The Women: A Family Story
Family history, usually destined or even designed for limited consumption, is a familiar genre within Mormon culture. Mostly written with little attention to standards of historical scholarship, such works are a distinctly hagiographic form of family memorabilia. But many family sagas in the right hands can prove widely engaging, owing to inherent drama and historical relevance. They can truthfully illuminate larger matters of history, humanity, and culture.
 
Kerry Bate proceeds on the premise that a story centering on the women of the clan could provide fresh perspective and insight. He portrays real people with well-rounded, flawed characters; builds from deep research; writes with a bit of style; and includes the rich context and detail of these lives. His main subjects are four generations of impressive women: the pioneer Catherine Campbell Steele; her daughter Young Elizabeth, the first Mormon child born in Utah; Kate, an accomplished community leader; and Sarah, a gifted seamstress trapped in an unhappy marriage. To enter their hardscrabble lives in small southern Utah communities is to meet women who pioneered in their own modest but determined ways.

Winner of the Mormon History Association's Best Personal History/Memoir Award.

Interview with Tom Williams on Access Utah
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The Women: A Family Story
Family history, usually destined or even designed for limited consumption, is a familiar genre within Mormon culture. Mostly written with little attention to standards of historical scholarship, such works are a distinctly hagiographic form of family memorabilia. But many family sagas in the right hands can prove widely engaging, owing to inherent drama and historical relevance. They can truthfully illuminate larger matters of history, humanity, and culture.
 
Kerry Bate proceeds on the premise that a story centering on the women of the clan could provide fresh perspective and insight. He portrays real people with well-rounded, flawed characters; builds from deep research; writes with a bit of style; and includes the rich context and detail of these lives. His main subjects are four generations of impressive women: the pioneer Catherine Campbell Steele; her daughter Young Elizabeth, the first Mormon child born in Utah; Kate, an accomplished community leader; and Sarah, a gifted seamstress trapped in an unhappy marriage. To enter their hardscrabble lives in small southern Utah communities is to meet women who pioneered in their own modest but determined ways.

Winner of the Mormon History Association's Best Personal History/Memoir Award.

Interview with Tom Williams on Access Utah
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The Women: A Family Story

The Women: A Family Story

by Kerry William Bate
The Women: A Family Story

The Women: A Family Story

by Kerry William Bate

eBook

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Overview

Family history, usually destined or even designed for limited consumption, is a familiar genre within Mormon culture. Mostly written with little attention to standards of historical scholarship, such works are a distinctly hagiographic form of family memorabilia. But many family sagas in the right hands can prove widely engaging, owing to inherent drama and historical relevance. They can truthfully illuminate larger matters of history, humanity, and culture.
 
Kerry Bate proceeds on the premise that a story centering on the women of the clan could provide fresh perspective and insight. He portrays real people with well-rounded, flawed characters; builds from deep research; writes with a bit of style; and includes the rich context and detail of these lives. His main subjects are four generations of impressive women: the pioneer Catherine Campbell Steele; her daughter Young Elizabeth, the first Mormon child born in Utah; Kate, an accomplished community leader; and Sarah, a gifted seamstress trapped in an unhappy marriage. To enter their hardscrabble lives in small southern Utah communities is to meet women who pioneered in their own modest but determined ways.

Winner of the Mormon History Association's Best Personal History/Memoir Award.

Interview with Tom Williams on Access Utah

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781607815174
Publisher: University of Utah Press
Publication date: 12/31/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 392
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Kerry William Bate has been a community organizer, Utah State Community Development Division director, and director of the Housing Authority of the County of Salt Lake. He has published in such varied magazines as The Utah Realtor,Utah Historical Quarterly, OralHistory Review, The American Genealogist, and Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, and has authored or coauthored four family histories. 

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
Family Pedigree
 
1. “Husband What Is Thy Will?”: Catherine Campbell Steele
2. “Convicts to Bondsman’s Lands”: Catherine and Elizabeth Steele
3. “Letting Posterity Come In”: Elizabeth Steele Stapley
4. “Nicest Great Grand Baby You Have Got”: Catherine Steele
5. “She Wanted Her Own Rights”: Sarah E. Roundy
6. “Do Their Own Doing”: Sarah E. Roundy
7. “She Can Do It”: Sarah E. Roundy
8. “Nothing Too Refined”: Victor L. Sylvester
9. “Mother of the Ward”: Sarah Catherine Stapley Roundy
10.“Let’s Go Over and See President Harding”: Joel J. Roundy
11.“Just Getting Nothing”: Victor L. Sylvester
12. “Continue to Increase”: Elizabeth Steele Stapley
13.“She Only Had One Mother”: Sarah Catherine Stapley Roundy
14. “That Was Money in Her Pocket”: Sarah E. Roundy Sylvester
15. “The Queen Bee”: Sarah E. Roundy Sylvester
16.“Stern Looking but Well-Polished”: Elizabeth Steele Stapley
17. “Poverty and Progeny”: The Women
 
Notes
Bibliography
Index
 
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