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  1. Katharine Sergeant Angell White (September 17, 1892 – July 20, 1977) was a writer and the fiction editor for The New Yorker magazine from 1925 to 1960. [2] [3] In her obituary, printed in The New Yorker in 1977, William Shawn wrote, "More than any other editor except Harold Ross himself, Katharine White gave The New Yorker its shape, and set ...

  2. Feb 18, 1996 · Katharine White, who was Katharine Sergeant Angell at the beginning of her New Yorker career, had an editor’s life, too, and she knew that stories might not work and that writers might be...

  3. Name variations: Katharine S. Angell; Kay White. Born Katharine Sergeant in Winchester, Massachusetts, on September 17, 1892; died of heart failure in North Brooklin, Maine, on July 20, 1977; daughter of Charles Spencer Sergeant (a vice president of West End Railway Co., Boston) and Elizabeth Blake (Shepley) Sergeant; attended the Winsor School ...

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  5. WHITE, Katharine S (ergeant Angell) 1896-1977. PERSONAL: Born September 17, 1896; died of congestive heart failure, July 20, 1977; married Ernest Angell (a lawyer; divorced); married E. B. White (a poet and children's book author), November 13, 1929; children: (first marriage) Roger, Nancy; (second marriage) Joel.

  6. The nickname was commonly bestowed on students named White. Mr. White described his love affair with Katharine Sergeant Angell as "stormy."

  7. Apr 25, 2019 · Katharine Sergeant Angell White was the fiction editor for The New Yorker magazine. As they both knew her days were numbered. She had a stately calm, a formality, a belief in the future,...

  8. Overview Katharine Sergeant White, the first fiction editor of The New Yorker magazine, was born in Winchester, Massachusetts in 1892. In 1914, White graduated from Bryn Mawr College. She married her first husband, Ernest Angell in 1915, and with him she had two children, Nancy and Roger.

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