Criticism of Mormonism/Books/Nauvoo Polygamy/Chapter 6
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Response to claims made in "Chapter 6"
356
Claim
- The author assumes that "[e]fforts to suppress the story" of polygamy in Nauvoo until the 1852 announcement "restricted the breadth and depth of the records that were kept."
Author's source(s)
Censorship of Church History (edit)
Response
356
Claim
- After 1890 the church tried to "phase out a practice the prophet had mandated as essential to salvation."
Author's source(s)
Necessary for salvation? (edit)
See also ch. Preface:
xiv
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-
Response
356
Claim
- "Official accounts" of plural marriage have been "redacted."
Author's source(s)
Censorship of Church History (edit)
Response
364-365
Claim
- Joseph and Brigham are claimed to have admitted that the practice of polygamy meant they were "free to go beyond the normal 'bounds'" and "the normal rules governing social interaction had not applied to" Joseph.
Author's source(s)
- Brigham Young Manuscript History, Feb 16, 1849, LDS Archives.
Response
366
Claim
- Author's quote: "Elizabeth [Whitney] was arranging conjugal visits between her daughter, Sarah Ann, and [Joseph]…."
Author's source(s)
Whitney "love letter" (edit)
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See also ch. 2:
53,
54,
63, and
65
See also ch. 2a:
137,
138,
142,
142-143,
147, and
155
See also ch. 3:
185,
190,
236a,
236c, and
366
Response
392
Claim
- The book has a subsection in "How Plural Marriage Worked," entitled "Female subordination."
Author's source(s)
Response
400
Claim
- Joseph Lee Robinson is claimed to have said: "There are some on this stand that would cut my throat or take my hearts blood" if he told them what God had revealed to him.
Author's source(s)
- Citation error
- Robinson Journal, 24, Utah State Historical Society Library.
Response
- The statement comes from the Joseph Robinson journal, but the statement is not from Robinson—it is from Joseph Smith. The author recognized this in an earlier article. [1]
408
Claim
- Did Joseph flee from three states because he had been suspected of "suspicious relationships with young women?"
Author's source(s)
Response
- Fanny Alger certainly caused problems in Ohio. There is no good evidence, however, that Joseph had "woman problems" in New York or Missouri.
408
Claim
- Was Joseph arrested after the destruction of the Nauvoo Expositor for violating "freedom of the press?"
Author's source(s)
Nauvoo Expositor (edit)
See also ch. Preface:
xii
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-
Response
Notes
- ↑ George D. Smith, "Nauvoo Roots of Mormon Polygamy, 1841–46: A Preliminary Demographic Report," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 27 no. 1 (Spring 1994), 26.