
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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|356||"Efforts to suppress the story of Nauvoo until the 1852 announcement [of polygamy in Utah] restricted the breadth and depth of the records that were kept.||Hiding history | |356||"Efforts to suppress the story of Nauvoo until the 1852 announcement [of polygamy in Utah] restricted the breadth and depth of the records that were kept. | ||
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*Hiding history | |||
*{{InternalContradiction|G.D. Smith claims elsewhere that the History of the Church had material expurgated; we now learn that most of this material was not in the primary documents (such as Joseph's journals) because of secrecy concerns.}} | *{{InternalContradiction|G.D. Smith claims elsewhere that the History of the Church had material expurgated; we now learn that most of this material was not in the primary documents (such as Joseph's journals) because of secrecy concerns.}} | ||
*GLS FARMS paper | *GLS FARMS paper | ||
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*No source provided. | |||
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|356||After 1890 the church tried to "phase out a practice the prophet had mandated as essential to salvation."||[[Polygamy_a_requirement_for_exaltation]] | |356||After 1890 the church tried to "phase out a practice the prophet had mandated as essential to salvation." | ||
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*[[Polygamy_a_requirement_for_exaltation]] | |||
*[[The_only_men_who_become_gods_are_those_that_practice_polygamy%3F|Brigham Young: is polygamy essential to salvation?]] | |||
*G.D. Smith ignores the nuances of LDS thought on this, both before and after the Manifesto. | |||
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*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
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|356||"Official accounts" of plural marriage have been "redacted."||Hiding history|| | |356||"Official accounts" of plural marriage have been "redacted." | ||
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*Hiding history | |||
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*GLS FARMS paper | *GLS FARMS paper | ||
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|364-365||Joseph and Brigham 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.|| | |364-365||Joseph and Brigham 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. | ||
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*G.D. Smith misconstrues and misrepresents the statements cited. | *G.D. Smith misconstrues and misrepresents the statements cited. | ||
*GLS FARMS paper | *GLS FARMS paper | ||
*Maybe wiki? Bounds and plural marriage | *Maybe wiki? Bounds and plural marriage | ||
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*Brigham Young Manuscript History, Feb 16, 1849, LDS Archives. | |||
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|366||"Elizabeth [Whitney] was arranging conjugal visits between her daughter, Sarah Ann, and [Joseph]…." | |366||"Elizabeth [Whitney] was arranging conjugal visits between her daughter, Sarah Ann, and [Joseph]…." | ||
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*Sarah Whitney again Chapter 2 | *Sarah Whitney again Chapter 2 | ||
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|392||G.D. Smith has a subsection in "How Plural Marriage Worked," entitled "Female subordination." | |392||G.D. Smith has a subsection in "How Plural Marriage Worked," entitled "Female subordination." | ||
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*G.D. Smith does nothing to compare the 19th-century LDS practice of marriage with Victorian marriage in general. Virtually without exception, all 19th-century marriage had strong elements of "female subordination." The single page he addresses to this topic serves only to recount attitudes in nineteenth-century leaders that sound chauvinist and ill-informed. | *G.D. Smith does nothing to compare the 19th-century LDS practice of marriage with Victorian marriage in general. Virtually without exception, all 19th-century marriage had strong elements of "female subordination." The single page he addresses to this topic serves only to recount attitudes in nineteenth-century leaders that sound chauvinist and ill-informed. | ||
*Smith again preys on his readers' presentism. They would probably be as troubled—if they knew of it—by the female subordination in 19th century American monogamy.) As one scholar noted: | *Smith again preys on his readers' presentism. They would probably be as troubled—if they knew of it—by the female subordination in 19th century American monogamy.) As one scholar noted: | ||
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*In fact, opportunities for women were perhaps greatest in Utah: | *In fact, opportunities for women were perhaps greatest in Utah: | ||
*Utah's women were the first in the nation to exercise the right of suffrage in voting for city, county, and territorial officers. Utah women were among the first to serve as jurors, mayors, and state legislators. Utah women played a prominent role in the livestock industry, in communications, and in the creation of literary symbols. In the last half of the nineteenth century, Utah probably possessed the largest number of midwives and women doctors in the United States. Utah women founded the first "permanent" magazine for women west of the Mississippi River, pioneered the operation of telegraph offices, and led out in the efforts to improve the social and economic status of the Indians." | *Utah's women were the first in the nation to exercise the right of suffrage in voting for city, county, and territorial officers. Utah women were among the first to serve as jurors, mayors, and state legislators. Utah women played a prominent role in the livestock industry, in communications, and in the creation of literary symbols. In the last half of the nineteenth century, Utah probably possessed the largest number of midwives and women doctors in the United States. Utah women founded the first "permanent" magazine for women west of the Mississippi River, pioneered the operation of telegraph offices, and led out in the efforts to improve the social and economic status of the Indians." | ||
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|400||"Joseph Lee Robinson put it bluntly: 'There are some on this stand that would cut my throat or take my hearts blood,' he said, if he told them what God had revealed to him.|| | |400||"Joseph Lee Robinson put it bluntly: 'There are some on this stand that would cut my throat or take my hearts blood,' he said, if he told them what God had revealed to him. | ||
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*The statement comes from the Joseph Robinson journal, but the statement is not from Robinson—it is from Joseph Smith. G.D. Smith recognized this in an earlier article. | *The statement comes from the Joseph Robinson journal, but the statement is not from Robinson—it is from Joseph Smith. G.D. Smith recognized this in an earlier article. | ||
*SOURCE ERROR | *SOURCE ERROR | ||
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*Robinson Journal, 24, Utah State Historical Society Library. | |||
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|408||"Joseph had already fled three states under pressure that arose, in part, from suspicious relationships with young women."|| || | |408||"Joseph had already fled three states under pressure that arose, in part, from suspicious relationships with young women." | ||
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*Fanny Alger certainly caused problems in Ohio. There is no good evidence, however, that Joseph had "woman problems" in New York or Missouri. | |||
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*No source provided. | *No source provided. | ||
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|408||Joseph was "arrested for violating freedom of the press."|| | |408||Joseph was "arrested for violating freedom of the press." | ||
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*This is presentism, and highly anachronistic—again, likely intended to bias a modern audience against someone who would threaten a cherished modern conception of liberty. | *This is presentism, and highly anachronistic—again, likely intended to bias a modern audience against someone who would threaten a cherished modern conception of liberty. | ||
*As two legal scholars note: | *As two legal scholars note: | ||
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*Joseph was arrested on a charge of riot for the destruction of the Expositor, not a freedom of the press issue. He posted bail for this charge, and was rearrested on the capital charge of treason. Smith ignores all the scholarship on this issue, save for a dismissive (and inadequate) footnote several pages later. | *Joseph was arrested on a charge of riot for the destruction of the Expositor, not a freedom of the press issue. He posted bail for this charge, and was rearrested on the capital charge of treason. Smith ignores all the scholarship on this issue, save for a dismissive (and inadequate) footnote several pages later. | ||
*[See also p. 435.] | *[See also p. 435.] | ||
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*No source provided. | |||
{{EndClaimsTable}} | {{EndClaimsTable}} |
Page | Claim | Response | Author's sources |
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356 | "Efforts to suppress the story of Nauvoo until the 1852 announcement [of polygamy in Utah] restricted the breadth and depth of the records that were kept. |
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356 | After 1890 the church tried to "phase out a practice the prophet had mandated as essential to salvation." |
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356 | "Official accounts" of plural marriage have been "redacted." |
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364-365 | Joseph and Brigham 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. |
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366 | "Elizabeth [Whitney] was arranging conjugal visits between her daughter, Sarah Ann, and [Joseph]…." |
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392 | G.D. Smith has a subsection in "How Plural Marriage Worked," entitled "Female subordination." |
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400 | "Joseph Lee Robinson put it bluntly: 'There are some on this stand that would cut my throat or take my hearts blood,' he said, if he told them what God had revealed to him. |
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408 | "Joseph had already fled three states under pressure that arose, in part, from suspicious relationships with young women." |
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408 | Joseph was "arrested for violating freedom of the press." |
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