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  1. When she met Muskie, Jane Gray was a 19-year-old dress shop girl from Waterville whose father had died when she was 12, leaving her mother to support five children by boarding Colby College students. After 18 months of courtship, she agreed to change both her religion (Baptist to Catholic) and her political party (Republican to Democrat) to marry Edmund Muskie.

  2. 20 de feb. de 2000 · Jane Fenderson Cabot was born on April 30, 1943 in Biddeford, Maine. Her parents were Janet (Hazelton) and Charles Fenderson. Her mother was a homemaker, and her father was a store superintendent at the Porteous, Mitchell and Braun Department Store in Portland, Maine. Jane lived in Biddeford until her family moved to Saco, Maine, in the late 1940s. Her family was fairly political, influenced ...

  3. Avenue in Bethesda, Maryland at the home of Jane and Martha Muskie, and Don Nicoll is interviewing Jane Muskie. Jane, when we concluded the first of our interviews for the project, we were talking about the 1954 election and the results when Senator Muskie was first elected governor, and you were getting ready to move to the Blaine House.

  4. 9 de feb. de 2020 · As the snow fell, he denounced William Loeb, the newspaper’s publisher, as a “gutless coward” for publishing the letter and a separate, unflattering item about Jane Muskie, the senator’s wife.

  5. 8 de ago. de 1980 · Despite her husband's contention that he probably wouldn't seek relection in 1982, Jane Muskie says, "Ultimately, I think he would have run again. It's the nature of the beast. there's no good way ...

  6. Jane Muskie is on Facebook. Join Facebook to connect with Jane Muskie and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and connected.

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › Jane_MuskieJane Muskie - Wikiwand

    Jane Frances Muskie was an American civic leader and writer who, as the wife of Edmund Muskie, served as First Lady of Maine from 1955 to 1959. She was an active campaigner for her husband, supporting his political career on both state and national levels while he served in the Maine House of Representatives, as Governor of Maine, as a United States senator, and as Secretary of State.