After the passing of the Edmund- Tucker Act, women in Utah that were once allowed to vote had that right taken from them. Sarah Elizabeth Anderson, a true advocate for Women's Suffrage, challenged this by attempting to vote in Ogden's precinct. She left her house here, walked three blocks south to the Second Precinct, and declared she wanted to register to vote. When, the clerk, refused on the grounds she was a woman, she took him to court! The local judge ruled that all women, did indeed have the right to vote. The case was appealed to the territorial supreme court in Salt Lake City, and that case, she lost. In 1895, Utah became a state and Sarah Anderson and other woman leaders drafted a petition for women's right to vote. Women voters later used their voice to elect Sarah Anderson to the State House of Representation.Sarah Anderson's house is long gone, replaced by a modern, commercial building at 2261 Kiesel Ave, Ogden, UT. However, Sarah Anderson's legacy lives on.