Laurence William "Bill" Lane Jr. was an American magazine publisher, diplomat, and philanthropist.
Early life and education
Lane was born November 7, 1919, to Laurence William Lane and Ruth Bell. His father was known as "Larry", so he was generally called "Bill". In 1928, the family moved from Des Moines, Iowa where Larry Lane was advertising director for the Meredith Corporation to California. The Lane family owned and published Sunset Magazine. Lane graduated from Palo Alto High School. Bill Lane attended Pomona College before transferring to Stanford University to study Journalism. He was a member of the Stanford Chaparral. After graduating with a bachelor's degree from Stanford, he joined the US Navy during World War II. He married Donna Jean Gimbel in 1955, they met while she was working as an interior designer in Chicago.
The Lane family were large donors to Stanford University including renovations in 1983 to the Palo Alto Stock Farm Horse Barn and after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, for the reconstruction of the Stanford Memorial Church and other historic campus buildings. In 2005, a donation to Stanford University named the Center for the Study of the North American West department after the Lane family. The Lanes sponsored an internship program starting in 2002, the Bill and Jean Lane Internship Endowment at the National Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution. In 2005, Lane and his wife funded the Jean Gimbel Lane Prize in Piano Performance. In 2015, an additional $5 million endowment to Northwestern University was announced. With a large donation to the UC Santa Cruz Arboretum, the Lanes established the Jean and Bill Lane Botanical Library in 1994, a non-lending library focusing on South African, Australian, New Zealand, and California plants. Bill and Jean Lane endowed the Lane Family Lectureship in Environmental Science at Washington State University. The lecture was inaugurated in 1993. With their son, Robert, a 1983 WSU graduate, they also created the Robert Lane Fellowship in Environmental Science to support graduate students studying environmental science at Washington State University. Bill Lane died on July 31, 2010, at the age of 90. His wife, Jean Lane, died in Portola Valley on 18 November, 2017, after a brief illness, at the age of 87. Together they were survived by their three children, two daughters Sharon Louise Lane and Brenda Lane Munks and a son Robert Laurence Lane.