Polygamy -- Religious aspects -- Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Found in 139 Collections and/or Records:
George Frederick Jarvis life sketch
John Horne Miles interviews, 1962-1993
Interview typescripts and resulting essays by Henry Landon Miles: works on J. H. Miles, George E. Miles, Ezra Weekes, LaRue Miles Elison, Maurice Jarvis Miles, and Richard Miles. Dated 1962-1993.
Autograph album of John Peter Rasmus Johnson
Handwritten autographs and notes written to John Peter Rasmus Johnson by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints while he was serving a sentence in prison for polygamy at the Utah Penitentiary. Album is dated 1888-1889.
William Derby Johnson diary
Albert Jones prison journal
Holograph diary which includes minutes and business records of the Provo City Corporation, lists of other people convicted and sentenced, poems of prisoners, news articles written by Jones on prison activities, and letters he received from family and friends during his period of imprisonment.
Johanna Christena Larson Jones autobiography
Biographies of William Edward Jones and Mary Jones Jones
Thomas Jefferson Jones autobiography and a biography
Photocopy of a microfilmed copy of a typescript. One two-paged item is an autobiography of Jones. The other item is a two-paged biography of Jones by an unknown person at an unknown date. Jones was born on 6 September 1838 in Pittsfield, Illinois. He came to Willard, Utah, and later settled in Panaca, Nevada, and Washington and Parowan, Utah. Jones served as bishop and stake president in the Mormon Church and was prosecuted for polygamy.
Journal of Margaret Pierce Whitesides Young
Typescript of a journal which gives accounts of Young's conversion to Mormonism, visits of church leaders, marriage to Brigham Young, exodus west, experiences in Utah and her feelings about women's suffrage and the practice of polygamy.
Karl G. Maeser personal correspondence, 1861-1900
Contains correspondence related to the personal life and projects of Maeser, along with correspondence related to his family. Included are Maeser's correspondence with Brigham Young about the issue of plural marriage and the state of his family. Dates range from 1861 to 1900.