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Early Mormon Documents, Vol. 5 [Hardcover]

Dan Vogel (Author, Editor)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 1, 2003 Early Mormon Documents (Book 5)
Unlike Oliver Cowdery"s grandiloquence and Martin Harris's mercurial temperament, David Whitmer--the third of Three Witnesses to the Book of Mormon--was plain-spoken, reliable, and straightforward, as one might expect from someone with his Mennonite upbringing. Readers will notice the care Whitmer takes to avoid exaggeration, for instance. "We did not touch nor handle the plates," he affirmed repeatedly. If he felt a reporter erred either in detail or in conveying the overall spirit of the Three Witnesses' vision of the gold plates, Whitmer quickly followed up with a letter to the editor to set the record straight.

He often availed himself of this option due to the number of interviews he granted to reporters from Chicago, Kansas City, St. Louis, and elsewhere and to LDS and RLDS leaders whose interviews were published in church periodicals. Through all of these discussions, Whitmer's story remained basically the same, although he occasionally added a detail in response to a specific question or experienced an understandable lapse in memory over a relatively minor point.

What will impress most readers, however, is the effort to be candid. People found him to be friendly, despite a no-nonsense approach to LDS history. He was engaging, open, and also well grounded in the real world, as his election as mayor of Richmond, Missouri, attests. He believed in spirits and visions, but he was not considered to be a fanatic; people felt that he was someone who could be trusted.

He "[h]as a good head and honest face," William Kelley and George Blakeslee wrote of their encounter with Whitmer in 1882. "He talks with ease and seemed at home with every subject suggested; and without an effort, seemingly, went on to amplify upon it, so that we had nothing to do but question, suggest and listen. ... [H]e studies to express himself in such a way as not to be misunderstood; and it hurts him to be misrepresented." In addition to Whitmer, others from Fayette, New York, where the Book of Mormon was transcribed and the first general church conferences were held, related what transpired there. They include David Whitmer's brother John; Hiram Page, who married Elizabeth Ann Whitmer and was one of the Eight Witnesses to the Book of Mormon; the Whitmer family's pastor in the German Reformed Church, Diedrich Willers; and others. The latter explained why Mormonism moved from Palmyra to Fayette and how its members grew beyond the founding Smith family to include the Whitmers. Among other things, the Peter Whitmer family, like the Smiths, had previously enjoyed unusual spiritual experiences. "In the month of July," the Reverend Willers noted in 1830, "Joseph Smith, Jr., made his appearance in Seneca county in the neighborhood of Waterloo, about six miles from my residence, where a certain David Whitmer had claimed to have seen an angel of the Lord. Joseph Smith made his way to this man's house in order to bring to pass the translation of the named book with the suggestion that only among such people, who had enjoyed commerce with residents of higher worlds, could he work, and that this was indeed the place where he could do so productively, where people had seen angels."


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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

In this 5-volume series:
1. The Joseph Smith family and Vermont
2-3: Palmyra, New York, and environs
4: Colesville & South Bainbridge, New York, & Harmony, Pennsylvania
5: Fayette, New York

From the Inside Flap

I was plowing in the field one morning, and Joseph [Smith] and Oliver [Cowdery] came along with a revelation stating that I was to be one of the witnesses to the Book of Mormon. I got over the fence and we went out into the woods, near by, and sat down on a log and talked awhile ... when all at once a light came down from above us and encircled us for quite a little distance around; and the angel stood before us ... dressed in white ... A table was set before us and on it the records ... from which the Book of Mormon was translated ... While we were viewing them the voice of God spoke out of heaven saying that the Book was true and the translation correct. --David Whitmer, interview, Saints’ Herald, 1882.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 576 pages
  • Publisher: Signature Books; First Edition edition (November 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1560851708
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560851707
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,442,229 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Ending to a Great Series, December 6, 2003
This review is from: Early Mormon Documents, Vol. 5 (Hardcover)
Dan Vogel finishes his series of books on Early Mormon Documents with Volume V just as strongly as he started. Over five volumes, he has successfully gathered, collated and correlated a vast amount of data. These documents represent a wide view and a fair and balanced approach to events that, to say the least, were mysterious, strange and even wonderful to many faithful LDS. Volume V covers documents from those individuals associated with Joseph Smith in Fayette. Among these, the Peter Whitmer family are most prominent. Documents related to David Whitmer, the only one of the three witnesses who did not rejoin the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints headed by Brigham Young, are found to be eye-opening and yet still an enigma.
The timeline at the conclusion of Volume V constructed by the author must be considered as one of the most authoritative overviews of the events in the life of Joseph Smith leading up to and including the foundation of the Church.
Dan Vogel has done a great service for historians and researchers of Joseph Smith and the early period of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This is about as unbiased as any reasonable person could expect. Thus I would predict that some will find these documents faith-promoting and others will find them faith-limiting depending on the individual reader's outlook and intent.
For myself, I see no reason for LDS to avoid the details of the early aspect of their church. Dan Vogel has brought a great deal of information to light because these events transpired in the modern era. Surely there would be even less savory accounts of early Christianity or Islam if we had the luxury of the types of extant documents that this author has compiled.
I recommend this book wholehearedly, along with its prior volumes, to anyone with a more than passing curiosity as to the events in the life of the young Joseph Smith and the formation of what must be recognized as a new world religion.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Collection of Primary Sources Rarely used by LDS Church., May 29, 2011
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This review is from: Early Mormon Documents, Vol. 5 (Hardcover)
This is the fifth and final in a five-volume set compiled by Dan Vogel. These primary source documents can be located elsewhere. However, it is quite convenient to have them all in a multi-volume collection. These sources are those which are rarely, if ever used by the LDS Church since many, if not most of these documents raise issues regarding early LDS history. The only criticism I have is that the organization of the documents is initially a bit confusing, but works fine once the compiler's system is understood.

Kay Burningham, Attorney

Author of "An American Fraud: One Lawyer's Case against Mormonism."
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An overall good effort to complete the collection, February 21, 2007
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This review is from: Early Mormon Documents, Vol. 5 (Hardcover)
Volume 5 of this series focuses on Mormon origins in Fayette, New York, and as such is primarily based on records regarding the Whitmer family, including interviews with the last (and most interviewed) of the Three Witnesses of the Book of Mormon, David Whitmer. It also contains statements, testimonies, letters and reminiscences by well known early church members: Hiram Page, William E. McClellin, Sidney Rigdon, John Whitmer and Parley P. Pratt.

Dan Vogel is a well known, non-Mormon historian. This collection is his attempt at publishing authentic historical accounts that are not common knowledge to the average inquirer, as well as containing excerpts from well known, published accounts.

From the Introduction:

"The present compilation includes numerous statements by and interviews with David Whitmer, followed by statements of his brother John Whitmer, brother-in-law Hiram Page, sister Elizabeth Ann Whitmer Cowdery, and nephew John C. Whitmer. Also included are accounts by area residents, including the early letters of farmer Lucius Fenn and the Reverend Diedrich Willers; the later statements of Lee Yost, Diedrich Willers, Sr., Diedrich Willers, Jr., and Harrison Chamberlain; and two published histories. Statements from non-residents or visitors to the Fayette area have also been provided. Finally, the miscellaneous documents section contains the Testimony of Three Witnesses, priesthood licences for Joseph Smith, Sr., John Whitmer, and Christian Whitmer, and excerpts from the Far West Record"

While this volume, as per the previous volumes, contains mostly *excerpts* of the accounts it publishes, I found it to be personally the best of all five.
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