2. Constructing Settler Masculinity
Examining the monuments’ representations of masculinity shows how both create a version of history where dominant Boer or Mormon men—with the support of other white men—
naturally dominate women and indigenous men. Both Afrikaners and Mormons perceived themselves as oppressed, and the men of each group sought to avoid being dominated by other white settler men. As such, both monuments employ idealized masculinity to celebrate European-descended groups that withdrew from “white” settler society in the 1830s and 1840s and moved to supposedly “unsettled” interiors—the Boer Voortrekkers moving out of the Cape region into the interior of southern Africa, and the Mormons from the Midwest into the interior southwestern Great Basin of North America.
2 By the 1930s, the Afrikaners and Mormons were gaining influence in their respective nations, and both turned to elaborate monumentalization to rehabilitate their image and enshrine their supposed cultural superiority not only to the indigenous populations they had violently displaced, but also to the other white settler groups. In the late nineteenth century, Dutch South Africans and Mormons had both suffered significant political crises: Afrikaners losing to British settlers in the second Anglo-Boer War, and the Mormons sacrificing their vision of an independent, polygamous theocracy to enable US statehood. So, in their twentieth century memorializations, each group created explicitly racialized and gendered tributes to their earlier nineteenth-century emigrant forebearers, emphasizing the achievements of male leaders while presenting indigenous men as either hyper-masculinized or feminized, in both cases out of line with the supposed natural order of settler culture and civilized manly behavior.
As recent theorists have argued, gender expectations and norms provided such powerful tools of imperial ideology because, throughout Western history and culture, gender has been considered “natural,” representing the divinely ordained order of the universe, with white men being naturally ascendant over white women, children, and all non-white peoples. Critics including Irving Goffman and Judith Butler have long argued that gender, as a social construction, is not natural; and critics like RW Connell and Anne McClintock have argued that gender, class, and race are co-determinate and hegemonic (
Goffman 1979;
Butler 1990;
Connell 1995;
McClintock 1995). But in the mid-nineteenth century, the conception of a natural order meant that high-status white men in the US and South Africa pursued a sense of refined manliness demonstrated by gentility in tastes and manners and defined against a lower status masculinity (exhibited by most settlers) grounded in work and labor. But by the early twentieth century, similar gentlemen fearing they had become
too civilized (i.e., feminized) led to organizations such as the Boy Scouts that offered opportunities for urban youth to mimic the supposed rugged masculinity of mid-nineteenth-century settlers or assume the indigene’s perceived physical prowess while maintaining the bounds of whiteness (
Kimmel 2006;
Bederman 1996).
Sculptors of the Voortrekker and This is the Place monuments, we will show, merged these competing notions of refined manliness and rugged masculinity to portray white settlers overall as masculine but civilized. However, both monuments use clothing, posture, and sculptural positioning to portray high-status Boer and LDS leaders as equal or superior to competing male settlers in their respective nations, and to differentiate leaders from supporting men of a lesser class, indigenous men, and—as we will later discuss—women. The monuments depicted other Boer and LDS settlers as supporting these leaders, yet established these men’s masculinity through labor and displays of civilized dominance over white women and indigenous men. In sharp contrast, the monuments portrayed indigenous men as either hypermasculine or feminized to assert that they were unworthy of land ownership, thus securing settler claims to those lands through their properly masculine and “civilized” leaders. Comparing the monuments’ gendered constructions of leaders, other white men, and indigenous men demonstrate how Afrikaners and Mormons employed gender as a tool to justify similar systems of oppression and privilege.
In South Africa, the creators of the Voortrekker Monument drew upon the perceived masculine power of early nineteenth-century Boer settlers to assert twentieth century political dominance over indigenous people and other white settler populations. Divided by Dutch and British ancestry, South African settlers staked out competing colonial outposts in the area that was to become Cape Town: the Dutch in 1652 and the British in the early nineteenth century as part of spoils from the Napoleonic wars. The two groups competed for control of South Africa, including two civil wars in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. After the Afrikaners lost the second Anglo-Boer war, they sought to recuperate their self-image into one of heroism and success, in part by remembering an incident of earlier-nineteenth-century warfare where one of the trek Boer groups fought and defeated the Zulu in battle, a victory that Afrikaners viewed as God’s sanctioning of white settler rule in that space. The Voortrekker Monument served as a monumental shrine to that event and its white male leaders, helping to make it a rallying cry for Afrikaner nationalism.
The Voortrekker Monument emphasized these Voortrek leaders by featuring heroic-sized, physically elevated sculptures at each of the structure’s four corners. Visitors reach the monument by ascending hundreds of stairs, so that, as
Figure 1 and
Figure 3 illustrate, these slightly elevated figures are even more imposing upon approach. The granite sculptures depict Boer leaders Piet Retief, Andries Pretorius, Hendrik Potgeiter and a generic male figure representing the remaining Voortrekkers. All four gatekeepers or “guards of honor” wear the typical Voortrekker costume of short buttoned jacket and baggy, ankle-length trousers (
Rankin and Schneider 2020a, pp. 310–11), and each holds a rifle in front, implying that the hegemonic white men who guard the building also guard the culture (see
Figure 3). They are called out as dominant over and above the women, non-white people and even other men incorporated into the monument’s interior, as well as the British men not depicted on the exterior of the monument but who these patriarchs overlook in Pretoria below.
The sculptural frieze on the interior of the building likewise celebrates achievements of white, male Boer leaders, by presenting a story of the great treks combined into one linear narrative. The 92 m (302 foot) long white marble frieze encircles the entirely of the massive interior space of the Hall of Heroes.
3 It features an Exodus-styled journey, beginning with a panel entitled “Voortrekkers Leaving the Cape Colony, 1835,” through 26 other bas-relief panels presenting bonneted stern-faced women and children and bearded men, first in discussion with and then in conflict with hordes of nearly naked male indigenous people. Though the unpainted marble makes all of the figures literally white, it is clear from the clothing and phenotypes of the figures who is “white” (Afrikaner) and who is “black” (indigenous) and with whom visitors are meant to identify.
All Afrikaner men depicted in the frieze wear European-style clothing, including coats, collared shirts, and trousers. But artist H.W. Coetzer (who began the design work on the Voortrekker frieze) and sculptors Peter Kirchhoff, Frikkie Kruger, Laurika Postma and Hennie Potgieter (who executed it) differentiate Boer men both from over-refined European men and barbaric African foes through positioning and distinctive attire.
4 While British and Portuguese soldiers wear lavishly ornate decorations on their uniforms that emphasize their power to the point of feminizing them, heroic Boer leaders match the civilian British leaders’ formal attire of long coats, bow ties, and top hats, and thus their high status without the pomp.
The frieze also uses clothing and position to place other male trekkers (wearing short, buttoned coats and wide-brimmed hats) above nearly naked indigenes. When doing the hard labor required to dominate the landscape in the absence of other ethnic groups, the frieze depicts some ordinary trekkers as masculine laborers working in their shirt sleeves. But when Boer men appear in the presence of the dominant British or scantily-clad indigenes—depicted with bare chests and legs and only an apron tied about their waist—the frieze shows Boer leaders in formal attire and all Boer men wearing buttoned short coats, even in the heat of battle, lest their civility be questioned. Moreover, the frieze regularly positions Boers as separate from and above their low-status black foes (see
Figure 4). In fact, the appearance of a slain Boer man in “Murder of Retief,” with his jacket and collared shirt torn aside, revealing the indignity of his bare torso, emphasizes the barbarity of African attackers and helps cast Retief and his men as martyrs to a noble cause. This juxtaposition of Boer leaders against lesser Boer men and indigenous figures emphasizes the hegemonic masculine authority of the leaders, while still demonstrating the masculinity of even the lower-status Boer men.
Although in reality the Voortrekkers invaded the lands of the Ndebele and Zulu, six of the twenty-seven frieze panels depict hordes of generic, stereotyped, anonymous and half-naked indigenous African men armed with clubs or spears savagely attacking formally attired Boer settlers sculpted with distinct facial features granting them individuality. The Boers’ painstakingly historically accurate material culture—formal clothing, wagons, wooden furniture, leather and glass goods, and firearms—emphasize the veracity of this imagery and their cultural dominance over “primitive” indigenes armed with spears. As
Figure 4 shows, African leaders stand out from their followers with ornate jewelry and headpieces. That they still bare their chests, arms, and legs marks them as less civilized than African servants who wear a loose-fitting woven shirt or trousers to serve their Boer masters, both clearly inferior to even the most humble Boer folk. Moreover, historians have uncovered the great pains taken in the frieze planning and construction to emphasize this distinction, even, as shown in
Figure 4, making sure that the indigenes are physically below the white settlers in their positioning in the frieze (
Rankin and Schneider 2020b, p. 265. And as
Figure 5 shows, the frieze portrays the Zulu warriors as disordered, out of control, and animalistic (one even prostate on the ground) in contrast to the rows of equestrian Afrikaner soldiers, who despite being outnumbered, manage to ride on horseback while shooting horizontally-aligned guns, their coats buttoned and orderly, hats neatly upon their heads. These images draw from tropes of disordered violent hypermasculinity to create a threatening Other as outside of the bounds of civilized masculinity both in the 1830s and 1930s, and in both times not to be trusted with land ownership. Moreover, the image of trek Boers as properly masculine men dominant in battle works to recreate an image of Afrikaner superiority threatened by the loss of the second Boer war.
With minimal captioning, visitors not familiar with the history of the treks (or the years of planning, debating and creating the frieze) would see a narrative of inevitable and righteous conflict, which the Boers tried to avoid through treaty until betrayed and forced into a battle that they won through divine aid. Interestingly, the frieze does not end with triumph over the indigene but instead with the Voortrekkers leaving the region “after the British occupation” and the British recognizing the independence of the Transvaal. The narrative becomes, then, Afrikaner distinction from and triumph over the Zulu (and by extension all black South Africans) as well as the British. The narrative emphasizes triumph over adversity, indigeneity, and colonial competition led by civilized Boer male leaders with the support of lesser, yet still masculine Afrikaner males—and, as we will show, properly feminine female—settlers.
Tropes of masculinity are equally present in This is the Place, which, like the Voortrekker Monument, was erected to commemorate a past victory in the service of refashioning its settler group’s public image in the mid twentieth century. Founded by prophet Joseph Smith in 1830 in upstate New York, the LDS Church’s followers repeatedly fled persecution by migrating westward. After Smith was killed in mob violence, his successor, Brigham Young, led a majority of Mormons to the Great Salt Lake in a region that was already inhabited by the Northern Shoshone and Timpanogos Ute indigenous groups (
Christy 1978). The monument’s title refers to Brigham Young’s alleged declaration at his first view of the valley—from the site where the monument was placed.
5More than merely separating themselves from US society, nineteenth-century Mormons attempted to build a polygamous theocracy in the Great Basin—a project that met wide resistance from other white populations in the United States who cast Latter-day Saints not only as un-American, but as less than fully “white,” associating the practice of polygamy with a savage racial Other (
Reeve 2015). By the 1890s, Latter-day Saints were forced to abandon polygamy and yield much of their political and civic control for Utah to achieve US statehood. Decades later, twentieth-century Mormons working to gain acceptance within American society downplayed their former radical marriage practices and cast their mid-nineteenth-century migration as part of—or even the epitome of—the US overlanding experience by erecting pioneer monuments to celebrate prominent Mormon men.
6Both monuments invoke the perceived natural hierarchy of gender to carry out their project of cultural recuperation. Even more so than the Voortrekker Monument, This is the Place focuses on prominent male leaders. Sculptor Mahonri Young placed his grandfather, prophet Brigham Young, in a central position, standing atop the central pillar, accompanied by LDS leaders Heber C. Kimball and Wilford Woodruff (see
Figure 6). The three men’s position of height relative to the viewer and other monument figures emphasizes their command over the space and its people, both white and indigenous.
7 Other well-known LDS men appear around the base of the central pillar, but their placement around the pillar and on horseback emphasizes their dominance over other, lesser men elsewhere on the monument (see
Figure 2). Below them, the first company of LDS settlers who accompanied Brigham Young to Utah drives wagons across the front of the monument’s long base. Most are mounted on horseback or carry rifles like those in the Voortrekker Monument to demonstrate their masculine power. Prominent non-LDS westerners stand in groups at the corners of the base and line the back of the monument like the Voortrekker Monument’s external sentries. Their placement below LDS leaders and behind the First Company, combined with their less refined attire, indicate their lower social status and suggest that these overly or insufficiently masculine men paved the way for the Mormon migration and founding of Utah.
The attire of these various figures in This is the Place establishes their racial and class status, reinforcing the message of the inevitability of LDS dominance and their status within the hierarchy of hegemonic masculinity. At the monument’s top, the highest-status Mormon men wear formal long coats, waistcoats, and stock ties, establishing their patriarchal authority through their class status. The LDS men placed below Young, Kimball, and Woodruff are less formally attired than the Mormon leaders, thus supporting the authority of the three leading figures on the highest plinth. Like Boers in the Voortrekker Monument frieze, laboring LDS men encircling the central plinth and driving the wagon train across the front of the monument’s base wear collared shirts, sometimes topped with jackets or vests. The most informally attired ride horses or carry rifles to reinforce their status as civilized men above other white men who failed to permanently settle the Great Basin and above the region’s indigenes.
Atop the two ends of the wide base are groups of non-Mormon white men wearing somewhat exotic attire. Like the Voortrekker frieze British and Portuguese soldiers, the group of Spanish missionaries in long robes accompanied by soldiers in sweeping capes appear effeminate by 1940s standards, despite having guns and a horse. The Anglo-American fur traders on the other corner and the mountain men on the monument reverse wear fringed coats and rustic animal skin caps that link them to overly aggressive, animalistic indigenes. The non-Mormon’s less civilized attire and implied engagement with indigenous people place them lower on the social hierarchy than the Mormon leaders on the central plinth and even the lower-status LDS men on the monument’s base who used their knowledge of the region to settle. In a large plaque on the monument’s reverse, the men of the doomed non-Mormon Donner Party—who attempted to carve a wagon road through Emigration Canyon in 1846, literally clearing a path through which Young would lead the LDS First Company the following year—strain like animals against ropes to move a single wagon. Not only do they remove their jackets and roll up their shirt sleeves like laboring Voortrekkers and the men of the LDS First Company on the front of the monument’s base, but three of these non-LDS men even labor naked from the waist up. Yet like the shirtless black servant in the Voortrekker frieze (but unlike that frieze’s even less clothed indigenous warriors), these white men’s hypermasculinity is constrained: they turn their backs to the viewer rather than reveal their nakedness.
Like most American pioneer monuments of the era, This is the Place largely erases indigenous peoples from its narrative of white settlement, implying that the Great Basin was a
terra nullius awaiting LDS settlement (
Prescott 2019, chaps. 1–2). The only indigenous figure included in the monument is Washakie (
Figure 7), a male Northern Shoshone leader who temporarily joined the LDS Church and allied with Mormon settlers (
Patterson 2020, p. 45). By presenting Washakie as the only indigenous individual in the narrative of Utah settlement, and by placing him on the back, surrounded by and in the shadow of Spanish missionaries who preceded LDS attempts to convert the region’s indigenous populations, This is the Place indicates that the only acceptable role for Native Americans in Mormon Utah was collaboration. Excluding images of Native warriors like those that appear in nearly half of the Voortrekker frieze panels reinforces Mormon fantasies of Utah as an empty land to which the LDS were called by God and evokes the popular American trope of the “vanishing Indian.” (
Blee and O’Brien 2019;
Brantlinger 2003) Excluding Native women further ensured that indigenous populations would disappear, yielding space to the descendants of LDS pioneer mothers. While the indigenous Other in South Africa was always numerically dominant and therefore unerasable, This is the Place reassures Mormons and all Americans that their taking of indigenous lands was justified, both by a fantasized lack of indigenes, and because settlers were welcomed by the indigenes who were present, like Washakie.
Moreover, the depiction of Washakie feminizes him. In contrast to extant photographs of the Native leader wearing Western dress, Mahonri Young chose to portray Washakie wearing an indigenous robe draped over his otherwise bare chest. Washakie’s long hair, soft facial features, and slender build and the peace pipe he cradles—signaling his intention to yield to LDS civilization—all place him in the position of the feminized Other, following contemporaneous representations of “pacified” Native Americans as effeminate (
Scott 2011, pp. 20–47). Of course, by excluding Native American women from this and other US pioneer monuments altogether, they hide the reality of miscegenation on the frontier and further the fantasy that the region will only produce civilized white society (
Prescott 2019, chap. 1).
Both This is the Place and the Voortrekker Monument use gendered imagery to create a racialized Other outside the bounds of acceptable masculinity, whether not masculine enough or too masculine, juxtaposed with the white settler (and especially the settler leader) as the exemplar of civilized masculinity. While the Voortrekker frieze portrays hypermasculine black Africans as animalistic and subhuman, This is the Place presents a feminized Native American as more assimilable; those who fail to convert to Mormonism or other lesser Christian faiths simply disappear, yielding to white men’s dominance. And because both Boer and Mormon men appear as strong and authoritative, civilized but not effete, their settlement projects are implied to be even more just and more divinely ordained than those of other European-descended groups with whom they competed for land in the 1830s and with whom they jockeyed for equality (or superiority) in the 1940s.
3. Containing Women
Just as This is the Place and Voortrekker monuments employed similar portrayals of 1840s hegemonic white masculinity to support the cultural project of the 1940s, they likewise utilized racialized and class-specific imagery of white femininity. Both 1940s monuments looked back to similar ideals for womanhood that had emerged in western Europe and in European settler societies in North America and South Africa in the mid-nineteenth century. However, in their parallel efforts, they each diverged in important ways in representing idealized nineteenth-century white womanhood. The Voortrekker Monument embraced a self-sacrificing Volksmoeder that paralleled the sainted US Pioneer Mother. This is the Place, in contrast, downplayed pioneer mothers and demoted Mormon women from iconic embodiments of white civilization to obedient supporting figures, obscuring the realities of LDS women’s exceptional contributions to nineteenth-century Utah to avoid the lingering taint of polygamy.
Just as with masculinity, however, femininity is hegemonic, meaning that women have been and are defined in relation to men, children, and other women according to class and race. In the nineteenth century, western Europe and its settler societies embraced an emphasis on women’s domestic labor and reproduction. Higher status women typically set themselves apart by focusing on decorative tasks such as needlework, while quotidian tasks such as laundry—let alone physically demanding field labor—were erased or passed off to servants of a lower class and/or racialized status (
Brink 1990, pp. 273–92;
Petzold 2007, pp. 115–31;
Prescott 2007, chap. 1). Despite the realities of physically demanding labor, settlers struggled to promote that domestic ideal. So, for instance, to protect their pale skin, juxtaposed against darkness and non-European physiognomy, female settlers in the US, Canada, and South Africa wore wide-brimmed bonnets. That those same sunbonnets (or kappies, as they were known to the Dutch-speaking Boers) also constrained women’s vision and actions was no accident, and in public memory over the course of the twentieth century in the US and South Africa, those sunbonnets and kappies came to symbolize the very cultural ideals of longsuffering nurturance to which the women who wore them were held in the mid-nineteenth century (
Matheson 2009;
De Beer 2009). In the early twentieth century, cultural memory of those settler women converged into a popular image of a white mother whose suffering paid for twentieth-century settler societies’ relative ease, prosperity, and uncontested land ownership (
Prescott 2019, chaps. 2). Clad in a long dress and sunbonnet/kappie and accompanied by children, the South African Volksmoeder and American Pioneer Mother were symbolic mothers to their respective nations, their purity embodying white dominance in each settler society (
Brink 1990;
Petzold 2007;
Prescott 2019, chap. 2).
Like many US pioneer monuments of the same era, the Voortrekker Monument places a bronze Volksmoeder in a position of honor at the monument’s entrance. As
Figure 8 shows, she stands gazing out past the viewer, her white face protected by a wide-brimmed kappie, while the children tugging at her long skirts look to her for support and comfort (
Prescott 2019, chap. 2, cf). Sculpted by Anton von Wouw—known for the 1913 Vrouemonument depicting Boer women suffering in British concentration camps during the Boer wars, which represented one of the earliest visual representations of Volksmoeder ideology (
Marschall 2010, pp. 238–39)—she stands at eye level at the center of the north façade, placed in comparison with but physically below the four guardian patriarchs at the building’s corners, as was believed to be her natural station. Like those simply-dressed male trekkers, her kappie and plain gown establishes her middling class status. The Volksmoeder is defined through her relationships to the Boer men above her, the children at her feet, and four wildebeests to either side of her. Standing in for the indigene and symbolizing the triumph of civilization over savagery, these wild creatures ensure her purity by allowing the avoidance of black African men assumed to be animalistic and prone to sexual violence against women. The
Official Guide to the monument says that the wildebeests “portray the ever threatening dangers of Africa,” though their “retreating attitude … suggest that the dangers are receding and that the victory of civilization is an accomplished fact” (
Board of Control of the Voortrekker Monument 1955, p. 35) Black women, as we will discuss, are completely erased.
The frieze inside the Voortrekker Monument also contains multiple images of bonneted white women acting as mothers and supporting white male leaders. Visitors see images of settler women riding on wagon boxes or looking on as men navigate difficult wagon trails, women accompanying their husbands on the trek, and women doing domestic labor. But, additionally, the Voortrekker frieze shows Boer women playing active roles that expand the Volksmoeder ideal, which in the 1940s would help replace the image of the female concentration camp victim with the worthy helpmate. For example, the panel entitled “Women spur men on” (Panel 18) represents the popular notion that despite many losses, Boer women refused to admit defeat and leave Natal. Instead, the women demanded that the Boer men avenge settlers killed in conflict with indigenes, bearing up under difficulty when the men cannot do so on their own, supporting their men, as would be expected in the natural hierarchy of gender and family. Yet unlike oft-told stories of Susanna Smit’s declaration that the women would prefer to walk barefoot over the Drakensberg Mountains than submit to British authority, this scene depicts unnamed women who gently encourage their despondent husbands.
Moreover, two other frieze scenes depict Boer women taking up male roles. “The women at
Saailaer” (panel 23) depicts women doing agricultural and defensive labor while their men are away at war with African indigenes. “The Battle of
Vegkop” even depicts Boer women taking part in the heat of battle. One woman even joins the men on scaffolding attached to the wagons to shoot the attacking Ndebele warriors.
8 Aside from a few women appearing without the protection of kappies in indoor or urban scenes and—more strikingly—while defending themselves against savage indigenes, the sculptors depicted all female trekkers as properly attired ladies. Afrikaners thus depicted Voortrekker women as active to help diffuse the memory of female victimhood at the hands of the British and remind of the “natural” order, where white women held authority over black men and women while helping their white men.
Despite including scores of black South African males, the frieze nearly excludes black South African women. Black South African women were, as Anne McClintock reminds, culturally significant in white settler society in the twentieth century, since they acted as domestics, nannies, and mother figures for white children of a range of classes (
McClintock 1995, conclusion). But according to Rankin and Schneider, the only proposed depiction of a black servant woman quickly disappeared from early plans for the Voortrekker frieze (
Rankin and Schneider 2020b, pp. 13–15). In fact, black African women only appear in one out of the twenty-seven frieze panels, and then as four of the many polygamous wives of a savage Zulu chief (panel 25, “Death of Dingane”). These African women wear only neckpieces, girdles, and small front aprons, in sharp contrast to the Boer women who are consistently depicted wearing long dresses and wide-brimmed kappies. By defining South African motherhood so firmly as white, Afrikaners of the 1940s disavowed the women who were intimate in their homes while celebrating a certain version of Boer femininity as part of their project of legitimizing settler rule.
Both the Voortrekker and This is the Place monuments depict self-sacrificing white mothers dressed in long gowns and wide-brimmed bonnets while erasing indigenous women. But juxtaposing their positioning relative to other characters in each monument’s sculptural elements reveals a surprising disjuncture in the two settler societies’ use of gender as a means of supporting their colonial legacy and proclaiming their contemporary superiority. While the Voortrekker Monument celebrates the heroic white Volksmoeder and the white Afrikaner family unit, This is the Place nearly erases the contribution of female Mormon settlers as part of sidestepping the issue of the polygamous Mormon family. This comparison between the monuments brings into relief how both used a raced and classed gender to reimagine their nineteenth-century settler forebears in the service of twentieth-century efforts to establish themselves as integral to the narrative of national expansion.
This is the Place differs from most early-twentieth-century American pioneer monuments, which celebrated a self-sacrificing Pioneer Mother that bears striking resemblance to the Voortrekker’s Volksmoeder (
Prescott 2019, chap. 2). In its representation of a non-Mormon woman—the female member of the Donner Party represented on the monument’s reverse in
Figure 9—This is the Place offers a particularly servile Pioneer Mother; whereas the Voortrekker Volksmoeder and best-known US Pioneer Mother statues are placed centrally facing the viewer, the Donner Party figure trails behind her wagon company. We see the non-LDS Pioneer Mother almost in profile, turned outward toward the viewer just enough to reveal her face. While the men around her move with decisive, physical action, straining against the difficult mountain terrain, the Donner Party mother trudges along, carrying a baby and leading her young son. Despite the importance of her role as a pioneer mother, she is clearly subordinate to the men leading her company.
Rather than representing Mormon women in more powerful roles, This is the Place was even
more circumspect of their contributions. Unlike the Voortrekker Monument’s celebration of Boer women’s assistance to their men, This is the Place represents only three nearly-anonymized Mormon women in even more passive positions than the Donner mother. In reality, while the practice of polygamy contributed to an exceptionally patriarchal society, it also afforded Mormon women opportunities for religious and civic leadership that were unusual for the era. Because many large polygamous families were spread across multiple estates, wives headed estates when their husbands were not present and collaborated to efficiently consolidate household work and childcare, freeing time for wives to also pursue education and establish careers (
Beecher 1981, pp. 288–89). After abandoning the practice of polygamy near the turn of the twentieth century, however, Mormon women lost much of the institutional power that they had obtained in the nineteenth century, as the Correlation movement brought the formerly independent Mormon women’s auxiliary, the Relief Society, under control of the all-male priesthood (
Steenblik et al. 2016, pp. 24–25).
Despite this earlier abandonment of polygamy, in the 1940s, Latter-day Saints were still struggling to overcome the lasting public association of their religion with the practice.
9 Thus as he developed the This is the Place Monument in the 1940s, Mahonri Young was faced with the challenge of representing Utah’s Mormon settlers as heroic, founding Americans—despite the fact that nineteenth-century Latter-day Saints maintained social practices that were widely excoriated by their contemporaries in the broader nation. While the Voortrekker frieze depicted African polygamy to reinforce racial divisions between white settlers and indigenes, Young carefully avoided the issue in This is the Place, giving no hint of the marriage practice that was already a defining feature of Mormonism by the time the settlers arrived. He accomplished this by minimizing the presence of women in the monument altogether—of the dozens of figures, there are only three named Mormon women and one anonymous female member of the Donner Party. The monument thus reverses the Mormon stereotype in American visual culture featuring Mormon men surrounded by throngs of women (
Bunker and Bitton 1983, pp. 123–36).
Young seems to have justified the lack of Mormon women by focusing exclusively on the first company that arrived in the Salt Lake Valley on July 22–24, 1847, which was overwhelmingly male. The frieze on the front of the right central base depicts members of this company, most identified by name on the text panel below. The three female figures are named as Clarissa Decker Young, Ellen Sanders Kimball, and Harriet Page Wheeler Decker Young, who were the only three women in the 145-person company (
Figure 10). Lest viewers imagine that the women were sister wives, the text also notes the names of each of the women’s husbands, clarifying that Clarissa Decker and Harriet Page Wheeler Decker were married to two different Youngs (Clarissa to Brigham Young, and Harriet to his younger brother, Lorenzo Dow Young). In truth, all three women
were polygamous wives—their sister wives came in later companies. Clarissa Decker Young and Ellen Sanders Kimball actually were members of the two largest polygamous families in early Mormonism, but the monument obscures this fact for viewers (
Kimball 1986, p. 122;
Johnson 1987, p. 60).
Just as This is the Place obscures the polygamous relationships of the women it represents, it is mute about the work that they did on behalf of Mormon migration and settlement, with the women only identified as wives. In fact, beyond the extraordinary work they undertook in raising families in a new colony where food and housing were dangerously inadequate, all three women were recognized by their community for their heroic actions in supporting migration and settlement (
Whitney 1904, vol. 4, pp. 63–69;
Jakeman 1915, pp. 9–10). Unlike the three heroic men atop the central plinth, the three original female settlers are relegated to a servile role—despite their high class status, indicated by the carriage behind them—accepting the protection of their powerful male leaders. Juxtaposed with the Mormon men depicted ahead of them on the frieze along the monument’s front, the women are strikingly passive, in what would have been seen as their natural role. While the men march forward, driving oxen, carrying rifles, or merely pointing forward, the women are rigidly stationary, their arms at their sides or quietly folded. Even the young boys are moving onward with their dogs—but the women just silently stand by.
As other white Americans embraced greater public roles for women, and even celebrated them in pioneer monuments, albeit in carefully conscribed ways, Mormon monuments placed women safely within nuclear families, presenting women who obediently follow the direction of active, prominent men. Minimalizing the presence and power of white women in the This is the Place Monument—and excluding indigenous women altogether—did more than just reaffirm colonization as a male-driven process—it helped reimagine Mormon settlers as core participants in the national project of nation-building, rather than radical others whose Americanness and even whiteness were suspect through their practice of polygamy.