Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah.[1]: 13 As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the Deseret News.[1]: 74 She studied philosophy, English, history, and speech at the University of Utah.[1]: 59 She graduated in 1943 with a degree in sociology.[2] On March 25, 1943, she married D. James Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple.[1]: 59
In 1959, she served as a delegate to the White House Conference on Youth.[2] During this year, she became an associate editor for "Era of Youth," a section of the Improvement Era that was targeted to adolescents. In 1971, the church magazine New Era was launched, which was patterned after the "Era of Youth" section of the Improvement Era.
In 1978, church presidentSpencer W. Kimball appointed Cannon as the successor to Ruth H. Funk as the general president of the Young Women organization. During her tenure, the young women of the church began holding a yearly meeting in the Salt Lake Tabernacle; the meeting was intended for all adolescent girls of the church and their mothers, and it was broadcast by satellite around the world. Also during her tenure, young women classes began being held on Sundays as part of the church's consolidated worship services. Cannon was released in 1984 and was succeeded by Ardeth G. Kapp.
Cannon died on May 19, 2003, in Salt Lake City.[2]
References
^ abcdMetcalf, Holly C. (2011). Love's Banner: Memories of the Life of Elaine Cannon. Kennmore, Washington: Lamb and Lion. ISBN9780615428994.