Ida Hunt Udall
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Ida Hunt Udall
Ida Frances Hunt Udall (March 8, 1858 – April 26, 1915) was an American diarist, homesteader, and teacher in Utah Territory, territorial Utah and Arizona Territory, Arizona. A lifelong member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), Udall participated in the church's historical practice of Mormonism and polygamy, plural marriage as the second wife of David King Udall and co-wife of Ella Stewart Udall and Mary Ann Linton Morgan Udall. During the height of the United States' prosecutorial campaign against polygamy in the 1880s, Udall went into hiding as a fugitive on the "Mormon Underground". From 1882 to 1886, she authored a diary of her life in plural marriage and then on the Underground. This diary, considered a "major contribution to Mormon pioneer literature" by one biographer, later became the core of a posthumous biography that won the Mormon History Association's Best Biography Award. Called a "serene intellectual" by historian Leonard J. Arring ...
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Hamiltons Fort, Utah
Hamiltons Fort is an unincorporated area, unincorporated community in south-central Iron County, Utah, Iron County, Utah, United States. Description A post office called Hamiltons Fort was in operation between 1859 and 1913. Variant names were "Hamilton Fort", "Fort Hamilton", "Fort Hamblin", "Hamblin", "Hambleton", and "Hamilton". The community was named after John Hamilton, a pioneer settler. See also References External links

Unincorporated communities in Utah Unincorporated communities in Iron County, Utah {{Utah-geo-stub ...
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