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The Trials of Young Joseph
F. Smith (1) |
Scott G. Kenney
Joseph F. Smith (November 13, 1838–November 19, 1918) was born in Far West,
Caldwell County, Missouri, the first child of Mary Fielding and her husband,
Hyrum Smith, whose first wife, Jerusha Barden, had died giving birth to their
sixth child in September 1837. On the day he was born, Joseph F.'s father and
Uncle Joseph were in the midst of a Court of Inquiry held in Richmond, Missouri
prior to their consignment to Liberty Jail on November 25. He was born into persecution,
a theme which ran through his entire life. Fatherless at five, he was orphaned
at thirteen ad became the fatherless son of a marter at age five. This article
examines the psychological and emotional effects of the deaths of his parents;
his anger, guilt, and addictions; and his traumatic first marriage.
Except where noted, primary
sources are in the Joseph F. Smith Papers, Church Archives, MS 155, available
on Selected Collections DVD 1:20.
Destined for leadership |
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By birth and temperament Joseph F. Smith was destined
for prominence. Born of the "royal lineage"nephew of the
Prophet Joseph and son the Patriarch Hyrumhis zeal for the restoration
never wavered. His entire life was spent in the service of "the church
and kingdom." |
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Son of
a martyr |
Five when his father was murdered, he grew up
not only fatherless, but the son of a martyr. |
Sentimental |
Thirteen when his mother passed away, he became strong and
self-reliant, his Victorian sentimentality about motherhood and children
bordering at times on the maudlin. |
Blames
apostates, values loyalty above all |
Blaming "apostates" for the death of his father,
and the disregard of church leaders and others for the loss of his mother,
Joseph esteemed loyalty as the highest virtue. |
Effects
of parents' deaths |
The deaths of his parents dramatically affected
Joseph's personality, manifest in a life-long struggle with anger, in melancholy
and lengthy, guilt-ridden addictions to tobacco and alcoholall of
which contributed to what was I believe the catastrophe of his life, the
failure of his first marriage.
Whatever privileges may have accrued to Joseph from his parentage, they
were surpassed in spades by the trials he suffered as a young man. Combined,
they produced a complex and very human being who, in turn, fathered modern
Mormonism. |
and
this because of thy family |
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Family
church |
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In its early stages Mormonism could
almost be called a family church. Not only were members of the Smith family,
immediate and extended, among the first baptized into the Church of Christ,
they were early defenders of the faith, missionaries, patriarchs, apostles,
high councilmen, city councilmen, and aldermen. "Priesthood" and
"lineage" were intertwined, the Smith line being particularly
blessed and chosen. Thus, Hyrum was told, "thy duty is unto the church
forever, and this because of thy family."
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¶ D&C
23:3, (April 1830)
The Royal Lineage (Smith) |
Church
Patriarch |
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The office of Church Patriarch
was a patrilineal position, and until the passing of "Uncle John"
Smith (17811854), the Church Patriarch was looked upon as the spiritual
father of the church. |
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The
office was also referred to as "the Patriarch over the whole Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints," "Presiding Patriarch
of the Church," "Presiding Patriarch over this Priesthood,"
and "Patriarch to the Church." Lost legacy, 115, 123, 125. |
Brigham
Young downgrades role of Church Patriarch |
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When Uncle John passed away without
ordaining a successor, President Young called Hyrum's oldest son, twenty-two
year old John, to the position. At the same time, Young downgraded the post
by changing the sequence of the sustaining vote in general conference, submitting
names of the Twelve to the church before the Patriarch, who had traditionally
followed immediately after the First Presidency. |
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Joseph
F. restores role |
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Smiths no doubt took note of the
change, as personal and dynastic prerogatives were sensitive issues.
As church president, Joseph F. took immediate steps to perpetuate Smith
family primacy, reinstating the office of Patriarch as second only to the
First Presidency, calling two of his sons and one of John Henry Smith's
sons into the Quorum of the Twelve, one son to the Presiding Bishopric,
and Bathsheba Smith to be president of the Relief Society. Latter-day Saints
who witnessed the emeritization of Church Patriarch Eldred G. Smith also
witnessed the demise of the office and the family tradition that loomed
large in Joseph F. Smith's life and being. |
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¶
Royal Lineage (Smith) |
stupified
with horror |
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News
of the martyrdom
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Early in the morning, five-year
old Joseph heard tapping at his mother's bedroom window. Then a man's voice
from outside.
His father was dead.
Uncle Joseph too.
A mob had rushed the jail and shot them.
She screamed in anguished denial, then began to sob uncontrollably. |
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Murder News
Reaches Mary |
B.
W. Richmond, eyewitness |
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As word spread, friends and relatives
began to callamong them, B. W. Richmond, a non-Mormon acquaintance. |
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B.
W. Richmond: "The Prophet's
Death" |
Hyrum
Smith home |
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Mary "had gathered her family
of four children into the sitting room," Richmond wrote, "and
the youngest about four years old sat on her lap. The poor and disabled
that fed at the table of her husband, had come in and formed a group of
about twenty about the room. They were all sobbing and weeping, each expressing
his grief in his own peculiar way. Mrs. Smith seemed stupified with horror." |
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Hyrum
had six living children: Lovina (who had just married Lorin Walker), John,
Jerusha, Sarah, Joseph, and Martha Ann. Sarah was six, Joseph five, and
Martha Ann three. |
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Joseph recalled "it was a misty,
foggy morning. Everything looked dark and gloomy and dismal." |
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Boyhood, 5. |
Bodies arrive |
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About three in the afternoon two
wagons bearing the martyrs reached the outskirts of town. A delegation from
the Nauvoo Legion, the city council, and a brass band formed the cortege.
Eight to ten thousand distraught mourners lined the streets. When they reached
the Mansion House, the pine coffins were unloaded and carried in to the
dining room. The families were asked to wait until the bodies could be cleaned.
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Families
come to view bodies |
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An hour later, they were admitted
with a few friends. Aunt Emma entered first, with her children, but before
she could reach Joseph's body, four months pregnant, she fainted and had
to be helped from the room. She made the attempt six times, Richmond reported,
"and six times she was removed in the arms of her two attendants."
At that point, Mary entered with Hyrum's children. |
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¶
"The Prophet's Death" |
Mary:
Hyrum, Hyrum! Have they shot you |
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She trembled at every step, and nearly fell, but reached her husband's
body, kneeling down by him, clasped her arms around his head, turned
his pale face upon her heaving bosom, and then a gushing, plaintive
wail burst forth from her lips: "Oh! Hyrum, Hyrum! Have they shot
you, my dear Hyrumare you dead, my dear Hyrum!" She drew
him closer and closer to her bosom, kissed her pale lips and face, put
her hands on his brow and brushed back his hair. Her grief seemed to
consume her, and she lost all power of utterance.
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¶
"The Prophet's Death" |
The
grief of Mary's four children |
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Her two daughters and two young children clung, some around her neck
and some to her body, falling prostrate upon the corpse, and shrieking
in the wildness of their wordless grief.
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If
Richmond is correct, John would have been missing since he was neither a
daughter nor one of the "young children" (he was five or more
years older than Sarah, Joseph, and Martha Ann). |
Emma
returns |
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Finally Emma, "in a half swooning
state," returned. As she approached Hyrum's body, Richmond took her
hand and laid it on his forehead. Soon "her strength returned,"
she murmured, opened her eyes, and said, |
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Emma:
Joseph, Joseph
have the assassins shot you? |
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"Now I can see him; I am strong now." She walked alone to
her husband's bed, kneeling down, clasped him around his face, and sank
upon his body. Suddenly her grief found vent; and sighs and groans and
words and lamentations filled the room. "Joseph, Joseph,"
she said, "are you dead? Have the assassins shot you?"
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Emma's
children's grief |
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Her children four in number gathered around their weeping mother and
the dead body of a murdered father, and grief that words cannot embody
seemed to overwhelm the whole group. She continued to speak in low tones,
but none of the words were audible save those which I have recorded.
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Coffins |
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By 7 a.m. the new coffins, lined
with fine white linen, covered with black velvet, and finished with brass
nails were ready. The bodies were placed in and protective squares of glass
swung on their brass hinges to cover the faces. Then the coffins were put
into rough pine boxes and set on tables for the viewing. |
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HC 6:627. |
Mourners |
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Emma, Mary, their children, and other
family members arrived and were seated at the head of the coffins with Mother
Smith. At 8 the doors were opened to the public and the mourning multitude
began to enter. Dan Jones, who had just arrived from Quincy, wrote, "Sad
as the tombs, cheerless groups mourning wend their way by closed stores
and windows of former busy life towards the place where lay the bloody cor[p]ses
of the martyrs!" |
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Dan
Jones to Thomas Bullock, Jan. 20, 1855, Dan Jones on martyrdom, 108. |
Hyrum's
face |
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In late June, when the Mississippi
river fog lifted, temperatures rose rapidly. In the Mansion House decomposing
flesh produced putrid gases and bloating tissue. By noon Hyrum's face was
nearly unrecognizable, "the neck and face forming one bloated mass,"
Richmond observed. Though the gunshot wounds had been filled with cotton,
blood and other fluids oozed out, trickling down to the floor and puddling
across the room. |
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Mary,
Emma, Lucy |
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"Kneeling in a pool of the
comingling dripping gore of the Martyrs on the floor," Jones wrote,
Mary, Emma, and Lucy turned to one another alternately crying, "My
husband, my husband too.' My father in blood.' And my father
is dead too," and My son, my sons.'" |
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The
smell |
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"Tar, vinegar and sugar were
kept burning on the stove lest" the stench overwhelm the visitors,
who, "tracking their feet in the prophet's blood" passed through
the apartments "from morning till night
and in the house for
the live-long day the lament of sorrow was heard." |
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"The Prophet's Death" |
Farewell |
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At 5 p.m. the doors finally closed
and the families took their final farewells. Mary lifted Joseph up "to
look upon the faces of my father and the Prophet, for the last time."
Peering through the glass over, he saw faces once so familiar, now bloated
and ashen, their jaws tied shut, cotton stuffed into the bullet hole at
the base of his father's nose. |
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Nibley's presidents, 229. |
Joseph's
reaction unknown |
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His mother lifting him up to see
his father's corpse was one of the few memories Joseph retained of his father.
Most of what he knew about him was second hand. He rarely spoke of his father,
or of his feelings about his death. However, there are indications that
the martyrdom reached deep into his psyche. |
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Fear
of prison |
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When he was twenty-one,
he returned to Nauvoo for the first time, and recalled hiding in the outhouse
when strangers came to town, fearing he too would be "taken to prison."
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JFS
to Levira Smith, June 28, 1860.
Joseph's cousin, Rachel Fielding, remembered
preparing to fend off potential attackers with farm implements, boiling
water, and cayenne pepper (Rachel Fielding Burton autobiography >.)
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Urge
to kill |
Leaving Nauvoo, his companions wanted to visit Carthage, but Joseph refused.
As he waited their return, he came close to killing a man he suspected
of being sympathetic to those who assassinated his father. As he later
told the Twelve, while his companions were gone, he
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met a man who said he had just arrived five minutes too late to see
the Smiths killed. Instantly a dark cloud seemed to overshadow Bro.
Smith and he asked how this man looked upon the deed. Bro. Smith was
oppressed by a most horrible feeling as he waited for a reply. After
a brief pause the man answered, "Just as I have always looked upon
itthat it was a d----d cold-blooded murder."
The cloud immediately lifted from Bro. Smith and he found that he had
his open pocket knife grasped in his hand in his pocket and he believes
that had this man given his approval to that murder of the prophets,
he would have immediately struck him to the heart.
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A. H. Cannon diary, Dec. 6, 1889.
"While they were gone, he sat on a well curb whittling a stick … A man
came along and began to talk to him. Like a flash the thought came to him,
‘this is the man who killed my father!' Of course, there was no way of telling
whether that was actually the case or not. But the impression remained."
Leaders in Zion, 169.
"Apostle Smith, a man of deep affections, had fought away from
himself the desire for revenge for the beastly murder of his manly father." Joseph F. appreciation, 41 (Joseph F. Smith editor). |
Mary
takes in Samuel's children |
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Hyrum's oldest child, Lovina, had married Lorin Walker on June 23, four
days before the martyrdom. Mary would now have to raise John, Jerusha,
Sarah, Joseph, and Martha Ann alone. Then, on July 30, Hyrum's brother
Samuel died. Samuel's pregnant wife, Levira, needed help, so Mary took
in three of their children as well.
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Samuel
H. Smith
, 18890. |
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Little wonder that, according to Martha
Ann, Mary "seldom smiled," and getting her to laugh was "quite
a feat." |
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Hyrum Smith, 426n6, citing
Mercy R. Fielding Lawson Centennial Letter, Mar. 2, 1881, opened Apr.
6, 1930. |
William
berates Mary for permitting John to go with Brigham
Joseph's helplessness |
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Emma, Mother Smith, and the rest
of the Smith family remained in Nauvoo, but Mary, her older brother, Joseph,
and younger sister, Mercy, decided to follow Brigham Young. When William,
the only surviving Smith brother learned that Mary had allowed John to join
the vanguard, he was furious, berating her for siding with Young against
the rest of the family. Listening upstairs, Joseph "longed for age
and maturity in order that he might defend his helpless mother from such
unwarranted and bitter assaults." At eight, if not before, he believed
he should be his mother's protector. |
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¶
Susa Young Gates: Mary Fielding Smith |
Pride
in driving the wagon to Winter Quarters |
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The family left Nauvoo in September,
crossing the Mississippi just hours before the cannonading of Nauvoo commenced.
Then Joseph would drive a team three hundred miles to Winter Quarters. "I
never got stuck once and I never tipped the wagon over, I never broke a
tongue or reach or wreched a wheel," he later crowed. "I got through
the journey just as well as the old men who drove the teams and I felt mighty
big about it, I tell you." |
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Boyhood, 59. |
Conditions
at Winter Quarters |
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At Winter Quarters they lived in
a clapboard house with a sod roof. The winters were horrid. An estimated
six hundred men, women, and children died in the eighteen months before
Mary's family got out. By then, Joseph had witnessed more than a boy's share
of suffering and death. |
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house: J. Fielding diary, 111112.
Joseph suffered from scurvy, probably malaria, and accidents.
¶ Joseph Fielding diary
Over 350 deaths are documented in Winter Quarters, 63, including causes such
as consumption (tuberculosis), scurvy, canker, cholera, scarlet fever,
and typhus.
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Almost
a man |
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He left a detailed account of the
trek westdiscussed below. Suffice it to say for now that the young
boy felt driving a heavily loaded wagon for a thousand miles attested to
his manhood. He performed all the chores of a man but night guard duty (which,
much to his embarrassment, his mother would not allow). |
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Hard
times in the Valley |
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In the valley Mary selected a spot
on Mill Creek. Before the snow flew she had only time to build a ten by
twelve shelter, primarily for cooking, but where she also taught Joseph
to read. They lived in the wagons. During the winter food was in short supply.
Bread was rationed, and some even boiled leather for soup. Mary's family
dined on parched corn and corn-meal, milk and butter, supplemented with
nettle greens, thistle roots, and sego lily bulbs. |
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¶
Joseph Fielding diary
Joseph Fielding located a short distance away in Mill Creek
¶ Rachel Fielding Burton Reminiscence |
Mary's
family |
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In the spring of 1849 Mary moved
the family a mile west, where they began construction of an adobe house,
fourteen by twenty-two, for eight persons: Mary; her step-children John,
Jerusha, and Sarah; children Joseph and Martha Ann; and two elderly persons,
George Mills and Hannah Grinnells, who had been with the family for many
years. |
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Crickets |
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Crickets destroyed much of the first
two years' crops, but the harvest of 1851 was successful, and prospects
for the Smith family finally began to improve. |
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JFS
to James E. Talmage, October 28, 1909. At the October 1851 conference President
Young exulted, "Tithing is coming in so fast their will not be room
to receive it.
Our graineries & store House are full of wheat
& good things." WWJ 4:72. |
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To be continued
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