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Monday, February 12, 2018

Black Mormon Pioneer Experiences

https://history.lds.org/article/in-my-father-s-house-are-many-mansions?lang=eng

My daughter, Amy Tanner Thiriot, will be presenting at the Church History Museum Theater, 45 North West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah on Thursday, February 15, 2018, 7:00 p.m. Attendance is free and open to the public. Here is the description of the event.
The first black members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were a vital part of the early history of the Church. They served missions and shared the gospel. As the Church moved west, they helped build Nauvoo and Winter Quarters and drove wagons across the plains to the Salt Lake Valley. Once in the valley, they helped rescue the stranded Willie and Martin handcart companies, built roads and communities, and raised families in the Mormon settlements of the West.
Many of them experienced great tragedies and losses, but they lived lives of service and built a strong heritage of faith for their descendants and the Church. Join us for an evening of the stories of early Latter-day Saints, including Green Flake, Jane Manning James, Venus Redd, Samuel and Amanda Chambers, Thomas Bankhead, and many others. 
Family and community historian Amy Tanner Thiriot specializes in the stories of the lesser-known, early members of the Church. She is the author of a blog series, The Eminent Women of the St. George Temple, and is currently finishing a book on the experiences of the enslaved African American pioneers of Utah Territory.
Amy is a co-writer on my blogs and contributes from time to time. She writes our family blog TheAncestorFiles that is an excellent example of a family oriented genealogy blog.

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