Jane Macnaughton Egerton Brownlow (née Morgan; 1854/55 – 14 November 1928) was a British educationist, writer, translator and suffragist.
She married at the King's Chapel, Gibraltar, Captain Edward Francis Brownlow on 20 August 1872.
[1] In a letter in the June 1896 issue of the feminist magazine Shafts, she noted that women did not attend printing and bookbinding classes provided by the Technical Education Committee of the London County Council because "powerful men's organisations ... refuse to allow their members to work where women are employed."
She was asked by the Women's Trade Union League to sit on a committee that was to look at the role of wage earning children and to advise on reform.
[1] Brownlow was a member of the feminist Pioneer Club, the Fabian Society, the Humanitarian League, the Teachers' Guild and the Women's Liberal Federation.