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When Wilford Woodruff converted to the LDS church in 1833, he joined a millenarian group of a few thousand persecuted believers clustered around Kirtland, Ohio. When he died sixty-five years later in 1898, he was the leader of more than a quarter-million followers worldwide. Before attaining the status of senior apostle at the death of John Taylor in 1887, Woodruff had been one of the fiercest opponents of United States hegemony. He spent years evading territorial marshals on the Mormon underground in rural Utah and Arizona, unable even to attend his first wife's funeral. As church president,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
When Wilford Woodruff converted to the LDS church in 1833, he joined a millenarian group of a few thousand persecuted believers clustered around Kirtland, Ohio. When he died sixty-five years later in 1898, he was the leader of more than a quarter-million followers worldwide. Before attaining the status of senior apostle at the death of John Taylor in 1887, Woodruff had been one of the fiercest opponents of United States hegemony. He spent years evading territorial marshals on the Mormon underground in rural Utah and Arizona, unable even to attend his first wife's funeral. As church president, faced with disfranchisement and federal confiscation of LDS temples, Woodruff reached a decision in 1890 to accept U.S. law. But through all this, Woodruff himself changed. Alexander examines the secular and religious development of the president's world view from apocalyptic mystic to pragmatic conciliator. He reveals the gentle, solitary farmer; the fisherman and horticulturalist; the family man with seven wives; the charismatic preacher of the Mormon Reformation; the astute businessman; the savvy politician who courted the favor of prominent Republicans in California and Oregon (Leland Stanford and others); and the romantic who in old age pursued the affections of Lydia Mountford.
Autorenporträt
Thomas G. Alexander is the Lemuel H. Redd Professor of Western History at Brigham Young University. His many works include Grace and Grandeur: A History of Salt Lake City and Mormonism in Transition: A History of the Latter-day Saints, 1890-1930. He is co-editor of Great Basin Kingdom Revisited: Contemporary Perspectives; Manchester Mormons: The Journals of William Clayton, 1840-1842; and volume five of The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant. He is national president of Phi Alpha Theta and past president of the Association of Utah Historians, Mormon History Association, and Utah State Historical Society.