Ishbel Ross | |
---|---|
Born |
Bonar Bridge, Scotland |
December 15, 1895
Died | September 21, 1975 New York City, United States |
(aged 79)
Occupation | Author |
Ishbel Ross (December 15, 1895 – September 21, 1975) was a Scottish-born American newspaper reporter, novelist, and nonfiction writer. In a writing career spanning six decades, Ross wrote numerous biographies of prominent women, with her best-known work being the first substantial history of women journalists.
Ishbel Ross was born on December 15, 1895 in Bonar Bridge, Scotland, one of six children of David Ross and Grace (McCrone) Ross. She graduated from the Tain Royal Academy in 1916 and then emigrated to Canada, where she took a job as a publicist for the Canadian Food Board. She subsequently got a job at the Toronto Daily News, starting out as a clerk and rising quickly to become a bylined reporter. A factor in her early success was an exclusive interview she obtained with the suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst in 1917 when Pankhurst was en route to Toronto.
Ross left the Toronto Daily News in 1919 for a job as a general assignment reporter at the New-York Tribune, becoming the second woman reporter (after Emma Bugbee) to be hired for this paper's city room. Among the stories she covered for the paper were the high-profile Hall–Mills murder case and Lindbergh baby kidnapping.
In 1922, she married New York Times reporter Bruce Rae, with whom she had a daughter.
In the 1930s, Ross turned to writing novels. Her first, Promenade Deck, was published in 1932. She left the paper the following year to concentrate on novel writing, publishing four more during her lifetime.
At the instigation of the New-York Tribune's city editor, Stanley Walker, she also began writing nonfiction. Her first book, Ladies of the Press (1936), was the first formal history of women in journalism, examining the various roles women have played in print journalism, with a focus on famous journalists like Margaret Fuller, Nellie Bly, and Dorothy Dix. Although limited to white women, it looked at those working in both urban and rural settings. Ross identified more than 300 women editors and publishers working at papers throughout the United States. It is still considered "the classic work among the general histories" of the subject.