"A Subject That Can Bear Investigation"
Anguish, Faith, and Joseph Smith's Youngest Plural Wife
J. Spencer Fluhman
J. Spencer Fluhman, 鈥溾楢 Subject That Can Bear Investigation鈥: Anguish, Faith, and Joseph Smith鈥檚 Youngest Plural Wife,鈥 in No Weapon Shall Prosper: New Light on Sensitive Issues, ed. Robert L. Millet (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2011), 105鈥119.
Perhaps no other aspect of Joseph Smith鈥檚 life has stirred controversy like the practice of plural marriage. Since its inception, both Latter-day Saints and members of other faiths have puzzled over polygamy and its complicated beginnings. Though the Church discontinued the practice over a century ago, polygamy continues to invite criticism from outside and questions from within the Latter-day Saint community. The fact that Joseph Smith was sealed to several younger women adds another layer of intrigue to an already difficult story. In this essay, the experience of one Latter-day Saint woman illuminates the spiritual world of the 1840s and provides insight into this complex topic.
Helen Mar Kimball Whitney (1828-96), Salt Lake City. (Courtesy of Church History Library, Salt Lake City.)
In the single month of May 1843, Joseph Smith married four brides under the age of twenty. The youngest, Helen Mar Kimball, was fourteen. [1] Of Joseph Smith鈥檚 plural wives, in fact, at least nine or ten were what would now be called 鈥渢eenage鈥 (the term was not widely used until the twentieth century) when they married the Prophet. [2] Since evidence for physical intimacy between Joseph Smith and some of his wives is compelling, the question of sexual contact with the youngest wives ignites controversy in print and across the Internet. Further complicating the picture of Joseph Smith鈥檚 relationship with his young wives is the fact that Helen Mar Kimball Whitney experienced considerable pressure to consent to the marriage from both the Prophet and her own father, Elder Heber C. Kimball; she understood that her salvation and that of her family鈥檚 depended on her acquiescence. Because the most pertinent documents for the Whitney case were penned by Whitney herself, critics charge on the basis of the Saints鈥 own documentary record that Joseph Smith used his religious position to impose himself on innocent teens. [3]
While a clear picture of these earliest plural marriages eludes historians鈥擩oseph Smith never offered any rationale for his plural marriages beyond Doctrine and Covenants 132鈥攊t is possible to reconstruct some of what the Nauvoo Saints experienced in those tumultuous years. [4] Such a reconstruction will not reconcile every questioner of early Latter-day Saint polygamy, but the Saints鈥 accounts help modern Church members comprehend the emotional and spiritual passages that defined the nineteenth-century Latter-day Saint experience. This essay uses the youngest wife鈥檚 experience as a window on those passages. Fortunately, the plural wife who probably stirs the strongest modern reactions is also perhaps the best documented. Helen Mar Kimball Whitney (1828鈥96) not only penned reminiscences of her Nauvoo experiences for the Relief Society鈥檚 Woman鈥檚 Exponent (1880鈥86), she also authored a candid autobiographical sketch for her family in 1881, published two extended defenses of polygamy, and left a memorable diary of her later years. [5] Her words offer an unmatched view of Nauvoo plural marriage and her own spiritual and emotional path, which by her own account lay somewhere between sacrifice and certainty. Even years afterward, she was still challenged by her marriage to Joseph Smith, but she balanced those emotions with her conviction that the principle of plural marriage came from God and with her sense that she had passed an Abrahamic test.
While marriage proposals at age fourteen were not unheard of in the 1840s, they were unusual. Nineteenth-century women married on average earlier than today; early American legal understandings of youthful marriage might baffle modern readers. Borrowing from English common law traditions, American law during the 1840s set the legal age for marriage at twelve for females and fourteen for males. [6] Similarly, pre鈥揅ivil War 鈥渁ge of consent鈥 laws set a low standard; not until the 1880s did states begin raising the age of female consent from ten or twelve to sixteen. [7] In rural communities where marriageable women could be scarce, marriage age could dip well below modern conventions鈥攆or instance, Martin Harris married his wife Lucy in 1808 when she was fifteen. These cases notwithstanding, the period鈥檚 census data reveal that, generally, age seventeen or eighteen marked the younger end of the typical range of female marital eligibility. [8] So, while the rest of Joseph Smith鈥檚 plural wives鈥 ages more or less met contemporary expectations, Helen stands out as a possible, but not unheard of, exception. [9]
Whatever her own expectations for marriage, fourteen-year-old Helen Kimball was stunned to learn of plural marriage. According to her reminiscences, she was introduced to the principle by her father. Her first reaction was anger, having considered rumors of the practice to be lies hatched by Latter-day Saint dissenters. She thought the suggestion 鈥渋mproper and unnatural鈥 and worried over the twenty-four hours Heber Kimball gave her to consider marriage to Joseph Smith. Helen remembered vacillating between faith and doubt that first night, in the end becoming open to a doctrine 鈥渟o repugnant and so contrary to all of our former ideas and traditions鈥 only because of her trust in her father鈥檚 love and commitment to God. [10] After that initial 鈥渟udden shock of a small earthquake,鈥 Helen met with her parents and Joseph Smith the following morning and agreed to be sealed to the Prophet. [11] Adding to her bewilderment, not long thereafter she learned from her father that her close friend Sarah Ann Whitney had been sealed to the Prophet months before. [12]
Readers concerned about whether or not the marriage was consummated are left without conclusive evidence for or against. In all her reminiscing, Helen neither confirmed nor denied a physical relationship. This was not the case with all the plural wives, however. After the Civil War, when Reorganized Church critics charged that Joseph Smith鈥檚 relationships with other women were purely spiritual unions, Latter-day Saints marshaled convincing evidence that at least some of the plural marriages had been consummated. [13] While the question of sexuality thus remains open, there is no documentary evidence that such was the case with Helen. In fact, her reminiscences convey little social interaction with Joseph Smith after the marriage, let alone an intimate physical relationship. In a retrospective poem written to convey her feelings about her youthful sealing, Helen described nothing of a close bond鈥攕he even wrote that the 鈥渟tep鈥 she took was 鈥渇or eternity alone,鈥 convincing some historians that the marriage was unconsummated. [14] What does emerge powerfully from the poem, though, is a sense of her dashed dreams of romantic love and missed social opportunities: 鈥淭hy sicken鈥檇 heart will brood and imagine future woes, / And like a fetter鈥檇 bird with wild and longing heart, / Thou鈥檒t dayly pine for freedom and murmur at thy lot.鈥 The poem ended where her reminiscences did, with a statement of trust in her father. [15] For his part, Heber Kimball wrote to Helen just weeks after her sealing: 鈥淢y child, remember the care that your dear father and mother have for your welfare in this life, that all may be done well, and that in view of eternal worlds, for that will depend on what we do here, and how we do it; for all things are sacred.鈥 [16]
Helen鈥檚 emphasis on 鈥渆ternity alone鈥 and her father鈥檚 underscoring of the 鈥渧iew of eternal worlds鈥 points to the otherworldly significance each attached to her marriage. Viewed from any angle, Nauvoo plural marriages contradict modern expectations. Helen鈥檚 marriage was not rooted in romantic feelings, mutual attraction, or an emotional bond. To the contrary, she sensed that her marriage provided spiritual benefits for her and her family. Looking back across the years, she wrote that those benefits had constituted a large share of her motivation to enter into the marriage: 鈥淛oseph . . . came next morning & with my parents I heard him teach & explain the principle of Celestial marrage鈥攁fter which he said to me, 鈥業f you will take this step, it will ensure your eternal salvation and exaltation & that of your father鈥檚 household & all of your kindred. This promise was so great that I willingly gave myself to purchase so glorious a reward.鈥 [17] Neither a starry-eyed nor love-struck proposal, Joseph Smith鈥檚 to Helen resembles others recorded by the Prophet鈥檚 wives; each reported that he couched his proposal in the language of revelation, obedience to God鈥檚 law, and the promise of eternal rewards. [18] Joseph Smith鈥檚 proposals, in other words, mirrored the 1843 revelation on celestial marriage (see D&C 132), which highlighted law (see vv. 3鈥7, 11鈥12, 15鈥19, 21, 24鈥28, 31鈥34, 37, 48, 54, 58鈥66), obedience (see vv. 3鈥5, 53鈥55, 64鈥66), and afterlife blessings (see vv. 19鈥24, 55, 63). [19]
According to Helen, her father was similarly motivated. The argument that Joseph Smith initiated plural marriages for his own lustful purposes fails to account for the fact that, in Helen鈥檚 case at least, it was her own father who proposed the marriage. Her father taught her 鈥渢he principle of Celestial marrage,鈥 Helen wrote in 1881, 鈥& having a great desire to be connected with the Prophet, Joseph, he offered me to him; this I afterwards learned from the Prophet鈥檚 own mouth.鈥 [20] Kimball鈥檚 desire to be 鈥渃onnected鈥 to Joseph Smith, curious as it may be to modern Saints, somewhat reorients the marriage away from questions of Joseph Smith鈥檚 motivations. What did Elder Kimball hope to achieve by 鈥渙ffering鈥 Helen? Why would a marriage to Joseph Smith have been preferred over one to a man closer to Helen鈥檚 own age? Why the urgency about marrying her off so young?
Many modern Latter-day Saints find it difficult to make sense of the spiritual blessings their nineteenth-century counterparts attached to plural marriage. Comprehensive answers elude Saints and historians alike, but attempts at understanding bring one into a period of intense spiritual activity in which Joseph Smith鈥檚 sermons, revelations, and instructions literally remade the cosmos for his followers. Parts of his teachings persist in the modern Church; beloved doctrines like the eternity of the marriage covenant and vicarious ordinance work received their first articulation in these years. Some aspects of Joseph Smith鈥檚 teachings have been modified or deemphasized in later years at the discretion of later Church leaders. Some ideas, like plural marriage, were explosive enough that Joseph Smith kept them relatively quiet, sharing them only with trusted companions. Others the Prophet offered in embryonic form only; it fell to future leaders to elaborate on and contemporize them. [21]
At the heart of his Nauvoo teachings was the Prophet鈥檚 emphasis on creating binding links that would join the Saints as God鈥檚 extended family. Writing to the Church in 1842, Joseph Smith stressed that baptisms for the dead would function as a 鈥渨elding鈥 link (see D&C 128:18). Certainly, celestial marriage would function as another. [22] Not yet a part of Latter-day Saint understanding, though, was a sense that families could be sealed together through ordinances across generations of the dead. No Saint of the 1840s was sealed to his or her own ancestors through vicarious ordinances; later Church Presidents would add intergenerational sealing to temple practice. Their absence in Nauvoo helps explain Heber Kimball鈥檚 actions with regard to his daughter. [23]
Convinced that sealing was God鈥檚 plan for his people, the Nauvoo Saints in effect created extended eternal families by sealing living Saints of no blood relation鈥攖hrough plural marriages and adult 鈥渁doptions鈥濃攔ather than through sealing to one鈥檚 own progenitors via proxy work. (Through what the Saints called the 鈥渓aw of adoption,鈥 adult men without faithful Latter-day Saint parents were sealed to other adult men as their adopted sons.) [24] Lucy Walker, for instance, who married Joseph Smith days before Helen did in 1843, remembered the Prophet explaining that their sealing would help 鈥渇orm a chain that could never be broken, worlds without end.鈥 [25] Since endowments and sealings for the dead were not yet part of Latter-day Saint temple practice, the Nauvoo Saints鈥 sealing work bore a marked sense of urgency. In other words, whatever was to be done in terms of ordinance work beyond baptism was to be done here and now and only for the living. Speaking in 1859, Elder Orson Pratt put it bluntly: 鈥淎ll these things have to be attended to here.鈥 [26] Saints like Heber Kimball thus yearned to be linked or welded into an extended celestial family. Viewed in this light, Elder Kimball and the Prophet Joseph Smith seem to have been collecting kin as much as wives. In the words of one historian, 鈥淛oseph did not marry women to form a warm, human companionship, but to create a network of related wives, children, and kinsmen that would endure into the eternities. . . . Like Abraham of old, Joseph yearned for familial plentitude.鈥 [27]
Complicated though they may be, these doctrinal points help make Heber Kimball鈥檚 鈥渙ffering鈥 of Helen more comprehensible. In the Kimball family narratives鈥攆rom Heber, Helen Mar, and finally her son, Elder Orson F. Whitney鈥擧elen Mar鈥檚 marriage bound the Smith and Kimball families together. In the logic of those narratives, an earthly relationship between Joseph Smith and Helen Mar Kimball was almost beside the point. Given the evident lack of a meaningful earthly relationship in their case, one historian with an eye on these wider connections being made between Joseph Smith and close associate鈥檚 families opted for the word 鈥渄ynastic鈥 to describe their marriage. [28]
This is not to say that it was easy for Helen to function as what her son would call the 鈥済olden link . . . whereby the houses of Heber and Joseph were indissolubly and forever joined.鈥 [29] In a particularly poignant line in her reminiscence, Helen cast herself as a modern sacrificial offering. 鈥淢y father had but one Ewe Lamb,鈥 she wrote, 鈥渂ut willingly laid her upon the alter.鈥 [30] Her evident pain at having so momentous a decision forced on her before she could fully grasp its significance was matched by her mother鈥檚. Helen wrote, 鈥淗ow cruel this [marriage] seamed to the mother whose heartstrings were already stretched until they were ready to snap asunder.鈥 Her mother, Vilate Kimball, who had been tried mightily by Heber鈥檚 polygamous marriage to Sarah Noon not long before, responded to the Prophet鈥檚 request for consent to marry Helen with resignation: 鈥淚f Helen is willing I have nothing more to say.鈥 Helen continued, 鈥淪he had witnessed the sufferings of others, who were older & who better understood the step they were taking, & to see her child, who had scarcely seen her fifteenth summer, following in the same thorny path, in her mind she saw the misery which was as sure to come as the sun was to rise and set; but it was all hidden to me.鈥 [31] In the Kimball family narratives, Helen鈥檚 offering was thus marked by anguish and faith, the twin inheritances of any redemptive sacrifice in Latter-day Saint theology.
Though Helen returned to sacrificial metaphors throughout her writings, her voice in the 1880s rang with conviction regarding her decision. With other Saints then weathering a storm of federal prosecution and national opprobrium, she at times wrote about her life as though all her striving had brought her future blessings only: 鈥淭he Latter-day Saints do not desire tribulation, but they look for little else in this life. . . . No earthly inducement could be held forth to the women who entered this order. It was to be a life-sacrifice for the sake of an everlasting glory and exaltation.鈥 [32] In other moments, though, she demanded that readers understand that it was all worth it. Responding to criticisms that Latter-day Saint women were coerced or cajoled into polygamy or that their lives were miserable, Helen maintained that Joseph Smith鈥檚 revelation (D&C 132) contained 鈥渢he words of the Lord.鈥 For her, that spiritual conviction was the key. 鈥淭he Latter-day Saints would not enter into this holy order of matrimony unless they had received some stronger and more convincing proofs of its correctness than the testimony of a man, for in obeying this law it has cost them a sacrifice nearly equal to that of Abraham.鈥 [33] Latter-day Saint women, she wrote, bravely stood with Sarah, Rachel, Leah, and other godly women, 鈥渓awful and honored wives鈥 in sacred history who had heard God鈥檚 word and obeyed. [34]
For Helen, not all blessings of plural marriage blessings were held in waiting. 鈥淚 have been a spectator and a participator in this order of matrimony for over thirty years, and being a first wife, I have had every opportunity for judging in regard to its merits,鈥 she wrote in 1882. 鈥淭here are real and tangible blessings enjoyed under this system.鈥 Without downplaying the difficulties plural marriage entailed, Helen maintained that those who entered into the 鈥減rinciple鈥 with 鈥減ure motives鈥 and 鈥渃ontinued to practice it in righteousness鈥 were fashioned into better Christians: 鈥淭heir souls will be expanded, and in the place of selfishness, patience and charity will find place in their hearts.鈥 Thus oriented toward God and 鈥渢he interests of others,鈥 she concluded, righteous polygamous men and women 鈥渁re rising above our earthly idols, and find that we have easier access to the throne of grace.鈥 [35]
Helen admitted to contemplating different paths in her younger years. Looking back, though, she willingly made peace with the trial of plural marriage in order to have all that Mormonism provided her. 鈥淚n my younger days, in the early scenes of trial and temptation, I thought that I would be perfectly happy if the plural system could be relinquished. I felt unwilling to sacrifice my earthly happiness for the promise of future reward. I thought I could content myself with a lesser glory. But I found that there was not real substance in any religious doctrine outside of 鈥楳ormonism,鈥 and I could not disbelieve one part (as many have professed to do) without rejecting it completely.鈥 [36] And, despite her youthful fears, Helen Whitney was not left without happiness in this world. Confident that even 鈥渢he slightest glimpse鈥 of future eternal glory would repay all the difficulty occasioned by the practice, Helen concluded her 1884 defense of polygamy with a statement of certainty鈥斺渙f that pure and unalloyed bliss [to come] I solemnly testify that I have had a foretaste.鈥 [37] Intense sacrifice, earthly joy, and faith in the promise of eternal glory had come to define Helen鈥檚 life as it had for so many of her fellow travelers. 鈥淭he Latter-day Saints are reaching after those things that are durable,鈥 she wrote in 1882. 鈥淲e do not want the shadow but the substance of what is hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen.鈥 [38]
Notes
[1] The quote in the title comes from Helen Mar Whitney, Plural Marriage, as Taught by the Prophet Joseph: A Reply to Joseph Smith, Editor of the Lamoni (Iowa) 鈥淗erald鈥 (Salt Lake City: Juvenile Instructor, 1882). This essay appeared in slightly modified form as 鈥溾楢 Subject That Can Bear Investigation鈥: Anguish, Faith, and Joseph Smith鈥檚 Youngest Plural Wife,鈥 Mormon Historical Studies 11, no. 1 (Spring 2010): 41鈥51. Joseph Smith married Lucy Walker (age seventeen) on May 1; and Sarah Lawrence (age seventeen), Maria Lawrence (age nineteen), and Helen Mar Kimball sometime during the month. See Todd Compton, In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1997), 4鈥6. Nancy Winchester, whose possible marriage to Joseph Smith is not as well documented as Kimball鈥檚, could also have been as young as fourteen or fifteen. See Richard L. Anderson and Scott Faulring, 鈥淭he Prophet Joseph Smith and His Plural Wives,鈥 FARMS Review 10, no. 2 (1998): 76鈥77; also Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 604鈥8. Original spelling and grammar retained in quoted material.
[2] Among the various ten-year age groupings for the wives, the teenage cohort was largest, nearly a full third of the total in Compton鈥檚 calculation. Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 11. The total number of wives ranges between twenty-nine and forty-eight in modern historians鈥 accounts. See Anderson and Faulring, 鈥淧rophet Joseph Smith and His Plural Wives,鈥 67鈥104; Danel W. Bachman, 鈥淎 Study of the Mormon Practice of Plural Marriage Before the Death of Joseph Smith鈥 (master鈥檚 thesis, Purdue University, 1975); Richard L. Bushman, Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling (New York: Knopf, 2005), 437鈥46; Fawn M. Brodie, No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith, 2nd ed. (New York: Knopf, 1975), 457鈥88; Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 10鈥11; D. Michael Quinn, The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1994), 587鈥88; George D. Smith, 鈥淣auvoo Roots of Mormon Polygamy, 1841鈥46: A Preliminary Demographic Report,鈥 Dialogue 27, no. 1 (Spring 1994): 1鈥72; George D. Smith, Nauvoo Polygamy: 鈥淏ut We Called it Celestial Marriage鈥 (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2008), 36ff.
[3] For an influential iteration of this charge, see Jon Krakauer, Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith (New York: Anchor Books), chapter 11.
[4] Though not necessarily intended as a rationale for polygamy, Joseph Smith penned an 1842 letter to Nancy Rigdon with the question of polygamy in mind in which he offered a rationale for obeying God鈥檚 commands regardless of one鈥檚 preconceptions. The letter was originally published by Latter-day Saint dissident John C. Bennett in the Springfield, IL, Sangamo Journal, August 19, 1842 (Springfield, MO), and is reprinted in The Personal Writings of Joseph Smith, Dean C. Jessee, comp. and ed. 2nd ed. (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002), 538鈥40.
[5] Whitney, Plural Marriage, as Taught by the Prophet Joseph; Helen Mar Whitney, Why We Practice Plural Marriage: By a 鈥淢ormon鈥 Wife and Mother鈥擧elen Mar Whitney (Salt Lake City: Juvenile Instructor, 1884); Charles M. Hatch and Todd M. Compton, eds., A Widow鈥檚 Tale: The 1884鈥1896 Diary of Helen Mar Kimball Whitney (Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 2003).
[6] Michael Grossberg, Governing the Hearth: Law and the Family in Nineteenth-Century America (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1985), 105鈥6.
[7] Mary E. Odem, Delinquent Daughters: Protecting and Policing Adolescent Female Sexuality in the United States, 1885鈥1920 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995), 9.
[8] Todd M. Compton, 鈥淭ruth, Honesty and Moderation in Mormon History: A Response to Anderson, Faulring and Bachman鈥檚 Reviews of In Sacred Loneliness,鈥 updated July 2001, accessed November 2, 2010, .
[9] For a thorough discussion of marriage-age patterns, see Todd M. Compton, 鈥淓arly Marriage in the New England and Northeastern States, and in Mormon Polygamy: What Was the Norm?,鈥 in The Persistence of Polygamy: Joseph Smith and the Origins of Mormon Polygamy, ed. Newell G. Bringhurst and Craig L. Foster (Independence, MO: John Whitmer Books, 2010). Nancy Winchester, discussed above (note 1) would be another aberration, but her status as a wife is hardly settled. See Anderson and Faulring, 鈥淧rophet Joseph Smith and His Plural Wives,鈥 78鈥79; Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 25鈥42. Flora Ann Woodworth was likely sixteen, as was Fanny Alger, though Alger鈥檚 marriage date is debated, and she may have been eighteen or nineteen when she married Joseph Smith. (Joseph Smith鈥檚 relationship with Alger is the subject of ongoing scholarly debate.) Other wives were Sarah Ann Whitney, Lucy Walker, Sarah Lawrence (age seventeen), or Emily Dow Partridge, Maria Lawrence, and Melissa Lott (age nineteen).
[10] Helen鈥檚 Nauvoo reminiscences, published originally in the Woman鈥檚 Exponent, are republished in Jeni B. Holzapfel and Richard N. Holzapfel, eds., A Woman鈥檚 View: Helen Mar Whitney鈥檚 Reminiscences of Early Church History (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1997). Quoted material appears on pages 196鈥97.
[11] Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 482. Helen鈥檚 1881 autobiographical sketch is transcribed in full in appendix 1, complete with images of Helen鈥檚 holographic manuscript. Though in her published writings Helen politely obscured the fact that she had been sealed to Joseph Smith, she was forthright in her diary and private autobiography. See, for instance, her entry for July 11, 1886, in Hatch and Compton, Widow鈥檚 Tale, 169.
[12] Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 252. Sarah Ann Whitney had married Joseph Smith the previous July. See Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 342鈥63. After Joseph Smith鈥檚 death, Helen married Horace Whitney, son of Newel K. and Elizabeth A. Whitney and brother of Sarah Ann.
[13] Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 12鈥15.
[14] Stanley B. Kimball, Heber C. Kimball: Mormon Patriarch and Pioneer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1981), 98; Anderson and Faulring, 鈥淧rophet Joseph Smith and His Plural Wives,鈥 79鈥81.
[15] Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 499鈥500. In one reminiscence, Helen recalled her bitterness at having to miss a Nauvoo party because Joseph Smith had cautioned Heber C. Kimball against letting her attend. See Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 224鈥25.
[16] Heber C. Kimball to Helen Mar Kimball, July 10, 1843, in Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 198.
[17] Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 482, 486.
[18] Joseph Smith鈥檚 proposal to Lucy Walker mirrors his to Helen in significant ways. Lucy remembered that the Prophet 鈥渇ully Explained to me the principle of plural or celestial marriage. Said this principle was again to be restored for the benefit of the human family. That it would prove an everlasting blessing to my father鈥檚 house.鈥 Quoted in Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 491.
[19] The idea that the purpose of plural marriage was essentially procreative, appearing in both the Book of Mormon (see Jacob 2:30) and the Doctrine and Covenants (see D&C 132:63), apparently did not figure in Joseph Smith鈥檚 proposals. Saints in Utah routinely explained that plural marriage鈥檚 significance was in the raising of a righteous posterity.
[20] Holzapfel and Holzapfel, eds., Woman鈥檚 View, 482.
[21] For differing perspectives on Joseph Smith鈥檚 Nauvoo theology, see Bachman, 鈥淢ormon Practice of Plural Marriage鈥; Danel W. Bachman, 鈥淧rologue to the Study of Joseph Smith鈥檚 Marital Theology,鈥 FARMS Review 10, no. 2 (1998): 105鈥37; Andrew F. Ehat, 鈥淛oseph Smith鈥檚 Introduction of Temple Ordinances and the 1844 Mormon Succession Question鈥 (master鈥檚 thesis, Brigham Young University, 1982); Glen M. Leonard, Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, A People of Promise (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002), chapters 9鈥10, 13; Quinn, Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power, chapters 3鈥4.
[22] Generally, Latter-day Saints equated 鈥渃elestial marriage鈥 with 鈥減lural marriage鈥 until the late nineteenth century. See B. Carmon Hardy, Solemn Covenant: The Mormon Polygamous Passage (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992), 54, 297鈥98.
[23] Endowments for the dead were initiated in 1877 under the direction of Brigham Young. Sealings for the dead followed thereafter. See Richard E. Bennett, 鈥淟ine upon Line, Precept upon Precept: Reflections on the 1877 Commencement of the Performance of Endowments and Sealings for the Dead,鈥 BYU Studies 44, no. 3 (2005): 38鈥77. Interestingly, despite their absence from 1840s Latter-day Saint life, Joseph Smith predicted proxy sealings in Nauvoo. Wilford Woodruff reported a sermon given by the Prophet in March 1844: 鈥淚 wish you to understand this subject for it is important & if you will receive it this is the spirit of Elijah that we redeem our dead & connect ourselves with our fathers which are in heaven & seal up our dead to come forth in the first resurrection & here we want the power of Elijah to seal those who dwell on earth to those which dwell in heaven[.]鈥 A month later, Woodruff reported another mention of vicarious temple ordinances beyond baptism by Joseph Smith: 鈥淲hen the House is done, Baptism font erected and finished & the worthy are washed, anointed, endowed & ordained kings & priests, which must be done in this life, when the place is prepared you must go through all the ordinances of the house of the Lord so that you who have any dead friends must go through all the ordinances for them the same as for yourselves.鈥 Scott G. Kenney, Wilford Woodruff鈥檚 Journal, 1833鈥1898 Typescript, ed. (Midvale, UT: Signature Books, 1983), 2:362, 388. The reasons for the considerable lag between Smith鈥檚 prediction and the ceremony鈥檚 introduction into Latter-day Saint practice are unclear. Speaking less than a year after Joseph Smith鈥檚 death, Brigham Young taught that 鈥淛oseph in his life time did not receive every thing connected with the doctrine of redemption, but he has left the key with those who understand how to obtain and teach to this great people all that is necessary for their salvation and exaltation in the celestial kingdom of God.鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1845, 955.
[24] Adult adoptions were eventually discontinued in the 1890s after Church leaders initiated the practice of intergenerational proxy sealing. Contemporaneous with the cessation of both plural marriage and adoptions, Woodruff oversaw the creation of Utah鈥檚 Genealogical Society in the mid-1890s, and Latter-day Saints began intergenerational proxy sealings in earnest. See Bennett, 鈥淟ine upon Line,鈥 62鈥67; Gordon Irving, 鈥淭he Law of Adoption: One Phase of Development of the Mormon Concept of Salvation, 1830鈥1900,鈥 BYU Studies 14, no. 3 (Spring 1974): 291鈥314.
[25] Quoted in Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 491.
[26] Orson Pratt, in Journal of Discourses (London: Latter-day Saints鈥 Book Depot, 1854鈥86), 6:359. A fuller quotation makes clear that Orson Pratt understood plural marriage to have resolved the seeming dilemma created in the command to be sealed and the fact that sealing was available, as of 1859, to the living only:
I ask, Would it be right, with a view that marriage is to exist, not only in time, but in eternity, that this woman, who is a good, moral, virtuous woman, should remain without a husband through all eternity, because she did not have an opportunity of being married? If marriage be of any benefit in the eternal world, would it not be far more consistent with the law of God that she should have the privilege, by her own free, voluntary consent, to marry a good man, though he might have a family, and claim him for her husband, not only through time, but eternity?
Jesus informs us that in the resurrection mankind are neither married nor given in marriage: all these things have to be attended to here.
Benjamin Johnson, a friend of the Prophet in Nauvoo, underscored the sense of urgency with regard to sealing in this life when he wrote, 鈥淭he Prophet taught us that Dominion & powr in the great Future would be Comensurate with the no of 鈥榃ives Childin & Friends鈥 that we inheret here and that our great mission to earth was to Organize a Neculi of Heaven to take with us.鈥 Benjamin F. Johnson to George F. Gibbs, 1903, quoted in Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 10.
[27] Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 440.
[28] Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 12, 347, 497. Joseph Smith鈥檚 marriage to Sarah Ann Whitney seems to have been of a similar type.
[29] Orson F. Whitney, The Life of Heber C. Kimball, 3rd ed. (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1992), 328.
[30] Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 482. In another agonizing line, Helen described women who had entered the practice as having 鈥渓aid their willing but bleeding hearts upon the altar.鈥 Whitney, Plural Marriage, 47. For all her empathy for other plural wives, Helen was also sensitive to the demands on polygamous husbands: 鈥淏ut those who think that men have no trials in the plural order of marriage, are greatly deceived. The wives have far greater liberty than the husband, and they have the power to make him happy or very unhappy. . . . It certainly takes considerable religion and faith to stimulate a man who loves a quiet, easy-going life, to take up this cross, even with the hope of a future crown.鈥 Whitney, Why We Practice, 31.
[31] Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 486. Helen explained that her mother had navigated her challenge with plural marriage with 鈥渁biding faith in the principles that were advanced by the Prophet and Seer鈥 and 鈥渃onfidence which she felt in her husband as a man of God.鈥 Without those, Helen wrote, 鈥渟he could never have borne up under all the trials with which her life鈥檚 path was filled.鈥 Whitney, Plural Marriage, 16.
[32] Whitney, Plural Marriage, 7; Holzapfel and Holzapfel, Woman鈥檚 View, 253.
[33] Whitney, Plural Marriage, 11, 47. Helen was adamant on the question of coercion: 鈥淭here has been no compulsion used in our marriage relations, but it is optional with every man or woman to act as he or she may feel to be right.鈥 Whitney, Plural Marriage, 50. Even so, some Latter-day Saint men and women felt considerable pressure to enter into the practice. See Kathryn M. Daynes, More Wives Than One: The Transformation of the Mormon Marriage System, 1840鈥1910 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2001), chapters 1鈥2.
[34] Whitney, Plural Marriage, 11鈥12, 15, 28.
[35] Whitney, Plural Marriage, 27, 46; Whitney, Why We Practice, 65.
[36] Whitney, Plural Marriage, 37. In another line, responding to Joseph Smith III鈥檚 claims regarding the origins of plural marriage, Helen wrote, 鈥淚 confess that I was too young or too 鈥榝oolish鈥 to comprehend and appreciate all that I heard his father [Joseph Smith, Jr.] teach, and if my parents at that early day had disagreed and my father been taken away by death, I am not able to decide what the consequences would have been to me.鈥 Whitney, Plural Marriage, 16. A hostile report from Catherine Lewis, who apparently lived with the Kimball family for a time in Nauvoo before abandoning Mormonism, wrote that Helen told her mother, 鈥淚 would never have been sealed (married) to Joseph had I known it was anything more than ceremony. I was young, and they deceived me, by saying the salvation of our whole family depended on it.鈥 Some aspects of Lewis鈥檚 account are not credible, but given Helen鈥檚 admission of youthful rebelliousness against polygamy, the episode might constitute what she came to later regard as youthful 鈥渇oolishness.鈥 Helen鈥檚 final conversion to the principle came after a period of prolonged illness during the trek to Utah in 1848. See Catherine Lewis, Narrative of Some of the Proceedings of the Mormons; Giving an Account of Their Iniquities. . . . (Lynn, MA: printed by author, 1848), 19; Compton, In Sacred Loneliness, 510鈥11.
[37] Whitney, Why We Practice, 66.
[38] Whitney, Plural Marriage, 37.