Brigham Young
At first, Young was ambivalent towards the Methodist -- or any other -- Church. He "held back from joining the Methodists" like his brothers had because of an "independent, deliberate personality" that rejected belief under pressure (8). Methodist revival meetings also turned Young off because of their "loud, crowded, and hyperactive" qualities," (8). Yet while living in the Auburn-Port Byron area, during an economic depression, he was "swept up by religious enthusiasm" and joined the Methodist Church in 1824 (13). The conversion turned out to be integral to Young's "program of self-improvement," (14). The Church prompted Young to give up swearing, one of his self-admitted habits. He experimented with vegetarianism, too, in an attempt to live an overall cleaner and healthier lifestyle. The religion also helped him to overcome his shyness and fear of public speaking (14). In addition to helping him on his personal path, the Methodist Church also introduced Young to Miriam Angeline Works, who he would later marry.
2. In February of 1838, Young, Smith, and other Mormons moved to Missouri to join a large Mormon settlement there. It was a thriving region socially, distant from other Mormon settlements and therefore conducive to greater political control (34). The new beginnings that had seemed so promising, though, grew increasingly filled with conflict and challenge. In March of 1838, dissention within the Church became a problem. Smith began to "purge" dissenters from the Church, "a move that involved reorganizing the High Council of Zion," (35). This led to the promotion of Young, and to his eventually being drawn "even closer to the center of Mormon power and influence,"...
(Rood & Thatcher, 1) Even here, the Mormons would be met with considerable challenges. The 'gentile' influence of American military force would ultimately push to confrontation the Mormons and various governmental groups set on obstructing effective settlement of the polygamist groups. Ultimately though, its brief history of reluctant nomadic behavior had prepared it better than such groups to shape the future of the Utah territory. Vying for American statehood in
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