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Mormon women --- History.
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Women ranchers --- Mormon women --- Polygamy --- Utah
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Mormon women. --- Women, Mormon --- Christian women --- Mormon women --- Latter Day Saint women.
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Feminism --- Mormon women --- Polygamy --- Suffragists --- Women --- History --- Political activity --- History --- History --- Religious life --- History --- Suffrage --- History
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This collection of original documents explores the largely unknown nineteenth-century history of the Relief Society, the women's organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Founded in 1842 in Nauvoo, Illinois, the Relief Society was initially led by Emma Smith, wife of church president Joseph Smith. The substantial minutes of the organization's proceedings from 1842 to 1844, published unabridged herein for the first time in print, document the women's priorities, contributions, and teachings. The Nauvoo Relief Society Minute Book also contains six sermons Joseph Smith delivered to the society, the only recorded words he directed exclusively to the women of the church. --
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Ex-church members --- Mormon Church --- Mormon women --- Biography --- Controversial literature --- Laake, Deborah.
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`With searching eyes he studied the beautiful purple, barren waste of sage. Here was the unknown and the perilous.'The novel that set the pattern for the modern Western, Riders of the Purple Sage was first published in 1912, immediately selling over a million copies. In the remote border country of South Utah, a man is about to be whipped by the Mormons in order to pressure Jane Withersteen into marrying against her will. The punishment is halted by the arrival of the hero, Lassiter, a gunman in black leather, who routs the persecutors and then gradually recounts his own history of an endless
Women ranchers --- Mormon women --- Polygamy --- Utah --- #KVHA:American Studies --- Women, Mormon --- Christian women --- Latter Day Saint women
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A follow-up to the highly successful Worth Their Salt, published in 1996, Worth Their Salt, Too brings together a new set of biographies of women whose roles in Utah's history have not been fully recognized, despite their significance to the social and cultural matrix, past and present, of the state. These women-community and government leaders, activists, artists, writers, scholars, politicians, and others-made important contributions to the state's history and culture. Some of them had experiences that reveal new aspects of the state's history, while others simply led lives so interesti
Mormon women --- Women --- Utah --- Human females --- Wimmin --- Woman --- Womon --- Womyn --- Women, Mormon --- Females --- Human beings --- Femininity --- Christian women --- Latter Day Saint women
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Women of Principle deals with the struggles of contemporary Mormon polygynous women in their efforts to sustain their families in the prolonged absence of their husbands.
Mormon women --- Polygamy --- Multiple marriage --- Plural marriage --- Marriage --- Non-monogamous relationships --- Women, Mormon --- Christian women --- Apostolic United Brethren. --- Allreds (Religious group) --- Allred Group --- Corporation of the Presiding Elder of the Apostolic United Brethren --- Case studies --- Latter Day Saint women --- Mormon women. --- Polygamy. --- Mormons --- Social conditions. --- Social networks. --- Family relationships. --- Latter Day Saint women. --- Latter Day Saints
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