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The available biographical information about Kate Thomas is sparse. She was born to Richard Kendall and Caroline Stockdale Thomas in Salt Lake City on 2 July 1871. R. K. Thomas was a prominent retailer, interested in theater. As well as his retailing efforts, he was at one time a choreographer for the Salt Lake Theater for John T. Caine. We can assume that Kate spent some time in her youth minding the family store, but it was the theater, arts, and letters which captured her imagination.
When Kate was 24, her father transformed the family barn into Salt Lake City's first little theater, The Barnacle. The remodeling job was outstanding -- a balcony was created in the hayloft, the stage was built over the horse stalls, and the orchestra pit was the buggy shed. After several puppet shows, and homespun productions which the Thomas children both wrote and performed, The Barnacle caught the attention of the adult theater audience, and the old barn went professional.
Kate Thomas, like her brother Elbert, the Senator, attended LDS Business College and the University of Deseret. She in turn became a confident educator of young women through the
The attitudes of her poems and the characters in her short stories suggest that she was a lonely child, if outwardly vivacious, and lived in a world of anticipation and fantasy. People who remember her in her later years said she was full of fun and quite outgoing, but at least in her youth she seems to have been extremely shy of young men. For one reason or another, she never married. Her writing is full of unrequited love for men, and later, an almost sensual passion for women.
The body of her work reflects a basic loyalty to Utah, the Mormon Church and Mormon culture, yet she herself did not spend many of her young adult years in the Salt Lake Valley. She travelled frequently to the East and West coasts, as well as to Europe, and spent several years in New York City in what is now Greenwich Village. From there she wrote her educational articles for the various Mormon publications. But her time in New York was a time of spiritual searching and political activism. She actively explored religions as diverse as Roman Catholicism and Buddhism. Her works include guides to the practice of "complete Yoga consciousness." She participated in "Peace Meetings" during the First World War. Those meetings may have been related to the Debsian Socialist Opposition, which must have had some following in the Village, or to the "Peace Through Victory" campaign of the government. At the war's conclusion, she campaigned openly for the establishment of the League of Nations.
In her later years, she returned to Utah and was a patron, if not a participant, in the arts and theater. Her writings then tapered off; there are few published works included in the collection after 1930, or about the time she was fifty years old. In later years she received national recognition for what is probably her worst poem,
The works of Kate Thomas, 1871-1950, held by the Utah State Historical Society, are divided into three major sections: published writings which have been clipped from publications, unbound hand and typewritten drafts of published and unpublished work, and her scrapbooks, notebooks, and journals which contain reflections, fragments, and extensive unpublished poetry and short stories. The most important part of the Kate Thomas collection is the scrapbooks, notebooks, and journals. The collection concludes with the Memorial Record from her funeral service. An annotated bibliography of the stories serves as an initial guide to the works.
Kate Thomas Papers, 1871-1950, Utah State Historical Society.
Gift of the Elbert D. Thomas family.
The Kate Thomas Papers are the physical property of the Utah Historical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. Literary rights, including copyright, may belong to the authors or their heirs and assigns. Please contact the Historical Society for information regarding specific use of this collection.