Bonus Chapter 3
Sisters in Very Deed
Lehi Relief Society
Upper Room of Cooperative Store, Lehi, Utah Territory
November 18, 1871
My sisters, I desire to throw in my mite with yours.9 I feel thankful that I am a member of this institution, and it always gives me pleasure to meet with my sisters, for I realize that we are sisters in very deed, children of the same Heavenly Parent, yet at times how estranged we seem to be from each other.10
How different the feeling will be if we are ever permitted to return to the presence of our Eternal Father. Then we shall greet each other with smiles of love, and every feeling contrary to love and kindness will be banished from us.
Then let us begin to cultivate more and more the spirit of love and kindness and forbearance one with another. Bear with each other’s weaknesses, remembering we are all members of the same great family, which may God bless us with his Holy Spirit so to do, I ask in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
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Footnotes
Footnotes
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[1]“A Meeting of the Teachers,” Lehi Ward, Utah Stake, Relief Society Minutes and Records, vol. 1, 1868–1879, Oct. 22, 1871, 75, CHL. The Nauvoo Relief Society instituted a “visiting” teacher program in 1843 in Nauvoo, assigning teams of women to specific geographic areas in which they were to ascertain needs and seek charitable contributions. The practice continued in Utah, and female ward “teachers” often reported their actions as well as spiritual counsel in Relief Society minute books. (Jill Mulvay Derr, Carol Cornwall Madsen, Kate Holbrook, and Matthew J. Grow, eds., The First Fifty Years of Relief Society: Key Documents in Latter-day Saint Women’s History [Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2016], 109–110, 209–210, 220–222; Jill Mulvay Derr, Janath Russell Cannon, and Maureen Ursenbach Beecher, Women of Covenant: The Story of Relief Society [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1992], 91–92.
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[2]“Rebecca E. Standring,” Woman’s Exponent 41, no. 13 (Jan. 1914): 91; Andrew Jenson, Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia (Salt Lake City: Andrew Jenson Memorial Association, 1901–1936), 4:198; “Mrs. Standring Dead,” Salt Lake Tribune, Dec. 21, 1913, 10; Lehi Centennial Committee, Lehi Centennial History 1850–1950 (Lehi, UT: Free Press, 1950), 296–297. Edwin Standring died in 1888. John Standring was the son of Edwin Standring and his plural wife Mary Ann Cutler, who died in 1900. John Standring was nineteen when Rebecca adopted him. He suffered from mental illness and died in the Utah State Mental Hospital. (Frank Esshom, Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah [Salt Lake City: Utah Pioneers Book Publishing, 1913], 1:346; “The Funeral of Mrs. Mary Ann Standring Roberts,” Lehi [Utah] Banner, July 19, 1900; John E. Standring Death Certificate, Utah County, Utah, Nov. 1, 1924, #452–353, Department of Health, Office of Vital Records and Statistics, Death Certificates, 1904–1961, Series 81448, Utah State Archives.) (Mary) Alice Bahr Royle was the daughter of William Andrew Bahr and Harriet Jackson. Her father died in 1885. When she married Henry M. Royle in 1903, the county record lists her last name as Standring. (Mary A. Bar, 1880 U.S. Census, Salem, Utah Co., UT; William Andrew Bahr, Salem City Cemetery, UT, block 35, lot 1, plot 4, memorial #35396839, accessed Jan. 19, 2016, findagrave.com; Utah County Marriages, 1887–1973, Jan. 21, 1903, #488400, Utah County Courthouse, Provo, UT.)
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[3]The news story announcing Standring’s death stated that “because of the public service she has done, she was probably the most prominent woman in Lehi and the north end of Utah County.” (“Mrs. Standring Dead,” 10.)
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[4]Rebecca Standring, Letter to Editor, in “F.R. Society Reports,” Woman’s Exponent 1, no. 18 (Feb. 15, 1873): 138.
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[5]Lehi Centennial Committee, Lehi Centennial History, 296–297; Jenson, Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia, 4:198.
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[6]Lehi Centennial Committee, Lehi Centennial History, 297.
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[7]Parley P. Pratt, Key to the Science of Theology: Designed as an Introduction to the First Principles of Spiritual Philosophy; Religion; Law and Government (Liverpool: F. D. Richards, 1855). Chapters of this book were often read and discussed in church meetings, and publication notices were included in newspapers. (See “Book Notices,” Woman’s Exponent 3, no. 2 [June 15, 1874]: 12.)
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[8]Lehi Ward Relief Society Minutes and Records, Nov. 18, 1871, 81–82.
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[9]See Mark 12:42–43; Luke 21:2–3.
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[10]Pratt wrote that “children of the same royal Parent in the heavens” are “joint heirs.” Pratt, Key to the Science of Theology, 32.