Item Detail
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17794
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2
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11
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English
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Kanosh and Ute Identity in Territorial Utah
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Fall 2003
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71
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no.4
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332-347
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Kanosh was the chief of the Pahvant band of Ute Indians when the Mormons arrived in Utah. A complex person, he seems to have found it advantageous to adopt some of the Mormon ways. He was regarded as a "good, civilized Indian" by many Mormons because he partially adopted Mormon dress, joined and actively participated in Mormonism, farmed, and often advocated peace. He employed compromise to gain material and political benefits for his people.
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A Comprehensive History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Establishing Zion : The Mormon Church in the American West, 1847-69
History of Indian Depredations in Utah
Mormonism : The Story of a New Religious Tradition
The Gunnison Massacre
The Journal of Anson Call
The Mormon Experience : A History of the Latter-day Saints
Utah's Black Hawk War
Utah's Black Hawk War : Lore and Reminiscences of Participants
Wakara Meets the Mormons, 1848-52 : A Case Study in Native American Accommodation
Wilford Woodruff's Journal, 1833-1898 : An Index