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Olson, Delilah King, 1841-1907

 Person

Biographical History

Delilah King Olson (1841-1907) was a prominent suffragette and women's right activist who settled the Fillmore, Utah with Latter-day Saint pioneers.

Delilah King Olson was born on July 10, 1841 in Sylvania, Ohio to Latter-day Saint pioneers Thomas Rice King and Matilda Robison King, who were a part of the early settlement Fillmore, Utah. She married George Daniel Olson, a cabinet maker and musician, on November 14, 1861 in Fillmore, Utah where all nine of their children were born. She devoted her life to teaching in schools and served eighteen years on the board of examination of teachers in Millard county. She was also the first woman to be elected to public office in Utah.

Delilah King Olson died in 1907 in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Citation:
FamilySearch.com, via WWW, Sep. 26, 2017 (Delilah King Olson; b. Jul. 10,1841 in Sylvania, OH; parents, Thomas Rice King and Matilda Robison King; m. George Daniel Olson, Nov. 14, 1861, Fillmore, UT; cabinet maker, musician; Latter-day Saint pioneers, settlement of Fillmore, UT; nine children)

Olson family papers, 1871-1947, Sep. 26, 2017 (suffrage; women's rights; teacher; eighteen years board of examination; first woman elected to public office in UT)

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

George M. Hanson and Bertha Olson Hanson papers, 1912-1939, bulk 1913-1916

 Series — Multiple Containers
Identifier: MSS 9056 Series 3
Content Description

Collection contains newspaper clippings, photographs, correspondence, articles, papers and official documents pertaining to George M. Hanson's work as an American Consul Officer in areas such as Tasmania, Sandakan, British North Borneo and Liege, Belgium. Includes letters from Bertha to her sister Ethel Bradley. Materials document George and Bertha's experiences and reflections on Pacific Island peoples, geography and colonial politics. Dated 1912-1939.

Dates: 1912-1939, bulk 1913-1916