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A Mormon Maid poster
Public Domain

A Mormon Maid

1917 · Friedman Company / Hiller & Wilk · Dir. Robert Z. Leonard

This silent melodrama is set against the 1840s westward migration of the Mormons. Dora, a young woman, and her family are saved from an Indian attack by a Mormon community traveling to Utah. They join the wagon train. Dora is pursued by two men, one a recent convert, the other a scheming elder with a stable of wives. The Mormon elder wants her in his harem. When the mother kills herself from revulsion toward polygamy, the daughter must consider her own future and the man she loves. One of Mae Murray's few surviving films, this was intended by Robert Leonard to be a thoughtful drama about the goods and evils of Mormonism, but today it is generally considered pure anti-Mormon propaganda.

Confidence
100
— Legal Reasoning —

Why this status applies

The film 'A Mormon Maid' was released in the United States on February 14, 1917. Under US copyright law, any work published or registered for copyright before January 1, 1928, has reached the end of its statutory copyright term and has entered the public domain. Registration records for this title exist (LP10313, filed February 24, 1917, by The Friedman Co.), but because the film was published more than 95 years ago, it is ineligible for further copyright protection regardless of whether it was renewed. Its status as a public domain work is definitive based solely on its 1917 release date.
— Cited Sources —

Supporting facts

Research summary based on cited sources, not legal advice. Always consult a qualified copyright attorney before commercial use.