Box 1
Container
Contains 10 Results:
Reva Beck Bosone, 1976
File — Box: 1, Folder: 1
Scope and Contents
Bosone (1895-1983) was the first woman elected to Congress from Utah. She recalls her childhood in American Fork, Utah, and ruminates on the influence of family on her career. Other topics discussed include her involvement in the theater, public school teaching, law school and practice, being a judge, alcoholism, dealing with prostitution, the Utah State legislature, minimum wage an hour law, child labor, the United States Congress, Indian affairs legislation, the Colorado River project, Hill...
Dates:
1976
Frances Farley, 1977
File — Box: 1, Folder: 2
Scope and Contents
Farley (b. 1923) was born in Grand Forks, North Dakota. She recalls her childhood, education, and her experiences in the business community. She describes her political involvement in civil rights and women's issues in Minnesota, the move to Utah, the influence of the dominant culture, behind the scenes political activity, and her election to the Utah State Senate. Other topics include sales tax on food, the anti-war movement, housing, campaigning, gender discrimintion, fund raising, women's...
Dates:
1977
Frances Farley, 1994
File — Box: 1, Folder: 3
Scope and Contents
Farley continues the discussion of her political career from her early political experiences in Minnesota to her bid for the United States Senate. Topics include meetings with the LDS church hierarchy, thoughts on working mothers, influence on legislation, campaign financing, and nuclear dumping in Utah. She also recalls more childhood experiences. Interviewed by Greg Thompson and Floyd O'Neil. 55 pages.
Dates:
1994
Francis Farley, "The MX: A Case Study of Citizen Involvement," Speech, 1982
File — Box: 1, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents
Recorded at the Committee for National Security Women's Conference in Washington, D.C. 12 pages.
Dates:
1982
Susanna Mae Grua, 1977
File — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Scope and Contents
Grua details her genealogy and recalls her childhood in Pleasant Grove, Utah. She discusses her education and teaching experience, her involvement with the Business and Professional Women's Organization, equal rights, community projects, lobbying, equal pay for equal work, the Women's Legislative Council, the Salt Lake City Council of Women, women in the workplace, divorce, dramatics, and the writing of history. Interviewed by Kathryn MacKay, Eloise McQuown, and Greg Thompson. 42 pages.
Dates:
1977
Nellie Jack, 1976
File — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Scope and Contents
Jack recalls her introduction to politics, legislative terms, being a woman politician, and financing a campaign. She also talks about her political philosophy. Interviewed by Kathryn MacKay, Eloise McQuown, and Greg Thompson. 16 pages.
Dates:
1976
Sonia Johnson, 1981
File — Box: 1, Folder: 7
Scope and Contents
Speech about Mormons for ERA given in Pocatello, Idaho.
Dates:
1981
Sonia Johnson, 1981
File — Box: 1, Folder: 8
Scope and Contents
ERA and the separation of church and state, press attention, national network, pressure on legislators, unratified states, Recruiting Mormons for ERA, stumpin in Illinois. Interviewed by David Merrill Jabusch at the Mormons for ERA strategy session in Pocatello, Idaho. 32 pages.
Dates:
1981
Beatrice Marchant, 1976
File — Box: 1, Folder: 9
Scope and Contents
Marchant (b. 1903) talks about becoming a "Roosevelt Democrat" in the 1930s, New Deal programs, party philosophies, mass meetings in the 1940s, the Women's Democratic Study Club, Social Security, campaigning, and being told by a fellow-legislator "Mrs. Marchant, you've got a big heart, but you don't have any sense." Other topics include Bircher's Liberty Amendment, bill sponsorship, welfare, unequal pay, the education of women, her children, and the ERA in Utah. Interviewed by Kathryn MacKay,...
Dates:
1976
Eloise McQuown, 1977
File — Box: 1, Folder: 10
Scope and Contents
McQuown talks about the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women, ERA defeat by the Utah Legislature in 1973, Phyllis Schafly, the ERA speakers bureau, the National Organization of Women, and pressure from LDS church authorities. She also recalls her childhood and early political activity, the McCarthy campaign, the Equal Rights Coalition, and the Women's Movement in Utah. Interviewed by Kathryn MacKay. 68 pages.
Dates:
1977