Lucy Stanton McCary was a Mormon woman who married and followed William McCary during his time as a prominent member of the LDS community at Winter Quarters in Ohio. She played a prominent role during William McCary's apostasy and followed him during his excommunication and prophetic claims. Her relationship with William McCary influenced early Latter Day Saint policy and doctrine in regards to race, sexuality, and gender roles. Many scholars argue that the LDS Church's ban on interracial marriage and the ordination of peoples of African descent to the priesthood was influenced by Lucy Stanton's relationship with Milliam McCary and the events that followed in Winter Quarters Ohio. [1]
Lucy Stanton Bassett, also known as Lucy Celesta Stanton, also known as Laah Ciel Manatoi, was born in New York on December 28, 1816. [2] Her father was Daniel Stanton and her mother was Clarinda Graves; Lucy grew up with seven siblings, five sisters and two brothers. [3] Soon after Lucy was born, her and her family moved to Missouri. This move to the southern United States was in reaction to a treaty that was agreed upon by the Delaware Indians, a tribe of which the Stanton's were a part of (later in her life, Lucy Stanton would write about her opposition to forced relocation of Native Americans). The treaty, created in 1818 included the relocation of the Delaware tribe to the James Fork of the White River in Missouri. [4]
In 1833 she married a man named Oliver Harmon Bassett. Around the year 1839 Lucy and her husband moved to Quincy, Illinois in Adams County with their three children. The first of their children was Solon Plumb Bassett born in 1834, next was Anna Clarinda Seraphine Bassett born in 1837, and last was Semera LaCelestine Roslin Bassett. [3] In 1843 Lucy and her husband were divorced. Another treaty with the Delaware Indians required Lucy's family to move again. This time they moved close to the Kansas-Missouri border. It was here that Lucy Stanton met William McCary, an African American man, a former slave, and convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints who had escaped from his master in his youth. [4] In the time of early 1846 Lucy Stanton and William McCary got married. This marriage between a white woman and an African American man was frowned upon in the LDS community. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints famously had a ban on black Africans receiving the priesthood soon after this time and the fear of interracial marriages, such as Stanton's and McCary's, was seen as a big reason for that ban. [5]
While in Council Bluffs, Iowa, Lucy Stanton married William McCary, a skilled ventriloquist and musician in 1846. Her marriage to William McCary was not originally questioned on the bounds of Church doctrine, as Early L.D.S. doctrine did not restrict membership or marriage until shortly after McCary's excommunication. Shortly after her marriage, both Lucy and William both joined the L.D.S. Saints in Winter quarters Nebraska in 1847. [6]
After her marriage to William McCary, Lucy Stanton was encouraged to write a narrative on the life of her husband. She was told to write this narrative by a man named Reverend Lewis Allen. Stanton wrote a sketch of McCary's life entitled A Thrilling Sketch of the Life of the Distinguished Chief Okah Tubbee (Okah Tubbee being the name that William McCary assumed when living among Native Americans). In the original publication of this narrative, Reverend Allen was identified as the only author. However, revised versions published soon after credited Lucy Stanton under her Native American name, Laah Ceil. [4]
An 1852 version of this narrative was eventually published and it included more accounts written by Okah Tubbee himself. At the end of his narrative Okah Tubbee wishes to let Laah Ceil (Lucy Stanton) "speak for herself, for she does not like to hear me say that we made an engagement the first day, made an acquaintance the next, and was married so soon". [2]
Stanton used this opportunity to write about her education and religious convictions as well as give her own account about the beginnings of her relationship with Okah Tubbee. She wrote about her travels with her husband and their advocation for the rights of Native Americans and their opposition to forced relocation; this was likely based on her and her family's experience with relocation in her childhood. [2] Lucy Stanton and her husband's visits to various groups of Native Americans such as the Choctaw Indians in Alexandria were recorded in this document. This expanded version of Tubbee's life sketch also included Tubbee's accounts of his early life before his marriage to Lucy Stanton. During his solo travels Tubbee also visited the Creek and Seminole Indians with a message that whites "would never give up the chase until the Indian was no longer an inhabitant of that soil". [4] This message was unwelcome to these Native American groups that Tubbee encountered.
Lucy Stanton's writing in this revised narrative also included an original poem as well as some letters and documents. [4]
During their time at winter quarters, William McCary began to claim various powers and spiritual authority that wasn't condoned or accepted by the greater L.D.S. leadership, the most famous of these supposed gifts was the ability to appear as various characters from the Bible and Book of Mormon. Following McCary's excommunication for Apostacy, Lucy Stanton remained with him and followed him after leaving Winter Quarters. This expulsion resulted in Orson Hyde preaching a sermon against McCary and his claims, however many L.D.S. members would continue to follow him and Lucy a short distance away from Winter Quarters. [6] After leaving Winter quarters, Lucy and William both continue to gather more early Latter Day Saints to McCary's unique brand of Mormonism. Direct evidence of Lucy's complicity and influence over McCary's ideological doctrine rests in the reinstitution of plural marriage and sealing ceremonies that involved sex only between William and Lucy. [7] It is difficult to tell exactly how much Lucy Stanton influenced the doctrinal aspects of McCary's theology, as no documents survive from either William or Lucy that describe its conception in any meaningful way. [8]
Scholars differ on exactly how much Lucy and William affected mainstream L.D.S. doctrine, but many have theorized that the behavior of Lucy and William encouraged the priesthood ban on African Americans. [7] In particular, his marriages to multiple white wives provoked disdain from several Latter Day Saints in Winter Quarters. [6] Originally, Brigham Young assured William McCary that race was not an issue in the Church ("It's nothing to do with the blood for [from] one blood has God made all flesh, we have to repent [to] regain what we av lost — we av one of the best Elders an African in Lowell [referring to Walker Lewis]). [9] Only one month after William and Lucy’s excommunication, Parly P. Pratt made the earliest known statement regarding a restriction of blacks receiving the priesthood made by a church leader.
The Churches rhetoric towards African Americans and the priesthood would only become more antagonistic during Lucy and William’s behaviors outside Winter quarters drew more and more women away from mainstream Mormonism. [6] Speaking of William McCary, Pratt stated that he “was a black man that had the blood of Ham in him which lineage cursed as regards with priesthood”. [10] Statements regarding Lucy Stanton specifically are unknown, but the cultural background under which Lucy and William are being written assumes a patriarchal leadership that William and lucy didn't follow to the same degree as other early Latter Day Saints. [11]
While historians agree that multiple factors, both political and doctrinal, contributed to the LDS Churchs’ policy towards ethnic minorities, specifically those of African descent, William McCarry is the earliest such man to be spoken out against by church leaders. [12] The nature of the sexual practices William and Lucy engaged in with other church members at Winter Quarters provoked stern reaction from rank and file members of the organization, as the details of these practices were particularly forbidden by church leadership and believed to be the result of corrupted priesthood authority. [13] In addition to this, because Lucy Stanton came from a particularly important and pious family in the early LDS Church, and her perceived apostate activity deeply grieved and concerned other members who feared the same fate for other own family members. [14]
Scholars argue that because the second restriction on blacks and priesthood was temple marriages, church leaders, particularly Brigham Young, had William and Lucy's marriage in mind when making the decision as an attempt to prevent more pious women from doing the same as Lucy Stanton and their followers. At the same time, White skin became synonymous with righteousness, arguably driven by Lucy and William's example. [15] After Brigham Young officially instituted the temple and priesthood ban in 1847 the LDS Church generally forbade people of African descent from holding the office of the priesthood or participating in temple rituals until 1978 when the Church would formally reverse this policy.
Lucy Celesta Stanton died in Springville, Utah in 1878 and was buried in Springville in the Historic Springville Cemetery. [16]
Brigham Young was an American religious leader and politician. He was the second president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, from 1847 until his death in 1877. During his time as church president, Young led his followers, the Mormon pioneers, west from Nauvoo, Illinois, to the Salt Lake Valley. He founded Salt Lake City and served as the first governor of the Utah Territory. Young also worked to establish the learning institutions that would later become the University of Utah and Brigham Young University. A polygamist, Young had at least 56 wives and 57 children. He formalized the prohibition of black men attaining priesthood, and led the church in the Utah War against the United States.
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Elijah Abel, or Able or Ables was one of the earliest African-American members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and was the church's first African-American elder and Seventy. Abel was predominantly of Scottish and English descent and appears to have been the first, and one of the few, black members in the early history of the church to have received Priesthood ordination, later becoming the faith's first black missionary. Abel did not have his ordination revoked when the LDS Church officially announced its now-obsolete restrictions on Priesthood ordination, but was denied a chance to receive his temple endowment by third church president John Taylor. As a skilled carpenter, Abel often committed his services to the building of LDS temples and chapels. He died in 1884 after serving a mission to Cincinnati, Ohio, his last of three total missions for the church.
During the history of the Latter Day Saint movement, the relationship between Black people and Mormonism has included enslavement, exclusion and inclusion, official and unofficial discrimination, and friendly ties. Black people have been involved with the Latter Day Saint movement since its inception in the 1830s. Their experiences have varied widely, depending on the denomination within Mormonism and the time of their involvement. From the mid-1800s to 1978, Mormonism's largest denomination – the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – barred Black women and men from participating in the ordinances of its temples necessary for the highest level of salvation, prevented most men of Black African descent from being ordained into the church's lay, all-male priesthood, supported racial segregation in its communities and schools, taught that righteous Black people would be made white after death, and opposed interracial marriage. The temple and priesthood racial restrictions were lifted by church leaders in 1978. In 2013, the church disavowed its previous teachings on race for the first time.
The status of women in Mormonism has been a source of public debate since before the death of Joseph Smith in 1844. Various denominations within the Latter Day Saint movement have taken different paths on the subject of women and their role in the church and in society. Views range from the full equal status and ordination of women to the priesthood, as practiced by the Community of Christ, to a patriarchal system practiced by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, to the ultra-patriarchal plural marriage system practiced by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and other Mormon fundamentalist groups.
Joseph Fielding Smith Sr. was an American religious leader who served as the sixth president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was a nephew to, and the last president of the LDS Church to have known personally, Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement.
This is a timeline of major events in Mormonism in the 20th century.
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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been subject to criticism and sometimes discrimination since its inception.
The 1978 Revelation on Priesthood was an announcement by leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints that reversed a long-standing policy excluding men of Black African descent from the priesthood and both Black men and women from priesthood ordinances in the temple. Leaders stated it was a revelation from God.
Warner "William" McCary was an African American convert to Mormonism who was excommunicated from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1847 for claiming to be a prophet. Some researchers have suggested that McCary's actions led to the Church's subsequent policy of not allowing people of black African descent to hold the priesthood or participate in temple ordinances.
From 1852 to 1978, temple and priesthood policies in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints prohibited women and men of Black African descent from temple ordinances and ordination in the all-male priesthood. In 1978, the church's highest governing body, the First Presidency, declared in the statement "Official Declaration 2" that the restriction had been lifted. Between 1830 and 1852, a few Black men had been ordained to the Mormon priesthood in the Latter Day Saint movement under Joseph Smith.
Since Mormonism’s foundation, Black people have been members, however the church placed restrictions on proselytization efforts among Black people. Before 1978, Black membership was small. It has since grown, and in 1997, there were approximately 500,000 Black members of the church, mostly in Africa, Brazil and the Caribbean. Black membership has continued to grow substantially, especially in West Africa, where two temples have been built. By 2018, an estimated 6% of members were Black worldwide. In the United States, approximately 1% of members are Black.
In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, marriage between a man and a woman is considered to be "ordained of God". Marriage is thought to consist of a covenant between the man, the woman, and God. The church teaches that in addition to civil marriage, which ends at death, a man and woman can enter into a celestial marriage, performed in a temple by priesthood authority, whereby the marriage and parent–child relationships resulting from the marriage will last forever in the afterlife.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and a topical guide to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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