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| Joseph F. Smith | |
| Full name | Joseph Fielding Smith |
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| Born | November 13, 1838 |
| Place of birth | Far West, Missouri |
| Died | November 19, 1918 (aged 80) |
| Place of death | Salt Lake City, Utah |
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| Ordained | October 17, 1901 (aged 62) |
| Predecessor | Lorenzo Snow |
| Successor | Heber J. Grant |
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| Called by | Brigham Young |
| Ordained | July 1, 1866 (aged 27) |
| Reason for ordination | Brigham Young's discretion[1] |
| End of term | November 19, 1918 (aged 80) |
| Reason for end of term | Death |
| Reorganization at end of term | Melvin J. Ballard ordained |
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| Called by | Brigham Young |
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| Start of term | July 1, 1866 (aged 27) |
| End of term | August 29, 1877 (aged 38) |
| End reason | Dissolution of First Presidency upon death of Brigham Young |
| Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
| Start of term | August 29, 1877 (aged 38) |
| End of term | October 10, 1880 (aged 41) |
| End reason | Called as Second Counselor in the First Presidency |
| Second Counselor in the First Presidency | |
| Called by | John Taylor |
| Start of term | October 10, 1880 (aged 41) |
| End of term | July 25, 1887 (aged 48) |
| End reason | Dissolution of First Presidency upon death of John Taylor |
| Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
| Start of term | July 25, 1887 (aged 48) |
| End of term | April 7, 1889 (aged 50) |
| End reason | Called as Second Counselor in the First Presidency |
| Second Counselor in the First Presidency | |
| Called by | Wilford Woodruff |
| Start of term | April 7, 1889 (aged 50) |
| End of term | October 6, 1901 (aged 62) |
| End reason | Called as First Counselor in the First Presidency |
| First Counselor in the First Presidency | |
| Called by | Lorenzo Snow |
| Start of term | October 6, 1901 (aged 62) |
| End of term | October 10, 1901 (aged 62) |
| End reason | Dissolution of First Presidency upon death of Lorenzo Snow |
| President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
| Start of term | October 10, 1901 (aged 62) |
| End reason | October 17, 1901 (aged 62) |
| Reason for end of term | Became President of the Church |
| President of the Church | |
| Start of term | October 17, 1901 (aged 62) |
| End of term | November 19, 1918 (aged 80) |
| End reason | Death |
Joseph Fielding Smith, Sr. (November 13, 1838 – November 19, 1918) was the sixth president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the last president of the LDS Church to have personally known the founder of the Mormon faith, Joseph Smith, Jr., who was the brother of his father Hyrum Smith.
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Smith was the son of Patriarch Hyrum Smith and his second wife Mary Fielding, a British convert to the Church who married Hyrum after the death of his first wife, Jerusha Barden Smith. In addition to her two children, Mary Fielding Smith raised the five children from the union of Hyrum and Jerusha.
Smith was born in Far West, Missouri on November 13, 1838. Just a few days before he was born, his father Hyrum had been taken prisoner under the auspices of the Mormon Extermination Order. At point of bayonet, Hyrum was marched to his home in Far West and ordered to say farewell to his wife. He was told that his "doom was sealed" and that he would never see her again. Hyrum was still in custody in Liberty Jail, Missouri when his son Joseph Fielding was born. He was named after his uncle, Joseph Smith, Jr. and his mother's brother Joseph Fielding. His mother and maternal aunt Mercy Fielding Thompson fled with their children to Quincy, Illinois early in 1839, and later they moved to Nauvoo, Illinois when the majority of the members of the Church settled there. Joseph F. Smith stated as an adult that he had memories of Nauvoo, and can recall his uncle, the prophet Joseph Smith, Jr. and events that occurred at his uncle's home; he would have been no more than five and a half when on June 27, 1844, Joseph's uncle and father were murdered in Carthage, Illinois.
Smith's family remained in Nauvoo until September 1844, at which time his mother took their family and fled the city, camping on the West side of the Mississippi river among the trees on its banks, without wagon or tent, while the city was bombarded by mobs. His mother was later able to exchange their property in Illinois for a wagon and team of oxen. Joseph and his family, along with many other Mormons, fled the American Midwest. The seven-year-old Smith drove the team of oxen, with his family, to the Church encampment at Winter Quarters, Nebraska. While at Winter Quarters, Joseph and another boy named Thomas Burdick were out on horseback some distance from the settlement, watching the cattle graze. They saw a band of twenty or thirty Indians ride into the valley on the other side of the cattle. Thomas rode back to camp to get help while Joseph rode toward the Indians and got between the Indians and the herd before the Indians reached the cattle. Joseph was able to turn the herd to head back toward the settlement, and coupled with the noise and arrival of the Indians, started a stampede (saving the herd from the Indians). He was still riding with the herd at full speed when two Indians picked him up off of his horse from either side and dropped him to the ground. A company of men from the encampment then arrived and were able to chase away the fleeing Indians and recover the herd, but Joseph's horse was stolen.
Joseph and his family remained at Winter Quarters until the spring of 1848 when Smith drove his mother's wagon across the plains to Utah.
While in Utah, Joseph's mother Mary Fielding Smith worked with her sister and brother to raise the two widow's families, as well as continuing to care for Hyrum and Jerusha's younger children. Mary Fielding Smith died in 1852, apparently of pneumonia, leaving Joseph an orphan at the age of 13. Smith reported that he was devastated by his mother's death, and relied upon the emotional support and help of Brigham Young and his stepfather Heber C. Kimball among others. Even with the support of his older half brother John Smith, Joseph assumed primary responsibility for his young sister, Martha Ann, and subsequently left school in 1854.
At the age of fifteen, Smith was called to go on his first LDS mission to the Sandwich Islands (designated the Hawaiian Islands after acquisition as a territory of the United States) under the direction of Apostle Parley P. Pratt. He successfully learned the language of the Hawaiian people and reported great success in four years of missionary work on the islands. He completed his service and returned to Utah to find it in the midst of serious conflict with the federal government (see Utah War). In 1858, Smith joined the territory's militia, named the "Nauvoo Legion" after a similar unit in Illinois, and spent several months patrolling the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains. Later in his tour of duty, he served as chaplain of Colonel Heber C. Kimball's regiment, with the rank of Captain. After tensions between the church and the federal government abated, Smith assisted his relatives in their return to northern Utah from areas in southern Utah, where they had taken their families for safety. In 1860, at 22 years of age, he was sent on a mission to Great Britain. He and his cousin Samuel H. B. Smith drove mule teams over the plains to Winter Quarters to help pay their way. Joseph served for 3 years, under mission president George Q. Cannon, returning in the summer of 1863.
Smith had only been home for a short while when he was called to accompany Ezra T. Benson and Lorenzo Snow on a second mission to the Sandwich Islands to correct the problems caused by Walter M. Gibson. He acted as principal interpreter for the apostles, and after Gibson was excommunicated, Joseph was left in charge of the mission. Joseph returned home in the winter of 1864-1865.
Joseph had a notable experience during this mission. The group anchored their boat in a rough channel in order to go ashore, proposing that the party should land using the freight boat. Joseph was strongly opposed to this, saying that the boat was unfit for the rough waters and that there was a great danger of capsizing. He offered to go ashore alone to obtain a boat fit to transport the party, to which they refused. They were persistent however, chiding him for his waywardness, with one leader even saying, "Young man, you would better obey counsel." He then reiterated his impression of danger, imploring them not to go, but they insisted, so he asked that they leave their satchels, clothes, and valuables and permit him to stay. They reluctantly consented and set out for land. Partway there, the freight boat was overturned by the rough water about 20 or 30 feet deep, and President Lorenzo Snow nearly drowned in the ocean. Fortunately, President Snow's unconscious body was recovered, and on shore they were able to resuscitate him. Due to Joseph's actions, all of their belongings were saved.
Upon his return home, Smith was employed in the Church historian's office for a number of years, then as a clerk in the Endowment House, being in charge after the death of President Young, until it was closed. Smith served seven terms in the Utah territorial House of Representatives, as well as terms on the Salt Lake City Council and in the territorial Senate; he also served in the presidency of a state constitutional convention in 1882. Smith also served as a Church representative on boards of many Utah businesses.
In 1859, Smith married his sixteen-year-old cousin Levira Smith, daughter of Samuel Harrison Smith. Seven years later, Brigham Young directed him to take a plural wife. With Levira's consent, he married Julina Lambson in 1866.
Levira later obtained a divorce "due to interference on the part of relatives, and because of the continued absence of her husband in mission fields and in ecclesiastical duties."[2]
Over the next eighteen years, Smith took on four additional wives: Sarah Ellen Richards (March 1, 1868); Edna Lambson (May 5, 1871); Alice Ann Kimball (December 6, 1883); and Mary Taylor Schwartz (January 13, 1884). Alice was Heber C. Kimball's daughter and a twin to Andrew Kimball, father of Spencer W. Kimball. Mary was Agnes Taylor's daughter and church president John Taylor's niece.
Smith ultimately fathered forty-three children, thirteen of whom preceded him in death. His first-born son by Edna, Hyrum Mack Smith, was a church apostle from 1901 until his death in 1918. His first-born son by Julina, Joseph Fielding Smith, Jr., was also an apostle and, later, church president.
Smith served another mission to Hawaii in 1884-1887, in part to evade federal anti-polygamy prosecution. He continued fathering children after 1890, including six (of seven total) with Mary and four[3] with Alice.[4] One of his granddaughters, Amelia Smith, married Bruce R. McConkie, later a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
After Smith's first mission to Hawaii at age fifteen, he served in the Salt Lake Stake High Council in 1859, and in 1864 began working in the Church Historian's Office as a "recorder" for the Endowment House, Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and the First Presidency. By the time he was called to the apostleship in 1866 at the age of 27, he had served three separate missions for the church. (Hawaii 1854–57; Great Britain 1860–63; Hawaii 1864)
On July 1, 1866, Smith was ordained an apostle by Brigham Young and sustained as a counselor to the First Presidency, where he served until Young's death. However, he was not sustained as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles until the church's October conference of 1867. On February 28, 1874, he left for his second mission to England, serving as President of the European Mission from 1874 to 1875, returning home upon the death of First Presidency member George A. Smith. He was then called to preside over the Davis Stake until he left again in the spring of 1877 for his third mission to England. When news arrived of the death of Young, Smith was released and sent home. The following year he served an Eastern States Mission with Orson Pratt, visiting noteworthy places in the history of the church in Missouri, Ohio, New York and Illinois. During this trip they met with and interviewed David Whitmer.
After Young's death, Smith was named second counselor in the First Presidency to church president John Taylor in October 1880, serving from 1880 to 1887. He later served as second counselor to president Wilford Woodruff (1889–1898), and as second counselor to president Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was sustained as first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as President Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in this position. He succeeded Snow as president of the Salt Lake Temple and served in this capacity until 1911, when he transferred this responsibility to Anthon H. Lund.
Smith also served as editor of the Improvement Era and Juvenile Instructor, and general superintendent of the Sunday School and Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association.
Smith felt it was important for Utah to become a state, and thereby eliminate the ongoing federal supervision of the Utah Territory. Following the official discontinuance of new plural marriages by Wilford Woodruff in 1890, and the dissolution of the Mormon People's Party in 1891, Smith championed the anti-polygamy Republican party in Utah.
Smith was chosen by the twelve apostles and set apart as President of the Church on October 17, 1901. This was ratified by a special conference and solemn assembly of the priesthood on November 10, 1901. He chose as his counselors John R. Winder, a native of the United Kingdom, and Anthon H. Lund, a native of Denmark. After Winder died, Lund became the First Counselor and Smith's second cousin John Henry Smith became the Second Counselor.
Joseph F. Smith gave more influence to the Presiding Patriarch of the church than had any president since Joseph Smith, Jr. The church's presiding patriarch, John Smith, was his elder half-brother.
Joseph F. Smith was the first church president to travel outside of North America while president of the church. In 1906 he went on a tour to Europe.
One of the first issues he faced was the ongoing difficulties for the Church due to the practice of plural marriage. As Church President, Smith supported Mormon Apostle Reed Smoot's candidacy for the U.S. Senate. But Smoot's election was contested on the grounds that he was an officer in the Church. The Senate investigation again focused national attention on Mormon marriages and political influence. Following his appearance before a Senate panel in 1904, Smith took steps to prevent any surreptitious continuation of church plural marriages. On April 6, 1904, Smith issued the "Second Manifesto." He also declared that any church officer who performed a plural marriage, as well as the offending couple, would be excommunicated. He clarified that the policy applied world-wide, and not just in North America. Two members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, John W. Taylor and Matthias F. Cowley, resigned in 1905 following the second manifesto. Smith, however, continued to live with his plural wives after the 1890 and the 1905 manifestos. In 1906, Smith was brought to trial on a charge of unlawful cohabitation with four women in addition to his lawful wife; he pleaded guilty and was fined $300, the maximum penalty then permitted under the law.[5]
Smith's seventeen year administration made efforts toward improving the Church's damaged relationships with the federal government and related issues dealing with the Church's financial situation. The administration acquired historic sites, constructed numerous meetinghouses, and expanded the church system of educational academies and universities. He also oversaw a continued growth in Church membership.
Smith died of pneumonia in Salt Lake City on November 19, 1918,[6] and was succeeded by President Heber J. Grant. Due to the widespread influenza pandemic of 1918–1920, a graveside service, rather than a public funeral, was held. Smith was interred in the Salt Lake City cemetery on November 22, 1918.
Smith is often remembered as church president for the construction and dedication of Joseph Smith Birthplace Memorial in South Royalton, Vermont on December 23, 1905 and the Seagull Monument at Temple Square in Salt Lake City, Utah on October 1, 1913. In 1913, Boy Scouting became the official youth activity program for the church's young men. During much of his presidential tenure, Smith oversaw the planning and construction of the Laie Hawaii Temple in Lā'ie, Hawai'i, one of his part-time residences. Smith died on November 19, 1918, a year before the Hawaii Temple was to be dedicated. He left a body of religious writings often used in discussing church doctrine and religious conduct.
During his administration as President of the Church, President Smith made significant official statements of Latter-day Saint doctrine:
Funded by Lorenzo N. Stohl, the sermons and writings of Joseph F. Smith were compiled by John A. Widtsoe, Osborne J.P. Widtsoe, Albert E. Bowen, Franklin S. Harris and Joseph Quinney. In 1919, the "Committee on Study for the Priesthood Quorums of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints" had this work published as the book Gospel Doctrine, for use as instruction for Melchizedek priesthood quorums of the church.
| Religious titles | ||
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| Preceded by Lorenzo Snow |
President of the LDS Church 17 October 1901–November 19, 1918 |
Succeeded by Heber J. Grant |
| Preceded by George Q. Cannon |
President of
the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles April 21, 1901–17 October 1901 |
Succeeded by Brigham Young, Jr. |
| Preceded by George Q. Cannon |
Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles July 1, 1866–17 October 1901 |
Succeeded by Brigham Young, Jr. |
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Joseph Fielding Smith, Sr. (November 13, 1838 – November 19, 1918), usually known as Joseph F. Smith to distinguish him from his son of the same name, was the sixth President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was the last President of the Church to have personally known the founder of the Mormon faith, Joseph Smith, Jr., who was also his uncle.
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