Jackson political family and Marian Engel

The Jackson family is a family of politicians from the United States. Below is a list of members: George Jackson (1757–1831), Virginia House Delegate 1785-1791, U.S. Representative from Virginia 1795-1797 1799-1803, Ohio State Representative 1809-1812, Ohio State Senator 1817-1819. Father of John G. Jackson and Edward B. Jackson. Return J. Meigs, Jr. (1764–1825), Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court 1803-1804, Judge in Louisiana Territory, Judge in Michigan Territory, U.S. Senator from Ohio 1908-1910, Governor of Ohio 1810-1814, U.S. Postmaster General 1914-1823. Father-in-law of John G. Jackson. John G. Jackson (1777–1825), Virginia Assemblyman 1811-1812, U.S. Representative from Virginia 1913-1817, U.S. District Court Judge in Virginia 1819-1825. Son of George Jackson. Edward B. Jackson (1793–1826), Virginia House Delegate 1915-1818, Clerk of U.S. District Court in Virginia 1819, U.S. Representative from Virginia 1820-1823. Son of George Jackson. James Madison (1751–1836), U.S. Representative from Virginia 1789-1797, U.S. Secretary of State 1801-1809, President of the United States 1809-1817. Brother-in-law of John G. Jackson. John James Allen (1797–1871), Virginia State Senator 1828, U.S. Representative from Virginia 1833-1835, Virginia State Court Judge 1836. Son-in-law of John G. Jackson. John Jay Jackson, Jr. (1824–1907), Virginia Assemblyman 1851-1855, Judge of U.S. District Court in Virginia 1861-1864, District Court Judge in West Virginia 1864-1905. Grandson of John G. Jackson. James M. Jackson (1825–1901), Prosecuting Attorney of Wood County, Virginia; West Virginia House Delegate 1870-1871; delegate to the West Virginia Constitutional Convention 1872; U.S. Representative from West Virginia 1889-1890; Criminal Court Judge in Wood County, West Virginia 1891-1901. Grandson of John G. Jackson. William Thomas Bland (1861–1928), Prosecuting Attorney of Atchison County, Kansas 1890-1892; Mayor of Atchison, Kansas 1894; Judge in Kansas 1896-1901; member of the Kansas City, Missouri Board of Education 1912-1918; U.S. Representative from Missouri 1919-1921. Grandson of John G. Jackson. Jacob B. Jackson, Governor of West Virginia 1881-1885. Grandson of John G. Jackson.

NOTE: James Madison was also second cousin of Kentucky Governor George Madison and U.S. President Zachary Taylor and second cousin thrice removed of Missouri Governor Elliot Woolfolk Major and Missouri legislator Edgar Bailey Woolfolk. John James Allen was also brother of U.S. Representative Robert Allen. See also List of United States political families

Marian Engel and Jackson political family

Marian Engel, OC, née Marian Ruth Passmore (1933–1985) was an award-winning Canadian novelist.

Contents 1 Summary 2 Public Life 3 Literary Life 4 Selected bibliography 5 Posthumous bibliography 6 References

Summary

Born May 24, 1933 in Toronto, Ontario, to teacher parents Frederick Searle and Mary Elizabeth (Fletcher) Passmore. She grew up in Port Arthur, Brantford, Galt, Hamilton and Sarnia.

Engel was educated at Sarnia Collegiate Institute & Technical School, Sarnia, Ontario, McMaster University (B.A. in Language Studies 1955) Hamilton, Ontario, McGill University (M.A. in Canadian Literature 1957) Montreal, Quebec and studied on a Rotary Foundation Scholarship at the Université d’Aix-Marseille (French Literature 1960-61), Aix-en Provence, France. At McMaster University she wrote her Master’s thesis on the English Canadian novel, under the supervision of Hugh MacLennan.

She taught briefly at The Study (1957–58) (Westmount, Montreal, QC), McGill University and University of Montana-Missoula (Missoula, Montana) and St. John’s School (Nicosia, Cyprus).

She met Howard Engel, a mystery novel writer and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) radio producer in Canada, and married him in England in 1962. They returned to Toronto, ON in 1964. She began to raise a family, twin children, William Lucas Passmore and Charlotte Helen Arabella, and to pursue a writing career. Marian and Howard separated in 1975 and divorced in 1977.

Engel was writer-in-residence at the University of Alberta (1977–1978) and at the University of Toronto (1980–1982).

Engel died of cancer in Toronto on February 16, 1985. Public Life

Engel was a passionate activist for the national and international writer’s cause. She was the first chair of the Writer’s Union of Canada (1973–74) and helped instigate the Public Lending Right Commission.

From 1975-1977 she served on the City of Toronto Book Award (an award she won in 1981 for Lunatic Villas) Committee and the Canadian Book and Periodical Development Council. She held a trusteeship on the Toronto Public Library Board from 1975-1978.

In 1982 she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Engel was Metro Toronto YWCA’s Woman of Distinction in Arts and Letters in 1984.

After her death the Writer's Development Trust of Canada instituted the $10 000 Marian Engel Award, which was presented annually to a woman writer in mid-career. The Engel and Findley Awards are no longer awarded separately, but were combined into the new Writers’ Trust Notable Author Award as of 2008. Literary Life

Marian Engel’s first published novel, No Clouds of Glory, was published in 1968.

She wrote two children's books; Adventures of Moon Bay Towers (1974) and My name is not Odessa Yarker (1977).

Engel's most famous and controversial novel was Bear (1976), a tale of erotic love between a librarian and a bear. She won the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction in 1976 for Bear.

Inside the Easter Egg (1975) and her posthumous The Tattooed Woman (1985) were collections of short stories. Some of these short stories had originally been written for Robert Weaver’s CBC radio program Anthology. The novel JOANNE: The Last Days of a Modern Marriage was originally commissioned as a radio-novel by CBC for the program This Country in the Morning.

In 1981 she wrote the text for a coffee-table style travel book Islands of Canada with photographs by J. A. Kraulis.

Engel was an avid journal keeper. Her journals were primarily a repository for memories and details from which she drew for her fiction. In 1999, this material was edited and published as Marian Engel's Notebook: ‘Ah, mon cahier, écoute…’.

From 1965-1985 she corresponded with literary peers and friends such as, Hugh MacLennan, Robertson Davies, Dennis Lee, Margaret Atwood, Timothy Findley, Alice Munro, Margaret Laurence, Matt Cohen, Robert Weaver, Graeme Gibson and more. Some of this correspondence can be found in Dear Hugh, Dear Marian: the MacLennan-Engel Correspondence (1995) and Marian Engel: Life in Letters (2004)

The novel on which she was working at the time of her death, Elizabeth and the Golden City was never completed until Christyl Verduyn incorporated it into Marion and the Major: Engel’s Elizabeth and the Golden City which was published in 2010. Selected bibliography No Clouds of Glory (reissued as Sarah Bastard's Notebook, ) The Honeyman Festival Monodromos (reissued as One way street ) Adventure at Moon Bay Towers Inside the Easter Egg JOANNE:The Last Days of a Modern Marriage Bear My name is not Odessa Yarker The Glassy Sea Lunatic Villas (UK published as The year of the child) Islands of Canada (photographs by J. A. Kraulis) The Tattooed Woman Posthumous bibliography Verduyn, Christl, ed. Dear Marian, Dear Hugh: The MacLennan-Engel Correspondence. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 1995. Verduyn, Christl, ed. Marian Engel's Notebook: ‘Ah, mon cahier, écoute…’. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1999. Verduyn, Christl and Kathleen Garay, eds. Marian Engel: Life in Letters. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2004 Verduyn, Christl, Marion and the Major: Engel’s Elizabeth and the Golden City Montreal-Kingston: McGill Queen’s University Press, 2010.
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