Elizabeth DeLong. Complied & Written by Jodi B. Kinner 2012

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Transcription:

Elizabeth DeLong Complied & Written by Jodi B. Kinner 2012 Elizabeth DeLong, known as Libbie, was born hearing on April 2, 1877, in Panguitch, Garfield County, Utah to Albert and Elizabeth (Houston) DeLong. She was the fourth girl and fifth child in the family. The DeLong children were, in this order, Margaret Amanda, Kate, Ralph, Dicey, Elizabeth, Albert, James Houston, Mary Dempster, Gladys and Winnie Belle. At the age of five in 1882, Libbie became deaf from scarlet fever and smallpox. At home, her mother was busy rearing her large family and wasn t able to pay much attention to Libbie. She and her sister Dicey (two years older) were very close. She taught Libbie to keep up with her speech and served as an oral interpreter until she left to go to school (Banks). At the age of fourteen in 1891, Libbie entered the Utah School for the Deaf, housed at the University of Deseret in Salt Lake City. Elizabeth DeLong. The DeLong Family Saga by Banks. Her cousin John Houston Clark, commonly referred to as John H. with whom she had a close association, also attended the USD at the same time (Banks). Their mothers were sisters. At school, she was an active participant in divisions and activities. In February of 1892, Libbie participated in a division given before the State Legislature to demonstrate what was being done at the school. She gave the welcome and later participated in a demonstration of lip reading and a recitation of a story told by another person (Banks). In 1893, Libbie and John H., as members of 1

the Student Literacy Society, were storytellers in the meeting. During her senior year, she was one of the editors of the student newspaper, The Eaglet (Banks). Elizabeth DeLong as a student at the Utah School for the Deaf in Salt Lake City, about 1895. The DeLong Family Saga by Banks. Libbie was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. While the Utah School for the Deaf was housed at the University of Deseret, she was likely one of the original Latter-day Saints Deaf Mute Sunday School pupils (The Daily Enquirer, February 11, 1892). On June 8, 1897, Libbie and John H. were only two students from USD to graduate (Ogden Standard, May 8, 1897). They were the first students from Utah to enter Gallaudet College that fall. On September 15, 1897, Frank M. Driggs, superintendent of the Utah School for the Deaf and the Blind, accompanied them by train to their first year at Gallaudet of a fouryear course of study. He was taking a one-year teacher's course at the same time (Ogden Standard, September 15, 1897). Libbie and John H. probably would not have had the opportunity to go so far away if Driggs hadn't been there as well. The U.S. Government paid for Libbie s schooling (Banks). While at Gallaudet, she was active in drama. During her senior year, Libbie was elected associate editor of the college publication called The Buff and Blue, and John H. (also a senior) was elected editor-inchief (Ogden Standard, June 19, 1901; Dr. Thomas C. Clark, personal communication, November 13, 2008). According to the Ogden Standard article (1901), To be Elizabeth DeLong, a student at Gallaudet College, about 1902. The DeLong Family Saga by Banks. 2

elected editor-in-chief of the college paper has always been considered one of the highest honors, and it is of special note that Utah students obtained two of the positions (1.). During her last year at Gallaudet, from November 1901 to June 1902, Libbie also wrote a monthly column called Our Washington Letter for the Utah Eagle. (The Utah Eagle was the new name of the paper at the USD) (Banks). She was a great writer. In 1902, Libbie was the first female Utah college graduate with a bachelor s degree and the first in her family to have a full college education. She left Washington, D.C. and returned to Elizabeth DeLong, president of the Utah Association of the Deaf, 1909 Ogden, where she began to teach at the USD on September 3, 1902. She continued that position for fifteen years (Banks). She is believed to be the first deaf teacher with a degree to teach at that school. In 1909, Libbie, an alumna and deaf faculty member of the Utah School for the Deaf, suggested the formation of the Utah Association of the Deaf for social purposes and welfare needs among USD alumni. USDB Superintendent Frank M. Driggs approved this idea. In the summer of 1909, the UAD emerged from this first alumni reunion (Evans, 1999). The association s first president was a woman and this was before women were granted the right to vote in 1920 and first allowed to vote in the National Association of the Deaf election in 1964. In fact, Libbie was also the first woman state association president in the nation. While teaching at the USD, Libbie met a young man by the name of Thomas Loran Savage, better known as Loran Savage, from Antimony, Garfield County, Utah (Banks; David Samuelson, personal communication, May 13, 2011). They became very well acquainted. Loran was 14 years younger than Libbie, as Loran was born on June 18, 1891. While Loran was a 3

student at USD, he was a very athletic person and participated in the school sports division. He especially excelled in basketball (Banks). Loran was a member of the 1905 Utah State Basketball championship team while at USD. At that time, they played against what are now Weber State University, Utah State University, and University of Utah, along with others (David Samuelson, personal communication, May 13, 2011). In school, Loran was in training to become a shoemaker (Banks). Libbie and Loran married on July 25, 1917 in Panguitch, then moved to Flagstaff, Arizona, where Loran established his shoe repair business. Libbie gave up her teaching position (Banks). They had no children (David Samuelson, personal communication, May 13, 2011). Libbie was a very positive influence on her nieces and nephews and she adored them (Banks). Libbie and Loran worked well together running a shoe repair business. According to (Banks), Libbie and her husband shared the esteem of the entire community. Their married life was ideal. She did most of the clerical duties connected with Loran s business, and they were happy in their constant companionship until her last illness, which however, did not abate her sweet cheerfulness nor his loving devotion (Banks). Elizabeth and her husband, Loran Savage, about 1930. The DeLong Family Saga by Banks. After fourteen years of marriage, Libbie died of cancer on September 25, 1931, at the age of 57. Her associates remembered her as a bright and attractive personality (Banks). Her nieces and nephews described Aunt Lib as the bright, talented woman she was. They also shared, With a quick wit and a sense of humor, she never let her deafness keep her from enjoying life and making a success of her life. Her devotion to her nieces and nephews was legendary (Banks). 4

Three years after Libbie s death, Loran and his mother were killed in a car accident, just north of Cedar City. They were returning home from Flagstaff on June 7, 1934, from the Utah Association of the Deaf Convention at the Utah Schools for the Deaf and the Blind in Ogden, Utah. The accident was caused by a tire blowout on the Savage s car (Banks). Loran was only 42. 5

Note David Samuelson, e-mail message to Jodi B. Kinner, May 13, 2011. Thomas C. Clark, e-mail message to Jodi B. Kinner, November 13, 2008. Bibliography "A Sunday School Organized for the Deaf Mutes." The Daily Enquirer, February 11, 1892. Transcribed and proofread by David Grow, Aug. 2006. http://jared.prattfamily.org/orson_family_histories/laron_pratt_organization.html Banks, Gladys W. "The DeLong Family Saga." "DeLong and Clark with Driggs to Gallaudet." The Ogden Standard, September 15, 1897. "Delong and Clark on Gallaudet Buff and Blue." Ogden Standard, June 19, 1901. Evans, David S. A Silent World in the Intermountain West: Records from the Utah School for the Deaf and Blind: 1884-1941. A thesis presented to the Department of History: Utah State University. 1999. Gallaudet University Alumni Cards, 1866-1957, "Elizabeth DeLong: B.A., 1902." http://dspace.wrlc.org/view/imgviewer?url=http://dspace.wrlc.org/doc/manifest/2041/45 785 UAD s First Convention Minutes: 1909 Minutes. "USDB." Ogden Standard, May 8, 1897. 6