Item Detail
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4841
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18
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2
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English
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Gentle Persuaders : Utah's First Women Legislators
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Winter 1970
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38
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1
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31-49
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The first part of the article discusses the debate over giving women the franchise in Utah's first state constitution. The second part of the article deals with a review of the bills introduced by the three women who were elected to Utah's first state legislature--Eurithe K. LaBarthe, Sarah E. Anderson, and Martha Hughes Cannon. Cannon's role call votes for U.S. Senator are also viewed. There is biographical information on all three women.
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A House Full of Females : Plural Marriage and Women's Rights in Early Mormonism, 1835-1870
Battle for the Ballot : Essays on Woman Suffrage in Utah, 1870-1896
Decade of Detente : The Mormon-Gentile Female Relationship in Nineteenth-century Utah
Emmeline B. Wells : An Intimate History
Mormon Women Connected Suffrage Directly to Joseph Smith's First Vision and the Restoration of the Gospel : Reflections from the 1920 Relief Society Magazine
Mormon Women, Other Women : Paradoxes and Challenges
New Scholarship on Latter-Day Saint Women in the Twentieth Century : Selections From the Women's History Initiative Seminars, 2003-2004
Patriarchs and Politics : The Plight of the Mormon Woman
Put On Your Strength, O Daughters of Zion': Claiming Priesthood and Knowing the Mother
The Americanism of Utah
The Awkward State of Utah : Coming of Age in the Nation 1896-1945
The LDS Church's Campaign against the Equal Rights Amendment
The Mormon Experience : A History of the Latter-day Saints
The Mormon History Association's Tanner Lectures : The First Twenty Years
The Right to be Different : Ogden and Weber County Politics, 1850-1924
Utah's History
Women in Utah History : Paradigm or Paradox?
Women's Work on the Mormon Frontier