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By
Jeffrey S. O’Driscoll
Editors’ Note:
We have been impressed by this new biography of the Patriarch, Hyrum
Smith, and so we invited author Jeffrey O’Driscoll to tell
us why he wrote the book, what impressed him as he did so, and his
feelings about Hyrum Smith.
In this welcome biography, Jeffery S. O'Driscoll's
careful research helps readers more fully appreciate the contributions
and the characters of this key church leader, beloved husband and
father and exemplary disciple. In endless affliction, no one stood
more consistently at Joseph's side than Hyrum. In Hyrum's patriarchal
blessing, Joseph Smith Sr. declared, "You shall be as firm
as the pillars of heaven unto the end of your days." This inspiring
biography provides compelling evidence of the truth of that prophetic
statement.
Introduction
“Hyrum
Smith put his foot in the stirrup and was about to swing
into the saddle when he paused to reconsider his plan.
After some time, he turned from his large white horse and
went back into the house, where he removed his watch from
his pocket, hung it in its usual spot, and replaced it with
his older timepiece. His oldest son, eleven-year-old John,
watched and wondered.” John remembered that day the rest
of his life. Speaking of it more than a half century later,
while officiating in the patriarchal office that his father
once held, John noted carrying the watch that Hyrum left
behind.
Hyrum’s
youngest son, five-year-old Joseph Fielding (commonly known
as Joseph F.), also secured an indelible image of his father
that day. Before leaving Nauvoo, the Patriarch saw Joseph
F. standing in the dusty street. “Leaning from his saddle,
Hyrum lifted his son into his arms, embraced him, kissed
him good-bye, and then gently lowered him to the ground.
Little Joseph F. looked on as his father rode toward death.”
Like John, Joseph F. never forgot. When he later returned
to Nauvoo, he pointed out the exact spot where he last embraced
his father.
These
touching scenes from Hyrum’s last day in Nauvoo open a window
into his life and invite readers of the recent biography,
Hyrum Smith: A Life of Integrity, to know more about
this marvelous man. More than the Church’s patriarch and
the Prophet’s older brother, Hyrum proved himself an exemplary
figure in Church history. He was a man of integrity—a man
of God.
Trust Your Feelings
When
Maurine Proctor invited me to introduce this biography to
Meridian readers, I was reminded of an experience I had
while writing the book itself. Laboring over words and
phrases, I tend to be pedantic, but a trusted friend advised
me, “Don’t worry about the words. Worry about the feeling.
Let the reader feel what you do and the words will come.”
With
that advice, I sat down and wrote what is now the first
chapter of the book, including the lines quoted above.
I did not worry about history or documentation or grammar.
I just described some of the most poignant portions of Hyrum’s
life in such a way that I hoped the reader would feel Hyrum
Smith and want to continue. Later, after the feelings were
established, I went back and inserted the documentation.
Perhaps I found some measure of success in the effort in
that I was recently pleased to hear a colleague say that
he liked the biography because “from the beginning, it just
felt right.”
During
the research for this book, and in the conversations since
its publication, I hear people repeatedly say that they
would love to know more about Hyrum. They know his name.
They know he was a noble man. But they know little else
of his life and experience. I admit feeling somewhat that
way when I began researching Hyrum’s life. Since then,
I have come to see Hyrum’s vital roles in the Restoration
and my desire to know more about him has only increased.
Hyrum was There from the Beginning
Hyrum
was one of the first to humbly listen to Joseph’s experience
in the Sacred Grove and to extend his steadfast support.
Not only did he provide a chest for the safe keeping of
the plates, he later handled the record and became one of
the Eight Witnesses of the Book of Mormon. He negotiated
the publication of the book and supervised some of the printing.
He also helped to prepare the printer’s manuscript and carried
installments of copy to the printer. By responding to the
promptings of the Holy Ghost, Hyrum protected the Book of
Mormon from would-be plagiarists who intended to serialize
portions for their local newspaper. Even when he was consumed
with the struggles of moving his family and others from
Kirtland to Far West, Hyrum took time to bear his witness
of the Book of Mormon. “His discourse was beautiful . .
. ,” Sally Parker recalled. “He said he had but two hands
and two eyes. He said he had seen the plates with his eyes
and handled them with his hands and he saw the breastplate
and told [us] how it was made.”
Hyrum’s
pattern of involvement with the Book of Mormon became typical
of his future Church service. Usually, those events for
which he is best known are only a short shadow of his real
participation. Everyone knows, for example, that he became
a charter member of the Church in 1830 and that he was called
as assistant president and patriarch ten years later. Many
do not know that he led a branch of Zion’s Camp, fulfilled
several missions, directed much of the building of two temples
and served in a branch presidency, a bishopric, a stake
high council, a stake presidency, and as a counselor in
the First Presidency. He also assisted in setting Brigham
Young apart as President of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles
and later assisted Joseph in anointing the Twelve when Joseph
delivered his so-called last charge.
Hyrum’s Great Work and Callings
Confident
in his calling as a prophet, seer and revelator (D&C
124:94), the Patriarch prophesied in the name of the Lord
regarding the future of Kirtland. He also set in motion
the fulfillment of scriptural prophecy by sending Erastus
Snow to preach the gospel in Salem, Massachusetts. The
Lord had told Joseph in 1836 that He would gather many souls
from Salem “in due time for the benefit of Zion” (D&C
111:2). Hyrum handed Erastus a copy of the revelation in
1841, and humbly suggested that “the due time of the Lord
had come.”
I
have always been impressed and intrigued by the Lord’s declaration
regarding Hyrum: “that his name may be had in honorable
remembrance from generation to generation, forever and ever”
(D&C 124:96). Writing this biography has helped me
to better appreciate the significance of this tribute.
I hope that reading it will help others to do the same.
“I
could pray in my heart that all my brethren were like unto
my beloved brother Hyrum, who possesses the mildness of
a lamb, and the integrity of Job, and in short, the meekness
and humility of Christ,” Joseph Smith once declared of the
man who would later become a fellow martyr. He later added,
“Brother Hyrum what a faithful heart you have got! O may
the Eternal Jehovah crown eternal blessings upon your heart,
as a reward for the care you have had for my soul! . . .
Hyrum, thy name shall be written in the book of the law
of the Lord, for those who come after thee to look upon,
that they may pattern after thy works.”
A Great Follower and a Great Leader
As
I learn more about Hyrum, I feel an increasing desire to
follow his example. Ironically, one reason that people
know little about Hyrum is because he was so humble and
faithful. Many names in Church history stand out because
of missteps or malevolence. Hyrum, in contrast, quietly
plodded along, doing exactly what he was asked to do by
his younger brother.
Because
Hyrum was so faithful and obedient, we tend, at times, to
think of him as a great follower. Certainly, he was that,
but he was also an impressive leader. When Mary Fielding
arrived in Kirtland in the spring of 1837, she saw Hyrum
“affected to tears” while teaching the saints. “Before
he concluded, he seemed to be filled with [the] Spirit and
power of God,” Mary later wrote to her sister. “He reminded
me of some of the Nephites’ preachers of old.” Wilford
Woodruff felt similarly when he heard Hyrum preach in the
Kirtland Temple and wrote in his journal that Hyrum “was
clothed with much of the spirit of God.”
His Individual Ministry
When
Heber C. Kimball received his mission call to England in
June 1837, Hyrum offered words of strength and reassurance.
“He was continually blessing and encouraging me, and pouring
out his soul in prophecies upon my head,” Heber recalled.
“He said to me, ‘Go, and you shall prosper as not many have
prospered.’”
Some
encounters, such as this one with Heber C. Kimball, reflect
Hyrum’s inclination toward a personal, individual ministry.
Other examples of Hyrum’s personal involvement include;
Parley P. Pratt, whom Hyrum taught through the night before
walking with him twenty-five miles to arrange his baptism;
William McLellin, whom Hyrum taught for four hours in the
woods before baptizing him, ordaining him to the priesthood,
and taking him as a missionary companion; or Ezra T. Benson,
whom Hyrum personally tutored and blessed and called into
a stake presidency. Each of these men, like Heber C. Kimball
and Wilford Woodruff, became apostles.
Hyrum
was also a strong institutional leader in whom the Prophet
justifiably placed his trust. When Joseph and Sidney left
Kirtland for Far West, Missouri, in January 1838, Hyrum
stayed behind as the presiding authority. He gave First
Presidency direction to the Seventy as they organized the
emigration of the saints to Far West. In the spring of
1839, he met with the Twelve and counseled them “chiefly
concerning the nature of their mission, their practicing
prudence and humility in their plans or subjects for preaching,
the necessity of their not trifling with their office, and
of holding on strictly to the importance of their mission
and the authority of the priesthood.”
Hyrum
also stabilized the growing community of Nauvoo in 1839
and presided in Joseph’s absence while the Prophet spent
four months in Washington, D.C., seeking redress for the
wrongs inflicted upon the saints in Missouri. “I would
say, go on, dear brethren, in the name of the Lord,” wrote
Hyrum to Joseph and his companions in the nation’s capital,
“and while you are pleading the cause of the widow and the
fatherless, may He who has promised to be a father to the
fatherless and a husband to the widow, bless you in your
undertaking and arm you with sufficient strength for the
Herculean task in which you are engaged.”
Acting
as the presiding authority at Church headquarters, Hyrum
wrote an open letter of consolation and encouragement to
the saints and had it published in the Times and Seasons.
No matter what trials may come, he told them, “be faithful,
maintain your integrity, let the principles of truth and
righteousness get deep hold in your hearts, live up to those
principles at all times, be humble withal, and then you
will be able to stand firm and unshaken.”
Counseling Others
While
Joseph was gone, Hyrum gave frank counsel to local stake
presidents and wrote letters of direction to those who presided
over outlying branches of the Church and to members of the
Twelve who were on missions. To Parley P. Pratt, he wrote,
“I intend to . . . advise you, respecting the matters and
things of which you write, as I feel led by the Spirit of
the Lord.”
To
Lucien Foster, who presided over a distant branch of the
Church, Hyrum acknowledged Joseph’s absence and introduced
himself “as a servant of Jesus Christ and one on whose shoulders
rests at all times (but more particularly at this time)
an important responsibility to address a few lines to you,
and to that part of the Church of Jesus Christ over which
you have been called in the providence of God to preside.”
Hyrum explained to Lucien that “in order to enjoy all the
blessings of the gospel it is necessary and all important
to pay the most strict attention to the commandments of
God and to the instructions which those, who are in authority
in the church of God may communicate.”
Gems from Hyrum’s Life
This
biography is full of gems from Hyrum’s life and ministry.
One of my favorite examples of Hyrum’s uncommon wisdom and
leadership comes from Ezra T. Benson. When Hyrum organized
the Quincy Stake in 1840, he called Daniel Stanton as the
stake president, with Moses Jones, who was about seventy
years old, as his first counselor. He then called twenty-nine-year-old
Ezra as the second counselor, explaining to the congregation,
“You may think a little strange of my appointment, but Brother
Jones is an old man and experienced in the Church, and Brother
Benson is young and wants to learn.”
As
a civic leader, Hyrum rose to the rank of Brevet Major General
in the Nauvoo legion, served two terms on the city council
and, for a time, as vice mayor. Only weeks before his fateful
ride to Carthage, he confirmed his intent to run for the
state legislature. And in his last general conference,
Hyrum declared, “Let every man use his liberties according
to the Constitution. . . . We want a President . . . who
will maintain every man in his rights. . . . Whatever are
the rights of men guaranteed by the Constitution of these
United States, let them have them.”
Hyrum’s Example
Writing
about Hyrum has enriched my life and inspired me to try
harder when faced with challenges or difficulties. When
his three-year-old daughter, Mary, died in his arms, Hyrum
sorrowfully, but hopefully, looked toward the resurrection.
When Jerusha, his wife of eleven years, died giving birth
to their sixth child, Hyrum, who was away on Church assignment,
received the doleful news by letter from his brothers.
Though he undoubtably mourned over several weeks as he traveled
the one thousand miles back to Kirtland, he remained faithful.
The
Patriarch watched his father die in 1840. In 1841, Hyrum’s
brother Don Carlos and brother-in-law Robert B. Thompson
died within a few weeks of one another. “[W]e have sustained
[a loss] in the death of two of our most valuable men,”
he wrote days later. “They are gone. Their loss is irreparable,
but we must be submissive to the will of God and try to
stand in our lot both now and at the end.” One month later,
Hyrum’s seven-year-old namesake son also died. If Hyrum
ever questioned or resented this bitter cup, there is no
record of it. Instead, he submitted himself to the will
of God, as he had counseled others to do, and stood in his
own lot to the end.
The Road to Carthage
I
can only wonder what passed through Hyrum’s mind as he rode
toward Carthage that fateful day in June 1844. I imagine
he pondered a priesthood blessing he had received ten years
earlier; “If it please thee, and thou desirest thou shalt
have the power voluntarily to lay down thy life to glorify
God.” Joseph pressed his brother repeatedly, even on the
road to Carthage, to save himself. But Hyrum responded
predictably: “Joseph, I can’t leave you.”
It
was not that Hyrum did not understand what would happen
in Carthage. Just two days earlier he prophesied to Joseph
regarding their enemies, saying, “just as sure as we fall
into their hands we are dead men.” I believe Hyrum’s determination
to remain with Joseph reflected not only a testimony of
his own destiny, but an unbounded love for his younger brother.
Blessed of the Lord is Hyrum
The
strong impression which came to me repeatedly as I wrote
this biography was, “Go forward.” I can hear that voice
in my mind even now. At crucial times in the process, in
moments of frustration or discouragement, when a particular
problem seemed insurmountable, I heard that familiar voice
say, “Go forward.”
That
is how I feel now about Hyrum. When I see Hyrum Smith in
my mind riding toward Carthage, “he was not focused on what
he was riding away from. As always, he was focused on what
he was riding toward. Hyrum was in the position he had
assumed so many times before—next to the Prophet and looking
forward. He knew where he was going and what awaited him
there. He knew, and he chose to go.”
In
the closing lines of the biography I wrote, “Integrity,
more than mere honesty, is the essence of a noble character.
It is a fulness of candor, obedience and sincerity as well
as an unflagging determination to honor covenants. As the
foundation of faithfulness and the capstone of consecration,
integrity is a signature on the life of Hyrum Smith.” I
titled the book, Hyrum Smith: A Life of Integrity,
because, like his contemporaries, that is the way I see
him.
“Blessed
of the Lord is my brother Hyrum for the integrity of his
heart,” Joseph once said. John Taylor also noted Hyrum
as “a man of sterling integrity.” “Hyrum was as good a
man as ever lived,” said Brigham Young in 1866. “His integrity
was of the highest order . . . I use to think, and think
now, that an angel dwelling in the presence of the Father
and the Son possessed no more integrity in their hearts
than did Hyrum Smith.” Brigham furthered, “he was just
as honest as an Angel, and as full of integrity as the Gods.”
Rachel
Ivins Grant, also expressed an opinion. She told her son,
Heber J. Grant, “that of all the men she was acquainted
with in her girlhood days in Nauvoo, she admired Hyrum Smith
most for his absolute integrity and devotion to God, and
his loyalty to the prophet of God.”
Most
significant of all pronouncements about the martyred Patriarch,
however, is the declaration of the Lord in 1841; “I, the
Lord, love him because of the integrity of his heart, and
because he loveth that which is right before me” (D&C
124:15). This is why I love Hyrum Smith and why I chose
to write about him.
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