Lyman Wight
Lyman Wight | |
---|---|
Church of Christ[1] | |
1844 – 1858 | |
Predecessor | Joseph Smith |
Successor | None |
Reason | Succession crisis |
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
April 8, 1841 | – December 3, 1848|
Called by | Joseph Smith |
End reason | Excommunicated for apostasy |
Latter Day Saint Apostle | |
April 8, 1841 | – December 3, 1848|
Called by | Joseph Smith |
Reason | Replenishing Quorum of the Twelve[2] |
End reason | Excommunicated for apostasy |
Reorganization at end of term | Charles C. Rich, Lorenzo Snow, Erastus Snow, and Franklin D. Richards ordained[3] |
Personal details | |
Born | Mountain Valley, Texas , United States | May 9, 1796
Lyman Wight (May 9, 1796 – March 31, 1858) was an early leader in the
Early life
Lyman Wight was born to Levi Wight and Sarah Corton on May 9, 1796, in
Service in the church
Wight was baptized a member of the
Jackson County conflict and Zion's Camp
With many of his converts, Wight went to settle in
On July 23, 1833, Wight signed an agreement with the vigilantes which specified that the Latter Day Saints would leave Jackson County by 1834. The Saints were driven out anyway into neighboring Clay County. The church membership called on several elders to go up to Kirtland to tell Joseph Smith about the events. When the elders refused, Wight stepped forward to make the journey, despite his wife being ill with a three-day-old child and only three days of food. Parley P. Pratt volunteered to go with Wight.
Wight and Pratt arrived in Kirtland, Ohio, on February 22, 1834. Two days later, they testified about the conflict in Missouri to the newly formed high council. This led to the organization of Zion's Camp. Smith sent out men, two by two, to recruit volunteers. Wight left on April 21 with Hyrum Smith to recruit from the northwestern United States. Recruitment was difficult, as many people did not want to leave their homes to defend others in Missouri. Smith and Wight recruited about twenty individuals, including Hosea Stout, who was not a church member at the time but was impressed with their preaching. They met with the main company on June 8 at the Salt River in Missouri, bringing the total to 207 men, 11 women, 11 children, and 25 wagons.
Wight tolerated the conditions of the company—including the eating of moldy and rancid food—under the promises from Joseph Smith that they would not be afflicted by it. After a 900-mile march, the members of the camp reached Missouri where they were smitten with cholera. They were then discharged without having accomplished their goal of returning the Latter Day Saints to Jackson County. At the end of Zion's Camp, Wight wrote up the discharge orders, and remained in Missouri according to Smith's request.
Itinerant preaching
For the remainder of 1834, Wight worked making bricks in Missouri, and built a large brick house for Colonel Arthur of Clay County, employing several others, including Wilford Woodruff.
In 1835, Wight was encouraged to travel to the temple at Kirtland. While on the journey, he preached. He stopped by Richmond, Indiana. He knew that people in the area were antagonistic towards the Mormons, yet he made an appointment to preach at the courthouse. At the appointed time, he went to the courthouse. People with tar and feathers filled the room, ready to lynch him. The event is described thus:
He preached about two hours, reproving them most severely for their meanness, wickedness and mobocratic spirit. At the close of the meeting he said, "If there is a gentleman in this congregation, I wish he would invite me to stay with him overnight." Whereupon, a gentleman stepped forward and tendered him an invitation, which he willingly accepted. His host said, "Mr Wight, it is astonishing how you have become so well acquainted with the people here, for you have described them very correctly." He was kindly entertained and furnished with money in the morning to aid him on his journey.[6]
Mormon leader in Daviess County
Staying the winter in Kirtland, Wight set out to return to Missouri in 1836. In 1837, apostle David W. Patten accused him of teaching false doctrine, for which he was tried before the high council in Far West. Being found guilty, Wight made the necessary acknowledgments and apologies.
Settling near the
On June 28, 1838, at a conference of local church members, Smith organized a stake at Adam-ondi-Ahman, with his uncle John Smith as president, with Reynolds Cahoon and Wight as counselors. With the organization, members began settling in the area, including new members and refugees from Kirtland.
Wight had also become a Colonel in the 50th regiment of the Missouri Regiment, in the state militia, under the command of General H. G. Parks. By end of June, he was also head of the Danite organization in Daviess County. Between his several roles, Wight became the preeminent leader of the Latter Day Saints in the county.
The Mormon War
In the summer of 1838, the troubles of the
After the trial, emotions did not abate on either side. The Mormons and non-Mormons in Daviess County engaged in non-fatal conflicts. Non-Mormon vigilantes from other counties came to the county and began to harass the Latter Day Saints in outlying areas, burning their homes and looting their property. Refugees began pouring into Adam-ondi-Ahman, seeking protection. The Mormon response was to call up armed volunteers from Caldwell County. Combining with the Daviess men, the Mormons split into three groups and raided the chief non-Mormon settlements. Wight led the raid on Millport. The old settlers and their families fled and Wight and his men looted their property and burned their homes to the ground.[7]
Following these actions, the Battle of Crooked River took place. Smith advised every church member to go to Adam-ondi-Ahman or Far West for protection and strength. When Far West fell under siege after the Missouri Executive Order 44, Wight organized members in Adam-ondi-Ahman to assist them. No battle took place, however, as Wight and the other Mormon leaders were arrested by the state militia and the Mormon militia subsequently surrendered.
While in custody of the state troops, Wight endured the mockery and vulgarity of the troops, lying in the ground in the rain. A court martial which might have led to Wight's execution was averted by General Alexander William Doniphan of Clay County, who challenged the legality of any such court. Instead, Wight and the other leaders were tried in the civil courts. Wight and other leaders were allowed to escape from jail during their transfer to Boone County on April 6, 1839.
Nauvoo era
Wight was ordained an apostle of the church by Smith on April 8, 1841, to replace Patten, who had died in the Battle of Crooked River in 1838. Wight and George Miller became co-responsible for a common-stock, religious cooperative company/church mill and logging town in the wilderness of Wisconsin. Much lumber for the Nauvoo Temple and the Nauvoo House were floated down the Mississippi River from the several Mormon mills in the area.
Succession crisis and Wightite colony
Split with the LDS Church
During the succession crisis after Smith's death, Wight felt compelled to follow the orders Smith had given him to found a safe haven for the Latter Day Saints in the Republic of Texas. Brigham Young attempted several times to persuade Wight to join the main body of Latter-day Saints, which he had organized as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Alta California area of Mexico, which would become the Utah Territory in 1850. However, Wight refused each time.[citation needed] He rejected Young as a prophet.[4] Wight was eventually excommunicated by Young on December 3, 1848;[8] his most prominent follower, Bishop George Miller, was also disfellowshipped.
Zodiac, Texas
Wight moved his group of Latter Day Saints to the Republic of Texas and he would eventually found several communities on the central Texas frontier. Wight's followers built the first Latter Day Saint
were performed in this temple by the Wightites.The only remaining material infrastructure of the colony is the Mormon Mill cemetery near Hamilton Creek, about fifty miles east by north of Fredericksburg.
President of the Church of Christ (Wightite)
Wight would later recognize William Smith as the president of the
Death
Wight died on March 31, 1858, in
See also
Notes
- ^ The Historical magazine, and notes and queries concerning the antiquities, history, and biography of America, vol. 3, London: C. Benjamin Richardson: Trübner & co., 1959, p. 12, retrieved July 26, 2010
- had been added to the Quorum. Wight's addition to the Quorum brought the membership in the Quorum of the Twelve to twelve members again.
- ^ Four new apostles were ordained to bring the Quorum to twelve members after Wight's excommunication and the reorganization of the First Presidency under Brigham Young.
- ^ OCLC 25553656.
- ISBN 978-1-60907-577-4.
- ^ Jenson, Andrew (1901). Latter-day Saint biographical encyclopedia: a compilation of biographical sketches of prominent men and women in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Vol. I ed.). Salt Lake City, Utah: The Deseret News. p. 94. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
- ^ Baugh, pp. 86–87.
- ^ Johnson 2006, p. 122
- ^ Johnson 2006, p. 125.
References
- OCLC 45456708
- Johnson, Melvin C. (2006), Polygamy On The Pedernales: Lyman Wight's Mormon Villages in Antebellum Texas, 1845 to 1858, Logan, Utah: OCLC 62728463
- Van Wagenen, Michael (2002), The Texas Republic and the Mormon Kingdom of God, College Station: Texas A&M University Press, OCLC 48475601
- Biography of Lyman Wight, The Joseph Smith Papers (accessed May 10, 2012)
- Laughlin, David L., David L. Laughlin Research Files, (MSS 2327), L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University.
Further reading
- Wight, Jermy Benton (1996). The Wild Ram of the Mountain: The Story of Lyman Wight. J.B. Wight. ISBN 978-0-9651163-7-4.
External resources
- Grampa Bill's G.A. Pages: Lyman Wight
- Lyman Wight, "Saints Without Haloes", Leonard J. Arrington and Davis Bitton. Signature Books.
- Lyman Wight's Mormon Colony in Texas excerpt from "Mormon Trails" chapter in Hill Country travel guide by Richard Zelade (2001). Accessed online August 6, 2007.
- Davis Bitton papers on Lyman Wight, 1849-1996, L. Tom Perry Special Collections
- Lyman Wight records of baptisms for the dead, L. Tom Perry Special Collections