November 1916


15 November 1916 • Wednesday

[Dau]ghters of Revolutin met at Jula [Julia] F. Lunds home pleasant time I was not well but h[a]d pleasant company and enjoyed it very much In the evening h[a]d a pleasant visit from Dr. Middletn [Middleton] & wife1 [a]nd spent the evening and it was very delighful– going over old tines [times] and talking of the Prophet Joseph [Smith] and Navoo [Nauvoo, Illinois] & so on. {p. 181}

16 November 1916 • Thursday

Today was Board Meeting and we had a long my nerves were nearly worn out so much “Ado ab[o]ut nothing– I an weary and [illegible] I am not at all rconeciled to the Election of a force of D[e]mocrats,2 and do not feel happy over it but must submit [illegible] not in accord with thngs {p. 182}

Cite This Page

Cite This Page

November 1916, The Journal of Emmeline B. Wells, accessed October 16, 2024 https://chpress-web.churchhistorianspress.org/emmeline-b-wells/1910s/1916/1916-11

Footnotes

  1. [1]Margaret Palmer Middleton.

  2. [2]Simon Bamberger, a Democrat, “was the first non-Mormon and the first Jew elected governor of the state. . . . In the United State Senate contest, Democrat William H. King won the first of his four consecutive terms. . . . The Democrats won big in the state elections, as only a total of five Republicans won seats in the legislature.” (Powell, “Elections in the State of Utah,” Utah History Encyclopedia, accessed 29 Apr. 2021, https://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/e/ELECTIONS.shtml.)