Today we’re so excited to share a conversation about the new book Carry On, a rich and thoughtful history of the church’s Young Women organization. This project has been ten years in the making, created by historians Lisa Olsen Tait, James Goldberg, Amber C. Taylor, and the late Kate Holbrook.
In this conversation, Lisa and James trace the arc of the organization’s beginnings and evolution from a small association founded among Brigham Young’s teenage daughters in the Lion House, through decades of change that continually adapted to meet the evolving spiritual and cultural needs of young women of the church.
Over the years, sixteen general presidents—along with their counselors, boards, and local leaders—used their gifts to create programs that nourished the young women in their care. These programs taught not just spiritual values, but also public speaking, leadership, drama, music, recreation, and practical life skills. For many, the organization became a gateway to confidence, connection, and a sense of divine purpose.
Lisa and James also address some of the more difficult parts of our past, including the ways young women have often carried the weight of the community’s fears—especially around modesty and worthiness and the way this sometimes played out in the Young Women Organization. They reflect on the effects of the Correlation movement and the changes that came as the organization was placed more directly under a priesthood line of authority. Through it all, they highlight how young women and their Young Women leaders have responded with courage, creativity, and spiritual initiative.
We hope this conversation serves as an invitation to reflect on what we might want to reclaim or reimagine for this global and spiritually hungry generation today, and to ask, with real intention, how each of us can in the spirit of the legacy of this organization use our own gifts to carry on what matters most. We’re so grateful to James and Lisa for offering their insight, scholarship, and heart to this important story.
MORE FROM LISA OLSEN TAIT:
MORE FROM JAMES GOLDBERG:
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