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Letter of appointment (Mormonism)

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containing the appointment. Analysis indicates that the handwriting on all three pages is the same. Vague references to Strang's appointment appear throughout the letter. On page one: "The faith which thou hast in the Shepherd, the stone of Israel , hath been repaid to thee a thousandfold, and thou shalt be like unto him; but the flock shall find rest with thee, and God shall reveal to thee his will concerning them." Page two continues: "e had faith in thee , the Shepherd and Stone of Israel, and to him shall the gathering of the people be." Page three: "Thy duty is made plain . ... f evil befall me , thou shalt lead the flock to pleasant pastures."
353: 76: 217:] marshal of the city of Nauvoo, told them, "They need not trouble themselves about it, for Joseph had appointed one James J. Strang, who lived up north, to stand in his stead." The sudden death of John P. Green immediately after this declaration (under very extraordinary circumstances) left Willard Richards and John Taylor sole repositors of all documents on this subject, except this letter. 251: 20: 161:
lawyer at that place, who, in consequence of the rumors of persecution and civil war against the Mormons, and a general anxiety to hear the latest news, immediately carried it to Mr. Strang, with the request to be informed of any news of public interest which it might contain. It therefore became public the same evening.
51:. It formed part of a four-tiered argument for succession, being that according to various passages in Doctrine and Covenants, a prophet successor had to be A) appointed by Joseph Smith, B) ordained by angels, C) receive revelations as Smith did and D) translate ancient records certified by witnesses. Sent from 317:
Despite the lack of agreement in the hand writings of exhibit A, B, and C, and possibly D, these documents were not necessarily authored by persons other than Joseph Smith. Exhibit A, B, and C were written on similar types of stationary, incorporating the letter in the envelope in one document. Then,
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If Emma Smith's recollections on the writing of the letter were accurate, Joseph, Hyrum, Willard Richards and John P. Greene were present and any of them could have written the letter and signed it. The above analysis would cast doubt on Richards as a handwriting match, however, Exhibit C (indicated
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Exhibit C - The body and signature of exhibit C in my opinion, are in a different hand than either exhibit A or exhibit B, as is the envelope address. Beneath the signature Joseph Smith to this document appears the words 'per W. Richards-Clerk,' which would indicate this was the person who filled in
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This letter was received at Burlington by regular course of mail, coming through the distributing office at Chicago, and bears the Nauvoo postmark of June 19, the day following its date. It arrived at Burlington July 9, and was immediately taken from the office by C. P. Barnes, Esq., a distinguished
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It must also be remembered that the use of scriveners or letter writers was quite common in those early days and undoubtedly Joseph Smith, being in a position of leadership, would have access to the services of such persons. A brief observation of the language used in these four documents indicates
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Exhibit B - The body and signature of exhibit B, on the contrary, were written by a different hand than the body and the signature of Exhibit A. The forms of the letters and the skill are fundamentally different. Further, the document is dated less than two months after Exhibit A and it is unlikely
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In 1956, Donna West Falk obtained photostats of three letters that the Illinois Historical Library assert are definitely Joseph Smith's and presented them with a photostat of the Letter of Appointment to the handwriting firm of Tyrell and Doud for analysis, a firm recognized as authorities in court
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known authentic works. Still, some authors have ventured to dispute the signature on this basis. Given that Smith had scribes sign his name on official documents regularly, even if the signature was penned by someone other than Smith, it would not of itself cast doubt on the letter's authenticity.
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Experts agree that the postmark on the letter is genuine. Strang's opponents at first challenged falsely that the stamp was the wrong color and subsequently challenged the authenticity of the stamp by pointing to a tiny dot on the postmark, just before the "J" in "June"–one that they claimed
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When Strang's supporters attempted to prove that Smith had mailed the letter using postal records in Nauvoo, they found that the corresponding portion of the Nauvoo postal records were missing. However, the records remained intact in the Chicago and Burlington post offices, showing that the letter
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and others of the Twelve, who were then in the east, stated in public congregations in New York, Philadelphia and other cities, that Willard Richards had written to them that the appointment of a prophet was left with him, under seal, to be opened on the return of the Twelve. This assertion was so
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replies were made, in substance, that the saints would know in due season, but that nothing could be done until the Twelve got home, because the appointment of a prophet and the directions for salvation of the church from the perils they were in, was contained in sealed packages directed to them.
126:, two contenders who claimed leadership on the basis of rank - Young as president of the Quorum of the Twelve and Rigdon as sole survivor of the First Presidency. Hence, Strang, as an unknown new convert, faced an uphill battle in his quest to be recognized as the heir to Smith's prophetic mantle. 270:
Modern analysts are divided on the authenticity of Smith's signature. The difficulty stems from the fact that Joseph Smith not only had scribes write his letters, but also sign his name for him. Therefore it is difficult to be certain of which signatures and handwriting are actually his, even of
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Unlike Rigdon and Young, Strang offered physical proof of his prophetic calling. Strang possessed a letter purportedly authored by Smith and mailed one week before his murder, prophesying of his impending demise and naming Strang as his successor. The wording of the letter is somewhat ambiguous.
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took a kind of temporary direction of the affairs of the church, instructing the saints to wait patiently the hand of the Lord; assuring them that he had not left them without a shepherd, and that all things would be made known in due season. To every question of the saints, Who is the prophet?
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Other critics assert that the outer sheet containing the postmark and address is of different stock than the first two pages, however this is disputed. This theory infers that Strang disposed of the first two pages, retaining the last page with the post mark and composed his own partial letter
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EXHIBIT A - It is reasonable to believe that exhibit A could be written by Joseph Smith himself. The writing indicates a person who is interested in getting his thoughts down on paper rather than in the appearance of the writing itself. The post script appears to have been squeezed in as an
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OPINIONS AND OBSERVATIONS - This case as presented differes from most document cases, since none of the specimens is definitely known to have been written by Joseph Smith. Accordingly, deduction must be made from the evidence at hand in order to fill in the gap of missing information.
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into modern English. Strang's position of maintaining the same church structure as Smith, led by a prophet, seer, revelator and translator with the fruits of prophecy - prophetic revelations and translations - continued to win him converts until his assassination twelve years later.
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on June 27 of that year. Upon Smith's death, a number of individuals came forward to lead his church, including Strang. As a recent convert, Strang did not yet possess the name recognition among rank-and-file Mormons that was enjoyed by
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as present at that council, and also that a letter was sent to Mr. Strang in answer, but of the import of the answer she was not informed." She and the entire Smith family were persuaded by it enough to declare their support for Strang.
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as scribed by Richards) was written in long hand, while Exhibit D was written in print. Further authentication would require examples of printed hand writing samples from Hyrum Smith, John P. Green and Willard Richards.
398:"Mormon," as used in this article, refers to adherents of the Latter Day Saint movement as a whole, and not just to its largest branch, the LDS Church. Its use here is only for convenience, not in any derogatory sense. 230:
was indeed mailed from Smith to Strang. Although Brigham Young quickly denounced the letter as a "wicked forgery," this did not stop two of the apostles in the Quorum of Twelve from supporting Strang, together with
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often made that the whole church were daily expecting to hear a new prophet proclaimed. On the 8th day of August, 1844, when Sidney Rigdon endeavored to obtain authority to lead the church, John P. Green, [
59:, this letter was highly influential at gathering support for Strang's claim to succession until his death. Following Strang's murder in 1856, the letter passed through various hands until acquired by 263:
should not have been there. Strang, however, produced several letters mailed from Nauvoo on June 19, all of which had the same flaw in the stamp, thus confirming its authenticity.
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The envelope address, however, on Exhibit B appears to be in the same hand as the envelope address on Exhibit B. This evidence would appear to tie together both Exhibit A and B.
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The postmark appears on the back side of one of the last page along with Strang's name and address, making the last page effectively the envelope, a common feature of the period.
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afterthought and several corrections were made in the text. It is unlikely that these would occur if done by a scrivener for Joseph Smith, but this is somewhat conjecture.
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Strang also claimed to have received an angelic appointment at the very moment of Smith's death, and, like Smith, claimed the ability to translate ancient documents on
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Critics who accept the letter as genuinely from Smith interpreted it as appointing Strang solely to the presidency of the newly created Voree
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The James Jesse Strang Collection in the Beinecke Library is coded WA MSS 447. A complete description of this collection may be viewed at
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and received "no education after the age of 15." Having educated himself, he became a lawyer by the age of 22. He was a latecomer to the
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Exhibit D - In as much as exhibit D is in handprinting, where as the other documents in question are not, few conclusions are possible.
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PURPOSE OF EXAMINATION: - You have asked me to determine if possible whether Exhibits A, B, C, and D were written by the same hand.
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After the return of the Twelve, the alleged promise of the "sealed packages" naming Smith's successor appears to have been dropped.
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of conspiring together to suppress evidence of his appointment to the prophetic office–and even the possibility of murder:
148:, while Strangites insist that it appoints him to Smith's prophetic office and receiver of revelations for the whole church. 110: 48: 322:
that the education and word usage was consistent with the theory that all four documents were authored by one individual.
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recollects well of her husband receiving a letter from Mr. Strang, and holding a council on the subject, and names
568:. Salt Lake City, Utah: Signature Books, p. 210. See also Eberstadt, Charles, "A Letter That Founded a Kingdom," 414:, two members of the Quorum of Twelve under Smith, joined Strang briefly but both had left his movement by 1847. 622: 88: 546:
Delivery of the Letter of 0Appointment. The Prophetic Controversy: A Letter from James Strang to Mrs. Corey
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D) The Letter of Appointment addressed to James J. Strang, dated Nauvoo, Ill. June 18, 1844 (exhibit D).
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C) A three page letter addressed to H. R. Hodgekiss, Esq., dated Nauvoo, May 13, 1842 (exhibit C) and
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A) A four page letter addressed to Horace H. Hodgekiss, Esg., dated Nauvoo Oct. 25, 1841 (exhibit A),
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B) A four page letter addressed to Smith Tuttle, Esq., dated Nauvoo, Ill. Oct. 9, 1841 (exhibit B),
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that the quality of the hand writing would be better so materially in that short period of time.
44: 586:. Burlington, WI: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite). pp. 261–262. 285:
None of the three appear to match, consistent with Smith's use of scribes for official letters.
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too, all of the documents bear a Nauvoo postmark and would seem to have the appearance of age.
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Official report of Tyrell and Doud—Examiners of Questioned Documents, dated October 8, 1956
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Emma Smith's testimony corroborates Smith's writing a letter to Strang: "Mrs.
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The "letter of appointment" is still accepted and defended by members of the
123: 119: 92: 80: 234:(Nauvoo Stake president), members of Smith's family (including his sisters, 411: 255: 254:
Page three of Strang's "Letter of Appointment," with possible signature of
131: 100: 84: 36: 530: 95:, by J. Atkyn, itinerant photographer and later one of Strang's assassins. 170: 457:
History of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
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The Prophetic Controversy: A Letter from James J. Strang to Mrs. Corey
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In his tract "The Diamond," Strang relates this version of events:
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and his adherents to prove that he was the designated successor to
535:. Provo, Utah, BYU Press, p. 6, n. 17. Retrieved on 2007-10-30. 151: 451:
Strang's own son, Charles Strang, took this position. See
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Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)
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Gleaning the Harvest: Strangite Missionary Work 1846–50
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Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)
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rooms across the country. The letters studied were:
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Corroboration in Postal Records and Alleged Cover-up
475:The Diamond: Being the Law of Prophetic Succession 481: 594: 31:is a controversial three-page document used by 584:James J. Strang: Teachings of a Mormon Prophet 23:Page one of Strang's "Letter of Appointment." 505:. St. James, Beaver Island: 1854, pp. 29–31. 245: 193:Immediately after the martyrdom of Joseph, 111:Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 49:Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 525: 523: 65:Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library 63:, where it currently forms a part of its 603:History of the Latter Day Saint movement 249: 185:Next, Strang accused the members of the 74: 18: 581: 595: 566:The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power 520: 13: 152:Events as related in "The Diamond" 70: 14: 649: 359:Latter Day Saint movement portal 351: 633:Mormonism-related controversies 575: 558: 538: 417: 55:on June 19, 1844, to Strang in 508: 493: 466: 445: 436: 401: 392: 379: 115:murdered by an anti-Mormon mob 1: 570:Autograph Collectors' Journal 478:. Voree, Wis.: 1848, pp. 3-4. 430: 138: 529:Jensen, Robin Scott (2005). 372: 7: 367:Book of the Law of the Lord 344: 10: 654: 564:Quinn, D. Michael (1994). 98: 582:Shepard, William (1977). 544:Strang, James J. (1854), 311:and signed the document. 246:Questions of authenticity 105:James J. Strang was from 555:, St. James, pp. 32–34. 515:Letter of Brigham Young 442:Strang (1848), pp. 5–6. 29:"letter of appointment" 330: 259: 219: 163: 96: 24: 572:(October, 1950): 3–8. 287: 253: 191: 158: 78: 57:Burlington, Wisconsin 22: 623:1844 in Christianity 490:Strang (1848), p. 4. 187:Quorum of the Twelve 459:vol. 3, chapter 2, 242:) and many others. 551:2007-12-05 at the 289:Official Results: 260: 97: 25: 618:Letters (message) 472:Strang, James J. 387:Strang Collection 203:William W. Phelps 645: 638:June 1844 events 588: 587: 579: 573: 562: 556: 542: 536: 527: 518: 512: 506: 497: 491: 488: 479: 470: 464: 449: 443: 440: 424: 421: 415: 405: 399: 396: 390: 383: 361: 356: 355: 354: 328: 199:Willard Richards 175:Willard Richards 107:Scipio, New York 53:Nauvoo, Illinois 653: 652: 648: 647: 646: 644: 643: 642: 593: 592: 591: 580: 576: 563: 559: 553:Wayback Machine 543: 539: 528: 521: 513: 509: 499:Strang, James. 498: 494: 489: 482: 471: 467: 450: 446: 441: 437: 433: 428: 427: 422: 418: 406: 402: 397: 393: 384: 380: 375: 357: 352: 350: 347: 334: 329: 326: 284: 282: 280: 278: 276: 248: 227: 154: 141: 127: 103: 73: 71:James J. Strang 61:Yale University 33:James J. Strang 17: 12: 11: 5: 651: 641: 640: 635: 630: 625: 620: 615: 613:1844 documents 610: 605: 590: 589: 574: 557: 537: 519: 507: 492: 480: 465: 444: 434: 432: 429: 426: 425: 416: 400: 391: 377: 376: 374: 371: 370: 369: 363: 362: 346: 343: 324: 247: 244: 226: 223: 179:John P. Greene 153: 150: 140: 137: 99:Main article: 72: 69: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 650: 639: 636: 634: 631: 629: 626: 624: 621: 619: 616: 614: 611: 609: 606: 604: 601: 600: 598: 585: 578: 571: 567: 561: 554: 550: 547: 541: 534: 533: 526: 524: 516: 511: 504: 503: 496: 487: 485: 477: 476: 469: 462: 458: 454: 448: 439: 435: 420: 413: 409: 408:William Smith 404: 395: 388: 382: 378: 368: 365: 364: 360: 349: 342: 340: 335: 323: 319: 315: 312: 308: 305: 301: 297: 293: 290: 286: 272: 268: 264: 257: 252: 243: 241: 237: 233: 232:William Marks 222: 218: 216: 215: 209: 204: 200: 196: 190: 188: 183: 180: 176: 172: 168: 162: 157: 149: 147: 136: 133: 128: 125: 124:Sidney Rigdon 121: 120:Brigham Young 116: 112: 108: 102: 94: 93:Lake Michigan 90: 89:Beaver Island 86: 82: 81:daguerreotype 77: 68: 66: 62: 58: 54: 50: 46: 42: 38: 34: 30: 21: 628:Joseph Smith 583: 577: 569: 565: 560: 540: 531: 510: 501: 495: 473: 468: 456: 453:Smith, Heman 447: 438: 419: 412:John E. Page 403: 394: 381: 336: 331: 320: 316: 313: 309: 306: 302: 298: 294: 291: 288: 273: 269: 265: 261: 256:Joseph Smith 228: 220: 212: 192: 184: 164: 159: 155: 142: 132:metal plates 129: 104: 101:James Strang 85:James Strang 37:Joseph Smith 28: 26: 195:John Taylor 171:Hyrum Smith 87:, taken on 597:Categories 431:References 208:Orson Hyde 167:Emma Smith 139:The letter 461:pp. 52–53 373:Footnotes 45:president 549:Archived 345:See also 325:—  16:Document 47:of the 41:prophet 39:as the 236:mother 240:widow 146:Stake 79:1856 410:and 238:and 201:and 177:and 122:and 43:and 27:The 214:sic 83:of 599:: 522:^ 483:^ 455:, 341:. 197:, 173:, 91:, 67:. 463:. 389:. 258:.

Index


James J. Strang
Joseph Smith
prophet
president
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Nauvoo, Illinois
Burlington, Wisconsin
Yale University
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library

daguerreotype
James Strang
Beaver Island
Lake Michigan
James Strang
Scipio, New York
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
murdered by an anti-Mormon mob
Brigham Young
Sidney Rigdon
metal plates
Stake
Emma Smith
Hyrum Smith
Willard Richards
John P. Greene
Quorum of the Twelve
John Taylor
Willard Richards

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