George Q. Cannon: A Biography Davis Bitton

BYU Studies Quarterly, Dec 2000

By William A. Wilson, Published on 07/01/00

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George Q. Cannon: A Biography Davis Bitton

BYU Studies Quarterly Volume 39 | Issue 3 Article 12 7-1-2000 George Q. Cannon: A Biography Davis Bitton William A. Wilson Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq Recommended Citation Wilson, William A. (2000) "George Q. Cannon: A Biography Davis Bitton," BYU Studies Quarterly: Vol. 39 : Iss. 3 , Article 12. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq/vol39/iss3/12 This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by the All Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in BYU Studies Quarterly by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact , . Wilson: <em>George Q. Cannon: A Biography</em> Davis Bitton DAVIS BITTON george Q cannon A biography salt lake city deseret book 1999 xiv 554 pp ap photos illustrations notes bibliography index 0495 3495 34.95 3495 reviewed by willi william A wilson on november 221850 ten LDS missionaries sailed from san francisco to hawaii to open that land to the preaching of their gospel among them was twenty three year old george Q cannon born in liverpool england in 1827 george with his family had been converted to the gospel in 1840 by georges uncle apostle john taylor in 1842 the family immigrated to nauvoo george s mother died on the voyage and his father died shortly following the martyrdom of joseph smith john taylor then became his surrogate father george was ordained a seventy in 1845 at age eighteen and was endowed the same year he made the trek to the salt lake valley in 1847 in 1849 with a few select individuals he was sent on a gold mission to california from there he was sent on his mission to hawaii by the time he left hawaii almost four years later over four thousand members remained behind in numerous branches even more remarkable george had learned hawaiian well enough not only to teach the natives in their own tongue but also to translate the book of mormon into their lanodthe the hawaiian misof guage in december 1900 fifty years after the opening ofthe sion george Q cannon returned to hawaii to participate in the missions jubilee celebration he visited sites of his earlier experiences preached to the members instructed the missionaries and prophesied the eventual building of a hawaiian temple shortly after returning to the mainland in failing health cannon died on april 12 igol 1901 121901 in the years between his two hawaiian experiences cannon married six wives and fathered forty three children was ordained an apostle in 1860 at age thirty three served as an additional counselor to brigham young and as first counselor in the first presidency to john taylor wilford woodruff and lorenzo snow and played such a prominent role in church business and civic affairs that in the development of nineteenth century mormonism and in the progress of utah toward statehood few men could be considered his equal now we have cannons remarkable life chronicled for us in davis bitton s equally remarkable biography drawing on rich primary sources especially cannon s journals and letters bitton brings his subject vividly alive some may wish the narrative moved ahead at a faster pace but it is bitton s use of extended quotations from cannon himself rather than summary or paraphrase that makes the apostle such a believable character 190 Published by BYU ScholarsArchive, 2000 BYU studies 39 no byustudies3q n033 2000 1000 1200 2000 1 BYU Studies Quarterly, Vol. 39, Iss. 3 [2000], Art. 12 review of george Q cannon A biography 191 following his return to utah from his mission in hawaii cannon married elizabeth hoagland and then set out for san francisco to get his hawaiian translation of the book of mormon into print and to publish the western standard which in addition to serving the saints in the area would counter the virulent anti mormonism pouring from the pens of other newspaper editors while in california he also presided over the pacific mission returning to salt lake city in 1858 he was sent on a mission to the east to assist mormon immigrants on their journey to salt lake valley and mormons Mormons to incline eastern presses toward a more positive view of cormons after being ordained an apostle cannon was sent almost immediately to preside over the british mission he directed mission activities edited ofbritish saints during the millennial star and supervised the emigration of british this mission he returned briefly to the states to take part in an abortive attempt to win statehood for utah he was to have served as one of the state s senators after his return to utah in 1864 cannon served as brigham young s personal secretary began publishing the juvenile instructor in 1866 and was called in 1867 to edit the deseret news beginning in 1872 cannon served for nearly a decade as utahs utah s territorial delegate to the united states congress throughout his tenure enemies of the church in utah from the media and in the congress attempted to deny him the seat he had won in fair elections finally succeeding in 1882 following the passage of the edmunds act which barred polygamists from holding public office during the remainder of the century cannon continued to defend the church against attacks from its opponents engaged in not always successful business endeavors to save the church from financial ruin spent time on the underground hiding from federal marshals and served time in prison for his polygamous marriages he was a key player with president woodruff in producing the 1890 manifesto that would eventually bring about the end of polygamy he was also instrumental in breaking the churchs chur&s churas unified people s party into two parties republicans and democrats a move necessary to win statehood in 1896 to the end of his life he remained a political figure to be reckoned with in bitton s biography two themes dominate cannons life the struggle over polygamy and the struggle to correct the malevolent distortions and misinformation spread everywhere by the churchs churche enemies bitton attempts to present the polygamy struggle as it occurred without taking a stand though he does take the rather relativistic position that the conflict was ultimately not over what was right and what was wrong but over what people holding two conflicting worldviews worldviews considered to be right and wrong bitton shows us the tragedy and heartbreak that resulted from families being split apart as a result of federal intervention but his description of https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq/vol39/iss3/12 2 Wilson: <em>George Q. Cannon: A Biography</em> Davis Bitton 192 BYU studies polygamy itself at least as it was lived in the cannon family tends to focus on the smiling aspects of that peculiar institution probably because the evidence would suggest that the cannon wives and children really did live together in harmony and because cannon genuinely loved them all and treated them fairly in some families however there was a da (...truncated)


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William A. Wilson. George Q. Cannon: A Biography Davis Bitton, BYU Studies Quarterly, 2000, pp. 12, Volume 39, Issue 3,