Sally Young Kanosh

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sally_Young_Kanosh an entity of type: Thing

Sally Young Kanosh (originally known as Kahpeputz or Sally Indian) was a Bannock woman who was kidnapped from her home and sold by a slave-trader named Batiste to Charles Decker, Brigham Young's brother-in-law. She converted to Mormonism and worked in Brigham Young's house as either an indentured servant, adoptive daughter or plural wife. She married Ute chief Kanosh as a plural wife. There is some evidence that she might have been killed by another wife of Kanosh who was jealous of her. In 1906, Susa Young Gates wrote about Sally, who portrayed Young's relationship with Sally as the ideal relationship between whites and Native Americans, which helped put Sally into the collective memory of second generation Mormons in Utah. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sally Young Kanosh
rdf:langString Sally Young Kanosh
rdf:langString Sally Young Kanosh
xsd:float 38.7852783203125
xsd:float -112.4379043579102
xsd:integer 55617777
xsd:integer 1071903131
rdf:langString circa 1840
rdf:langString Kahpeputz
rdf:langString Kanosh, UT Cemetery
<second> 1870.0
rdf:langString Dec 1878
rdf:langString Servant of Brigham Young
rdf:langString Kahpeputz
rdf:langString Northern Paiute language
xsd:string 38.7852785254307 -112.4379007
rdf:langString Sally Young Kanosh (originally known as Kahpeputz or Sally Indian) was a Bannock woman who was kidnapped from her home and sold by a slave-trader named Batiste to Charles Decker, Brigham Young's brother-in-law. She converted to Mormonism and worked in Brigham Young's house as either an indentured servant, adoptive daughter or plural wife. She married Ute chief Kanosh as a plural wife. There is some evidence that she might have been killed by another wife of Kanosh who was jealous of her. In 1906, Susa Young Gates wrote about Sally, who portrayed Young's relationship with Sally as the ideal relationship between whites and Native Americans, which helped put Sally into the collective memory of second generation Mormons in Utah.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7004
rdf:langString Kahpeputz
xsd:gYear 1840
xsd:gYear 1878
<Geometry> POINT(-112.43790435791 38.785278320312)

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