
Sarah Melissa Granger Kimball (1818–1898) was a pioneer advocate for women’s rights and an early leader in the Relief Society. Born in Phelps, New York, to a prominent family, she joined the Church in 1833 at age fifteen. She was one of twenty-three women known to have attended Joseph Smith’s School of the Prophets in Kirtland.
In Nauvoo, Kimball organized a charitable sewing society that evolved into the Relief Society when it was officially organized on March 17, 1842. She believed this founding marked the beginning of a new era of opportunity for women worldwide. After crossing the plains to Salt Lake City in 1851, driving her own team, she was appointed Relief Society president of the Fifteenth Ward.
Kimball served as ward Relief Society president for forty years while also holding positions as general secretary of the Relief Society and president of the Utah Woman Suffrage Association. Her gravestone reads “Strong-Minded and Warm-Hearted,” fitting tribute to a woman who declared that “education and agitation are our best weapons of warfare” in advancing women’s rights.