Book Description
There were typically two kinds of teachers in territorial Utah: single, cloistered women of the Presbyterian mission schools and Mormon polygamist wives. Neither had exceptional educational training. Yet as they developed their own fledgling intellectual skills, they often proved equal to their frontier circumstances. In fact, the restrictive environment seemed to push them toward liberal thinking. The primitive conditions -- cedar bark and slate sometimes being substituted for paper -- not only taught them to improvise but added to their determination to make real schools out of their makeshift accommodations. The community's ambivalence toward education helped heap fuel on their passion, and their first-hand narratives demonstrate just how strong-willed, resourceful, and quietly subversive these pioneer educators could be.