Parley P. Pratt
Parley P. Pratt | |
---|---|
Pratt, ca. 1845 | |
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
February 21, 1835 (1835-02-21) – May 13, 1857 (1857-05-13) | |
LDS Church Apostle | |
February 21, 1835 (1835-02-21) – May 13, 1857 (1857-05-13) | |
Reason | Initial organization of Quorum of the Twelve |
Reorganization at end of term | George Q. Cannon ordained |
Personal details | |
Born | Parley Parker Pratt (1807-04-12)April 12, 1807 Burlington, New York, United States |
Died | May 13, 1857(1857-05-13) (aged 50) Alma, Arkansas, United States |
Parley Parker Pratt Sr. (April 12, 1807 – May 13, 1857) was an early leader of the Latter Day Saint movement whose writings became a significant early nineteenth-century exposition of the Latter Day Saint faith. Named in 1835 as one of the first members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Pratt was part of the Quorum's successful mission to Great Britain from 1839 to 1841. Pratt has been called "the Apostle Paul of Mormonism" for his promotion of distinctive Mormon doctrines.[3]
Pratt explored and surveyed Parley's Canyon in Salt Lake City, Utah (named in his honor), and subsequently built and maintained the first road for public transportation in the canyon.
Pratt practiced plural marriage. He was murdered in 1857 by the estranged husband of his twelfth wife. Pratt fathered thirty children. His living descendants in 2011 were estimated to number 30,000 to 50,000. He is the great-great-grandfather of Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican candidate for President of the United States, and the great-great-great-grandfather of Jon Huntsman Jr., diplomat and former Governor of Utah, who is currently serving as the U.S. Ambassador to Russia.[4]
Contents
1 Early life and education
2 Early Latter Day Saint service
3 Missionary
4 Apostle
5 Missouri War
6 Writer
7 Journey to Utah
8 Life in Utah
9 Death and legacy
10 Family
11 Memorials
12 Publications
13 See also
14 Notes
15 References
16 External links
Early life and education
Pratt was born in Burlington, New York, to Jared Pratt (1769–1839) and his wife, Charity Dickinson (1776–1849), a descendant of Anne Hutchinson.[5] He married Thankful Halsey in Canaan, New York, on September 9, 1827.
The young couple migrated west, where they settled near Cleveland, Ohio, where Pratt purchased land and constructed a home. In Ohio, Pratt became a member of the Reformed Baptist Society, also called "Disciples of Christ", influenced by the preaching of Sidney Rigdon. Pratt soon left his property to take up the ministry as a profession.
Early Latter Day Saint service
While traveling to visit family in western New York, Pratt read a copy of the Book of Mormon owned by a Baptist deacon. Convinced of its authenticity, he traveled to Palmyra, and spoke to Hyrum Smith. Pratt was baptized in Seneca Lake by Oliver Cowdery on or about September 1, 1830, formally joining the Latter Day Saints church. He was ordained to the office of an elder in the church. Continuing on to his family's home, he introduced his younger brother, Orson Pratt, to Mormonism and baptized him on September 19, 1830.
Arriving in Fayette, New York, in October 1830, Pratt met Joseph Smith and was asked to join a missionary group assigned to preach to the Native American tribes on the Missouri frontier. During the trip west, he and his companions stopped to visit Sidney Rigdon. They were instrumental in converting Rigdon and approximately 130 members of his congregation within three weeks. Pratt became close friends with the Smiths, particularly Joseph, with whom he would later experience persecution and imprisonment, including incarceration at Liberty Jail.
In early 1833, Pratt served as a missionary in Illinois. He went to Jackson County, Missouri, where through the summer he headed the School of the Elders, a gathering of about 60 men who studied religious and secular subjects, similar to the School of the Prophets in Kirtland, Ohio.[6] In the fall of 1833, he served as president of the Mormon branch number 8 in Jackson County and as a leader in the Mormon militia. He was among those Latter Day Saints driven into Clay County, Missouri, by mob violence.[7] In February 1834, Pratt and Lyman Wight headed back to Kirtland to report on the events in Missouri to Joseph Smith.[8] From Kirtland, Pratt traveled with Smith in Pennsylvania and western New York, preaching and trying to recruit people to serve in Zion's Camp.[9] After traveling together for three weeks, during some of this time with Pratt serving as Smith's scribe, Smith returned to Kirtland from Geneseo, New York, for a court case. Pratt continued his missionary efforts along with Henry Brown. Pratt and Brown went to eastern New York to give his family members money to move to Kirtland.[10] They went to Richland, New York, where Pratt convinced Wilford Woodruff, who had been baptized three months before, to join Zion's Camp.[11]
Pratt returned to Missouri later in 1834 as a member of Zion's Camp.[12] After Zion's Camp broke up, Pratt rejoined his wife, Thankful, who had remained in Clay County while he had been traveling. While working as a day laborer, Pratt served on the Missouri High Council. Thankful had run up large debts in Pratt's absence, and when he returned with her to Ohio, some felt he was trying to flee his creditors and criticized him for it.[13] Pratt settled in New Portage, Ohio (now part of Barberton), where he was the leader of a group of Latter Day Saints there.[14]
Missionary
In 1835, after his call as an apostle, Pratt served with other apostles in a mission to New York, New England, and eastern Canada.[15] Pratt preached in Upper Canada, in and around Toronto, in 1836. In 1837 and 1838, he preached in New York City.[12]
Pratt later served as a missionary in the southern United States and in England, the Pacific islands, and South America. He moved to Chile to begin missionary work in Valparaíso. In 1852, Pratt and his family left Chile after the death of their child, Omner, without having had much success among the country's Catholic residents.
In addition to having converted his brother Orson and preacher Sidney Rigdon, Parley Pratt introduced the Mormon faith to several future church leaders, including Frederick G. Williams, John Taylor and his wife, Leonora, Isaac Morley, and Joseph Fielding, along with his sisters, Mary and Mercy.
Apostle
In 1835, Pratt entered the leadership of the early Latter Day Saint movement when he was selected as one of the original Quorum of Twelve Apostles. While on a mission to the British Isles in 1839, Pratt edited the newly created periodical, Millennial Star. While presiding over the church's branches and interests in New England and the mid-Atlantic states, Pratt published a periodical entitled The Prophet from his headquarters in New York City.[16]
Missouri War
After serving as a missionary in New York City, Pratt returned to church headquarters in Missouri in 1838. He was arrested in November 1838, along with Joseph Smith, and was held in prison in Richmond and then Columbia until escaping on July 4, 1839.[12] His writings during this and other imprisonments with Smith comprise many first accounts and stories preserved about Smith.
Writer
Pratt was a noted religious writer and poet. Many of Pratt's writings are the only credible or lasting accounts from important American and Mormon events, such as the Hauns Mill Massacre and the events and conditions of imprisonment with Smith at Liberty Jail.
Pratt's first printed work was "'The Mormons' So Called", a 5500-word account of the persecution of Mormons in Jackson County in 1833.[17]
Pratt wrote an autobiography, published after his death but likely his most widely read work in the 21st century.[12][18] He published a book of poetry in 1835, the first collection of poems by a Latter Day Saint.[12] Some of his poems have become staple Latter Day Saint hymns, some of which are included in the current hymnal of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Pratt wrote many of these hymns in 1839 while sailing to England to serve as a missionary.[12] He was involved in compiling a hymnal with 40 hymns of his own work while editor of the Millennial Star.
In 1835, Pratt published a pamphlet about his missionary efforts in Mentor, Ohio.[12] This work, entitled "A Short Account of a Shameful Outrage", was the first pamphlet ever published by a Mormon.[19]
One of Pratt's most influential works was a book entitled A Voice of Warning (1837), first published in New York City.[12] Givens and Grow say the book was "a work that served the church as its most powerful proselytizing tool—after the Book of Mormon—for more than a century."[20] Pratt made substantial revisions between the first and second editions after Joseph Smith voiced some reservations about it.[21] The second edition of A Voice of Warning was published in 1839.
In 1837, Pratt, along with John Goodson, published the second edition of the Book of Mormon. It included Pratt's testimony, along with that of the three and eight witnesses to the golden plates.[22]
Near the end of 1837, Pratt published Mormonism Unveiled: Zion's Watchman Unmasked, which is the earliest surviving response by a Mormon to an anti-Mormon writer.[12]
Pratt also wrote one of the earliest Mormon works of fiction. His "A Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil", was published on January 1, 1844, in the New York Herald. It was a religious treatise in fictional form.[23]
Pratt's most well-known theological work was A Key to Science of Theology, which was published in 1855.[12] Other works by Pratt included Late Persecutions, Millennium and Other Poems, at least ten tracts published while he served as editor of the Millennial Star, and "Proclamation to the People of the Coasts and Islands of the Pacific", written by Pratt in the summer of 1851 in San Francisco, California, and published by W. C. Wandell in Sydney, Australia.[12]
Pratt's Visions and Poetry also serve as the text for many songs now found in the Latter Day Saint Hymnal. Pratt's writings also corroborate many events and revelations which are found in a book of Latter Day Saint scripture known as the Doctrine and Covenants.
In total, Pratt is known to have written 31 published works, not including his posthumous autobiography.[24]
Journey to Utah
After the death of Joseph Smith, Pratt and his family were among the Latter Day Saints who emigrated to what would become Utah Territory. They continued as members of LDS Church, under the direction of Brigham Young. Pratt helped establish the refugee settlements and fields at both Garden Grove and Mt. Pisgah, Iowa. He personally led a pioneer company along the Mormon Trail to the Salt Lake Valley.
Life in Utah
In 1849, Pratt was appointed one of the justices of the anticipated state of Deseret.[25] He later served in the legislature of the provisional state of Deseret beginning in 1849.[26] During this same time, as one of the seven members of the Quorum of the Twelve in Utah, he was among those who oversaw the division of Salt Lake City into wards and the organization of other wards in Utah.[27]
Sometime in the mid-1850s, working with George D. Watt, Pratt helped develop the Deseret alphabet. In 1854, Pratt went to San Francisco, California, to preside over the LDS Church's Pacific Mission
In 1856, Pratt served as chaplain of the Utah Territorial Legislature.[28]
Death and legacy
In 1856, Pratt went on a mission to the eastern United States. At that time, troubles were brewing in Pratt's life. Hector McLean was the estranged husband of one of Pratt's plural wives, Eleanor McLean. Pratt had met Eleanor in San Francisco, where he presided over a church mission. In San Francisco, Eleanor had joined the LDS Church and had also had her oldest sons baptized. Hector rejected Mormonism and opposed his wife's membership in the church. Though they did not divorce, the dispute led to the collapse of their marriage.[29]
Fearing that Eleanor would abscond to Utah Territory with their children, Hector sent his sons and daughter to New Orleans, Louisiana, to live with their maternal grandparents.[30] Eleanor followed the children to New Orleans, where she lived with them for three months at her parents' house. Eventually, she and the children left for Utah Territory, via Texas; they arrived in Salt Lake City on September 11, 1855.[30] She worked in Pratt's home as a schoolteacher. On November 14, 1855, she and Pratt underwent a "celestial marriage" sealing ceremony in the Endowment House.[30] She was the twelfth woman to be sealed to Pratt. For religious and cultural reasons, Eleanor considered herself unmarried at the time of her sealing to Pratt, but she had not legally divorced from Hector.[31][32][33]
While Pratt was serving a mission in the eastern states, Eleanor went to New Orleans to get her children. Eleanor then took the children from her parents and headed to Texas.[34] This was at the same time that Pratt was serving as a missionary in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. Because Eleanor took the children, Hector blamed Pratt.[35]
Hector pressed criminal charges, accusing Pratt of assisting in the kidnapping of his children.[36] Pratt managed to evade him and the legal charges, but was finally arrested in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) in May 1857.[37] Pratt and Eleanor McLean were charged with theft of the clothing of McLean's children.[38] (The laws of that time did not recognize the kidnapping of children by a parent as a crime.) Tried before Judge John B. Ogden, Pratt was acquitted because of a lack of evidence and Ogden's own feelings after interviewing Eleanor.[38] Ogden sympathized with Eleanor and Pratt, because he was so disgusted by Hector's drinking and wife-beating.[39] Shortly after being secretly released, on May 13, 1857, Pratt was shot and stabbed by Hector on a farm northeast of Van Buren, Arkansas.[38] He died two and a half hours later from loss of blood.[38]
As Pratt was bleeding to death, a farmer asked what he had done to provoke the attack. Pratt said, "He accused me of taking his wife and children. I did not do it. They were oppressed, and I did for them what I would do for the oppressed any where."[38] Pratt was buried near Alma, Arkansas, despite his desire to be buried in Utah Territory.
Some writers have viewed Pratt's death as the act of a jealous husband, deeply angered by a man who had "run off" with his wife.[40] A 2008 Provo Daily Herald newspaper article characterized McLean as a man who had "hunted down" Pratt in retribution for "ruining his marriage".[41] A 2008 Deseret News article described McLean as a man who had "pursued Pratt across Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas, angry that his estranged wife, Eleanor, had become Pratt's 12th wife."[42]
Many Mormons viewed Pratt's death as a martyrdom; his dying words were said to be, "I am dying a martyr to the faith."[43][44] A 2007 article in the Deseret Morning News said that "Pratt was killed near Van Buren, Ark., in May 1857, by a small Arkansas band antagonistic toward his teachings".[45] The historian Will Bagley reports that McLean and two friends tracked Pratt after he was released by Van Buren's magistrate.[38] Brigham Young compared Pratt's death to those of Joseph and Hyrum Smith.[46] Other Mormons blamed the death on the state of Arkansas, or its people.[47]
Due to Pratt's personal popularity and his position in the Quorum of the Twelve, his murder was a significant blow to the Latter-day Saint community in the Rocky Mountains.[48] Pratt's violent death may also have played a part in events leading up to the Mountain Meadows massacre a few months later.[49] After the massacre, some Mormons circulated rumors that one or more members of the party had murdered Pratt,[50] poisoned creek water that subsequently sickened Paiute children,[51] and allowed their cattle to graze on private property.[52]
Pratt was one of the better known Mormons among other Americans; for instance, in his 1864-published visit to the Mormons, Fitz-Hugh Ludlow, in The Atlantic made a joke about "Mrs. Deacon Pratt" and referred to "Parley's Cañon (named after the celebrated Elder, Parley Pratt)."[53]
In 2008, Pratt's family received permission from an Arkansas judge to rebury his remains in the Salt Lake City Cemetery,[54] but no human remains were found at what was believed his gravesite.[55] No further search efforts for Pratt's burial site have been planned.[56]
Family
Pratt practiced plural marriage and had 12 wives, 30 children, and 266 grandchildren. In 2011, Pratt's living descendants were estimated to number 30,000 to 50,000.[57] His first wife, Thankful Halsey Pratt, died following childbirth in March 1837. (Thankful was a widow ten years older than Pratt when she married him.) Pratt did, however, marry women averaging ten years younger than himself, the greatest age difference occurring with his marriage to his Ann Agatha Walker who was 18 to his 40 years.
On May 14, 1837, Pratt married his second wife, Mary Ann Frost Stearns (1808–1891), a widow with a daughter. The marriage was performed by Frederick G. Williams.[58] Mary Ann was a native of Bethel, Maine (part of Massachusetts until 1820) whose first relative to join the church was Patty Bartlett Sessions, later a prominent midwife in Utah. Mary Ann was baptized by David W. Patten. She had come to Kirtland as a widow in 1836.[59] Joseph Smith later condemned Latter Day Saints for "marrying in five or six weeks, or even in two or three months, after the death of their companion."[58] Pratt may have married Mary Ann so quickly to get back his infant son, although he remained in the care of Mary Ann Young for nearly a year after Pratt remarried.[58] Mary Ann and Pratt at times demonstrated a deep companionship in their marriage, most fully shown by her joining her husband in prison in Missouri.[60] After Pratt began practicing polygyny, they became estranged. Pratt suggested his falling out with Mary Ann was "stung by falsehoods which are circulated in the Church".[61]
Some sources state that in 1843, Mary Ann Pratt married Joseph Smith, the church's founder. This marriage, however, does not appear on most lists of Smith's marriages. That same year, Smith married at least 17 other women—including Mary Ann's sister, Olive Grey Frost. Olive would marry Smith's successor, Brigham Young, after Smith's death in 1844.
Pratt made several attempts to get Mary Ann to join him in traveling west in 1846 and 1847, but after spending the winter of 1846–47 in an abandoned Nauvoo, she chose to return to Maine. Pratt provided her with clothes and money upon her return to Maine. She received some of the proceeds from the sale of Pratt's home to a Roman Catholic priest; the Nauvoo home is still used as a residence for Catholic priests.[60] In 1852, Mary Ann traveled to Utah Territory, but she and Pratt did not see eye to eye on how to raise their children. Mary Ann received a divorce decree issued by Brigham Young in 1853.[62] Mary Ann then settled in what is now Pleasant Grove, Utah. She worked as a midwife, remained in the LDS Church and became a leading advocate for Mormon women against the attacks of those opposed to polygamy.[63]
In the fall of 1853, Pratt had seven living wives. These wives were:
- Elizabeth Brotherton (1817–1897). Married Pratt July 24, 1844. They adopted one child.
- Mary Wood (1818–1898). Married Pratt September 9, 1844. Four children including Helaman Pratt.
- Hannahette Snively (1812–1898). Married Pratt November 2, 1844. Three children.
- Belinda Marden (1820–1894). Married Pratt November 20, 1844. Five children.
- Sarah Houston (1822–1886). Married Pratt October 15, 1844. Four children.
- Phoebe Elizabeth Soper (1823–1887). Married Pratt February 8, 1846. Three children.
- Ann Agatha Walker (1829–1908). Married Pratt April 28, 1847. Five children. Agatha ran a millinery business in Salt Lake City.[64]
Other wives of Pratt:
- Martha Monks (1825–?). Married Pratt April 28, 1847. One child who died shortly after birth. After this Martha abandoned Pratt in early 1849 and moved to California.[65]
- Keziah Downes (1812–1876). Married Pratt December 27, 1853. They did not have any children. She lived in the same house as five of Pratt's other wives and helped them in raising their children.[64]
- Eleanor Jane McComb (1817–1874). Married Pratt November 14, 1855.
Pratt's constant missions left him little time with his family. After he started practicing plural marriage, the longest period of time he had with his family were the 18 months following his return from a mission to Chile.[66]
According to Terryl L. Givens and Matthew J. Grow, Pratt's "highest happiness was to be surrounded by a teeming domestic world of multiple wives and offspring."[67] They noted that he also had an "antisocial bent".[68]
One of Pratt's grandsons, William King Driggs, was the father of the King Sisters.
Mitt Romney, the Massachusetts governor (2003–07) and the 2012 Republican nominee for the U.S. presidency, is one of Pratt's great-great-grandsons.[69]
One of Pratt's great-great-great-grandsons is Jon Huntsman, the former Utah governor and Ambassador to China, and an unsuccessful candidate for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.[70]
Memorials
- Pratt explored, surveyed, and built the first public road in Parley's Canyon, Salt Lake City, which is named in his honor.[71]
- His escape from the Columbia Jail on July 4, 1839, has been commemorated in Columbia, Missouri,[72] with a "freedom run"[73] each Independence Day since the 1970s.[74]
Publications
A Voice of Warning (1837) (ebook from Project Gutenberg)
The Millennium and Other Poems (1840) (scans from BYU library)
Late Persecutions of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: With a Sketch of Their Rise, Progress and Doctrine (1840) (scans from BYU library)- "A Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil", 1844
Key to the Science of Theology (1855) (ebook from Project Gutenberg)
Key to the Science of Theology (1855) (scans from BYU library)
The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt (1874, posthumous) (scans from BYU library)
The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt (ebook from Project Gutenberg of 1888 edition)
See also
|
- LDS fiction
- Latter Day Saint martyrs
- Pratt family
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Arkansas
- The Morning Breaks, the Shadows Flee
Notes
^ Smith, George D (Spring 1994), "Nauvoo Roots of Mormon Polygamy, 1841-46: A Preliminary Demographic Report", Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 27 (1): 16, retrieved May 5, 2007.mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
^ Smith, George D (Spring 1994), "Nauvoo Roots of Mormon Polygamy, 1841-46: A Preliminary Demographic Report", Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 27 (1), retrieved May 5, 2007
^ Givens & Grow 2011
^ Horowitz, Jason (March 4, 2011). "Presidential hopefuls Huntsman, Romney share Mormonism and belief in themselves," The Washington Post. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
^ Reitwiesner, William Addams. "The Ancestors of Mitt Romney". William Addams Reitwiesner Genealogical Services (wargs.com). Retrieved 2011-03-30.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 59–60.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 61–63.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 65.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 66–67.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 67.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 68.
^ abcdefghijk Crawley, "Parley P. Pratt", in Arnold K. Garr, Donald Q. Cannon, and Richard O. Cowan (eds), Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book, 2000) pp. 941–42.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 70–71.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 71.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 77–80.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 172.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 64.
^ In the autobiography Pratt said that he was a good friend of Pantheist and freethinker John Shertzer Hittell, author of Evidences Against Christianity. "Chapter 50 and 51 in Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt".
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 74–75.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 90.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 167.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 90–91.
^ Richard H. Cracroft and Neal E. Lambert (eds), A Believing People: Literature of the Latter-day Saints (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press, 1974) pp. 331, 333
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 398–400.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 275–76.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 276–77.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 277.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 367.
^ Bagley 2002, p. 8.
^ abc Bagley 2002, p. 9.
^ Millennial Star 19:432.
^ New York World, 23 November 1869, p. 2
^ Pratt 1975, pp. 6, 9, 24.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 373.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 372–73.
^ Pratt 1975, p. 241
^ Bagley 2002, p. 69.
^ abcdef Bagley 2002, p. 70.
^ Gibson, Doug (August 30, 2011). "The Political Surf". Standard-Examiner. Archived from the original on May 3, 2014. Retrieved May 5, 2014.|contribution=
ignored (help)
^ Capurro, Wayne Atilio (2007). White Flag: America's First 9/11. AuthorHouse. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-4259-9565-2. OCLC 169899686.
^ "No remains found in dig for Parley P. Pratt". Daily Herald (Utah). 23 April 2008. Retrieved March 30, 2011.
^ Smith, Robert J. (4 April 2008). "Relatives get OK to disinter, move Parley P. Pratt". Deseret News. Retrieved March 30, 2011.
^ Pratt 1975, p. 248 ("I am dying a martyr to the faith").
^ John A. Peel, "Dying Remarks of Parley P. Pratt," LDS Church Archives. "Peel was in Van Buren at the time of the murder, but his statement was not taken down by Frank Poneroy until 1895."
^ Moore, Carrie A. (14 April 2007). "LDS-tied events to bisect in Arkansas". Deseret Morning News. Retrieved March 30, 2011.
^ "Reminiscences of Mrs. A. Agatha Pratt", January 7, F564, #16, LDS Church Archives (stating that Young said, "Nothing has happened so hard to reconcile my mind to since the death of Joseph.").
^ Brooks 1950, pp. 36–37; Linn 1902, pp. 519–20 ("It was in accordance with Mormon policy to hold every Arkansan accountable for Pratt's death, just as every Missourian was hated because of the expulsion of the church from that state.").
^ LDS Church leaders learned about the death on June 23, 1857 (Wilford Woodruff Journal). The murder was first reported in the Deseret News on July 1, 1857.
^ Bagley 2002.
^ Bagley 2002, p. 98 (identification by the widow Pratt).
^ Bagley 2002, pp. 105–10.
^ Bagley 2002, p. 102.
^ Fitz-Hugh Ludlow (April 1864). "Among the Mormons: A nineteenth-century writer meets Brigham Young and explores the 'City of Saints' (republication)". TheAtlantic.com. Retrieved November 13, 2017.
^ "Ark. judge: Remains of early LDS leader can be moved to Utah". KSL-TV (AP). 3 April 2008. Retrieved March 30, 2011.
^ "No remains found in dig for Parley P. Pratt". Daily Herald (AP). 23 April 2008. Retrieved March 30, 2011.
^ "Search for Parley Pratt's remains yields nothing but Arkansas clay". The Salt Lake Tribune (AP). 25 April 2008. Article archive ID: 9050460. Retrieved March 30, 2011.
^ Givens 2011, p. 342.
^ abc Givens & Grow 2011, p. 95.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 94.
^ ab Givens & Grow 2011, p. 318.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 317.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 317–18.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 318–19.
^ ab Givens & Grow 2011, p. 323.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, pp. 277–78.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 316
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 396.
^ Givens & Grow 2011, p. 237.
^ Romney is descended from Helaman Pratt, a son of Pratt's fourth wife, Mary Wood (Glasgow, 18 June 1818 – Salt Lake City, Utah, 5 March 1898). She was the daughter of Samuel Wood (baptized Dumfries, 8 July 1798) and wife (m. Mungo, Dumfriesshire, 18 July 1816) Margaret Orr (baptized Inverchaolin, Argyllshire, 15 August 1793 – 1852.)Dobner, Jennifer; Johnson, Glen (25 February 2007). "Polygamy was prominent in Romney's family tree". Deseret News (AP). Retrieved 2011-03-30.
^ Dobner, Jennifer (June 23, 2011). "Romney, Huntsman compete in Mormon primary". Associated Press.
^ Van Atta, Dale (Jan 22, 1977). "You name it - there's a town for it". The Deseret News. pp. W6. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
^ The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt, chapter 32, pp. 274–89
^ Israelson, Craig (17 July 1999). "Freedom run commemorates Parley P. Pratt's escape from jail". Church News. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
^ Stroup, Megan (6 July 2010). "Parley P. Pratt memorial run". Columbia Missourian.
References
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Allen, James B.; Leonard, Glen M. (1976). The Story of the Latter-day Saints. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book Co. ISBN 0-87747-594-6..
Arave, Lynn (5 January 2007). "Tidbits of history — Unusual highlights of Salt Lake County". Deseret Morning News. Deseret Morning News. p. S1–S2..
Bagley, Will (2002). Blood of the Prophets, Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-3426-7.
Brooks, Juanita (1950). The Mountain Meadows Massacre. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2318-4.
Crawley, Peter L., ed. (1990). The Essential Parley P. Pratt. Classics in Mormon Thought. 1. Salt Lake City: Signature Books. ISBN 0-941214-84-2..
Givens, Terryl L.; Grow, Matthew J. (2011). Parley P. Pratt: The Apostle Paul of Mormonism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-537573-2..
Linn, William Alexander (1902). "The Story of the Mormons: From the Date of their Origin to the Year 1901". New York: McMillan. OCLC 621583 (scanned versions).
Ludlow, Daniel H. (1978). A Companion to Your Study of the Doctrine and Covenants. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co. ISBN 1-57345-224-6..
Ludlow, Daniel H., ed. (1992). Church History, Selections From the Encyclopedia of Mormonism. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co. ISBN 0-87579-924-8..
Pratt, Parley P. (1985) [1874]. Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt. Classics in Mormon Literature. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book. ISBN 0-87747-740-X..
Pratt, Steven (1975). "Eleanor McLean and the Murder of Parley P. Pratt" (PDF). BYU Studies. 15 (2): 225–256. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-19..
"Tragical". Daily Missouri Republican. May 25, 1857..
Ward, C.G. (May 26, 1857). "The Mormon Tragedy in Arkansas: Interesting Details of the Circumstances of Elder Pratt's Death". Daily Missouri Republican..
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Parley P. Pratt |
Works by Parley P. Pratt at Project Gutenberg
Works by or about Parley P. Pratt at Internet Archive
Works by Parley P. Pratt at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
History of Parley P. Pratt from gordonbanks.com
Parley P. Pratt Grave Site from angells.com
Documents about Parley P. Pratt at pratt-family.org
Official website of the Parley P. Pratt Memorial Freedom Run/Walk
Parley P. Pratt papers, MSS 7 at L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Brigham Young University
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints titles | ||
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Preceded by William E. M'Lellin | Quorum of the Twelve Apostles February 21, 1835 – May 13, 1857 | Succeeded by Luke S. Johnson |