| Valeen Tippetts Avery |
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Information AboutValeen Tippetts Avery |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT VALEEN TIPPETTS AVERY | |
| american historians | |
| avery, valeen tippetts | |
| american biographers | |
| historians of the latter day saint movement | |
| 1936 births | |
| 2006 deaths | |
| american latter day saints | |
| latter day saint writers | |
| avery | |
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Avery was born Dec. 22, 1936 in the agricultural community of Great Falls, Montana . She attended Rocky Mountain College in Billings , and Brigham Young University , in Provo, Utah . She married Charles C. Avery in 1961; the couple had four children, but divorced in 1986. In 1996, Avery married Bryan Collier Short. Avery attended graduate school at Northern Arizona University during her research for Emma Smith 's biography. She earned a master's degree in history in 1981, and her Ph.D. in history in 1984. She served as president of the Mormon History Association between 1987 and 1988. Avery was well known in the western history field for articles, reviews and commentaries. She served as professor of history, with specialties in women's history and Colorado Plateau Studies, at Northern Arizona until her retirement in 2005. Avery died unexpectedly on April 7, 2006, in Flagstaff, Arizona . MAJOR BIOGRAPHIES "''Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale Smith''" was well received by the scholarly community when it was first published in 1984. The biography won the Evans Biography Award, the Mormon History Association Best Book Award, and the John Whitmer Association (RLDS) Best Book Award. Avery and Newell provided the following note in the book's introduction: Early leaders in Utah castigated Emma from their pulpits for opposing Brigham Young and the practice of Polygamy , and for lending support to the Reorganization. As these attitudes filtered down through the years, Emma was virtually written out of official Utah histories. In this biography, we have attempted to reconstruct the full story of this remarkable and much misunderstood woman's experiences. Despite its quality and recognition, the biography was startling and controversial among leaders, administrators and members of the Utah based The Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-day Saints . Shortly after publication, Avery and Newell, both participating members in the church, were refused any opportunity to talk about their research or book in church meetings. Avery produced a biography of the life of the youngest son of Joseph and Emma Smith, . He was confined in the institution for twenty-seven years. The book draws on a large body of Smith's correspondence and poetry to examine both his personality and his emotional state. SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
With Linda King Newell:
With Linda King Newell and Maureen Ursenback Beecher:
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