Representative Women of Deseret: A Book of Biographical Sketches

audiobook

Representative Women of Deseret: A Book of Biographical Sketches

by Augusta Joyce Crocheron

EN·~4 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total

REPRESENTATIVE WOMEN OF DESERET, A BOOK OF BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, TO ACCOMPANY THE PICTURE BEARING THE SAME TITLE.

0:38

INTRODUCTORY.

3:07

PREFACE.

3:15

INDEX.

0:28

ELIZA R. SNOW SMITH,

17:56

ZINA D. H. YOUNG,

15:12

MARY ISABELLA HORNE,

14:34

SARAH M. KIMBALL,

10:24

PRESCENDIA L. KIMBALL.

11:55

PHOEBE W. CARTER WOODRUFF.

8:53

Description

This audio presentation brings listeners a series of intimate portrait sketches of pioneering women who helped shape early Utah society. Written in the late 19th century, the companion text frames their stories within the larger mission of the Latter‑Day Saint women's organizations, emphasizing faith, perseverance, and community service over mere academic achievement. The narrator guides us through the introductory remarks that explain the purpose of honoring these women for their spiritual labor and moral example.

Through brief but vivid biographies of figures such as Eliza Snow, Zina Young, and other noted mothers and teachers, the work reveals how they balanced domestic responsibilities with public leadership, often under harsh frontier conditions. Their accounts illustrate personal sacrifice, education, and charitable outreach, offering a window into the daily rhythms of 19th‑century pioneer life. Listeners gain a sense of the enduring values that these women embodied and how they inspired both their contemporaries and future generations.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (258K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by the Mormon Texts Project (MormonTextsProject.org), with thanks to Renah Holmes and Villate Brown McKitrick for proofreading.

Release date

2016-01-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Augusta Joyce Crocheron

Augusta Joyce Crocheron

1844–1915

A pioneer writer in early Utah, she turned personal faith and frontier experience into poetry, children's stories, and lively biographical writing. Her best-known work preserves the lives of Latter-day Saint women in the nineteenth century.

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