George A. Smith
George A. Smith | |
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First Counselor in the First Presidency | |
October 7, 1868 | – September 1, 1875|
Called by | Brigham Young |
Predecessor | Heber C. Kimball |
Successor | John W. Young |
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
April 26, 1839 | – October 7, 1868|
Called by | Joseph Smith |
Predecessor | Wilford Woodruff |
Successor | Orson Hyde |
End reason | Called as First Counselor in the First Presidency |
LDS Church Apostle | |
April 26, 1839 | – September 1, 1875|
Called by | Joseph Smith |
Reason | Replenishing Quorum of the Twelve[1] |
Reorganization at end of term |
No apostles ordained[2] |
Personal details | |
Born | George Albert Smith June 26, 1817 Potsdam, New York, United States |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, United States |
Resting place | Salt Lake City Cemetery Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Spouse(s) | 7 |
Children | 20 |
Parents | John Smith Clarissa Lyman |
George Albert Smith (June 26, 1817 – September 1, 1875) (commonly known as George A. Smith to distinguish him from his grandson of the same name) was an early leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and served in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and as a member of the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).
Smith played a prominent role in the chain of events preceding the Mountain Meadows Massacre on September 11, 1857. The city of St. George, Utah, is named after him.
Contents
Childhood
Smith was born in Potsdam, St. Lawrence County, New York, the son of John Smith and Clarissa Lyman, and a nephew of Joseph Smith, Sr. In September 1832, at the age of 15, George A. Smith was baptized into the Church of Christ founded by his cousin Joseph Smith The following year, John Smith and his family moved to Kirtland, Ohio, the church's headquarters. There Smith met his cousin, Joseph, for the first time. In 1838, he moved with his parents and a large body of church members to the state of Missouri.
Church service
In the spring of 1834, the 16-year-old Smith accompanied a group Latter Day Saints on a 2000-mile march to Missouri and back to Ohio. This trip, known as Zion's Camp, was intended to bring aid to suffering members of the church in Missouri. Smith served as a missionary to the eastern United States, traveling and preaching during the summers of 1835, 1836, and 1837, while attending school each winter.
Smith was ordained a seventy in the priesthood on March 1, 1835, by Joseph Smith. On April 26, 1839, at the age of 21, George A. Smith was ordained an apostle and became a member of the Quorum of the Twelve. Future church president Wilford Woodruff was ordained as an apostle on the same day. The two men replaced former apostles Thomas B. Marsh, who had left the church, and Orson Hyde, who had been disfellowshipped and removed from his position.
After Joseph Smith's death and the assumption of church leadership by Brigham Young, Smith travelled to the Salt Lake Valley as a Mormon pioneer. After arriving in Utah, Smith led a company of 118 volunteers and about 30 families to establish a colony near the Little Salt Lake in Iron County. They arrived at Centre Creek, 265 miles from Salt Lake City, on January 13, 1851. Under direction from the General Assembly of the State of Deseret, the group organized the political entity of Iron County and elected Smith as chief justice. During the winter of 1850–51, the settlers constructed a fort enclosing homes, a meeting house, a school, and a watch tower. They named their community Parowan. Smith taught school during the first winter, and later served as a member of Utah's territorial legislature.
In 1868, Smith was called to replace Heber C. Kimball as First Counselor in the First Presidency under church president Brigham Young. Smith served in this position until his death. Smith's first wife, Bathsheba W. Smith, served as general president of the church's Relief Society from 1901 to 1910. A son, John Henry Smith, also served as an apostle and member of the First Presidency. George A. Smith's grandson and namesake, George Albert Smith, also became an apostle and later was the church's eighth president.
Smith was the eighth official Church Historian of the LDS Church between 1854 and 1871.
Utah War
During the hurried series of actions Young and LDS Church leaders initiated on learning of the eminent arrival of U.S. troops into Utah Territory, Smith left Salt Lake City to visit southern Utah communities. Scholars have asserted that Smith's tour, speeches, and personal actions contributed to the fear and tension in these communities, and influenced the decision to attack and destroy the Baker–Fancher emigrant train near Mountain Meadows, Utah.
Leaving on August 3, 1857, Smith arrived at Parowan, Utah on August 8, 1857,[3] and on August 15, he set off on a tour of the local military district manned by the Utah militia known as the Nauvoo Legion, led by stake president-Colonel W. H. Dame. Although Smith's rank in the Legion was simply a private,[4] one Parowan resident understood that part of the purpose of his trip was to represent the church leadership and to organize the regiment, inspect the troops, and provide instructions.[5] During the tour, Smith gave military speeches[6] and counseled Mormons that they should prepare to "touch fire to their homes, and hide themselves in the mountains, and to defend their country to the very last extremity." Smith instructed church members to stockpile grain, and not to sell it to emigrants or use it for animal feed.
In addition to Parowan, Smith's tour included visits to Cedar City and Santa Clara. The group stopped at Mountain Meadows to eat dinner on August 20[7] with a group of resident missionaries.[8] Smith addressed a group of Indians in Santa Clara, counseling them that "the Americans" were approaching with a large army, and were a threat to the Indians as well as the Mormons.[9] Riding in a wagon afterwards, John D. Lee said he warned Smith that the Indians would likely attack emigrant trains, and that Mormons were anxious to avenge the blood of the prophets,[10] and according to Lee, Smith seemed pleased, and said "he had had a long talk with Major Haight on the same subject."[11]
Isaac C. Haight, Cedar City stake president, and second in military command under Dame, met with Smith again on August 21.[12] Haight told Smith he had heard reports that 600 troops were already approaching Cedar City from the East, and that if the rumors were true, Haight would have to act without waiting for instructions from Salt Lake City. Smith agreed, and "admired his grit".[13] Smith later said he was uncomfortable, perhaps "on account of my extreme timidity", because some of the militia members were eager that "their enemies might come and give them a chance to fight and take vengeance for the cruelties that had been inflicted upon us in the States", such as the Haun's Mill massacre,[14] where 18 Mormons were killed in 1838 in a skirmish with the Missouri militia during the Mormon War.
On the way back to Salt Lake City, Smith was accompanied by a party including Jacob Hamblin of Santa Clara, a newly appointed Mormon missionary to the Natives in the region who also ran a federally funded "Indian farm" next to Mountain Meadows.[15] Also traveling north with the Smith party were several Native chiefs of the southern Utah Territory.[16]
On August 25, 1857, Smith's group camped next to the Fancher–Baker party, headed the opposite direction, at Corn Creek, now Kanosh. Smith later said he had no knowledge of the Baker–Fancher party prior to meeting them on the trail.[17] When the Baker–Fancher party inquired about places to stop for water and grazing, Hamblin directed them to Mountain Meadows,[18] near the "Indian farm" there, a regular stopover on the Old Spanish Trail.
Plural marriage
Like many Mormon leaders in the nineteenth century, Smith practiced plural marriage. Known for his somewhat bombastic speaking style, Smith once said: We breathe the free air, we have the best looking men and handsomest women, and if [non-Mormons] envy us our position, well they may, for they are a poor, narrow-minded, pinch-backed race of men, who chain themselves down to the law of monogamy, and live all their days under the dominion of one wife. They ought to be ashamed of such conduct, and the still fouler channel which flows from their practices; and it is not to be wondered at that they should envy those who so much better understand the social relations.[19]
In addition to his first wife, Bathsheba, Smith married Lucy Smith, Nancy Clement, Sarah Ann Libby, Hannah Maria Libby, Zilpha Stark, and Susan E. West. His wives bore him 20 children, 11 of whom were still living when Smith died.
Physical characteristics
Smith was a portly man, at 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 m) and at least 250 pounds (110 kg). He was humorously known for sometimes removing his wig to wipe his brow while preaching. After seeing Smith remove his hair, glasses, and false teeth, Paiutes gave him the name Non-choko-wicher, or "takes himself apart".[20]
Death
Smith died in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory and was buried at the Salt Lake City Cemetery.
Image gallery
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Smith Ca. 1862 -
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Smith Ca. 1875 -
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Grave marker of George A. Smith.
Notes
- ↑ The Quorum of the Twelve Apostles had not had twelve members since September 3, 1837, when Luke S. Johnson, John F. Boynton, and Lyman E. Johnson were disfellowshipped and removed from the Quorum. Since that time, William E. McLellin and Thomas B. Marsh had been excommunicated and removed from the Quorum; David W. Patten had been killed; and John Taylor and John E. Page had been added to the Quorum. The ordinations of Smith and Wilford Woodruff brought membership in the Quorum of the Twelve to ten members.
- ↑ No apostle was immediately called to replace Smith. Brigham Young died two years after Smith, and the First Presidency dissolved. Due to the dissolution of the First Presidency, the Quorum of the Twelve had twelve members after Young's death and there was therefore no immediate need to call an apostle to replace Smith.
- ↑ Martineau 1857.
- ↑ See George A. Smith [July 4, 1852], JD 1:79; Smith 1875
- ↑ Martineau 1857
- ↑ Smith 1857, p. 221
- ↑ Martineau 1857
- ↑ Smith 1857, p. 222
- ↑ (Lee 1877, pp. 223).
- ↑ (Lee 1877, pp. 223–225).
- ↑ (Lee 1877, pp. 224).
- ↑ Martineau 1857.
- ↑ Smith 1857, p. 223.
- ↑ Smith 1857, p. 223
- ↑ Smith 1875; "Case of the Defense", The Salt Lake Tribune, August 3, 1875.
- ↑ These chiefs included Ammon, Kanosh, Tutsegabit, and Youngwids (Brooks 1950, p. 27; Bagley 2002, p. 113).
- ↑ Smith 1875.
- ↑ Carleton 1859, pp. 2–4
- ↑ Journal of Discourses, vol. 3, p. 291.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. See also: Massacre at Mountain Meadows
References
- Nibley, Preston. The Presidents of the Church. Deseret Book, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1974. ISBN 0-87747-414-1.
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: George A. Smith |
- George A. Smith Family Papers, University of Utah
- Grampa Bill's G.A. Pages: George A. Smith
- Works by or about George A. Smith in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints titles | ||
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Preceded by | First Counselor in the First Presidency October 7, 1868 – September 1, 1875 |
Succeeded by John W. Young |
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints titles Later renamed: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1844) |
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Preceded by | Quorum of the Twelve Apostles April 26, 1839 – October 7, 1868 |
Succeeded by Orson Hyde |
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