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No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith
A FAIR Analysis of: No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith, a work by author: Fawn Brodie
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Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith by Fawn Brodie
Summary: Louis Midgley: "Though Fawn McKay Brodie forged a reputation as a controversial psychohistorian, it is her 1945 biography of Joseph Smith for which she has always been known among Latter-day Saints. She thought of herself, and has been portrayed by cultural Mormons, as an "objective" historian who had taken the measure of "the Mormon prophet." Her death on 10 January 1981 was followed by tributes in which she was depicted as a heroic figure who had courageously liberated herself from bondage to the mind-numbing religious orthodoxy of her parochial childhood and who had thereby set in place among Latter-day Saints what one of her admirers called "a new climate of liberation." Fawn McKay Brodie: A Biographer's Life—the latest and most comprehensive of these tributes to Brodie—constitutes a substantial addition to the tiny academic specialty that might be called 'Brodie studies'."[1]
Jump to details:
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 2: Treasure in the Earth"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 3: Red Sons of Israel"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 4: A Marvelous Work and a Wonder"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 5: Witnesses for God"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 6: The Prophet of Palmyra"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 7: The Perfect Society and the Promised Land"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 8: Temple Builder"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 9: Expulsion from Eden"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 10: The Army of the Lord"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 11: Patronage and Punishment"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 12: Master of Languages"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 13: My Kingdom is of this World"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 14: Disaster in Kirtland"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 15: The Valley of God"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 16: The Alcoran or the Sword"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 17: Ordeal in Liberty Jail"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 18: Nauvoo"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 19: Mysteries of the Kingdom"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 20: In the Quiver of the Almighty"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 21: If a Man Entice a Maid"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 22: The Bennett Explosion"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 23: Into Hiding"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 24: The Wives of the Prophet"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 25: Candidate for President"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 26: Prelude to Destruction"
- Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 27: Carthage"
- Hugh W. Nibley, "No, Ma'am, That's Not History"
- Louis Midgley, "F. M. Brodie--"The Fasting Hermit and Very Saint of Ignorance": A Biographer and Her Legend"
- Louis Midgley, "Comments on Critical Exchanges"
- Gary F. Novak, ""The Most Convenient Form of Error": Dale Morgan on Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon"
- BYU Studies, "Exploding the Myth About Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet"
- BYU Studies, "The Brodie Connection: Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Smith"
Claim Evaluation |
No Man Knows My History |
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 2: Treasure in the Earth"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 16 - Joseph was notorious for telling tall tales
- Response to claim: 16 - Joseph was charged with being "a disorderly person and an impostor" at his 1826 trial
- Response to claim: 18 - Fifty-one of Joseph's neighbors signed affidavits accusing him of being "destitute of moral character" and "addicted to vicious habits"
- Response to claim: 18 - Joseph dreamed of an "illustrious and affluent" future, "detested the plow" and despaired about the family's debts
- Response to claim: 19 - A "vagabond fortune-teller" named Walters became popular in the area. When Walters left the area, "his mantle fell upon" Joseph Smith
- Response to claim: 20 - William Stafford told a story about Joseph which claimed that he could find money using a bleeding black sheep
- Response to claim: 20 - Joseph could see "ghosts, infernal spirits" and "mountains of gold" in his seer stone
- Response to claim: 23 - Palmyra newspapers took no notice of Joseph's vision at the time it was supposed to have occurred
- Response to claim: 24 - The story of Joseph first vision evolved greatly between his 1832 and 1838 accounts
- Response to claim: 24- Oliver Cowdery described Joseph's first vision as having occurred in 1823
- Response to claim: 24 - Some of Joseph's close relatives confused the first vision with Moroni's visit
- Response to claim: 25 - Joseph's own family did not know of his first vision at the time that it happened
- Response to claim: 25 - Joseph's vision may have been an invention to cancel out stories of his fortune telling and money digging
- Response to claim: 26 - Joseph liked preaching because it gave him an audience, and this was as "essential to Joseph as food"
- Response to claim: 30 - In March 1826 Joseph got into serious trouble because of his "magic arts"
- Response to claim: 30 - The court pronounced Joseph "guilty" at the 1826 trial
- Response to claim: 31 - Joseph's mentor was "the conjurer Walters"
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 3: Red Sons of Israel"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 35 - Between 1820 and 1827 Joseph decided to write a history of the mound builders
- Response to claim: 37 - Peter Ingersoll claimed that Joseph told him that no one could see the golden Bible and live
- Response to claim: 39 - The "magic" Urim and Thummim was found with the plates
- Response to claim: 40 - The four year period during which Joseph waited to get the plates corresponded with his most intensive money-digging activities
- Response to claim: 40 - Lucy Mack Smith, Martin Harris and David Whitmer gave differing descriptions of the Urim and Thummim
- Response to claim: 41 - Joseph warned his family that it meant instant death to look at the plates
- Response to claim: 43 - Joseph was able to translate the plates without unwrapping them by using his stone
- Response to claim: 43 - Emma said that Joseph used the Urim and Thummim for the first 116 pages and then the seer stone for the remainder of the translation
- Response to claim: 43 - God cursed the Lamanites and all their descendents with a "red skin"
- Response to claim: 43 - A neighbor, Lemuel Durfee. Signed an affidavit in 1833 charging Joseph with vicious habits and an immoral character
- Response to claim: 44 - After each battle in the Book of Mormon, the dead were "heaped upon the face of the earth, and they were covered with a shallow covering" - a reference to the Indian mounds
- Response to claim: 46 - Joseph's familiarity with the idea that the Indians descended from the Hebrews seems to have come primarily from Ethan Smith's View of the Hebrews
- Response to claim: 49 - Joseph Smith took the whole Western Hemisphere as the setting for the Book of Mormon
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 4: A Marvelous Work and a Wonder"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 53 - Joseph warned Martin Harris that God's wrath would strike him down if he examined the plates
- Response to claim: 53 - Harris once tried to trick Joseph by substituting an ordinary stone for the seer stone
- Response to claim: 54 - Lucy Harris stole the manuscript and "neither pleas nor blows could make her divulge its hiding place"
- Response to claim: 54 - Joseph realized that he could not duplicate the 116 pages exactly
- Response to claim: 55 - Joseph's family was counting on sales of the Book of Mormon to prevent foreclosure on their farm
- Response to claim: 55 - Once Joseph had translated the small plates of Nephi, he could go back to the old plates and carry on
- Response to claim: 58 - The Isaiah chapters in the Book of Mormon were "chiefly those chapters from Isaiah mentioned in Ethan Smith's View of the Hebrews
- Response to claim: 58 - Joseph was careful to modify primarily the italicized interpolation in the King James text
- Response to claim: 58 - Joseph incorporated one of his father's dreams into the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 59 - Early in the writing Joseph vigorously attacked the Catholic Church as the "great and abominable church" and the "whore of all the earth"
- Response to claim: 60 - Lucy Smith's stories about the Golden Bible had converted Oliver Cowdery
- Response to claim: 62 - Joseph Smith's lack of education is "a favorite thesis designed to prove the authenticity" of the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 62-63 - Joseph Smith borrowed many stories from the Bible
- Response to claim: 63 - Joseph's sentence structure in the Book of Mormon was "loose-jointed, like an earthworm hacked into segments that crawl away alive and whole"
- Response to claim: 65 - The story of the Gadianton band reflects the anti-Masonic feelings in New York at the time that the Book of Mormon was produced
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 5: Witnesses for God"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 69 - The Church has "exaggerated the ignorance" of Joseph Smith in order to bolster the divinity of the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 70 - The Book of Mormon claims that Jesus was born in Jerusalem
- Response to claim: 70-71 - Joseph added the story of the Jaredites in order to explain how animals had come to America
- Response to claim: 72 - Joseph had the Jaredites bring horses, swine, sheep, cattle, and asses, yet these animals were not found in the Americas
- Response to claim: 74 - Joseph had a talent for making men see visions
- Response to claim: 77 - The Three Witnesses all told different versions of their experience
- Response to claim: 77 - The author claims that the Three Witnesses were hypnotized by Joseph Smith
- Response to claim: 78 - Martin Harris stated that he viewed the plates through "the eye of faith"
- Response to claim: 78 - The author claims that years after the event, David Whitmer embellished his story of seeing the gold plates
- Response to claim: 78 - The Three Witnesses never denied their vision even after they all left the Church because Joseph had "conjured up a vision they would never forget"
- Response to claim: 79 - The first edition of the Book of Mormon said that Joseph was "Author and proprietor," which in later editions was changed to "Translator"
- Response to claim: 79-80 - Joseph convinced the Eight Witnesses by showing them an empty box and claiming that they did not have sufficient faith to see them
- Response to claim: 80 - Joseph may have built some kind of "makeshift deception" to account for those witnesses who described the size, weight and metallic texture of the plates
- Response to claim: 81 - Hyrum suggested to Joseph that they attempt to sell the copyright of the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 82 - Martin Harris sold his farm to pay for the publication of the Book of Mormon only after Joseph frightened him with the revelation
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 6: The Prophet of Palmyra"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 83 - The Book of Mormon was conceived as a money-making history of the Indians
- Response to claim: 84 - A story circulated that Joseph Smith boasted he would walk upon the water
- Response to claim: 84-85 - Joseph began to sincerely believe what he was teaching
- Response to claim: 86 - Joseph Smith performed "miracles," but was unaware that they were common occurrences
- Response to claim: 89 - Joseph detested tedious and solitary field labor
- Response to claim: 92 - Oliver Cowdery demanded that Joseph amend some of his own revelations
- Response to claim: 92 - Oliver Cowdery secretly encouraged Hiram Page to receive revelations through his seer stone
- Response to claim: 96 - Joseph experimented with the idea of "revealing" lost books of the Bible
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 7: The Perfect Society and the Promised Land"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 101-102 - Joseph promised Lyman E. Johnson that he would see the Savior come and stand upon the Earth. William Smith and Orson Hyde were told that they would stand on earth until Christ comes
- Response to claim: 102 - Joseph suggested that the Second Coming would occur within fifty-six years
- Response to claim: 103 - Joseph began "translating" the New Testament at Sidney Rigdon's suggestion
- Response to claim: 108 - The United Order was Sidney Rigdon's idea
- Response to claim: 111 - Joseph said that the lost ten tribes were living in a land near the North Pole
- Response to claim: 112 - Joseph attempted to perform miracles and failed during a conference in Kirtland, Ohio
- Response to claim: 113 - Stories claimed that miracles could not be performed in Ohio because it was not "consecrated ground"
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 8: Temple Builder"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 117 - Joseph elaborated on Isaiah's prophecy regarding the learned man and the sealed book to match details of Martin Harris' visit to Charles Anthon
- Response to claim: 118 - Joseph's description of the three degrees of glory contrasted Book of Mormon descriptions of a "lake of fire and brimstone"
- Response to claim: 120 - The Missouri Mormons never forgave Joseph for returning to Ohio
- Response to claim: 124 - The "Civil War" prophecy was abandoned and excluded from early collections of Joseph's revelations because they thought it had failed
- Response to claim: 127 - Joseph couldn't initially called the Kirtland Temple a "temple," since there was already land dedicated for a temple in Missouri
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 9: Expulsion from Eden"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 141 - It was easy for Joseph to revise his revelation on the United Order since most copies of the Book of Commandments had been burned
- Response to claim: 141 - Joseph wanted to "destroy the notion" that the United Order had been similar to communism
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 10: The Army of the Lord"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 143 - neighbors of Solomon Spalding recalled that the Spalding manuscript that matched "an astonishing number of details" from the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 144 - The Spalding manuscript bore no resemblance to the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 144 - Martin Harris was brought to trial before the High Council because he claimed the Joseph Smith had "drunk too much liquor" while translating the Book of Mormon
- Response to claim: 145 - Hurlbut's affidavits were published by E.D. Howe in Mormonism Unvailed'
- Response to claim: 145 - Brigham Young stated, before he even met Joseph Smith, that he would follow Joseph even if he were to get "drunk every day of his life, sleep with his neighbor's wife every night"
- Response to claim: 147-148 - suggestion to change the name of the Church from the Church of Christ to the Church of Latter-day Saints in order to avoid the names "Mormon" and "Mormonite"
- Response to claim: 149 - Joseph found a skeleton of a Lamanite warrior named "Zelf"
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 11: Patronage and Punishment"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 159 - Zion's Camp was a "major failure" for Joseph Smith
- Response to claim: 159 - Men and women had died in Missouri Joseph Smith's name
- Response to claim: 159 - Joseph decided that he could no longer give out "incidental" revelations after the Missouri trials
- Response to claim: 162 - The Kirtland High Council complained that the Apostles had too much power
- Response to claim: 162 - Henry Green was cut off from the church simply because of a remark made that Joseph was "extorting" the cost of a book
- Response to claim: 165 - Joseph was "vain" regarding his "wrestling prowess"
- Response to claim: 166 - The Word of Wisdom was not given by "commandment or constraint" because Joseph was "too fond of earthly pleasures"
- Response to claim: 167 - Joseph did not take the Word of Wisdom seriously
- Response to claim: 167 - Joseph replaced wine with water in the Sacrament because Sidney Rigdon forced a vote for total abstinence through the Church
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 12: Master of Languages"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 170 - Joseph did not originally intend to translate the papyri "by inspiration as in the past," and instead attempted to formulate an Egyptian alphabet and grammar
- Response to claim: 171 - Joseph picked up the idea that there were plural gods when he learned in Hebrew class that Elohim was plural
- Response to claim: 171 - Joseph developed the concept in the Book of Abraham that the earth was organized out of existing matter from Thomas Dick's Philosophy of a Future State
- Response to claim: 171 - Joseph developed the idea that matter was "eternal and indestructible" from Thomas Dick's work
- Response to claim: 172 - Joseph's concept of Kolob being "near the throne of God" and its control of the reckoning of time came from Thomas Dick
- Response to claim: 173 - Joseph wrote the Book of Abraham in order to justify denying the priesthood to Blacks
- Response to claim: 174 - Joseph taught that "one third of the spirits had been neutral" in Heaven
- Response to claim: 175 - The Book of Abraham facsimiles are ordinary funeral documents
- Response to claim: 179 - It was reported that some of the men were drunk during the dedication of the Kirtland Temple
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 13: My Kingdom is of this World"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 181 - Joseph Smith was rumored to have "seduced" Fannie Alger
- Response to claim: 181 - It was rumored that Fannie Alger was driven out of the house by Emma because she was pregnant
- Response to claim: 181 - It is claimed that Joseph and Fannie were "found together"
- Response to claim: 182 - The author claims that Joseph accused Oliver Cowdery of "perpetuating the scandal"
- Response to claim: 182 - Fannie Alger did not admit to being the Prophet's plural wife
- Response to claim: 183 - Martin Harris was brought to trial for adultery "as early as 1832"
- Response to claim: 182 - Joseph told Ezra Booth to "take a wife from among the Lamanites"
- Response to claim: 183 - Joseph performed marriages even though it was against Ohio law
- Response to claim: 185 - Oliver Cowdery wrote a formal statement that the Church denied polygamy in August 1835
- Response to claim: 187 - Joseph realized "that for a prophet it is easier to change marriage laws than to contravene them"
- Response to claim: 189 - Isaac McWithy was brought to trial before the High Council because he would not sell his farm to Joseph Smith
- Response to claim: 192 - Joseph's trip to Salem in August 1836 with Oliver Cowdery, Sidney Rigdon and Hyrum was to look for buried gold beneath a house
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 14: Disaster in Kirtland"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 195 - The Kirtland Safety Society was said to have been established by "a revelation from God," and that it would "grow and flourish, and spread from the rivers to the ends of the earth"
- Response to claim: 197 - The assets backing the Kirtland Safety Society's notes were actually boxes filled with "sand, lead, old iron, stone and combustibles"
- Response to claim: 197 - Warren Parrish claimed that the Kirtland "bank" assets were less than Joseph claimed
- Response to claim: 198 - The Kirtland Safety Society "bank" was operating illegally
- Response to claim: 198 - Warren Parrish could not have taken $25,000 because the bank didn't have that much
- Response to claim: 199 - Joseph "prophesied" that the bank notes would be "as good as gold"
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 15: The Valley of God"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 208 - Oliver Cowdery accused Joseph of trying to "set up a kind of petty government, controlled and dictated by ecclesiastical influence"
- Response to claim: 211 - Joseph proclaimed that an altar found in Missouri was where Adam offered sacrifices
- Response to claim: 211 - The Saints believed that Jackson County was the site of the Garden of Eden
- Response to claim: 213 - Sidney Rigdon supported Sampson Avard's formation of a "secret" band
- Response to claim: 214 - Joseph and Sidney "were careful not to be associated" with the Danites
- Response to claim: 214 - The Danites were a secret society with oaths, passwords and secret signs
- Response to claim: 215 - Joseph "made a confused and damaging admission of his own relationship to the Danite organization" before his death
- Response to claim: 217 - Sidney Rigdon wanted to have Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer cut off from the church in order to banish his rivals
- Response to claim: 218-219 - Sidney Rigdon's Salt Sermon threatened the dissenters in the Church
- Response to claim: 223 - Sidney Rigdon's 4th of July sermon alluded to a "war of extermination" with the mob
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 16: The Alcoran or the Sword"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 230-231 - Joseph Smith claimed to be "a second Mohammed" and that it would eventually be "Joseph Smith or the Sword!"
- Response to claim: 230 - Joseph hinted that stealing the gentiles' supplies was acceptable
- Response to claim: 232n - Joseph "virtually admitted" that the Mormons were responsible for the looting and burning
- Response to claim: 232 - Sidney Rigdon threatened anyone who was planning to leave Far West
- Response to claim: 234 - Orson Hyde and Thomas B. Marsh admitted that the Mormons were "burning and pillaging"
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 17: Ordeal in Liberty Jail"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 251-252 - While in Liberty Jail, Joseph was worried that Sidney Rigdon would revive the United Order and the Danites
- Response to claim: 252 - Lucinda Morgan Harris claimed to have been "the prophet's mistress" at one time
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 18: Nauvoo"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 257 - Over the years, the stories of Josephs healings of the sick in Nauvoo multiplied
- Response to claim: 269 - Nauvoo had a brothel near the temple
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 19: Mysteries of the Kingdom"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 275 - Joseph's "dream images came easily to him and with such intense color and luxuriant detail"
- Response to claim: 275 - Everything in Joseph's past was reinterpreted to "enhance the glory of the present"
- Response to claim: 276 - The Book of Mormon was a "secret source of worry" to Joseph
- Response to claim: 276 - Joseph said regarding the Book of Mormon manuscript that he had "had trouble enough with this thing"
- Response to claim: 276 - Joseph Smith claimed that the word "Mormon" meant "more good"
- Response to claim: 279 - Much of the endowment ritual was borrowed from the Freemasons
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 20: In the Quiver of the Almighty"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 289 - Joseph permitted the construction of a brewery in Nauvoo and allowed it to be advertised
- Response to claim: 289 - Joseph gave some of the brethren money to purchase additional whiskey in contradiction to the Word of Wisdom
- Response to claim: 289 - Joseph was presented with a bottle of wine and he "drank it with relish"
- Response to claim: 289 - Joseph told Robert Thompson that he should "get drunk and have a good spree" or that he would die
- Response to claim: 290 - Joseph claimed to be able to translate a Greek psalter
- Response to claim: 291 - Joseph claimed that he translated a portion of the Kinderhook plates
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 21: If a Man Entice a Maid"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 298 - The doctrine of polygamy was secretly taught but publicly denied
- Response to claim: 299 - Joseph is claimed to have published a pamphlet called "The Peace Maker" supporting plural marriage in 1842, but then later denounced it
- Response to claim: 299 - Paul taught that there were be no marriage in heaven, but Joseph taught that this would not apply to the Saints
- Response to claim: 302 - Joseph was sealed to women who were already married
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 22: The Bennett Explosion"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 310 - Joseph wrote a letter to Nancy Rigdon in an attempt to persuade her to become his plural wife
- Response to claim: 312 - John C. Bennett claimed that Joseph threatened to deliver him to the Danites
- Response to claim: 314 - Bennett claimed that the Danites were present in Nauvoo
- Response to claim: 316 - Joseph proposed plural marriage to Sarah Pratt while her husband Orson was away on a mission
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 23: Into Hiding"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 323 - There was a rumor that Joseph had predicted that Governor's Boggs and Carlin would meet a violent death
- Response to claim: 328 - Joseph threatened to have houses burned if tavern owners in the village of Paris did not let them stay for the night
- Response to claim: 331 - Joseph was accused of sending Porter Rockwell to kill Lilburn Boggs
- Response to claim: 332-333 - Joseph had a bar installed in the Mansion House but removed it at Emma's insistence
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 24: The Wives of the Prophet"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 334 - The number of women sealed to Joseph Smith may have exceeded fifty
- Response to claim: 336 - At least twelve of the women sealed to Joseph were already married with living husbands
- Response to claim: 338 - "Most" of Joseph wives were married to him for "time and eternity"
- Response to claim: 339 - Emma selected the Partridge sisters and the Lawrence sisters as plural wives for Joseph
- Response to claim: 342 - Emma burned the revelation on plural marriage
- Response to claim: 343 - Joseph said that he would have Emma as his wife in the hereafter even if he had to "go to hell" for her
- Response to claim: 345 - There is "some evidence that Fannie Alger bore Joseph a child in Kirtland"
- Response to claim: 345 - The author claims that Prescindia Huntington Buell's son Oliver may have been Joseph's son
- Response to claim: 345 - "Legend" says that John Reed Hancock may have been Joseph's son
- Response to claim: 345 - The son of Mary Rollins Lightner "may as easily have been the prophet's son as that of Adam Lightner"
- Response to claim: 345 - Mrs. Orson Hyde's sons Orson and Frank "could have been Joseph's sons"
- Response to claim: 345 - Mrs. Parley P. Pratt's son Moroni "might also be added to this list"
- Response to claim: 345-346 - "According to tradition," Emma beat Eliza Snow with a broomstick and caused her to fall down the stairs, resulting in a miscarriage
- Response to claim: 346 - "It is astonishing that evidence of other children than these has never come to light"
- Response to claim: 346 - Jedediah Grant "excused" Joseph's marriages to married women by stating that it was a way to "try the people of God to see what was in them"
- Response to claim: 346 - Perhaps Joseph "learned some primitive method of birth control" or took advantage of items such as "Portuguese Female Pills" to produce miscarriage
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 25: Candidate for President"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 354 - Joseph said that God was his "right hand man"
- Response to claim: 355-356 - Joseph "had become a law unto himself" and totally disregarded Illinois state law
- Response to claim: 356 - A council of fifty "princes" was formed to be the "highest court on earth"
- Response to claim: 356 - The Council of Fifty ordained and crowned Joseph as "King of the Kingdom of God"
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 26: Prelude to Destruction"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 368 - Joseph threatened to excommunicate wealthy converts who came to Nauvoo and purchased land without his consent
- Response to claim: 368 - William Law thought that Joseph was diverting funds donated for the Nauvoo House to purchasing land to re-sell to converts
- Response to claim: 370 - Joseph said that Hell was "an agreeable place"
- Response to claim: 370 - Joseph threatened to "blow up the steamboats that did not pay" wharfage fees
- Response to claim: 374 - Joseph boasted that he was the only one who had kept a whole church together since the days of Adam
- Response to claim: 376 - Joseph admitted to William Marks that he had been "deceived" by the "spiritual wife-system"
- Response to claim: 377 - The destruction of the Nauvoo Expositor was a violation of the Constitution
Response to claims made in No Man Knows My History, "Chapter 27: Carthage"
Jump to details:
- Response to claim: 381 - Joseph blessed his son Joseph III to be his successor as president of the Church
- Response to claim: 392 - Joseph sent for some wine while in Carthage Jail and "all except Hyrum sipped a little"
- Response to claim: 394 - Joseph may have given the Masonic signal of distress as he leaped to the window
- Response to claim: 405 - Joseph was lazy
Reviews of this work
Hugh W. Nibley, "No, Ma'am, That's Not History"
Hugh W. Nibley, Tinkling Cymbals and Sounding Brass, (1991)Brodie's Joseph Smith is a more plausible character than the consummate fiend of the earlier school in that his type is much more likely to be met with on the street any Tuesday afternoon. But he is actually much less plausible as the man who accomplished what Joseph Smith did. Some kind of an inspired super-devil might have gotten away with some of the things he did, but no blundering, dreaming, undisciplined, shallow and opportunistic fakir could have left behind what Joseph Smith did, both in men's hearts and on paper.
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Louis Midgley, "F. M. Brodie--"The Fasting Hermit and Very Saint of Ignorance": A Biographer and Her Legend"
Louis Midgley, FARMS Review of Books, (1996)Fawn McKay Brodie's adroitly fashioned biography of Joseph Smith was released to the public on 22 November 1945--over fifty years ago. No Man Knows My History6 was republished as a paperback in 1995. This most recent appearance of Brodie's book provides an occasion for a close look at the history of the controversy her work engendered. There are, I believe, important lessons to be learned from the debate, scholarly and otherwise, that has subsequently taken place over the soundness of her book. I will not examine in detail criticisms made by faithful Latter-day Saints, but will focus on the commentary about and subsequent debate over Brodie's biography.
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Louis Midgley, "The Legend and Legacy of Fawn Brodie"
Louis Midgley, FARMS Review of Books, (2001)Though Fawn McKay Brodie2 forged a reputation as a controversial psychohistorian, it is her 1945 biography of Joseph Smith3 for which she has always been known among Latter-day Saints. She thought of herself, and has been portrayed by cultural Mormons, as an "objective" historian4 who had taken the measure of "the Mormon prophet." Her death on 10 January 1981 was followed by tributes in which she was depicted as a heroic figure who had courageously liberated herself from bondage to the mind-numbing religious orthodoxy of her parochial childhood and who had thereby set in place among Latter-day Saints what one of her admirers called "a new climate of liberation."5 Fawn McKay Brodie: A Biographer's Life—the latest and most comprehensive of these tributes to Brodie—constitutes a substantial addition to the tiny academic specialty that might be called "Brodie studies."
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Louis Midgley, "Comments on Critical Exchanges"
Louis Midgley, FARMS Review of Books, (2001)To see what Glen Hettinger is attempting to accomplish by publishing his critique of me, I believe that an awareness of the larger context of the conversation about Joseph Smith's prophetic truth claims, in which Hettinger's essay plays a polemical role, is needed. Since he is attacking me, this must include an indication of why I have given any attention at all to Fawn Brodie and what that attention has actually consisted of.
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Gary F. Novak, ""The Most Convenient Form of Error": Dale Morgan on Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon"
Gary F. Novak, FARMS Review of Books, (1996)I first heard of Dale Lowell Morgan in the spring of 1980. The previous fall, Louis Midgley had published "The Brodie Connection: Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Smith,"3 in which he reported what many of the Jefferson experts had to say in the seventies about Fawn M. Brodie's Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate Biography and then noted that many of their criticisms were very similar to what Mormons, especially Hugh Nibley, had been saying in the forties about her No Man Knows My History.4 Kent L. Walgren5 had written to Louis Midgley to complain that "The Brodie Connection" "should be required reading for students of the non sequitur: If scholars can find problems with Thomas Jefferson, there must also be serious problems with No Man."6 Walgren indicated that he thought "No Man has remained impenetrable all these years not so much because of Ms. Brodie's genius as because she had available to her a resource more valuable than any library in the world: Dale Morgan."7 Although Walgren claimed that Morgan helped Brodie by providing source material and by reading her manuscript, he did not demonstrate how that sort of help made her book "impenetrable."
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BYU Studies, "Exploding the Myth About Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet"
Richard L. Anderson, BYU Studies 8/2 (Winter 1968)F. L. Stewart (Lori Donegan) has educated herself in the sources of Mormon history simply through making a hobby of carefully checking Brodie’s documentation. Such a project is less a question of ideology than a fairly objective determination of whether the footnote citations of No Man Knows My History really support its thesis. Because this double-checking may be done on a broader scale, Stewart’s work is a valuable pilot study of the validity of Brodie’s generalizations.
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BYU Studies, "The Brodie Connection: Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Smith"
Louis C. Midgley, BYU Studies 20/1 (Fall 1979)Those outside the Church often think they have the objective explanation for Joseph Smith in Fawn McKay Brodie's No Man Knows My History. Mormons' complaints about her treatment of the Joseph Smith story are either unknown or brushed aside as biased special pleading. But recently something has happened that has called into question - Ms. Brodie's previously towering reputation as a scholar: she has written another book which has turned into an academic scandal.
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Notes
- ↑ Louis Midgley, "The Legend and Legacy of Fawn Brodie," FARMS Review of Books 13:1 (2001).