Wednesday, March 27, 2013

First Woman Juror?


Jean Patterson Sharp Hunter in her tartan
Jean Patterson Sharp Hunter
Jean Patterson Sharp Hunter
While at another one of my Wednesday evening research sessions at the local Family History Centre, my newspaper search turned up the following small item in the May 2 edition of the Salt Lake Tribune in 1905.


Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake City, Utah, Tuesday, May 02, 1905, Page 11

If that is a bit difficult to read, here it is written out.


WOMAN JUROR
____________

Mrs. Jean H. Mulholland Has Honor of Being First.

Mrs. Jean H. Mulholland has the distinction of being the first woman juror to be drawn for jury service in Utah.  She was present in Judge Lewis’s court when called, but was excused.
The Jury Commissioners are said to have made a mistake in the name and believed they were summoning a man. The name “Jean H.” on the voters’ list let them to believe that Mrs. Mulholland was not a member of the fair sex. 


So I thought I would check out a few of the facts associated with this story.

To place this in context of Jean's life, this happened in 1905. Jean is 47 years old and living in Salt Lake City.  Jean's husband and son, both called David, had already moved up to Canada in 1904. Before the year 1905 ended, Jean would also move up to Canada with her daughter Elezebeth.
Salt Lake City and County  Courthouse by JustinKrebs (creative commons licence)
Constructed by the free masons between 1891-1894 to replace the Salt Lake City Council Hall and the Salt Lake County Courthouse. It was used as the Utah State Capitol building until 1915 and also housed the city's first public library. 
Next, I wondered how much later women would be able to serve on a jury in Utah. That is when it got interesting. Most states changed the law to include women on juries between 1911 and 1921. Utah, however, became the FIRST state to allow women to be called to jury duty in 1898. (source citation below).  Salt Lake City is in the Third Judicial District  but I couldn't find out any further information on when women actually were chosen to serve on juries in Utah.  So when this news article was posted, the law already allowed Jean to serve despite being the fair sex.

Actually, Jean would have made a great juror and was more than capable of holding her own in a man's world. These excerpts from her life story show this.

  • She was healthy and robust, and as boys were much needed in her family, her father allowed her to help get wood from the mountains. 
  •  One day she was cutting stove-wood in the yard, when a young man saw her and came in and asked to wield the axe for her.  Not being used to wielding an axe, he broke the handle instead of cutting the wood. (That young man later became her husband.)
  • Jean helped her husband dig an irrigation ditch so that they would be able to have water on their farm.  The ditch was ten miles long, and the two of them dug it themselves with pick and shovel. The cattlemen would stampede their cattle over the ditch, breaking it and causing the water to run everywhere. They had to dig a well, and to do this they used a windlass, their son led the horse, her husband dug and loaded the bucket and Jean emptied it.  The well was abandoned after going down ninety-nine feet, as the gas fumes made her husband sick. Once he had come up out of the well in the empty bucket, and as he was getting out, being overcome by the fumes, he fell, but was grabbed by his wife, Jean, and thus was saved from a fall that could have been fatal.  Jean always seemed to know what to do at the right moment.

She never had the chance to serve on a jury but she was acknowledged for all by the press that she was the first woman drawn for jury duty in all of Utah. I appreciate that she turned up to serve even though she may have known it was an unusual request. I will remember her every time I pass the downtown City and County Building in Salt Lake City. 

Lucy Fowler, Gender and Jury Deliberations: The Contributions of Social Science, 12 Wm. & Mary J.
Women & L. 1 (2005), http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmjowl/vol12/iss1/2



Monday, March 25, 2013

Roots Tech 2013




Saturday I attended a Family History Fair associated with RootsTech 2013.  They piloted sharing the conference online this year and it was fantastic. So much to learn and be inspired by.  I went out to the Cochrane church building to attend sessions there. A full house turned out to learn about researching our ancestors from 9:00 am - 4:30 pm. Overwhelming in the amount of information shared and on the website you can download all the presentation notes in a zipped file here . And not only the 13 sessions available online but over 100 handouts from presentations not shared remotely. 

Lots of highlights.  I loved the review of technology and tools shared by Valerie Elkin. She took a while to get started - too much of a set up but when she got into the meat of the presentation, we were all madly taking notes (I didn't know I could get the syllabus of the presentations until after this first session of my day).  

Another highlight was listening to the a storytelling master. Kim Weinkamp has had her stories featured on NPR and Sirius Radio and she blends humour into her touching stories of life and family. 

James Tanner inspired me to use maps to get a more complete picture of my ancestors. His tips included using Google StreetView which is something I've begun to use as I put the pieces of their lives together. It gave me a great look at East Tisted, where the Puzey family home still stands, and allowed me to virtually drive the country roads in Ireland where the Muirheads spent their lives. 

I will try to share more stories and information as I get more organized and have my weekly research date at the Family History Centre. I have so much collected over the years but it needs to be shared. Asking for stories or about people will help! Use the comments and I can share what I have. My aunt asked about the Puzey line and that is when I realized how little I actually had. And I have found so much since I began to explore a bit more on that side of the family. (Go back in this blog to read some of the previous posts of what I have learned.)  And there is so much more to do. The more I learn, the more I realize that!

Next post:  What I learned about Jean Hunter Mulholland.
Jean Patterson Hunter