Mormon Suffragist
Emmeline B. Wells Gets Book Treatment
PROVO, Utah — One of the first Mormon women
to take a prominent role in society was Emmeline
B. Wells, who fought for suffrage alongside
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
Wells worked to correct misconceptions about
women of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints and establish a respected Mormon presence
in American life.
In honor of her life and work, BYU Press and
Deseret Book have released a new publication,
An Advocate for Women: The Public Life of
Emmeline B. Wells, 1870-1920.
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After
25 years of research, Carol Cornwall Madsen,
an emeritus professor of history and emeritus
research historian with the Joseph Fielding
Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History
at Brigham Young University, has published this
first of two volumes on the life of Wells. This
volume focuses
on her public life as a suffragist and Mormon
liaison with national women's organizations.
"Emmeline Wells was the most influential
and well-known LDS woman of her time, particularly
outside the Church, and one of the most lauded
and beloved within the Church," Madsen
said.
For 37 years, Wells edited the Woman's Exponent,
a Mormon women's semi-monthly newspaper, and
represented Latter-day Saint women in national
women's organizations. She courageously defended
her religion in the halls of Congress and helped
mitigate anti-Mormon sentiments, all before
becoming Relief Society General President in
1910 at age 82.
"Emmeline Wells left indelible footprints
not only in Utah — where she had a close working
relationship with five Church presidents-but
on the national stage, including interviews
with four U.S. Presidents," said Ronald
Esplin, Joseph Smith Papers general editor and
president-elect of the Mormon History Association.
Madsen's book shows how one woman played a significant
role in controversial issues about the Church,
LDS women and women in general. Wells said that
she desired to do all in her power to help elevate
the condition of the Mormons, especially women.
"Wells encouraged and inspired the women
of her day," Esplin said. "With Madsen's
eloquent retelling, Emmeline Well's accomplishments
may now inspire those of our own age, too."