The Sweetness of Certain Things
April 18, 2018[…] accepted a big wedding for the same day and would not be able to fill the branchβs order.Β Spencer came home from the catererβs and went straight to his room. He lay on his […]
[…] accepted a big wedding for the same day and would not be able to fill the branchβs order.Β Spencer came home from the catererβs and went straight to his room. He lay on his […]
[…] explorers and pioneers, but it represented a willingness to give limited support to a military effort in order to benefit the larger needs of the Mormon kingdom. Ironically, in later years the Mormon Battalion […]
[…] was one held here Thursday night called by Pres. Wood . . . from 8:30 P.M. until 12 mid night after which we had lunch. . . .Β Zina, I received a letter last […]
[…] Saints planning to go by sea on the first emigration to California were putting their affairs in order and gathering to New York City. They came from all directions: Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New […]
[…] transient, central city ward grinds her teeth when I confess I have never filled out a welfare order. Our bishop has never, to my knowledge, been called out of his sleep to bail a […]
<i>Dialogue 22.1 (Spring 1989): 69β75</i><br>This essay focuses on the efforts of both groups to establish congregations in Canadaβs far west and explores why the growth of the Latter–day Saint and Reorganized Latter Day Saint […]
[…] βYou know what I mean.β Old Fairbank was a polygamist, the leader of a community called the Order of Enoch that operated a coal mine a couple of miles farther up the canyon. To […]
In his carefully crafted and distinguished novel Recapitulation (1979), Wallace Stegner, Iowa -born, Saskatchewan–reared, but Utah–formed, joins his protagonist Bruce Mason on a brief visit to Salt Lake CityΒ some forty–five years after leaving home. […]
[…] likely to separate the role of the United States as the βcradle of the restorationβ (where an order of government was established which both allowed the restoration and which has served as an example […]
[…] the changes in their lives at the same time that it claimed to restore a sacred, ancient order.Β In a sense, Joseph Smith, Brigham Young, and other early Mormons were like refugees from the […]