HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
SPRING 1973/VOLUME 41/NUMBER 2
Contents IN THIS ISSUE
115
UTAH ANTI-IMPERIALIST: SENATOR WILLIAM H. KING AND HAITI, 1921-34 ISAAC TRUMBO AND THE POLITICS OF UTAH STATEHOOD . . .
HAUPTMAN
116
EDWARD LEO LYMAN
128
LAURENCE
.
UNPACKING THE NEA: THE ROLE OF UTAH'S TEACHERS AT THE 1920 CONVENTION
M.
BUCHANAN
150
FAE DECKER DIX
162
W.
DRIGGS
178
ALLAN KENT POWELL
182
FREDERICK
UNWILLING MARTYR: THE DEATH OF YOUNG ED DALTON
S.
WHEN CAPTAIN FREMONT SLEPT IN GRANDMA McGREGOR'S BED .
.
TRAGEDY AT SCOFIELD
.
NEVADA
BOOK REVIEWS
195
BOOK NOTICES
207
RECENT ARTICLES
210
HISTORICAL NOTES
215
T H E C O V E R Completed in 1882, the Beaver County Courthouse served as the seat of justice in the territory's Second Judicial District until 1896. U. S. Marshal William Thompson was tried and acquitted here of the murder of polygamist Edward Meeks Dalton of Parowan in 1886. Photograph from the Society's Richard K. A. Kletting Collection. As seen on the back cover, the courthouse was partially rebuilt following a fire in 1889 which accounts for the changed appearance of the roof. The Beaver County Courthouse — now listed on the National Register of Historic Places—is considered an outstanding example of the architecture of public buildings in the 1880s. Utah Heritage Foundation photograph by Kent Fairbanks.
© Copyright 1973 U t a h State Historical Society