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Text / A life sketch of Ida Frances Hunt Udall [microform]: 1941, July

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Title
A life sketch of Ida Frances Hunt Udall [microform]: 1941, July
Creator
Smith, Pauline Udall, 1885-1968
Date Created and/or Issued
1941-07
Contributing Institution
Huntington Library
Collection
Mormonism and the West
Rights Information
For information on using Huntington Library materials, please see Reproductions of Huntington Library Holdings: https://www.huntington.org/library-rights-permissions
Description
Microfilm typescript of Pauline Udall Smith's biography of her mother, Ida Frances Hunt Udall (1858-1915). Ida was born at Hamilton's Fort near Cedar City, Utah, and was a granddaughter of Jefferson Hunt and Addison Pratt. She lived in San Bernardino, California, as a child before returning to Beaver, Utah, at the age of 5. Smith's account traces Ida's childhood, including notes on her schooling and her family's move to Savoia, one of the settlements at Little Colorado, Arizona. Her father was appointed bishop of Snowflake in the late 1870s, and Ida lived with her grandmother in Beaver, Utah, until 1880. Pauline writes that on returning to Arizona with the Jesse N. Smith Company Ida was inspired to pursue a life of polygamous marriage. She taught school in Taylor and Snowflake, Arizona, until meeting Bishop David K. Udall (1851-1938) in 1881. He offered her a position at the St. Johns cooperative store, and she became his plural wife in 1882. Smith's account describes how Ida, along with her sister-in-law Eliza Tenney and Catherine and Annie Romney, were forced to flee after her brother-in-law Ammon Tenny was arrested for polygamy. Polygamy charges were brought against David Udall in 1884, but were dropped as Ida could not be found to testify. In 1885 he was indicted for perjury in a case involving a land claim, and sentenced to 3 years in the Detroit House of Corrections (he was released by presidential pardon in December 1885). Smith describes the difficulty of the situation for Ida, and her unsettled life in Eagar, Snowflake, St. Johns, and finally Hunt, Arizona, following her husband's release. Included are the typescripts of several letters sent by Ida to David Udall. All inquires about this item should be directed to the H. Russell Smith Foundation Curator of Western Historical Manuscripts at the Huntington Library, San Marino, CA. Microfilm. San Marino, Calif. : Huntington Library Photographic Dept., 1948. 1 microfilm reel : negative 35 mm. Forms part of the Manuscripts Department's Mormon file, c.1805-1995.
Pauline Udall Smith (1885-1962), a daughter of Ida Frances Hunt Udall and David K. Udall, was the author of Captain Jefferson Hunt and the Mormon Battalion (1958).
Type
text
Format
PDF
Extent
16 frames.
Identifier
MSS MFilm 00099
446164
http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16003coll15/id/6058
Subject
Smith, Pauline Udall, 1885-1968
Udall, David King, 1851-1938
Udall, Ida Hunt, 1858-1915
Frontier and pioneer life--Arizona
Mormon families
Mormon pioneers
Mormon women
Mormons--Persecutions
Mormons--Arizona--History--19th century
Polygamy
Arizona--History--To 1912
Little Colorado River Valley (N.M. and Ariz.)--History
1941, July
Biographies Arizona 20th century. (aat)
Source
Mormon Manuscripts at the Huntington Library
Mormonism and the West, Huntington Digital Library
Provenance
Microfilm of typescript loaned by Augusta Flake, June 8, 1948.

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