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[[fr:Specific works/No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith/Index/Chapter 24]]
[[fr:Specific works/No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith/Index/Chapter 24]]

Revision as of 06:06, 24 May 2010



A FAIR Analysis of:
Criticism of Mormonism/Books
A work by author: Fawn Brodie

Claims made in "Chapter 24: The Wives of the Prophet"

334

Claim
  • The number of women sealed to Joseph Smith may have exceeded fifty.

Author's source(s)
  • William Hepworth Dixon: New America (1867), p. 225.
Response

336

Claim
  • At least twelve of the women sealed to Joseph were already married with living husbands.

Author's source(s)
  • No source provided.
Response
  •  History unclear or in error: the number was lower; Brodie's evidentiary standards are weak. She notes that the evidence for one of these women (Mrs. Levi Hancock) is "only word-of-mouth tradition in the Hancock family."
  • Polyandry

338

Claim
  • "Most" of Joseph wives were married to him for "time [that is, life] and eternity."

Author's source(s)
  • No source provided.
Response

339

Claim
  • Emma selected the Partridge sisters and the Lawrence sisters as plural wives for Joseph.

Author's source(s)
  • No source provided.
Response

342

Claim
  • Emma burned the revelation on plural marriage.

Author's source(s)
  • No source provided.
Response
  • This is likely true.

343

Claim
  • Joseph said that he would have Emma as his wife in the hereafter even if he had to "go to hell" for her.

Author's source(s)
Response
  • This is likely true.

345

Claim
  • There is "some evidence that Fannie Alger bore Joseph a child in Kirtland."

Author's source(s)
  •  [ATTENTION!]
Response

345

Claim
  • Prescindia Huntington Buell's son Oliver may have been Joseph's son.

Author's source(s)
  •  [ATTENTION!]
Response

345

Claim
  • "Legend" says that John Reed Hancock may have been Joseph's son.

Response

345

Claim
  • The son of Mary Rollins Lightner "may as easily have been the prophet's son as that of Adam Lightner."

Response

345

Claim
  • Mrs. Orson Hyde's sons Orson and Frank "could have been Joseph's sons."

Response
  •  History unclear or in error: Brodie mistakes the date on Frank's birth certificate—it is impossible for him to have been Joseph's son.
  • Orson died in infancy, but the birth dates match times when Orson Sr. was available to sire him. Most historians have disagreed with Brodie here.
  • Joseph Smith and polygamy—Children of polygamous marriages—Hyde

345

Claim
  • Mrs. Parley P. Pratt's son Moroni "might also be added to this list."

Response

345-346

Claim
  • "According to tradition," Emma beat Eliza Snow with a broomstick and caused her to fall down the stairs, resulting in a miscarriage.

Author's source(s)
  • None specified.
Response

346

Claim
  • "It is astonishing that evidence of other children than these has never come to light."

Response

346

Claim
  • Jedediah Grant "excused" Joseph's marriages to married women by stating that it was a way to "try the people of God to see what was in them."

Author's source(s)
Response
  •  Misrepresentation of source: Grant says nothing about Joseph's polyandrous marriages; he is speaking of cases (e.g., such as Heber and Vilate Kimball) in which Joseph proposed plural marriage but then relented.
  • See Quote mining—Journal of Discourses 2:14 to see how this quote was mined.
  • Polyandry

346

Claim
  • Perhaps Joseph "learned some primitive method of birth control" or took advantage of items such as "Portuguese Female Pills" to produce miscarriage.

Author's source(s)
  • No source provided.
Response