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Susa Gates (née Young, formerly Dunford; March 18, 1856 – May 27, 1933) was an American writer, periodical editor, president of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers, and women's rights advocate. She was a daughter of LDS Church president Brigham Young. Throughout her life, Gates wrote many articles, poems, short stories, novels, and other literary ...
Susa Young Gates, founder and first editor of The Relief Society Magazine. Susa Young Gates (1915–1922) (she was also editor of the Relief Society Bulletin) Clarissa Smith Williams (1923–1928) Alice Louise Reynolds (1928–1930) Mary Connelly Kimball (1930–1937) Belle S. Spafford (1937–1945) Marianne C. Sharp (1945–1970)
Five generations of voting Mormon women, image c. 1920. Phebe Y. Beattie. [5] Margaret N. Caine. [6] ... Susa Young Gates. [4] Annie Thompson Godbe. [14] Augusta W ...
The Young Woman's Journal was founded in 1889 by Susa Young Gates, a volunteer worker within the YLMIA, with its first issue dated October of that year. [1] [2] Anstis Elmina Shepard Taylor, the YLMIA general president at the time, oversaw the first publication of the journal. [2]
Michelle Johnson, professor emerita of journalism at Boston University, holds a photo of her great-great-grandfather Simon Peak in Glenn Springs, S.C., where according to 1870 census records Peak ...
Susan Powter, ’90s Stop the Insanity! fitness guru, is returning to the spotlight after disappearing for over 30 years. She is telling her story via a self-published memoir, And Then Em Died ...
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Sally Young Kanosh (originally known as Kahpeputz or Sally Indian) was a Bannock woman who was kidnapped from her home and sold by a slave-trader named Batiste to Charles Decker, Brigham Young's brother-in-law. She converted to Mormonism and worked in Brigham Young's house as either an indentured servant, adoptive daughter or plural wife.