The early Arizona women imagined that in Mormonism faith they crossed the country in an unknown area without air conditioning. Believe it or not, thousands of people are doing it. These pioneers must strive hard to protect themselves, use the resources around them, and to make ordinary family life based on this. Mormon women face more challenging tasks; they have to maintain their faith and teach them the words of all who contact them. Even though they calm down to build houses, communities, and churches, they must overcome many challenges rather than saying the boredom and loneliness of being away from their families.
"Since the number of women in the border area far exceeds the number of men, women are practicing polygamousism, multiple marriages give all women the opportunity to own husbands." In some towns, the number of unmarried men is three times that of women. In this turbulent Mormon single marriage market, women chose garbage. "The double polygamy system takes care of older women and elderly people, so there is a chance to get married." The truth is that most of the widows are younger than their first wives. This idea was especially true in the 1950s, after decades it became more difficult to persuade young women to marry more than one.
Why does Mormon's women still support polygamy? Even if their rights are restricted, they want to protect their husbands. According to "Mormonist books in America", "In the nineteenth century, Mormon women were impoverished and repressed, they shared their husbands and lived in a polygamy family as the second or third wife Limited income Oriental women fighting for their rights are regarded as slaves and bondages of Mormon, prisoner who must be released from prison. "(Claudia and Richard Bushman, 56) Salt Lake City women had to help to support their families, husbands and other wives and participated in general community projects. Maybe they are taught to live like this. In order to survive, they must comply with their religious rules.
The Patriarch leader of the Latter-day Saints Jesus Christ Church in Salt Lake City, Utah, led Mormons to Arizona from mid-nineteenth to late. They founded Mesa, Snowflake, Heber, Safford and other towns. They also settled in Phoenix Valley (or "Sun Valley"), Tempe, Prescott and other areas. Mormons settled in northern Arizona and northern New Mexico. These areas were part of the former New Mexico state. During the Mexican revolution from 1910 to 1920, several battles were held in the Mexican town on the other side of the reconciliation with Arizona. Through the revolution, many Arizona participated in one of several forces fighting in Mexico. Between the US and the Mexican armies there were only two important battles: Pancho Villa of Columbia Raide in New York Mexico in 1916, Ambos Nogales of Arizona in 1918. Americans have won the latter