Item Detail
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8347
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6
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6
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English
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The Economics of Ambivalence : Utah's Depression Experience
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Summer 1986
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54
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268-85
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Utah's experience during the Depression is examined, revealing both unique and common strands with those of the other states. The widely- held myth that Mormons were the sole people in the nation who steadily refused all help from the federal government is disclaimed. They, in fact, although resenting federal intervention, accepted the federal dole while on the same hand advocated reduced federal spending.
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Dorothea Lange's Portrait of Utah's Great Depression
Health, Medicine, and Power in the Salt Lake Valley, Utah, 1869-1945
Sports in Zion : Mormon Recreation, 1890-1940
Spreading Zion Southward, Part I : Improving Efficiency and Equity in the Allocation of Church Welfare Resources
State, Church and Moral Order : The Mormon Response to the New Deal, in Orem, Utah, 1933-40
Utah’s Plight : A Passage Through the Great Depression