Jean Griswold

American entrepreneur
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican entrepreneur
PlacesUnited States of America
isBusinessperson Entrepreneur
Work fieldBusiness
Gender
Female
Birth30 July 1930
Age94 years
Star signLeo
The details

Biography

Jean Griswold (born July 30, 1930) is an American entrepreneur. She is the founder of Griswold Home Care, a corporation founded in 1982 to provide non-medical, in-home care for the elderly and infirm. She has been the subject of ongoing press attention because she founded a successful corporation despite being confined to a wheelchair because she suffers from Multiple Sclerosis.

Education and personal life

Jean Griswold earned her bachelor's degree in economics and business administration from Douglass College in New Brunswick, N.J. in 1952. She earned her master's degree in counseling from Rutgers University in 1956.

Jean and her husband, Lincoln Griswold, lived for many years in Erdenheim, Pennsylvania, where Reverend Griswold was pastor of the Chestnut Hill Presbyterian Church.

Career

Early career

Griswold worked as a guidance counselor at Westfield High School, then as a counselor at the Lutheran Home for the Aged.

Founding the home care company

In 1982 Griswold founded a home care company for the elderly and disabled. Initially called Overnight Sitting Service prompted by her discovery that there was no company offering overnight companionship for the frail elderly. The first caregivers Griswold hired when she started the company working from her dining room table were seminary students who stayed nights with the elderly. According to Inc. (magazine) by 1989 the company was a $10-million, multi-state business.

The company was soon renamed Special Care Inc., then renamed Griswold Home Care. In 2005 it was described by the Philadelphia Business Journal as, "the nation's largest, privately owned nonmedical home-care company." By 2006 the company had 87 franchises in 16 states and some outside the United States. In 2009 it had 103 franchises. Griswold, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, was in a wheelchair when she founded the company, and continues to work from her wheelchair.

Griswold's son, Kent, served as president of the company, and her husband, Lincoln, a Presbyterian minister, served as chairman of the board.

In 1995 the company attracted media attention when one of its home care employees was arrested while buying illegal drugs, and press reports focused on the fact that since the company does not provide medical services, its employees are not required to be certified and may not be closely supervised.

In 2003–2004 Griswold was Entrepreneur in Residence at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

Recognition

Jean has won numerous awards, including the Spirit of Philadelphia Award. She won Working Woman's 2001 Entrepreneur of the Year honor. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society presented Griswold with the 2002 MS National Achievement Award. She was inducted to the Hall of Distinguished Alumni of Rutgers University in 1995. She was awarded an honorary doctorate from Holy Family University in Philadelphia.

Plays, books about Griswold

Letter to My Daughter: Adventures of Atypical Women, a one-woman play written and performed by Beth Hirst, profiled Griswold, Isadora Duncan, explorer Mary Kingsley, and environmental activist Julia Butterfly Hill as models of women who overcome challenges to lead lives of great achievement.

In 1999 her story was told in the book "The Courage To Give" by Jackie Waldman. Her story was published in the 2010 book Women of Spirit, by Katherine Martin.

Books by Jean Griswold

  • Fears Of The Elderly. 2013. ISBN 978-1484912898. 
  • Griswold, Jean (August 13, 2013). Fears Of The Elderly. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 174. ISBN 978-1484912898. 

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.