Joseph White Musser
{{Short description|Mormon fundamentalist leader and official (1872–1954)}}
{{Infobox Latter Day Saint biography
| name = Joseph White Musser
| image = Mormon fundamentalists priesthood council.jpg
| caption = The priesthood council with
Joseph White Musser (lower right)
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1872|03|08}}
| birth_place = Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
| death_date = {{Dda|1954|3|29|1872|3|8}}
| death_place = Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
| resting_place = Salt Lake City Cemetery
| resting_place_coordinates = {{Coord|40.7772|-111.858|type:landmark|display=inline|name=Salt Lake City Cemetery}}
| spouse = Rose S. Borquist
Mary C. Hill
Ellis R. Shipp Jr.
Lucy O. Kmetzsch{{cite web|last=Hales |first=Brian C. |title="I Have Been Fanatically Religious" Joseph White Musser, Father of the Fundamentalist Movement |url=http://www.mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JosephWhiteMusser.htm |publisher=mormonfundamentalism.com |access-date=16 January 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131226181825/http://mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JosephWhiteMusser.htm |archive-date=26 December 2013 }}
| parents = Amos Milton Musser
Mary E. White
| portals = movement
| position_or_quorum1 = Senior Member of the Priesthood Council
| predecessor1 = John Y. Barlow
| successor1 = Rulon C. Allred
(Apostolic United Brethren)
Charles Zitting
(Priesthood Council)
| start_date1 = {{start date|1949|12|29}}
| end_date1 = {{end date|1954|03|29}}
}}
Joseph White Musser (March 8, 1872 – March 29, 1954){{cite journal |title=Imprisonment, Defiance, and Division: A History of Mormon Fundamentalism in the 1940s and 1950s |author=Ken Driggs |year=2005 |journal=Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought |url=http://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/Dialogue_V38N01_77.pdf|page=69}} was a Mormon fundamentalist leader.
Musser was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, to Amos Milton Musser (an assistant LDS Church historian) and Mary E. White. He is known for his Mormon fundamentalist books, pamphlets and magazines, as well as being considered a prophet by many Mormon fundamentalists.
LDS Church service
On June 29, 1892, Musser was called to the 16th Quorum of the Seventy, and two years later in April 1895 served a mission in Alabama, having been set apart by Brigham Young, Jr., Heber J. Grant, and John W. Taylor.
On Thanksgiving Day 1899, in the company of four other couples, Musser and his wife, Rose Selms Borquist, received their Second Anointing at the unusually young age of twenty-seven, under the direction of Lorenzo Snow.{{harvtxt|Bradley|1996|p=23}} Musser was later told by apostle Brigham Young, Jr. that he had been sent by the President of the Church, Joseph F. Smith, to tell Musser that if he did not enter into the principle of plural marriage he would lose his blessings (presumably, the blessings promised in the Second Anointing). This likely suggested to Musser that living plural marriage was a pre-requisite qualification for the blessings of the Second Anointing, regardless of the previous administration of the ordinance.
In November 1901, Musser was made president of the 105th Quorum of Seventy, and would later also serve as a high councilor in the Uintah, Wasatch and Granite Stakes (being set apart by president Joseph F. Smith). "On 16 February 1903 Patriarch John M. Murdock ordained Musser to the office of High Priest. He was then the husband to two women; both marriages were post-Manifesto".{{harvtxt|Bradley|1996|p=24}} Musser was also the Duchesne Uintah branch president beginning in 1906.{{harvtxt|Bradley|1996|p=21}}
Wives and post-Manifesto plural marriage
Musser married his first wife, Rose S. Borquist in the Logan Temple in June 1892, and his second wife, Mary C. Hill, in March 1902. But upon marrying his third wife, Ellis R. Shipp Jr., in July 1907, he caught the attention of the Salt Lake Tribune, which announced the marriage on its front page. His support of continued plural marriages, in violation of the first and second Manifestos of the LDS Church, led him to be called before the Quorum of Twelve Apostles of the church in July 1909, but this did not lead to any disciplinary action against him.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}}
According to Musser, in 1915 he was given authority to perform plural marriages by "an apostle." He was excommunicated from the LDS Church by the high council of the Salt Lake City-based Granite Stake on March 21, 1921{{harvtxt|Bradley|1996|p=26}} for attempting to take Marion Bringhurst as his fourth wife.
In May 1932, Musser married again, this time Lucy O. Kmetzsch, and on the May 14, 1929, he was ordained an apostle in the Council of Friends by Lorin Calvin Woolley, the then-leader of the Mormon fundamentalist movement.[http://www.mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JosephWhiteMusser.htm http://www.mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JosephWhiteMusser.htm] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131226181825/http://mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JosephWhiteMusser.htm |date=2013-12-26 }}
In the 1930s and 1940s, Musser was responsible for editing the Mormon fundamentalist publication, Truth Magazine. His promotion and practice of plural marriage led to his incarceration by the U.S. federal government between May and December 1945.
Controversy
A concessionary document he and some of his fellow polygamist inmates signed (which they were told was limited to the period of their parole) during their time in prison led to some dissension between those who would sign and those who would not.
In late December 1949, with the death of John Yeates Barlow, Musser became the leader of the Mormon fundamentalists. However, upon his May 1951 decision to select Rulon C. Allred as an apostle, some other members of the presiding Priesthood Council felt they were being bypassed. Other leaders also took issue at Musser's condemnation of the practices of underage and arranged marriages that were going on in the Short Creek, Arizona Mormon fundamentalist community. This split deepened in July 1951 with the call of Mexican apostle Margarito Bautista, and in January 1952 Musser created a new Priesthood Council including Owen A. Allred, and others, including the apostles he had already called.
Musser was the leader of the Short Creek community during the Short Creek raid.
Upon Musser's death on March 29, 1954,{{cite web|title=Joseph White Musser Death Certificate|url=https://familysearch.org/photos/images/6338171?p=137134|publisher=State of Utah|access-date=6 May 2014}} the fundamentalists in Short Creek refused to accept the leadership of his appointed successor, Rulon Allred, and instead LeRoy S. Johnson became their leader, while the fundamentalists in Mexico and the Salt Lake City region remained faithful to Allred. Some of those who supported neither group became independent Mormon fundamentalists.
Works
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |year= 1895 |title= Mormonism from its earliest phases to the present time |publisher= Northern Farmer and Fancier |oclc= 28355336}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1934 |title= The new and everlasting covenant of marriage |publisher= Truth Publications |oclc= 13962884}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1935 |title= An open letter to Heber J. Grant, April 15, 1935 |oclc= 5948001}}
- {{citation |last1= Musser |first1= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |first2= Dale L |last2= Morgan |year= 1939 |title= Michael, Our Father and Our God |publisher= Truth Publications |oclc= 24039364}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1944 |title= Celestial or Plural Marriage |place= Salt Lake City |publisher= J.W. Musser |oclc= 1535179}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1953 |title= The Star of Truth |oclc= 365215002}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |title= Joseph W. Musser, 1872-1954 [journal] |oclc= 34442527}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1900s |title= The law of plural marriage |publisher= Truth Publications |oclc= 14758297 }}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1900s |title= Economic Order of heaven |publisher= Truth Publications |oclc= 34455269}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 1989 |title= Truth |oclc= 658826924}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 2008 |title= It Is Written |publisher= Messenger Publications |isbn= 978-1-4382-5123-3}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 2008 |title= The Sermons of Joseph W. Musser |publisher= Messenger Publications |isbn= 978-1-4382-5124-0}}
- {{citation |last= Musser |first= Joseph White |author-mask= 2 |year= 2010 |title= Joseph W. Musser's book of remembrance |place= Mona, Utah |publisher= Hindsight Publications |oclc= 682193441 }}
See also
Notes
{{Reflist|colwidth=60em}}
References
- {{Citation
| last = Bradley
| first = Martha Sonntag
| year= 1996
| orig-year = 1993
| title = Kidnapped from That Land: The Government Raids on the Short Creek Polygamists
| place = Salt Lake City
| publisher = University of Utah Press
| isbn = 0585272123
| oclc = 45728295
}}.
{{s-start}}
{{s-rel|Mormon fundamentalist titles}}
{{s-bef|rows=4|before=John Y. Barlow}}
{{s-ttl|rows=4|title=Senior Member of the Priesthood Council|years=December 29, 1949 - March 29, 1954}}
{{s-aft|after= Rulon C. Allred|as=President of the Priesthood of
the Apostolic United Brethren}}
{{s-non|reason={{nowrap|As Senior Member of the Priesthood Council}}}}
{{S-break}}
{{s-aft|after= Leroy S. Johnson
{{nobold|(Short Creek Community)}}}}
{{s-aft|after= Charles Zitting
{{nobold|(unrecognized)}}|years=March 29, 1954 – November 25, 1986}}
{{s-ref|1={{cite web|last=Hales |first=Brian C. |title=J. Leslie Broadbent |url=http://www.mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JLeslieBroadbent.htm |access-date=18 March 2014 |publisher=mormonfundamentalism.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131226191849/http://mormonfundamentalism.com/ChartLinks/JLeslieBroadbent.htm |archive-date=26 December 2013 }}}}
{{MFleaders}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Musser, Joseph White}}
Category:19th-century Mormon missionaries
Category:20th-century Mormon missionaries
Category:American Latter Day Saint leaders
Category:American Mormon missionaries in the United States
Category:Burials at Salt Lake City Cemetery
Category:Mormon fundamentalist leaders
Category:Mormonism-related controversies
Category:People excommunicated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Category:People from Duchesne, Utah
Category:People from Salt Lake City
Category:People from Short Creek Community
Category:Prophets in Mormonism