Description:

Brigham Young's Daughter Conveys Lot in Salt Lake City to One of Her Half-Sisters

This pair of deeds were designed to convey a lot in Salt Lake City from Brigham Young's daughter Evelyn Louisa Young Davis to Charlotte Talula Young, while reserving a right-of-way for both parties through the property. Brigham Young had owned the property and deeded it to Davis in 1873. The deeds were not signed or executed.

[BRIGHAM YOUNG.] Evelyn L. Young Davis, Partially Printed Document Signed, Deed to Charlotte Talula Young, June 1, 1889, Salt Lake City, Utah. 2 pp., 8.5" x 14"; Charlotte Talula Young, Partially Printed Document Signed, Deed to Evelyn L. Young Davis, June 1, 1889, Salt Lake City, Utah. 2 pp., 8.5" x 14". Neither deed is signed by the parties. Both include the signature of Ben W. Driggs Jr. (1858-1930), a notary public in Salt Lake City. Very good.

Brigham Young (1801-1877) was born in Vermont and moved with his family to New York as a child. He married Miriam Works in 1824, with whom he had two daughters. He worked as a carpenter in several towns in upstate New York. He was first introduced to the Book of Mormon in 1830 shortly after its publication. After meeting Joseph Smith, he joined the Mormon faith in 1832. After his first wife died in 1833, he married Mary Ann Angell in 1834. He became a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in 1835 and its president in 1841. After evangelizing in various areas, he settled in Missouri and then Illinois in 1838. After Joseph Smith introduced the doctrine of plural marriage, Young married Lucy Ann Decker in 1842 as his first plural wife. Joseph Smith was killed by an armed mob in June 1844. After a period of uncertainty, Young succeeded Smith as the leader of the church in December 1847, and continued to lead it until his death 29 years later. In 1846-1847, Young led the Latter-Day Saints to relocate to Salt Lake Valley, which was then part of Mexico. They arrived on July 24, 1847. He named the city "The City of the Great Salt Lake" and organized it into blocks of ten acres, each divided into eight equal lots. After Congress organized the Utah Territory, President Millard Fillmore appointed Young as the territory's first governor. As territorial governor, the University of Deseret in 1850, which became the University of Utah, and introduced the first printing press in Salt Lake City, which was used to print the Deseret News. He supported slavery and its expansion into Utah. In 1875, he deeded buildings and land in Provo for an academy that was to be part of the University of Deseret, but it broke away and became Brigham Young Academy in 1876, the precursor to Brigham Young University. As a polygamist, Young had at least fifty-six wives and had fifty-seven children with sixteen of his wives.

Evelyn Louisa Young Davis (1850-1917) (sometimes spelled "Eveline") was the first child and only daughter of Brigham Young and his twenty-second wife Margaret Maria Alley Young (1825-1852). Evelyn Young married Milton Herbert Davis (1846-1890) in 1871, and they had at least two children between 1872 and 1874. She was one of the "Big Ten," a designation Young gave to his ten oldest daughters. She was in the sixteenth class of her father's will.

Charlotte Talula Young (1861-1892) was born in Salt Lake City to Brigham Young and Clarissa Clara Decker (1828-1889), one of Young's plural wives, whom he had married in Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1844. In August 1891, Charlotte Talula Young married Augustus Madeira Wood (1851-1905), but she died five months later of Bright's disease (nephritis).

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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