Item Detail
-
3830
-
8
-
7
-
English
-
Socialist Saints : Mormons and the Socialist Party in Utah, 1900-1920
-
Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought
-
Spring 1985
-
18
-
121-31
-
The first part of the article contains brief biographs of prominant Mormon socialists and their reasons for being socialists. Part two looks at the reason for success and failure of socialism in Utah. Authors found that a majority of Mormon socialists had been active in United Orders. They conclude that socialist party's demise resulted from a Mormon-Non-Mormon split within the party and the Church moving into corporate America.
-
Differing Visions : Dissenters in Mormon History
Equal Rites : The Book of Mormon, Masonry, Gender, and American Culture
Mr. Samuelsen Goes to Copenhagen : The First Mormon Member of a National Parliament
"Our Political Faith is Socialism, Our Religious Faith is the Latter-day Saints" : Socialist Mormons and Their Millennial Vision in the Early Twentieth Century
Thomas W. Williams : Socialist in the Twelve
Transformation of the Mormon Culture Region
Utah in the Twentieth Century
Voicing Government : Politics and Participation -
Cornerstones of the 1908 LDS Academy : A Researcher's Guide
Great Basin Kingdom: An Economic History of the Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900
Hornets in the Hive : Socialists in Early Twentieth-Century Utah
How Firm a Foundation! What Makes it So
Mormons and Mammon : Dealers in Revelations, Railroads, Sugar, Salt and Salvation
Utah : A Bicentennial History
Women and the Socialist Party in Utah, 1900-1920