Gates, Susa Young, 1856-1933 (Personal Name)
- Young, Susa, 1856-1933
- Dunford, Susa Young, 1856-1933
- Homespun, 1856-1933
John Stevens' courtship: a story of the Echo Canyon War, 1909: t.p. (Susa Young Gates)
OCLC, Feb. 6, 2003 (hdg.: Gates, Susa Young, 1856-1933; usage: Susa Young Gates)
Wikipedia, website viewed 25 July 2013 (Susa Young Gates; born March 18, 1856, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory; died May 27, 1933, Salt Lake City; born Susa Young to Lucy Bigelow and LDS church president Brigham Young; attended Brigham Young Academy in Provo, Utah where she founded the music deparment; 4th president of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers; attended the University of Deseret; 1872 married Alma B. Dunford and had 2 chidren, but divorced in 1877; married Jacob F. Gates in 1880 and had 13 children with him; missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to the Sandwich Islands; founded the Young Woman's Journal; author; founded the Relief Society Magazine of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; delegate to five congresses of the International Council of Women; delegate and officer of the National Council of Women; member of the Board of Regents of Brigham Young University and Utah State Agricultural College; head of the Research Department and Library of the Genealogical Society of Utah)
Woman's Exponent author list, 2016: (Susa Young Gates, also wrote under the name "Homespun")
Wikipedia, May 15, 2017 (Susa Young Gates; Susa Young Gates (March 18, 1856--May 27, 1933) was a writer, periodical editor, and women's rights advocate in Utah)