DOWNLOAD PDF LETTERS OF CATHARINE COTTAM ROMNEY, PLURAL WIFE

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Chapter 1 : Early Mormon Polygamy BYU Studies Catharine Jane Cottam Romney () was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Thomas and Caroline Smith Cottam. At a young age, she moved with her family to St. George where she grew into young womanhood. Mitt Romney, March 21, The year-old missionary was in his apartment when a woman burst in to say some Frenchmen were beating up one of his fellow Mormons down the street. The barefoot Mitt Romney, who had been in France for just six months, joined his roommates in rushing into the snowy night. They found a team of rugby players, drowning their sorrows after a lost match, hassling two female missionaries. The women had cried out "Allez-y! Romney ended up with a badly bruised jaw. But as a snapshot of his 30 months as an LDS missionary, it is less exceptional: His time in France posed one of the great challenges of his life. It was marked by frustration and, ultimately, tragedy. The victories were visible only in hindsight. Day after day, he knocked on doors urging people, most of them Catholic but many of them hostile to religion and often to the United States as well, to join The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Mormonism was a religion of mystery to most French people, recognized mostly for its history of polygamy and, in a country that takes its wine seriously, for its prohibition against alcohol. Serving as a missionary was an LDS tradition. From the very start, in the s, the Latter-day Saints had sent out missionaries to preach the gospel. McKay, who as church president was revered as a living prophet by Mormons. There would be no drinking, no smoking, no sex and no dating. All of his time, all of his energy, would be devoted to trying to persuade the people of France to join the LDS Church. France was, of course, glamorous and beautiful, and the missionaries had half a day off each week for "diversions," which often meant a chance to visit a chateau. But France was also one of the most inhospitable countries to Mormonism. The Romneys came from the English village of Dalton-in-Furness, about miles northwest of London, and immigrated to America in response to the same kind of missionary work that Mitt would perform. Born in the little village of Sharon, Vt. A year later, Smith was assassinated and the Mormons were driven out of Nauvoo, headed for a new promised land of Utah. The Mormons believed that the great mountains of the West would protect them from persecution and from hostility toward polygamy. Mormon men had begun taking "plural wives" after Smith said God told him to revive the Old Testament practice of polygamy. One month later, with Hannah pregnant, Miles left to perform church missionary duties in England for nearly 3 years. Two months after the marriage, on July 8,, President Abraham Lincoln signed an antibigamy act, which prohibited polygamy in Utah and the other territories. He laid out his beliefs in England in an article titled "Persecution. But Miles stood by his faith, writing that "from the earliest ages of the history of man, Truth and those who strictly adhere to its principles have been unpopular. The family was poor, possessing a small cook stove, a bed, three chairs and a small table. Miles, a carpenter, bought land and built a two-room wooden house. Hannah became pregnant again, and a second daughter was born. Romney had a fateful meeting with Young. Miles faced the choice of obeying U. He chose the church. Hannah wrote, "I was able to live in the principle of polygamy and give my husband many wives. Soon, Young gave Miles and his two wives a new mission: Sell your home, and move to the southern Utah town of St. The new settlement about miles south of Salt Lake was in a vast desert, surrounded by red-toned ridges in a region where summer temperatures often topped degrees. Young prophesied that, "There will yet be built between these volcanic ridges, a city, with spires and towers and steeples, with homes containing many inhabitants. George, where they lived "in a little shanty, a small board room and a wagon box," Hannah wrote. From the shanty, the Romneys wrote themselves into church history as builders. Miles played a major role in the construction of St. Then, Brigham Young hired Miles to build a two-story addition to his winter home in St. Miles took on the task with zeal, constructing one of the most lavish residences in Utah, a sandstone brick dwelling with an elaborate porch painted red and green. Pictures of Young and Romney hang in an adjoining building. But while Miles was prospering as a builder, he had increasing trouble handling two wives. Hannah wrote that Caroline "was very jealous of me But Caroline was not satisfied. She asked Young Page 1

for permission to return to her parents in Salt Lake City. The separation was "the severest trial ever experienced" by Miles, according to "Life Story of Miles Park Romney," written by his son, Thomas. Miles and Hannah "made a special trip of three hundred miles by wagon to try to induce Carrie to return to her home in Saint George. But all their pleadings were in vain," and a divorce was granted, according to the biography. Miles, meanwhile, was climbing in prominence in the church. He was given a new responsibility: Miles and four other Mormon leaders signed a letter stating that "the Anti-polygamy bill The lobbying paid off and the bill died in the Senate, but other antipolygamy laws remained on the books. For a brief time, with Caroline having left, Miles and Hannah were once again in a single-wife marriage. It was then, in, that Hannah gave birth to Gaskell, the grandfather of Mitt Romney. Hannah, seven months pregnant, did not attend the wedding. Instead, she prepared a room for Catharine, whom she called "a girl of good principles and a good Latter-day Saint. Two months after Miles and Catharine were married, the child of Miles and Hannah died during delivery. Nearly four years later, Miles married again, taking as his wife Annie M. George with Hannah, Catharine and Annie briefly settled into a comfortable, devout routine. But church leaders in Salt Lake City intervened, devising a plan to plant Mormon communities in an arc throughout the West. Miles was told by church leaders to uproot his family and help settle the town of St. The journey of almost miles was harrowing, requiring the wagon trains to skirt the northern rim of the Grand Canyon. It was a sparsely settled town, a Wild West amalgamation of gun-toting farmers and laborers, including American Indians and Mexicans, who were especially resentful of new settlers such as the Mormons. The local newspaper, the Apache Chief, urged on May 30,, that "the shotgun and rope" be used to get rid of Mormon settlers. Catharine began to fear her surroundings, writing, "I believe there are some as wicked people here as can be found anywhere on the footstool of God. To avoid prosecution, Miles sent Catharine and Annie into hiding. But authorities brought new charges, alleging that Miles lied about having title to his land. One night, a marshal arrived at the Romney home after midnight, demanding that Miles surrender. A colony in Mexico Miles fled to Utah, where he was told by church leaders "to go to Old Mexico and build a city of refuge for the people that would have to go there on account of persecutions of polygamy," Hannah wrote. Miles agreed and decided it was safest to go with only one of his wives, Annie. He left behind Hannah and Catharine and their children, hoping they would reunite in the coming months. After weeks of travel, Miles reached a vantage point in the Mexican mountains. Gazing upon a valley that extended for miles on the banks of the Piedras Verdes River, Miles Romney saw mesquite and cactus carpeting the flatlands, with stands of scrub oak shading the riverbanks. The valley floor was 5, feet high, providing a climate cool enough to support peach and apple trees. Beyond brown hills, the towering, pine-covered peaks of the Sierra Madre curtained the valley, catching the winter snows that would provide ample water for irrigation. At first, Miles was desperately poor and responsible for an enormous family. He lived out of a wagon, and then a crude hut. He feared federal marshals might come to Mexico to arrest him. He was uncertain about the fate of Hannah and Catharine. Then, more than a year after Romney arrived in Mexico, Catharine joined them. A festive reunion followed, with Miles, his three wives, and their children. The town, meanwhile, began to take shape, due in significant part to Gaskell Romney. At 15, he helped build the canal that irrigated the fields, and helped build a family farm known as Cliff Ranch, in the mountains overlooking Colonia Juarez. Back in Utah, some of the same LDS leaders who had urged Romney to create a refuge for polygamy now turned against the practice. They may have believed that Woodruff was referring to the law in the United States, not Mexico. They continued their practice of plural marriage but even more isolated than before. Indian attacks and crop failures were common. Miles moved to a nearby town called Colonia Dublan and, in, seven years after the Manifesto, married for a fifth time, to a wealthy widow named Emily Henrietta Eyring Snow, the only wife with whom he did not have children. Anna descended from one of the most important families in the LDS faith. Her grandfather, Parley Pratt, had 12 wives and was chosen by Joseph Smith as one of the 12 apostles. Gaskell and Anna broke with their family traditions and did not engage in plural marriage. After 12 years of marriage, the couple had a boy whom they named George W. Romney, the fourth of their seven children. Revolution and return The family lived happily in Mexico, where Page 2

Gaskell and his family operated a prosperous ranch. But in, after a revolution that ousted dictator Porfirio Diaz, rebel factions began mounting attacks throughout the countryside. Page 3

Chapter 2 : Miles Park Romney - Wikipedia My ancestors lived this "Principal", and my great grandmother's mother became a "Sister-Wife" to Miles P. Romney and is mentioned in this book. I've only read a few of the letters, but find it all quite interesting. Campaign coverage Day after day, he knocked on doors urging people, most of them Catholic but many of them hostile to religion and often to the United States as well, to join the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Mormonism was a religion of mystery to most French people, recognized mostly for its history of polygamy and, in a country that takes its wine seriously, for its prohibition against alcohol. Serving as a missionary was a Mormon tradition. From the very start, in the s, the Latter-day Saints had sent out missionaries to preach the Gospel. McKay, who as church president was revered as a living prophet by Mormons. For two and a half years, Romney would wear the dark suits and white shirts of a Mormon missionary. There would be no drinking, no smoking, no sex, and no dating. He would be alone only in the bathroom - Mormon missionaries are paired always with a companion to reduce the opportunity for mischief. All of his time, all of his energy, would be devoted to trying to persuade the people of France to join the Mormon Church. But France was also one of the most inhospitable countries to Mormonism. By the time Romney arrived, there were just 6, Mormons in the entire country. The Romneys came from the English village of Dalton-in-Furness, about miles northwest of London, and immigrated to America in response to the same kind of missionary work that Mitt would perform. Born in the little village of Sharon, Vt. A year later, Smith was assassinated and the Mormons were driven out of Nauvoo, headed for a new promised land of Utah. The Mormons believed that the great mountains of the West would protect them from persecution and from hostility toward polygamy. Two months after the marriage, on July 8,, President Abraham Lincoln signed an antibigamy act, which prohibited polygamy in Utah and the other territories. The family was poor, possessing a small cook stove, a bed, three chairs and a small table. Miles, a carpenter, bought land and built a two-room wooden house. Hannah became pregnant again, and a second daughter was born. Romney had a fateful meeting with Young. Miles faced the choice of obeying US law, under which polygamy was illegal, or the head of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He chose the church. Soon, Young gave Miles and his two wives a new mission: The new settlement about miles south of Salt Lake was in a vast desert, surrounded by red-toned ridges in a region where summer temperatures often topped degrees. From the shanty, the Romneys wrote themselves into church history as builders. Miles played a major role in the construction of St. Then, Brigham Young hired Miles to build a two-story addition to his winter home in St. Miles took on the task with zeal, constructing one of the most lavish residences in Utah, a sandstone brick dwelling with an elaborate porch painted red and green. Pictures of Young and Romney hang in an adjoining building. But while Miles was prospering as a builder, he had increasing trouble handling two wives. But Caroline was not satisfied. She asked Young for permission to return to her parents in Salt Lake City. Miles, meanwhile, was climbing in prominence in the church. He was given a new responsibility: The lobbying paid off and the bill died in the Senate, but other antipolygamy laws remained on the books. For a brief time, with Caroline having left, Miles and Hannah were once again in a single-wife marriage. It was then, in, that Hannah gave birth to Gaskell, the grandfather of Mitt Romney. Hannah, seven months pregnant, did not attend the wedding. Two months after Miles and Catharine were married, the child of Miles and Hannah died during delivery. Nearly four years later, Romney married again, taking as his wife Annie M. George with Hannah, Catharine and Annie briefly settled into a comfortable, devout routine. But church leaders in Salt Lake City intervened, devising a plan to plant Mormon communities in an arc throughout the West. Miles was told by church leaders to uproot his family and help settle the town of St. The journey of almost miles was harrowing, requiring the wagon trains to skirt the northern rim of the Grand Canyon. It was a sparsely settled town, a Wild West amalgamation of gun-toting farmers and laborers, including Native Americans and Mexicans, who were especially resentful of new settlers such as the Mormons. To avoid prosecution, Romney sent Catharine Page 4

and Annie into hiding. But authorities brought new charges, alleging that Romney lied about having title to his land. One night, a marshal arrived at the Romney home after midnight, demanding that Miles surrender. Miles agreed, and decided it was safest to go with only one of his wives, Annie. He left behind Hannah and Catharine and their children, hoping they would reunite in the coming months. After weeks of travel, Romney reached a vantage point in the Mexican mountains. Gazing upon a valley that extended for miles on the banks of the Piedras Verdes River, Miles Romney saw mesquite and cactus carpeting the flatlands, with stands of scrub oak shading the riverbanks. The valley floor was 5, feet high, providing a climate cool enough to support peach and apple trees. Beyond brown hills, the towering, pine-covered peaks of the Sierra Madre curtained the valley, catching the winter snows that would provide ample water for irrigation. This would be the colony of Juarez - Colonia Juarez. At first, Miles was desperately poor and responsible for an enormous family. He lived out of a wagon, and then a crude hut. He feared federal marshals might come to Mexico to arrest him. He was uncertain about the fate of Hannah and Catharine. Then, more than a year after Romney arrived in Mexico, Catharine joined them. A festive reunion followed, with Miles, his three wives, and their children. The town, meanwhile, began to take shape, due in significant part to Gaskell Romney. At 15, he helped build the canal that irrigated the fields, and helped build a family farm known as Cliff Ranch, in the mountains overlooking Colonia Juarez. Back in Utah, some of the same Mormon leaders who had urged Romney to create a refuge for polygamy now turned against the practice. They may have believed that Woodruff was referring to the law in the United States, not Mexico. They continued their practice of plural marriage, but even more isolated than before. Indian attacks and crop failures were common. Miles moved to a nearby town called Colonia Dublan and, in, seven years after the Manifesto, married for a fifth time, to a wealthy widow named Emily Henrietta Eyring Snow, the only wife with whom he did not have children. Anna descended from one of the most important families in the Mormon faith. Her grandfather, Parley Pratt, had 12 wives and was chosen by Joseph Smith as one of the 12 Apostles. Gaskell and Anna broke with their family traditions and did not engage in plural marriage. After 12 years of marriage, the couple had a boy whom they named George W. Romney, the fourth of their seven children. Revolution and a return The family lived happily in Mexico, where Gaskell and his family operated a prosperous ranch. But in, after a revolution that ousted dictator Porfirio Diaz, rebel factions began mounting attacks throughout the countryside. Gaskell and other Mormons stockpiled guns. In July, the Romneys learned that hundreds of revolutionaries were nearby. The family, including 5-year-old George, packed whatever they could carry and boarded an overloaded train to El Paso. For years afterward, the often-destitute Romneys moved from house to house, from California to Idaho to Utah. He regained his financial footing from an unlikely source: He had never given up trying to obtain financial compensation from the Mexican government for losing his family property. The records say Gaskell gave half of the award to his son, George, which would have helped to put him on his road to becoming chairman of American Motors and governor of Michigan. In, three years after receiving the Mexican financial settlement, the Romneys made a sentimental return to Mexico, retracing the route of Miles P. Romney and his wives from Utah to Arizona to Mexico. Throughout the journey, Gaskell told George about his hardships but also his pride in establishing the remote Mormon outpost. The one-bedroom apartment that he shared with three other missionaries had no telephone, no television, and no radio. There were also no Mormons in Le Havre, so the four American missionaries would hold worship in their apartment, taking turns preaching and singing and offering each other the sacrament of bread and water. The missionaries would wake up at 6 a. They traveled on Solex motorized bicycles, wearing their suits and carrying satchels with pamphlets about Mormonism. Get out of Vietnam! And he worked hard to memorize key French words and phrases that would help in his missionary work. One of his fellow missionaries, Gerald Anderson, now an Alberta agrologist, recalled how Romney, on a trip to Paris, stunned everyone with his familiarity with the fine French perfumes in a shop on the Champs Elysees. The book argued that wealth and success grew out of the rigorous application of personal beliefs. There was little that was rich or comfortable in the missionary experience, but fellow missionaries say Romney applied himself with the faith of a true believer. He was promoted through Page 5

the ranks, first to zone leader in Bordeaux, and then to the highest position attainable by a missionary, that of assistant to the mission president in Paris. But his time in Paris was marred by the car accident that killed Leola Anderson, wife of the mission president, Duane Anderson. Romney was driving when the crowded Citroen was hit by another car. Bruce Robinson, to fly to France to oversee the medical care. But within a few weeks, Mitt was seemingly back to normal, and his friends were struck by how quickly he threw himself back into work, determined not to let the tragedy slow the mission. Page 6

Chapter 3 : Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, Plural Wife - Catharine Cottam Romney - Google Books JENNIFER MOULTON HANSEN ed letters of catharine cottam romney plural wife urbana university of illinois press xvii ppap 24 illustrations 53 maps bibliography index Additional Information In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: Despite disavowing essentialism, Romines variously reveals essentialist assumptions. Edited by Jennifer Moulton Hansen. University of Illinois Press, George, Utah, where her family was sent by the Mormon church to settle the Dixie Mission. At age eighteen, after persuading her parents that she could not live happily without him, she married Miles P. Romney, a personable man of many talents, twelve years her senior, becoming his third wife. He was to have five. Such a marriage conferred unusual status upon the woman: Not every woman so joined could abide this unequal division and maintain harmony both with husband and other wives. There has been endless curiosity about the principle which gave Mormonism its most peculiar manifestation, but this is not the book to satisfy it. Nearly all of these letters were to family members to whom she was devoted. Separation from them, which began in when her husband was called to settle St. Johns, in the Arizona Territory, caused lasting pain. They have been gathered and edited by great-granddaughter Jennifer Moulton Hansen. A Study ofthe ShortFiction. By Edward Halsey Foster. William Saroyan died in Each year since then, as the force of his presence recedes, it becomes easier to arrive at an accurate assessment of his work. This volume, divided into three parts, is a useful contribution to that endeavor. You are not currently authenticated. View freely available titles: Page 7

Chapter 4 : Catherine Jane Cottam Romney () - Find A Grave Memorial Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, Plural Wife, Mormon Odyssey, and Prisoner for Polygamy Reviewer Kathryn M. Daynes, JENNIFER MOULTON HANSEN, ed. Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, Plural Wife. Additional Information In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: Despite disavowing essentialism, Romines variously reveals essentialist assumptions. Edited by Jennifer Moulton Hansen. University of Illinois Press, George, Utah, where her family was sent by the Mormon church to settle the Dixie Mission. At age eighteen, after persuading her parents that she could not live happily without him, she married Miles P. Romney, a personable man of many talents, twelve years her senior, becoming his third wife. He was to have five. Such a marriage conferred unusual status upon the woman: Not every woman so joined could abide this unequal division and maintain harmony both with husband and other wives. There has been endless curiosity about the principle which gave Mormonism its most peculiar manifestation, but this is not the book to satisfy it. Nearly all of these letters were to family members to whom she was devoted. Separation from them, which began in when her husband was called to settle St. Johns, in the Arizona Territory, caused lasting pain. They have been gathered and edited by great-granddaughter Jennifer Moulton Hansen. A Study ofthe ShortFiction. By Edward Halsey Foster. William Saroyan died in Each year since then, as the force of his presence recedes, it becomes easier to arrive at an accurate assessment of his work. This volume, divided into three parts, is a useful contribution to that endeavor. Chapter 5 : Template:Romney family tree - Wikipedia A compelling autobiography of a Mormon woman is presented in this collection of more than letters written between and A plural wife, mother, and colonist, Catharine Cottam Romney wrote from St. George, Utah, and from Mormon settlements in eastern Arizona and northern politics. Chapter 6 : Mitt's LDS roots run deep Deseret News Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, plural wife. [Catharine Cottam Romney; Jennifer M Hansen] -- Catharine Jane Cottam Romney () was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Thomas and Caroline Smith Cottam. Chapter 7 : Studies in Mormon History Atom Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, Plural blog.quintoapp.com by Jennifer Moulton Hansen. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, vii + pp. Chapter 8 : Miles Romney - Wikipedia Searching for Letters Of Catharine Cottam Romney Plural Wife Epub Download Do you really need this document of Letters Of Catharine Cottam Romney Plural Wife Epub Download It takes me 30 hours just to get the right download link, and another 4 hours to validate it. Chapter 9 : Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, Plural Wife by Jennifer Moulton Letters of Catharine Cottam Romney, Plural Wife by Jennifer Moulton Hansen; Mormon Odyssey: The Story of Ida Hunt Udall, Plural Wife edited by Maria S. Ellsworth; Prisoner for Polygamy: The Memoirs and Letters of Rudger Clawson at the Utah Territorial Penitentiary, edited by Stan Larson. Page 8