- Susa Young Gates
Susa Young Gates (
March 18 ,1856 –May 27 ,1933 ) was a writer, periodical editor, andwomen's rights advocate inUtah .Susa Young was born in
Salt Lake City ,Utah Territory to Lucy Bigelow, LDS Church presidentBrigham Young 's twenty-second wife. She entered theUniversity of Deseret at age 13 and became the editor of the student newspaper. In 1872, she married Alma B. Dunford and had two children, but the couple divorced in 1877. One of these children was Leah Dunford, who latter became the wife ofJohn A. Widtsoe .In 1878, Young entered
Brigham Young Academy inProvo, Utah , where she founded the music department. In 1880, she married Jacob F. Gates. She had 13 children with him, seven of which did not survive to adulthood.Gates and her husband served as church missionaries to the
Sandwich Islands in the late 1880s. In 1889, she founded the "Young Woman's Journal ", a periodical targeted to adolescentLatter-day Saint females. In 1897, the church'sYoung Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association adopted the "Young Women's Journal" as its official organ. Gates assisted in editing the "Journal" until it ceased publication in 1929.Around the turn of the century, Gates was ill for three years after suffering a psychological and physical breakdown. However, she eventually returned to health.
In 1915, Gates founded "
Relief Society Magazine " a periodical targeted at adult Latter-day Saint women. The magazine became the official publication of the church'sRelief Society and Gates edited it until 1922. Gates also wrote nine books, including a biography of her father, two novels, a history of women in the LDS Church, and a 1911 history of theYLMIA .Gates was active in promoting
women's rights andwomen's suffrage . She was a founding organizer National Household Economics Organization, served as a delegate and speaker to five congresses of theInternational Council of Women and was a delegate and officer of theNational Council of Women . Gates was also the primary organizer of the Utah chapters of theDaughters of the American Revolution ,Daughters of the Utah Pioneers , and the National Woman's Press Club. She attended severalRepublican National Convention s. Gates was also a member of the Board of Regents ofBrigham Young University andUtah State Agricultural College .In her later years, Gates was active in
genealogy and LDS Church temple work. For a time she was the head of the Research Department and Library of theGenealogical Society of Utah . She managed the genealogy departments in the "Deseret News " and "Inter Mountain Republican" and edited and wrote columns for both papers.Gates died in Salt Lake City at the age of 77.
ee also
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Maud Babcock References
*R. Paul Cracroft (1951). Susa Young Gates: Her Life and Literary Work. Master's thesis, University of Utah.
*Louise Plummer, [http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/EoM&CISOPTR=3720&filename=3721.pdf "Gates, Susa Young"] , in "Encyclopedia of Mormonism ", vol. 2, pp. 535–536External links
* [http://mormonlit.lib.byu.edu/lit_author.php?a_id=575 Mormon Literature Database: Susa Young Gates]
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