A few months ago,
a new family moved into a rental home up the street. For several weeks, all we
would see were a couple of large pickup trucks, a large SUV, and a two or three
large trailers, the type a contractor might own for hauling construction tools
and supplies. During the daylight hours, from what I understand (since I’m not
around), there’s not much sign of life at the house. I take the dog out for a
walk in the evening, though, and now and then during the first few months I would
see the vehicles pull up and park the trailers out in the street. Usually a man
and a couple older boys would get out of the vehicles and go into the house
through the garage. If I was later walking the dog, though, I noticed that
there were never lights on in the house.
When they first
moved in, it was colder, and the man and boys wore long-sleeved shirts. I
didn’t think much of it. I wondered if they were part of a construction crew,
and this was their base of operation, which might actually be the case, since I
have seen them moving ladders and construction gear between trailers. But one
day someone in the ward mentioned that the house had been rented by a
polygamist family. A few of the puzzle pieces started to fall into place. As
the weather has gotten warmer and the sunset later, I walk by some evenings
when it’s still light. A couple of times I’ve seen some teenage girls and some
younger boys and girls. The boys are still dressed in jeans and plain-colored,
long-sleeved shirts, no matter how hot it is. And the girls all have the
customary polygamist braid in their hair and wear plain-colored long dresses,
also long-sleeved. I say hi when I walk by, and they respond in kind, but they
don’t appear to want any conversation. I’m not really sure they even live in
the house, since it appears to be empty most of the time. The next-door
neighbor, who also recently moved in, knows a bit more than I do, and he
doesn’t think they sleep there. He had no idea what sort of neighbors he was
getting when he moved in. It’s a little odd, but then aren’t we all? I have no
idea which polygamist clan they belong to, and I don’t think it would be polite
to ask.
Personally, I
have a strange relationship with polygamy. First, I wouldn’t be here without
it. I am the descendant of a second wife on both sides of my genealogy. Thomas
Sirls Terry was a pioneer. In fact, he came west in 1847, then served a mission
to the eastern states and returned in 1857 to Salt Lake as a captain in one of
the wagon companies. On the return trip, he had an interesting adventure. A
young lady, Lucy Stevenson, became ill one night and died. Her father called
for Thomas to administer to her. He and John Dustin, another of the captains, laid
hands on her head and blessed her, twice. Nothing happened. So Thomas went to
his wagon, fetched his temple clothes, and walked out into the prairie about a
quarter mile. There he put on his temple clothes, knelt down in the darkness,
and prayed until he felt that Lucy should live. In his words, “After I had
returned I found Sister Lucy still dead, the family were all crying. I said to
Brother Dustin, we will administer to her again. We placed our hands upon her
head and I asked my Heavenly Father that her spirit might return to its body.
Before we took our hands off her head her Spirit returned and she came to life.
The time altogether was one hour. She came to the Valley and was married.”
That last bit is
one heck of an understatement. Yes, she married. She married Thomas. She became
his third wife. But it didn’t last. According to his version of the story, she liked
to go dancing, but he didn’t dance, so she left him. Some thanks for raising
her from the dead.
At any rate, she
was wife number three. Previously, Thomas had married two daughters of Zera
Pulsipher, the missionary who baptized Wilford Woodruff. I am descended from
the younger of the two, Eliza Jane. Pat Holland (Patricia Terry Holland) is
descended from the older sister, Mary Ann. Eliza Jane ended up being packed off
to Nevada, probably to hide her during the Raid years. That’s where she died
and where her grave still is. Thomas Sirls is buried in Enterprise, Utah, where
my dad and Sister Holland grew up.
On my mom’s side
is William Stimpson, a survivor of the Martin Handcart Company. He buried a
son, not quite two years of age, at the crossing of the Platte River. He then
buried his wife and a premature baby in a shallow grave near Fort Bridger. He
and a four-year-old son somehow survived the ordeal, made it to the Valley, and
settled in the Ogden area, where he married again, twice, the second time
polygamously to my great-great-grandmother, Danish immigrant Ann Mary
Christensen. I can’t imagine how hard his life must have been. He was
illiterate, so he didn’t leave a record, but I am guessing, based on what I
know, that polygamy was not easy for either William or Ann.
And that’s the
other side of my relationship with polygamy. While I wouldn’t be here without
it, I am not a big fan of the Principle. As with most things Mormon, I have
read a good deal about it. I have also carefully considered the various
rationales given to support its implementation. And for reasons I won’t go into
here, let me just say that I am not a believer in polygamy. I think it was a
mistake, much like the priesthood ban. But if I had lived in Nauvoo in the
1840s or Utah in the 1860s, what would I have done? My sensibilities are
certainly shaped by modern American values and prejudices and by historical
hindsight. I like to think I would have been sympathetic to men like William
Law and William Marks, Church leaders who couldn’t find anything divine in
plural marriage. But especially as a young man, I was rather blindly obedient (sometimes blindly disobedient), so
I can’t say what I would have done.
Consequently,
whenever I walk past the new neighbors and see them outside in their polygamist
garb and hair styles, trying to keep to themselves, seeming for all the world
lost between two worlds, I can’t help but think, “There, but for the grace of
George F. Edmunds and John Randolph Tucker, go I.” I must admit I am grateful
that the Senator from Vermont and the Congressman from Virginia crafted a piece
of legislation so brutal (and perhaps so unconstitutional) that it finally
caused the Church to give up on polygamy. And I’m grateful for the Smoot Senate
hearings that forced the Second Manifesto and finally deep-sixed Mormon plural
marriage forever. I guess I am not alone. A 2012 Pew Research poll turned up
one surprising finding on Mormon moral beliefs: 86 percent of Mormons surveyed
considered polygamy to be immoral, while only 79 percent said sex between
unmarried adults was immoral. That’s rather incredible, if you think about it. Abortion
came in at 74 percent.
It has been 130
years since Edmunds and Tucker, and the LDS Church is a far cry from the Church
that their Act tried to dismantle. And I am glad. I am about as monogamous as a
person can be. Even when I was dating, I didn’t like dating more than one
person at a time. I just couldn’t get interested. Marrying more than one woman
would be incredibly repugnant to me. So, thank you, Senator Edmunds and
Congressman Tucker. You gave me the liberty to be an American, a monogamist, a
full-fledged member of a modern society, with no pressure to be anything else.
I don’t have to live in the shadows. I can walk the dog in my shorts and
t-shirt, eat at restaurants, go to movies. I can be part of the twenty-first
century without having to look over my shoulder. It’s something for me to be
grateful for as we approach Pioneer Day. But Pioneer Day does carry some
awkward overtones for me.
Last night while
I was working on this post, my dad called. He is 92. He’d had a busy day. He
drove the car in to the shop, then took the bus home. He worked in the yard a
bit and noticed that the apricots were ripe, so he bottled eight quarts. He then
drove a truckload of yard waste (from his yard and the neighbors’ yards) to the
dump. On his way home, he said, he had gone by the cemetery and had a talk with
my mom. He told her to put in a request for him to join her. It was four years
to the day since she died. I can’t help but wonder if his great-grandfather,
Thomas Sirls, ever had a chat like that. If so, which grave would he visit?
Which one would he want to spend the hereafter with? Probably not Eliza Jane,
since she’s the one who got shipped off to Nevada. I’m sure my dad’s happy he
doesn’t have to think about that sort of question.
Roger, Your attitude towards polygamy reflects the attitudes/reactions of just about everyone I have read about when they were first taught and or called to live that principle. Some of those labored with this spiritually for a long time until finally coming to a testimony of the correctness of the principle. Others rejected it out of hand, while others labored with it spiritually before finally rejecting it.
ReplyDeleteNone of us here is these days have been called to live that principle here in this life, and probably will not even if it does become legal (not a far fetched notion owing to the rapidly changing cultural and social mores of the day).
It is a principle that requires a lot of discipline, wisdom, and love in order to be lived righteously.
Glenn