Jane Campbell (activist)
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Jane Campbell (activist)
Jane Campbell may refer to: * Jane Campbell, Viscountess Kenmure (died 1675) Scottish aristocrat * Jane Campbell, Baroness Campbell of Surbiton (born 1959), Commissioner of the Equality and Human Rights Commission * Jane L. Campbell (born 1953), American politician * Jane Campbell (table tennis) (born 1968), British Paralympic table tennis player * Jane Campbell (soccer) (born 1995), American soccer goalkeeper * Jane Cannon Campbell, American Revolutionary War patriot * Jane Montgomery Campbell, British musician and poet * Jane Maud Campbell, librarian See also * Lady Jeanne Campbell (1928–2007), British socialite * Janey Sevilla Callander Janey, Lady Campbell ( Janey Sevilla Callander; 18 March 1846, Craigforth House, Stirlingshire – 15 July 1923, Coombe Hill Farm, Norbiton), was a Scottish theatre producer and society hostess. Life One of three daughters of James Henry Ca ...
(married name Campbell, 1846–1923), British theatre producer and society hostess ...
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Jane Campbell, Viscountess Kenmure
Jane (occasionally Jean) Campbell, Viscountess Kenmure, sometimes called Lady Montgomery (? – February, 1675) was a Scottish patron of ministers. She married twice and was well regarded. She is particularly noted for her support of Samuel Rutherford and other covenanters. Life She was the third daughter of Lady Agnes Douglas and her husband Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll (1575/6–1638) By 1626 she married Sir John Gordon of Lochinvar. Women in early modern Scotland did not usually change their surnames on marriage, and she was known as "Jane Gordon, Lady Lochinvar", or "Lady Lochinvar". He was made Viscount Kenmure in 1633 and he died on 12 September 1634. He had give in to Charles I's religious changes and he was remembered for that weakness, but she was always well regarded. She married again in 1640 to Sir Henry (Harry) Montgomerie and he died in 1644. She continued to use the title of "Viscountess Kenmore" and she was now the owner of her second husband's estate ...
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Jane Campbell, Baroness Campbell Of Surbiton
Jane Susan Campbell, Baroness Campbell of Surbiton, (born 19 April 1959)Living with Dignity - Not Dying with Dignity
Baroness Campbell's official website, accessed 25 April 2016
is a British disability rights campaigner and . She was Commissioner of the (EHRC) from 2006 to 2008. She also served as Chair of the Disability Committee which led on to the EHRC Disability Programme. She was the former Chair of the
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Jane L
Jane may refer to: * Jane (given name), a feminine given name * Jane (surname), related to the given name Film and television * ''Jane'' (1915 film), a silent comedy film directed by Frank Lloyd * ''Jane'' (2016 film), a South Korean drama film starring Lee Min-ji * ''Jane'' (2017 film), an American documentary film about Jane Goodall * ''Jane'' (2022 film), an American psychological thriller directed by Sabrina Jaglom * Jane (TV series), an 1980s British television series Music * ''Jane'' (album), an album by Jane McDonald * Jane (American band) * Jane (German band) * Jane, unaccompanied and original singer of "It's a Fine Day" in 1983 Songs * "Jane" (Barenaked Ladies song), 1994 * "Jane", a song by Ben Folds Five from their 1999 album ''The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner'' * "Jane" (Century song) * "Jane", a song by Elf Power * "Jane", a song by EPMD from '' Strictly Business'' * "Jane" (Jefferson Starship song), 1979 * "Jane", a song by the Loved Ones fro ...
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Jane Campbell (table Tennis)
Jane Campbell (born 18 June 1968) is an English Paralympic table tennis player. Campbell was selected for the 2012 Paralympic Games, where she took the bronze medal in the women's team class 1–3 event with team-mate Sara Head. Career history Campbell was born in Barnsley. She has used a wheelchair since 1983 when she broke her back in a car accident. Campbell started playing table tennis socially in 2000 and shortly afterwards decided one of her aims was to play the game at Paralympic level. After the disappointment of failing to qualify for the 2008 Paralympics in Beijing, Campbell made the Great Britain team for the 2012 Paralympic Games in London. In the women's class 1–3 team event at London, Campbell and Head faced the Turkish team made up of pairing Nergiz Altintas and Hatice Duman. They both lost their opening individual matches, but then turned that result around when they switched opponents to level the game 2–2. The British team won the deciding doubles set t ...
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Jane Campbell (soccer)
Carolyn Jane Campbell (born February 17, 1995) is an American professional soccer player who plays as a goalkeeper for the Houston Dash of the NWSL and the United States women's national soccer team . She has also represented the United States on the under-23 and under-17 national teams. In January 2013 at age 17, Campbell became the youngest goalkeeper ever called to a national training camp for the senior United States women's national soccer team. Campbell won a bronze medal in the 2020 Summer Olympics. Early life Campbell attended Darlington School, a college-preparatory school in Rome, Georgia. She was named NSCAA All-American in 2011. She was a member of the club "Concord Fire South", and with this team won the under-16 state championship. Campbell won the under-14 state title with the North Atlanta Soccer Association while playing with their under-12 through under-15 teams. She played for the Silver Backs under-10 and under-11 teams. Campbell attended Stanford Univ ...
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Jane Cannon Campbell
Jane Cannon Campbell (1 January 1743 - 1836) was an American Revolutionary War Patriot from Cherry Valley, New York.  Biography Campbell was born in the county of Antrim, Ireland. At the age of 10 she and her family left Ireland and settled in an area now part of the state of Delaware. The family farmed there for approximately 10 years before moving to an area near Cherry Valley, New York State. In 1767 she married Colonel Samuel Campbell. Campbell was captured by the combined forces of British Captain Walter Bulter and the Mohawk Chief Joseph Brand during the Cherry Valley Massacre of November 11, 1778. She was held captive with her father, Matthew Cannon and four children first in the Seneca nation capital Kanadaseago, followed by over a year at Fort Niagara before being sent to Montreal for a prisoner exchange. References {{DEFAULTSORT:Campbell, Jane Cannon 1743 births 1836 deaths People from Antrim, County Antrim Irish emigrants to the United States ...
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Jane Montgomery Campbell
Jane Montgomery Campbell (1817 - 15 November 1878) was a British musician and poet. Biography She was born in Paddington, the daughter of A. Montgomery Campbell, perpetual curate of St James's Church, Paddington, London, and rector of Little Steeping, Lincolnshire. After her early years in London, where she taught singing in her father’s parish school in Paddington, she moved to Bovey Tracey near Newton Abbot, and remained there until her death from a tragic carriage accident on Dartmoor. As well as a musical enthusiast, she was a gifted linguist and German scholar. She published ''A Handbook for Singers'', which contained musical exercises based on her teaching experience. Through Charles Bere, rector of Uplowman, Tiverton, Devon, her translations of German hymns appeared in his book: ''A Garland of Songs'' in 1862, and later in his ''Children's Chorale Book'' (1869). One of her translations contained the text written by Matthias Claudius: ''Wir pflügen und wir streuen' ...
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Jane Maud Campbell
Jane Maud Campbell (March 13, 1869 – April 24, 1947) was a librarian known for being an early advocate for multiculturalism in libraries through her service to immigrant and minority populations. Campbell believed in cultural pluralism–that there was no one "American culture"–so while she supported immigrants' learning English and eventually becoming citizens, she was supportive of them maintaining their own cultures and interests. Career In 1901, Campbell got a job working assistant in the reference department of the Newark Public Library; she was the only staff member at the time who could type. She worked under Frank Pierce Hill and learned many of the principles of librarianship. Newark had a foreign-born population of over 30 percent at that time and Campbell worked establishing traveling libraries and small satellite libraries in stores throughout the city. As a result, in 1904, the Passaic library had books in French, German, Dutch, Italian, Hungarian, Russian, Boh ...
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Lady Jeanne Campbell
Lady Jeanne Louise Campbell (10 December 1928 – 4 June 2007) was a British socialite and foreign correspondent who wrote for the ''Evening Standard'' in the 1950s and 1960s. Early life Campbell was the daughter of Ian Douglas Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll (1903–1973) and his first wife, the Hon. Janet Gladys Aitken (1908–1988), whose own father was Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook. After their divorce in 1934, her father remarried three times, including to Margaret, Duchess of Argyll. Her father inherited the Duke of Argyll, dukedom from his first cousin once removed, Niall Diarmid Campbell, 10th Duke of Argyll upon his death in 1949. Her mother remarried to the Hon. Drogo Montagu (1908–1940), the second son of George Montagu, 9th Earl of Sandwich, who died during World War II. Through her mother, she was a granddaughter of the Canadian born press baron Lord Beaverbrook, who was the owner of the ''Evening Standard''. Through her father, she was the great-niece of Princ ...
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