Petrik, PaulaReeder, Jennifer2013-08-092013-08-092013https://hdl.handle.net/1920/8236On 17 March 1842, twenty-two women of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gathered in Nauvoo, Illinois, under the direction of their prophet, Joseph Smith, to organize a female counterpart to priesthood and patriarchal leadership. The women elected lady leaders and established a purpose: to save souls and provide relief to the poor. "We are going to do something extraordinary," said Emma Smith, first Relief Society president. "We expect pressing calls and extraordinary occasions." The Relief Society engaged in religious, charitable, economic, political, and cultural activity and initiated a new emphasis on recording, remembering, and retaining the authority of the past.389 pagesenCopyright 2013 Jennifer ReederAmerican historyReligious historyWomen's studiesAmerican VictorianHair artMaterial cultureMemoryMormonQuilt"'To do something extraordinary:' Mormon Women and the Creation of a Usable Past"Dissertation