Cannon, George Q. (George Quayle), 1827-1901
Dates
- Existence: 1827 - 1901
Biography
George Q. Cannon (1827-1901) worked as the Utah Territory Delegate to the United States House of Representative for several years. He also served as a missionary, mission president, and apostle for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
George Q. Cannon was born in Liverpool, England, on January 11, 1827. He was the oldest child of George and Ann Quayle Cannon. The Cannon family sailed to the United States in 1842 after being converted to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and baptized by John Taylor, the husband of George's aunt, Leonora Cannon. Shortly after arriving in Nauvoo, Illinois, George Cannon lost both of his parents. He was raised in John and Leonora Taylor's home and worked as a printer's apprentice.
George Cannon moved west to Utah with the Taylor family, arriving in 1847. Soon after their arrival, George served a mission first in California, and then to the Sandwich Islands, where he mastered the Hawaiian language. He later served as mission president over the California/Oregon, Eastern States, and European missions. He was also commissioned by the church to do work on several different newspapers. In addition, George Cannon was ordained an apostle for the Church in 1859.
In 1862, George Cannon was elected to represent the Utah Territory in the United States Congress. He only served one term in this capacity but in 1872 returned to Washington, D.C., as the Utah Delegate to Congress. He remained a prominent figure in Utah's plea for statehood and as a representative for the church to the federal government for ten years. He left his seat in Congress following the Edmunds Act, which limited the rights of Utah's polygamists. George Cannon was forced into seclusion until 1888 when he surrendered himself and consequently served nearly six months imprisonment in the Utah State Penitentiary for cohabitation.
George Cannon's first (and only legal) marriage was to Elizabeth Hoagland Cannon just following his first mission for the church. She bore him eleven children, six of whom reached adulthood. In 1858, George Cannon took his second wife, Sarah Jane Jenne Cannon, who raised seven children, one of which was adopted. His third wife, Eliza L. Tenney Cannon, had three sons. George Cannon married Martha Telle Cannon in 1868, and eventually nine children came of their union. George Cannon's fifth wife, Emily Hoagland Little Cannon, was sister to Elizabeth Hoagland Cannon. Emily was a widow, and Elizabeth encouraged the match due to concern over her sister's welfare. George Cannon and Emily Hoagland had no children together. Caroline Young Croxall Cannon became George Cannon's sixth and last wife nearly three years after Elizabeth's death. She was a daughter of Brigham Young, and George Cannon's only legal wife during the time they were married. George Cannon adopted her five children from a previous marriage, and together they raised four more children. In all, George Cannon reared thirty-five children (seven of which were adopted), but forty-three are sealed to him eternally.
In 1880, George Cannon became the first counselor in the first presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints under John Taylor. He also served as first counselor under the presidencies of Wilford Woodruff and Lorenzo Snow before his death on April 12, 1901, at age seventy-four.
Citation:
nuc86-51044: His Utah contested-election case [MI] 1882 (hdg. on CU-BANC rept.: Cannon, George Q. (George Quayle), 1827-1901; usage: George Q. Cannon)LC data base, 10-7-86 (hdg.: Cannon, George Quayle, 1827-1901; usage: George Q. Cannon; G.Q. Cannon)
Wikipedia, via WWW, Jan. 2, 2013 (George Q. Cannon; George Quayle Cannon; b. Jan. 11, 1827 in Liverpool, England; parents, George Cannon and Ann Quayle; baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1836; lived in Nauvoo, Ill., Winter Quarters, Neb., and Salt Lake City, Utah; d. April 12, 1901 in Monterey, Calif.; member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, 1860-1901; served in the First Presidency under Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow, 1873-1901; missionary in Hawaii, Calif.; Eastern States; newspaper printer, editor; delegate to U.S. Congress, 1872-1882; practiced plural marriage, five wives)
Ancestry.com, via WWW, Jan. 2, 2012 (George Quayle Cannon; George Q. Cannon; b. Jan. 11, 1827 in Liverpool, England; d. Apr. 12, 1901 in Monterey, Calif.; spouses: m. Dec 11, 1854 in Royal Oak City, Mich. to Elizabeth Hoagland (1835-1882), m. Apr. 11, 1858 to Sarah Jane Jenne (1839-1928), m. July 29, 1865 in Salt Lake City, Utah to Eliza Lamercia Tenney (1845-1908), m. Mar. 16, 1868 to Martha Telle (1846-1928), m. Apr. 13, 1877 in Grouville, Jersey, Channel Islands to Susanne De La Mare (1834-1962), m. July 11, 1881 to Emily Hoagland (1837-1906), m. Nov. 3, 1884 to Caroline Partridge Young (1851-1903))
Found in 63 Collections and/or Records:
Hester Telle Richards diary
Materials include Hester Telle Richards diary which she started in 1886 when she was eighteen and apparently living in Monroe, Utah and kept it in August and September of that year. Also included are miscellaneous notes and observations including class notes from a geography course. Dated 1886-1901.
Hester Telle Richards diary
Collection consists of photocopied pages from Richards' diary from 1891 to 1933, and a transcribed copy of Richards' diary of 1892.
Scrapbook and loose materials, approximately 1897-1960
Contains loose scrapbook material, such as clippings, photographs, postcards, and other ephemera. Also contains a scrapbook tited "The Ideal Scrapbook," with clippings, photographs, and other ephemera. Materials dated approximately 1897 to 1960.
Student Loan Association of Utah records
Contains minutes of directors meeting, articles of agreement, licenses, correspondence, financial records, and applications for loans, 1891-1932. Also includes a handwritten letter from George Q. Cannon requesting balance information for Lilian H. Cannon (see folder 3).
John Taylor letter
Photocopy of a handwritten letter addressed to George Q. Cannon and other executors and trustees of the estate of Brigham Young (1801-1877), second president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Taylor outlines the claims of the Church on the estate of Brigham Young.
Tell us some more about your funny family
Mimeographed copy of a typewritten history. Georgius Cannon writes humorous stories about his ancestors, George and George Q. Cannon, and about other members of his family. The item was "written about 1932 and reedited in 1962."
Thomas L. Kane correspondence with George Q. Cannon, 1859-1884
Contains letters of correspondence between Thomas L. Kane and George Q. Cannon. Many of the letters were sent by Cannon from Washington, D.C. and Salt Lake City, Utah as he served as chief political strategist for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. They were received by Kane in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Letters date between 1859 to 1884, the majority of which date between 1874 to 1878.
William Henry Tovey's territorial prison journal
Original journal kept during his imprisonment at the Utah Territorial Prison, dealing with prison life and activities. Individuals mentioned in the journal include Legrand Young, Charles Zane, George Q. Cannon and others. An accompanying typescript of the journal, prepared by Glenda Breslin in 1995, includes photocopies of legal documents concerning Tovey's case. The typescript also includes a name index.
Unidentified photographs, approximately 1910-1940
Contains photographs of unidentified individuals, dated approximately 1910 to 1940.
Utah territorial penitentiary photographs
One folder containing thirty-seven photographic prints from the Utah territorial penitentiary from the 1880s and 1890s, including prisoners incarcerated for practicing polygamy.