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A Myth About David Whitmer?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 4:46 pm
by _Ray A
Most of us have heard the story of David Whitmer having his fields spread with plaster of paris "by three strangers", thus allowing him to leave for Harmony to meet Joseph Smith.
According to the editors of Meridian, who have published a revised history of Joseph Smith by his mother, this story is doubtful:
As George A. Smith continued to study the book and compared it to other sources, he began to feel there were factual mistakes, or at least the need to double-check stories for accuracy. For instance, in Lucy's history she tells a story about how three strangers showed up unexpectedly and spread David Whitmer's fields with plaster of paris, thus allowing him to leave for Harmony to meet Joseph Smith for the first time. George A. wrote to David Whitmer to verify the story, but received no response. 7In the early months of 1859, George A. and assistant historian Wilford Woodruff continued to write inquiries to check the details of the book for accuracy.
Meridian.
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Re: A Myth About David Whitmer?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 5:11 pm
by _Ray A
Also of interest is the account of William Smith, the Prophet's temperamental and sometimes violent brother:
Since William Smith, Joseph's brother, had made his own rival claim to be Joseph's successor, Lucy Smith's positive portrayal of him in her history probably concerned Brigham, and stood as just another evidence to him that the book contained distortions. Through Lucy's eyes we see William as a valiant missionary, a fighter for the restored gospel, and a recipient of revelation in a dire moment in Missouri . In reality, William was volatile, unstable, and controversial. He had a checkered past, having often been at odds with his prophet brother. Disagreeing with Joseph during a meeting in Kirtland, enraged William attempted to throw him out and inflicted him with an injury that Joseph felt occasionally the rest of his life. During the dark days at Far West when Joseph was taken to Liberty Jail, William exclaimed, “Damn him, Joseph Smith ought to have been hung up by the neck years ago and damn him, he will get it now anyhow.” 14 [xiv] In his last encounter with Joseph in spring 1844, William asked him to give him a city lot in Nauvoo near the temple. Joseph said he would do it with great pleasure if he would build a house and live upon it there, but he would not give him this lot, worth one thousand dollars, to sell. William agreed to the terms, and within hours an application was made by a Mr. Ivins to the recorder to know if that lot was clear and belonged to William, for the Prophet's brother had sold it to him for five hundred dollars. Joseph, hearing this, directed the clerk not to make the transfer, and William's last words to Joseph were threatening.
After the death of his brothers, a somewhat humbled William petitioned to be ordained the Presiding Patriarch of the Church, a position he had legitimate claim to as the oldest lineal descendant of the Smith family. He was ordained to that position on May 25, 1845, but within a few days he claimed this gave him the right to succeed Joseph as the leader of the entire Church, and by October 1845, he was excommunicated. An aspiring man has to find a home for his aspirations, and William went looking. Expelled from the Church, he temporarily became a leader with James Strang's group. Excommunicated there, by 1850 he began teaching that legitimate leadership for the Church had to come from within the Prophet's immediate family. Since Joseph Smith III was too young, he suggested he should be sustained as president pro tem, “guardian of the seed of Joseph,” until the boy came of age. By 1854 he was seeking to be restored to his former position as an Apostle in the Church, and then after 1860, when Joseph Smith III was sustained as president of the Reorganized Church in Plano , Illinois , he hoped to find a high office in the new organization.
Given this background, no wonder the First Presidency's 1865 recall of Lucy's book was so strong in singling out William: “Those who have read the history of William Smith, and who knew him, know the statements made in that book respecting him, when he came out of Missouri, to be utterly false.” 15The timing of the recall was probably also significant, coming so soon after Joseph's sons had newly organized a church and were advancing succession claims. Brigham didn't want Lucy's book to bolster their effort. He may have felt the same way about the book's rosy portrayal of Emma, who supported her sons in the Reorganized Church .
Re: A Myth About David Whitmer?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 7:44 pm
by _CaliforniaKid
Interesting, Ray. I wonder if Lucy's misleading anecdotes were intentionally crafted by her, or if memory simply failed her in her old age.
Re: A Myth About David Whitmer?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 7:48 pm
by _Ray A
CaliforniaKid wrote:Interesting, Ray. I wonder if Lucy's misleading anecdotes were intentionally crafted by her, or if memory simply failed her in her old age.
I think she had a penchant for grandiosity, Chris. And imaginative tales. If memory failed I think she just purposely embellished stories.
Incidentally, I also think the Proctors may have done a good job here, by trying to eliminate the myths and incorrect portions.
Re: A Myth About David Whitmer?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 11:20 pm
by _gramps
Ray A wrote:CaliforniaKid wrote:Interesting, Ray. I wonder if Lucy's misleading anecdotes were intentionally crafted by her, or if memory simply failed her in her old age.
I think she had a penchant for grandiosity, Chris. And imaginative tales. If memory failed I think she just purposely embellished stories.
Incidentally, I also think the Proctors may have done a good job here, by trying to eliminate the myths and incorrect portions.
I think the earliest women of the restoration have been given a pass on the accuracy of their stories. Grandiose and imaginative. That is about right.
Some people call that lying, when it has do to with real history.