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| "God Has Made Us a Kingdom" James Strang and the Midwest Mormons |
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CONTENTS
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Preface
II. The Prophet's Wives and Children |
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Conclusion: God Has Made Us a Kingdom
* * * * * I wasn't looking for Mormons during the summer of 1991. I was simply looking for some basket-making materials and the nearest shop was about thirty miles away in Burlington, Wisconsin. I found the shop at the corner of Highway 36 and Mormon Road. "Mormon Road?" I thought to myself. "There weren't any Mormons in Wisconsin." I figured I should know. After all, I was a sixth-generation Mormon from Idaho, active in my church, and a Mormon history buff. In all of my religious education, I had never heard of Mormons in Wisconsin. So I took the unfamiliar road that sunny day and what I found astonished me. It started me on the highway of an adventure, the like of which I never would have anticipated. From a series of plaques and monuments installed near the edge of Mormon Road, I became acquainted with a group of Latter Day Saints from the 1840s and 1850s who called their community Voree, which they said meant "Garden of Peace." I saw their houses, the remains of their cemetery, their Hill of Promise, and groves along the river where they held their services. I learned about their leader, James Jesse Strang. When the Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, was killed in 1844, Strang claimed to be Smith's successor even though Strang had been baptized only four months earlier. He based his claim on a letter of appointment from Smith and the anointing of an angel. Over the next few years, Strang's leadership attracted hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people to Voree and to the Beaver Islands, a remote area in the northern part of Lake Michigan. The Strangites built temples and tabernacles, served proselytizing missions, practiced baptisms and sealing ordinances for the dead. They established a communal order of living which they called the Associated Order of Enoch. Strang found and translated ancient historical records. He experienced revelations and visions to guide his people. Twelve years to the very day of receiving his religious calling, he died of a gunshot wound administered by former friends and members of his church. Curious about this religious group, I started researching their story in various historical repositories. I found that a great deal had been published about Strang and his life but that very little had been written about his five wives. I wondered what had happened to these women and their children. Their lives did not end when his did. In fact, four of Strang's five wives were pregnant at the time he died. The youngest children did not begin life until after their father's was over. As I studied these women and children, I suddenly realized I was working on something of much broader scope. I began to comprehend that the story of the wives and children was, in a sense, the actual history of the Strangite people. All four of Strang's plural wives had family members who were similarly Strangite adherents. His first wife, Mary, continued to interact with her husband's followers. The trials and hardships of these women were echoed in the experiences of those related to them. For most of the Strangites, the journey of faith began in Nauvoo, Illinois, with the death of Joseph Smith. Eyewitnesses to singular religious events and participants in the social upheaval that occurred when the Mormon people were left leaderless, they chose Wisconsin and Strang rather than Utah and Brigham Young. While building their own communities, they were witness to some important events in the broader history of America such as the emergence of Wisconsin as a state, the steamboat trade on the Great Lakes, and the demise of the great fur and fishing empire centered on Mackinac Island. They made their homes on the frontier in both Wisconsin and Michigan, lost their homes on Beaver Island, and made new homes and communities. For the most part, they were hardworking, ordinary folk looking for simple religious truth. I am not the first to write about the Strangites, and I am sure I won't be the last. At least two experts in Mormon history told me I should not waste my time studying the Strangites because everything about them had already been written. They were wrong. I learned that new facts and new resources are still being discovered. Old records are ready for re-examination and re-interpretation. This book is not a biography of James J. Strang. Information about him can be found in other volumes. Nor is the intent to discuss whether Strang was a prophet or charlatan. This, too, has been debated again and again. It really doesn't matter to me whether Strang was a "genuine prophet" or not because the people who followed him obviously believed he was. This book is simply an attempt to tell the fuller story of the Strangitestheir trials and tribulations and efforts to maintain the Strangite Church during their founder's ministry and after his death. I have drawn extensively on primary sourcesletters, diaries, memoirs, public records, and Strang's newspapers and religious materials. Whenever possible, I have allowed the eyewitnesses to speak for themselves. To avoid confusion in terminology, I have used the same names that were common in Strang's day for the different segments of the Mormon Church. Those who followed Strang will be called Mormons, Saints, or Strangites interchangeably, while those who followed Brigham Young will generally be called Brighamites. Members of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, now the Community of Christ, will be referred to as Josephites. Those who did not belong to any of these churches were known as "gentiles." I have referred to Strang's wives and most of the women in this narrative by their maiden names. The story of this movement is a compelling and intriguing one. Many writers, including Strang's own descendants, have struggled with the logistics of how to relate the tale without sensationalizing it, and so have I. Strang's grandson, Mark A. Strang, wrote the following words to a cousin in 1956:
Mark Strang was later successful in obtaining and deciphering his grandfather's diary and getting it published. Mark left behind a number of letters written to and from Strangite leaders in the 1950s and 1960s. James Strang's sons, Charles and Clement, similarly struggled to tell a more sympathetic story of their father. They obtained the original letter of appointment and their father's autobiography and collected a huge number of letters written to and from the church founder during the 1830s-50s. Other writers have also added to the collection of knowledge over the years, the most notable being Milo M. Quaife, author of The Kingdom of Saint James: A Narrative of the Mormons, and Roger Van Noord, author of King of Beaver Island: The Life and Assassination of James Jesse Strong. In the 1920s, Quaife interviewed the last of the original Strangites, including Sarah Wright, one of Strang's widows, Wingfield W. Watson, and James Oscar McNutt. Van Noord discovered a number of sources that had never before been used and produced a more modern interpretation of Strang and his followers. I have made a number of friends during the writing of this book and am grateful for the kind assistance of William Shepard, a member of the Strangite Church and trustee for the Wingfield Watson Land Trust. Bill introduced me to the Strangites in Burlingtona small but gracious and very patient group. I admire their faith and devotion more than I can say. I am also grateful to Norma Jean Drebin Herzman and Jerry Gorden, descendants of people who lived on Beaver Island; Bill Cashman, director of the Beaver Island Historical Society; and the members of the Society for Strang Studies. All have helped me immeasurably. Others have assisted me, including the librarians at the Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University, the Wisconsin Historical Library in Madison, and the State Library of Michigan in Lansing. Ron Romig of the Community of Christ spent an entire day running files to and from the archives for me in Independence, Missouri. All of these people went out of their way to help me find the documents I needed. The librarians at the Morris Area Library in Morris, Illinois, allowed me to make hundreds of prints from their microfilm readers. I would not have been able to write this book if it were not for the help of my dear husband and best friend, Bob. He read every word of this book time after time. His faith in me kept me going long after I was ready to give up. I also owe a debt of gratitude to my four children, Mike, Kaatje, Keri, and Rob, and to my parents, Joyce and Dick Cleverley. I sorely neglected them during the research and writing, yet they never complained. I want my mother-in-law, Truis Speek, to know that she does not have to worry about my health anymore because I am finally taking it easy. Thanks for caring about me. * * * * * 1. THE PROPHET AND HIS WIFE
It was indeed a hot day in early July 1856 when a large group of Mormons stood in the sweltering sun on a dock in Chicago, uncertain what to do. Only two days before, they had been forced from their homes on Big Beaver Island in the middle of Lake Michigan, herded onto departing ships like cattle, and stripped of their possessions. Their religious leader, James Jesse Strang, lay on his death bed in Wisconsin, dying of wounds administered by former friends and followers. Homeless and leaderless, the destitute Mormons prayed for divine guidance. ... * * * * * Jesse James Strang was born in the town of Scipio, Cayuga County, New York, on March 21, 1813, the son of Clement Strang and Abigail James. There was no indication the child would grow up to be a leader, let alone a prophet. Both of his parents were small in stature. Clement stood only about five foot three, while Abigail measured even less. However, James wrote that his were "comely in appearance, amiable, affectionate, charitable, remarkably industrious, skillful in labor, and judicious in business." They were also "unsullied in moral and religious character."2 Their oldest child, David, was two years older than James, and their only daughter, Myraette, was five years younger. The family was close and there was never "so much as a momentary coldness between any two members of the family"3 James's childhood and school days were quiet and uneventful, although he was precocious and addicted to reading. He exhibited a rare ability in debate at an early age. Before he had even turned nineteen, he had attained the reputation of a debater among his schoolmates. At the age of twenty-one, he began to study law. At first he borrowed law books, then hired out as a farmer to earn the money to buy his own books.4 Sometime during his teenage years, he reversed his first and middle names and thereafter became known as James Jesse Strang.5 In June 1836, James began practicing law in a small village near Cherry Creek, New York, called Clear Creek at the time.6 Twenty-three years old, the future prophet was, like his parents, slight of frame and stood about five foot seven. His hair was a light "sandy red" and "seemed to send out rays of light," while his beard was a "lambent reddish-brown."7 He had large, dark brown eyes that some said were "dreamy and meditative." He was nearly blind in his left eye, although it was not a noticeable defect.8 At age twenty-one, he remarked in his diary that for the first time in many years he was able to read a word with his right eye covered.9 His manner was "ingratiating and attractive," "sensitive and tender in his emotions"artistic, in other words. He sometimes drew original embroidery patterns for ladies. Both he and his brother, David, were "inclined to invention" but were discouraged from that occupation by their father.10 A newspaper reporter once made the following observation: "In person, Strang is rather below the ordinary size, very plainly dressed, red face, bold, prominent forehead, large eyes and mouth and cheekbones; possesses considerable talent, great shrewdness, and an earnest, energetic manner, is very loquacious, and speaks very fast and loud when preaching." In fact, while preaching, the reporter noted:
In the early part of 1836, James, now twenty-three, began courting Mary Abigail Perce, a young woman of eighteen. James was familiar with her family, having been a member of the wedding party when her paternal aunt, Freelove Perce, married Jarvis Bennett.12 James was also a friend of Ellen Waitee (Weata) Perce, another paternal aunt. In fact, it was Ellen who introduced James to Mary.13 His best friend was Benjamin Carpenter Perce, another member of the extended family14 Only nine years older, Benjamin may have seemed more of an older brother to Mary than an uncle.15 The previous year, 1835, Benjamin had joined a group of people who were moving to Wisconsin Territory, which was newly opened for settlement. The party included Benjamin's sister Lydia; her husband, Moses Smith; and Aaron Smith, Moses's brother. The Smiths settled in an area along the White River near what is now Burlington, Wisconsin, and Benjamin moved about a mile and a half farther west to found the community later called Spring Prairie.16 Mary was the second oldest child of William Livingston and Lydia Brown Perce. Born on April 10, 1818, in Madison County, New York, she had an older sister, Harriet, and two younger brothers, William Jr. and Samuel Y.17 Her father was a contractor in the canal business; by 1836 he was digging a water channel in Virginia.18 At least two of Mary's siblings lived with their father while he was away in Virginia, while Mary and her mother lived in Elliottville, New York, where Mary attended school. James proposed marriage to Mary within a few months of meeting her. She apparently had apprehensions and soon called off the engagement. James was upset and embarrassed over this turn of events. He wrote in a coded portion of his diary on May 7, 1836, that his engagement had been "a total, radical and unmitigated failure, without one redeeming circumstance. She could have gone but one act more," he wrote, which would have been to say that when "we meet again it must be as total strangers." But undaunted, James persisted. "By heavens, she is mine," he acclaimed. "I will steal her heart in an hour she thinks not. I know she can and must and will love me."19 Three weeks later, on May 29, he was no longer as eager to be married as Mary's Aunt Waitee was that the two should be reconciled. "Weata has done me a twofold kindness," James wrote in code. "It was on her introduction that I formed the engagement with Mary. Now she has procured its renewal. I did not [seek] or wish for this, preferring an entirely different course. Yet it may answer well," he conceded. If not, Aunt Waitee "shall fail for once. One interview will decide. I know I shall finally conquer," he added confidently.20 James decided to write to Mary's father in Virginia to ask for her hand in marriage. "It is with feelings of more than ordinary diffidence that I now address you," he wrote. "I have been introduced to your daughter Mary Abigail. I have corresponded with her since last winterhave avowed my affection for her, and after her assurance that my high regard was kindly and fully reciprocated, I have said to her that with the permission of her parents I was ready to offer her (what I believe I have to bestow) an honour unsullied, a heart uncorrupted." James then got to the point:
Within three weeks, William Perce replied to Strang's letter with one of his own, agreeing to the marriage. "Mary is very dear to me & I am very solicitous for her comfort and happiness," he answered. "But I am certainly as well pleased to trust her to you as any gentleman in the circle of my acquaintance. You have therefore my entire approbation & I fervently hope you may neither of you have cause for sorrow & that you may not be disappointed. You must not expect too much." William then wrote to his daughter:
The wedding took place on November 20, 1836, in a Presbyterian church in Silver Creek. James was twenty-three and Mary eighteen. It was a cold day, "ushered in by rain, and sleet and snow, and November wind and glooma fit precursor for the tragic life of Mary Abigail Content Perce," wrote their daughter, Myraette, many years later.23 On that day, Mary became the first of James's five wivesthe only one to whom he would be legally married. "Who could have imagined, as they walked up the aisle to the altar that Sunday morning, the sorrow and trouble, the heartache, and woe and pain the years were holding for her?" Myraette mused.24 As a wedding present, James gave his new wife a copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare, a handsome brown-leather volume that can still be seen in the archives at the State Library of Michigan. Mary's name is carefully written in script on the inside cover.25 James wrote to his friend Benjamin, Mary's uncle, telling him of the marriage:
For a few months after their marriage, the young couple lived apart. Mary studied Latin and French in Elliottville, New York, while James studied law in Randolph about twenty miles away. Three weeks into their marriage, Strang wrote to his wife:
He continued to tell his wife the next day he had
He included a love poem he had composed for her:
Mary, too, was lonely. "I received the books you sent me, James, but [I] was not here when they arrived, & had I been, I would have written you by the bearer." She continued:
Mary added that she had heard something that hurt her feelings: "They say I ought not to go to school that I am going to be more expense to you than I shall be profit. James is this truth? If it is I had rather not attend school. Perhaps I have done wrong in wishing to attend."30 David Strang was one of those who thought Mary was unnecessarily depleting his brother's finances. "I should think you had better stop sending your wife to school," he advised a few months later.31 Mary was frequently ill, which may have contributed to her worry about James's health. Her mother and sister believed she could regain her health if she would drop her studies. But James continued to encourage her, frequently buying her quills and school supplies and such books as Thomas Nugent's French-English dictionary, a French grammar, an edition of Fenelon's Les Aventures de Télémaque, and Samuel Putnam's Sequel to the Analytical Reader?32 Besides being physically ill, Mary was also often depressed. Her mother, Lydia, now living away from her daughter, wrote the following: "Do not, my Dear Mary, harbor melancholy. [I]t is hurtful to your health and without doubt, likewise to your husband's feelings. I judge him by myself when I used to see you dejected. It always grieved me." Perhaps instinctively knowing that Mary needed some cheering, Lydia added that she had "written till I am almost beside myself. I would say to you how much I want to see you but it is useless. I could not give you an idea of my feelings on the subject [;] I am not eloquent enough to describe them but I must close by wishing the best of heaven's blessings may attend you here and hereafter."33 In early 1838, James and Mary traveled to the eastern United States and visited her father in Virginia.34 When they returned a few months later, they moved in with James's parents. But the young couple was living on their own by the time Mary gave birth to their first child on July 5, 1838. The baby girl was named Mary Elizabeth and nicknamed "Little Mary." Exactly what disease ailed Strang's wife and caused frequent illness throughout her life cannot be determined, but there is some evidence she may have suffered from chronic depression. After giving birth to her second daughter, Myraette (Nettie) Mabel, on May 23, 1840, Mary was very ill, presumably with postpartum depression. Her mother-in-law took the older child into her home for a time. "Little Mary is well and contented & happy," James's sister, Myraette, wrote from her mother's home in a note addressed to Mary. "She is so good that mother don't mind her noise. Mother says she brought her home because she was afraid she would not be taken care of when you were sick & now she thinks you had better let her stay till you can take care of her yourself." Myraette continued by describing how "Mary stands by this stand while I write [,] jabbering [,] & is as happy as a little queen, she says she is happier than Victoria. We do not wonder that you want to see her; we love her so well that it's no trouble to wait on her, but we are willing that you should send for her when you think best."35 Myraette had written to her brother a few days previously:
Out in Wisconsin, Mary's relatives had heard of the new baby and of Mary's illness. Benjamin and Ellen Perce wrote to say they were "well-situated," selling land at speculation prices. They encouraged the Strangs to join them in Burlington. "I am truly sorry to hear of your ill state of health and I know ill health brings misery and no enjoyment of life," Ellen wrote Mary. She enclosed some prairie flower seeds in her letter, telling Mary how beautiful Wisconsin Territory was.37 By this time, James had become postmaster of Ellington, New York, and was practicing law. In 1843 he purchased a weekly newspaper, the Randolph Herald, and served as publisher and editor. Mary frequently helped him, at least once taking over her husband's duties while he was away. "I think [Mary] must be a capable woman to take care of the post office [,] law office [,] & other offices without your assistance," James's cousin wrote.38 Although James was periodically away, he appeared to be a good husband and father. On one occasion he wrote his wife to tell her he would not be home for a few days. "Kiss the children for me and pat the dog on his head," he wrote warmly.39 By 1840, Mary's father had moved his family to Illinois, where he worked as a contractor on the I&M (Illinois and Michigan) Canal.40 He purchased land both in northwestern Illinois and Burlington, Wisconsin, and urged James and Mary to join them.41 After considering the idea for three years, James sold the Randolph Herald and placed an advertisement in his paper offering to act as land agent for anyone interested in Wisconsin property. On August 18, 1843, the Strangs loaded their belongings into a carriage and left their home in Clear Creek, New York, for Burlington, Wisconsin.42 |
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“Charles Douglas,” the sixteen-year-old nephew of James Strang, was really Elvira Field, Strang’s first plural wife, in disguise. This photo was taken in 1849-50, probably in Buffalo, New York. Courtesy Clarke Historical Library, Central Michigan University
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After the prophet’s death, Elvira married John Baker, with whom she shared many interests, although she kept her religious beliefs private. Courtesy Clarke Historical Library
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Six years after being banished from Beaver Island, Sarah Wright moved to Utah with her new husband, Joseph S. Wing. She became a well-known doctor in Springville, Utah. Courtesy Springville Historical Society
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Of all the Strangites, none was more devoted to the prophet than Lorenzo Dow Hickey. At first opposed to polygamy, he eventually had four wives. The first child born to his first plural wife was named after Elvira Field. Courtesy Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)
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Many former Strangite children were educated in the Wrightsville school near Black River Falls, Wisconsin. Once a prosperous town, Wrightsville no longer exists. The school has been moved from its original site nearly two miles east to its present location, shown here, near U.S. Highway 12. Photo by author
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