“A More Universal Sisterhood”: Latter-day Saints in the National Council of Women, 1888–1987 Available to Purchase
REBEKAH RYAN CLARK is a historian for Better Days 2020 and serves on the board of the Mormon Women’s History Initiative Team. She holds a law degree from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at BYU and a history and literature degree from Harvard University, where her honors thesis was on Utah’s national suffrage activism. This article is based in part on research conducted during a summer fellowship at the Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Church History and presented at the 2019 Mormon History Association conference. See Rebekah Ryan, “In the World: Latter-day Saints in the National Council of Women, 1888-1987,” Latter-day Saint Women in the Twentieth Century: Summer Fellows’ Papers, ed. Claudia L. Bushman (BYU Studies, 2003).
Rebekah Ryan Clark; “A More Universal Sisterhood”: Latter-day Saints in the National Council of Women, 1888–1987. Journal of Mormon History 1 January 2021; 47 (1): 87–124. doi: https://doi.org/10.5406/jmormhist.47.1.0087
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