Mormon Polygamy: A HistorySignature Books, 1986 - 307 Seiten In this comprehensive survey of Mormon Polygamy, Richard Van Wagoner details, with precision and detachment, the tumultuous reaction among insiders and outsiders to plural marriage. In an honest, methodical way, he traces the origins, the peculiarities common to the midwestern and later Utah periods, and post-1890 new marriages. Drawing heavily on first-hand accounts, he outlines the theological underpinnings and the personal trauma associated with this lifestyle. What emerges is a portrait that neither discounts nor exaggerates the historical evidence. He presents polygamy in context, neither condemning nor defending, while relevant contemporary accounts are treated sympathetically but interpreted critically. No period of Mormon history is emphasized over another. The result is a systematic view that is unavailable in studies of isolated periods or in the repetitions of folklore that only disguise the reality of what polygamy was. Scattered throughout the western United States today are an estimated 30,000 fundamentalist Mormons who still live "the principle." They, too, are a part of Joseph Smith's legacy and are included in this study. ... Publisher description. |
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Seite 125
... began pursuing a variety of other equally ineffective measures to maintain plural marriage . When federal raids made shambles of Mormon communities in the mid - 1880s , for example , George Q. Cannon suggested to President Taylor that ...
... began pursuing a variety of other equally ineffective measures to maintain plural marriage . When federal raids made shambles of Mormon communities in the mid - 1880s , for example , George Q. Cannon suggested to President Taylor that ...
Seite 134
... began immediately taking over the escheated prop- erty . Church leaders , scattered over much of the western United States and Mexico , were confident that once their case came before the U.S. Supreme Court , the property would be ...
... began immediately taking over the escheated prop- erty . Church leaders , scattered over much of the western United States and Mexico , were confident that once their case came before the U.S. Supreme Court , the property would be ...
Seite 203
... began to tell his sons about Benjamin F. Johnson . He told them that in Salt Lake City in the 1920s the angelic form of Johnson appeared to him and told him of the mission he was to perform . LeBaron promised one day to pass the ...
... began to tell his sons about Benjamin F. Johnson . He told them that in Salt Lake City in the 1920s the angelic form of Johnson appeared to him and told him of the mission he was to perform . LeBaron promised one day to pass the ...
Inhalt
THE RESTORATION OF ALL THINGS | 1 |
STIRRINGS IN NAUVOO | 17 |
PROTECTING THE LORDS ANOINTED | 29 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Abraham H Allred announced anti-polygamy April asked authority believe Bennett brethren Brigham Young University brother Cannon celestial marriage church leaders Church of Jesus church president Council counselor court covenant Cowdery Day Saints declared Deseret diary doctrine Emma Smith Ervil eternity excommunicated Fundamentalist George Q Heber History husband Hyrum Smith ibid Ivins Jesus Christ John Henry Smith John Taylor Joseph F Joseph Smith Journal of Mormon July June Kimball later Latter-day Saints LDS Archives LeBaron letter living Lord Lyman M.A. thesis March married Mexico Mormon polygamy Nauvoo non-Mormon officials Orson Pratt plural marriage plural wife plural wives polyg polygamists polygamy post-Manifesto practice President Joseph President Woodruff priesthood principle prophet Quinn Quorum reported revelation Salt Lake City Salt Lake Tribune Sarah Short Creek Sidney Rigdon spiritual wifery stake president statehood statement Taylor and Cowley territorial tion told Twelve Wilford Woodruff William woman women wrote