8] In her diary, Dorothy Day recorded her wish that Gregory become her executor: To Dorothy Tully to sign will. Judith [Gregory] is responsible if Chas and I both die.Day also described her: When Judy is in the city working at St. Joseph's House, she keeps her nose buried in desk work. She sits there answering the mail, answering papers, and filing orders for books and pamphlets–and carrying on the most heated discussions on anything from religion with any of the college crowd who happen to drop in.[9]In 1975, she moved to Jaffrey, New Hampshire, studied permaculture with originator Bill Mollison, and co-founded Gap Mountain Permaculture Center and the Gap Mountain Land Trust.[1][2][5][6] Personal and deathGregory was a permaculturalist and eco-feminist.[1][2][5][6][4] She headed the Palache Family Land Trust, Inc., from 1994 until its dissolution in 2001.[10] She died on 20 January 2017.[1][2] LegacyGregory's papers serve as important sources on the life of Dorothy Day. (See "Works" below for list of books that use her papers as a source.) She has confirmed Day's authority among those around her.[11] She herself also wrote of Day: Dorothy was not a good listener. She was impatient to be off to her own work... When... asked if she had really drunk Eugene O’Neill under the table, she said testily, "When you stay up all night you have to have something to keep you going"... Dorothy was by no means always repressive and severe. She could enjoy the comic aspect of things. In the winter of 1962, some young people started a magazine called F--- You, and composed it in the Catholic Worker office. When Dorothy discovered this, she told them to leave. They were taken in by the American Friends Service Committee, where they changed the name of the magazine to F--- Thee. When Dorothy heard about this, she laughed out loud.[8]Gregory was a lesbian and member of the Lesbian Alumnae of Radcliffe College.[6][4] She observed: While I was at the CW, I heard virtually no talk about sexuality of any kind... It was different in ’61-’62. I don’t doubt that such talk was going on then, but I didn’t join in it. Bob (Steed) and I acknowledged later that we were gay. I don’t know if any others did. I never talked with Dorothy about my sense of myself, my sexuality. In the mid-seventies I wrote a book that was in a way a coming-out story, and I sent a copy to Bob. I got the impression that he showed it to Dorothy, but I never knew for sure. She never spoke of it. I definitely did not feel like sending it to her directly — shy, I guess.Nevertheless, she and Day remained lifelong friends–Day even made her executor of her will.[1][4] As a grandchild of Charles Palache, Gregory descended from the Sephardic Pallache family, specifically Joseph Pallache, brother of Samuel Pallache. With regards to her more immediate family, she donated a significant portion of the Palache family's papers to the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University in the 2000s. She helped create a correspondence index for the collection. She helped write about her family's years in California and in Massachusetts. The papers include her own correspondence (e.g., correspondence with Dorothy Day) from 1939 to the 1990s.[5][6] Her collected papers of family genealogy also cross-reference into other collections and genealogies, e.g., Austrian astronomer Samuel Oppenheim (1857–1928).[12] WorksGregory wrote:
She appears or contributed through her own collected papers at Harvard University to works regarding Dorothy Day:
References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 {{cite news| title = Judith Palache Gregory (1932–2017)| publisher = Monadnock Ledger-Transcript| url = http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/ledgertranscript/obituary.aspx?n=judith-palache-gregory&pid=183824355| date = 31 January 2017| accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 2. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 {{cite news| title = Judith P. Gregory| publisher = Sentinel Source| url = http://www.sentinelsource.com/news/obituaries/judith-p-gregory/article_5c3c5e71-665c-5b99-b560-92a2ae566b57.html| date = 1 February 2017| accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 3. ^{{cite web| title = Biographical notes: Judith P. Gregory| publisher = Social Networks and Archival Context| url = http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu/ark:/99166/w69913md| date = | accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 4. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite web| first = Michael| last = Harank| title = Judith Palache Gregory| publisher = The Parkland Worker Blog: A Diary of Care and Compassion| url = https://theparklandworkerblog.wordpress.com/2017/01/24/judith-palache-gregory/| date = 24 January 2017| accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 5. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 {{cite web| title = Palache family. Papers of the Palache family, 1839-2006 (inclusive), 1895-1988 (bulk): A Finding Aid| publisher = Harvard University| url = http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00358| date = April 2008| accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 6. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 {{cite web| title = Papers of Judith Gregory, 1946–2000| publisher = Harvard University| url = http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001474770/catalog| date = April 2008| accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 7. ^{{cite magazine| first = Dorothy| last = Day| authorlink = Dorothy Day| title = Holding Fast| publisher = Catholic Worker| url = http://www.catholicworker.org/dorothyday/articles/193.html| date = November 1959| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 8. ^1 2 {{cite news| first = Judith| last = Gregory| title = 'Catholic Worker' Lessons Stayed with Me| publisher = National Catholic Reporter| url = http://www.natcath.org/NCR_Online/archives2/1997b/062097/062097a.htm| date = 20 June 1997| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 9. ^1 2 {{cite book| first = Dorothy| last = Day | authorlink = Dorothy Day| title = The Duty of Delight: The Diaries of Dorothy Day| page = 228 (reminiscence), 334 (executor)| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=GyFEzWus95MC| date = 2011| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 10. ^{{cite web| title = Corporate Division: Palache Family Land Trust, Inc.| publisher = New Hampshire Secretary of State| url = https://www.sos.nh.gov/corporate/soskb/Corp.asp?650016| date = | accessdate = 5 February 2017}} 11. ^1 {{cite book| first = Nancy L. | last = Roberts| title = Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker: Teaching and Learning about Writing in Online Environments| publisher = SUNY Press| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Wx5A4UE05QYC| pages = 84| date = 1984| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 12. ^{{cite web| title = Guide to the Samuel Oppenheim Papers (1859-1928), undated, 1614-1938| publisher = American Jewish Historical Society| url = http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=364783| date = 2017| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 13. ^{{cite magazine| first = Judith | last = Gregory| title = Remembering Dorothy Day| publisher = America| url =| pages = 346| date = 21 April 1981| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 14. ^{{cite book| first = Judith | last = Gregory| title = Women's Wages: A Key to Preserving Middle Income Jobs| publisher = National Organization for Women| url = http://www.worldcat.org/title/womens-wages-a-key-to-preserving-middle-income-jobs/oclc/778855870| date = 1986| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 15. ^{{cite book| first1 = Bill | last1 = Beardslee| first2 = Judith | last2 = Gregory| title = Philosophy of the Green Revolution| publisher = Catholic Worker| url = http://www.worldcat.org/title/philosophy-of-the-green-revolution/oclc/676693431| date = 1991| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 16. ^{{cite web| first = Judith| last = Gregory| title = Homosexuality at the Catholic Worker| publisher = Live Journal - Personalist| url = http://personalist.livejournal.com/97620.html| date = 29 January 2017| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 17. ^{{cite book| first = June | last = O'Connor| title = The Moral Vision of Dorothy Day: A Feminist Perspective| publisher = Crossroad| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=XFLZAAAAMAAJ&dq| date = 1991| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} 18. ^{{cite book| first = Dorothy | last = Day| title = All the Way to Heaven: The Selected Letters of Dorothy Day| publisher = Crown Books| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=R9qApzGu3vMC| date = 2012| accessdate = 12 June 2017}} External sources
| title = Papers of Judith Gregory, 1946–2000 | publisher = Harvard University | url = http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001474770/catalog | date = April 2008 | accessdate = 5 February 2017}}
| title = Palache family. Papers of the Palache family, 1839-2006 (inclusive), 1895-1988 (bulk): A Finding Aid | publisher = Harvard University | url = http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00358 | date = April 2008 | accessdate = 5 February 2017}}
| title = Guide to the Samuel Oppenheim Papers (1859-1928), undated, 1614-1938 | publisher = American Jewish Historical Society | url = http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=364783 | date = 2017 | accessdate = 12 June 2017}}{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Gregory, Judith Palache}} 24 : 1932 births|2017 deaths|20th-century American non-fiction writers|American pacifists|American memoirists|American people of English descent|American people of Dutch descent|Anti-poverty advocates|Catholic Workers|Editors of Christian publications|Nonviolence advocates|Women memoirists|American educators|Permaculturalists|People from Chicago|Curry School of Education alumni|Ecofeminists|University of Chicago Laboratory Schools alumni|The Putney School alumni|Radcliffe College alumni|Lesbians|LGBT people from Illinois|American women non-fiction writers|20th-century American women writers |
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