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Alice Smith <I>Merrill</I> Horne

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Alice Smith Merrill Horne

Birth
Fillmore, Millard County, Utah, USA
Death
7 Oct 1948 (aged 80)
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Burial
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA Add to Map
Plot
PARK_3_8_2E
Memorial ID
View Source
Horne, Alice Merrill, (Mrs.) a native of Fillmore, Utah, daughter of Clarence and Bathsheba Merrill, a resident of Salt Lake City for the last 30 years. Married to George H. Horne. Children: Dr. Lyman Merrill, Virginia, Zorah, Almbert Merrill, Mrs. L.E. Winder. Art Dealer. Writer. Served as a member of the third State Legislature; author of bill creating the Utah Art Institute, now having its 27th annual exhibition of fine arts. Dealer in paintings and oriental rugs; also owns a private gallery. Conducts traveling exhibitions to various cities in the state. For 15 years, served on Board of National Woman’s Relief Society, as chairman of art, public health. Author: “Columbus,” “Westward Ho!,” “Devotees and Their Shrines”; a handbook of Utah Art and various poems. Member: Ass’n for Encouragement of Inter-Mountain Artists, D.A.R., Daughters of Pioneers of Utah. Home: 868 Second Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah.
-from the book: U.S., Women of the West, 1928
Horne, Alice Merrill, (Mrs.) a native of Fillmore, Utah, daughter of Clarence and Bathsheba Merrill, a resident of Salt Lake City for the last 30 years. Married to George H. Horne. Children: Dr. Lyman Merrill, Virginia, Zorah, Almbert Merrill, Mrs. L.E. Winder. Art Dealer. Writer. Served as a member of the third State Legislature; author of bill creating the Utah Art Institute, now having its 27th annual exhibition of fine arts. Dealer in paintings and oriental rugs; also owns a private gallery. Conducts traveling exhibitions to various cities in the state. For 15 years, served on Board of National Woman’s Relief Society, as chairman of art, public health. Author: “Columbus,” “Westward Ho!,” “Devotees and Their Shrines”; a handbook of Utah Art and various poems. Member: Ass’n for Encouragement of Inter-Mountain Artists, D.A.R., Daughters of Pioneers of Utah. Home: 868 Second Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah.
-from the book: U.S., Women of the West, 1928


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