Session #62 · 1911–13

Speech #620246987

Wood before she left that he would stay at the colony " as long as the last dog stayed." On the broad acres of the Mormon farms in the Chihuahua colonies thousands of trees are laden with luscious fruit. melons ripened on thousands of vines. and alfalfa is just ready for the harvest. Hundreds of acres of vegetables were left ungathered. This Is one of the phases of the material loss that the exiled Mormons suffered. This special dispatch which appeared in the Arizona Democrat of Phoenix. on August 1. gives an account of the condition of the refugees on their arrival in El Paso. Tex.: Out In an old abandoned lumber shed. on Magoffin Avenue. between Cotton Avenue and the Texas & Pacific Rallway tracks. nearly 300 American women and children are living until bette quarters can be procured for them. They are exiles.
Keywords matched
refugees

Classification

Target group
Sentiment
Neutral
Stereotyping
No
Confidence
95%
Model
gemini-2.0-flash
Framing
Economic contributor Victim

Speaker & context

Speaker
CARL HAYDEN
Party
D
Chamber
H
State
AZ
Gender
M
Date
Speech ID
620246987
Paragraph
#1
← Prev Next →