Ambiguous Allegiances and Divided Sovereignty
Ambiguous Allegiances and Divided Sovereignty
Mormons and Other Uncertain Americans in Nineteenth-Century North America
This chapter recounts the Mormons' uneven relationship with the US government throughout the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the middle of the nineteenth century. It traces back how Mormons faced the greatest persecution at the hands of Americans and came closest to political independence, developing separate and semiautonomous economic, political, and military institutions, and relocating to the Great Basin. It also describes the Mormon settlement, political authority, economic development, and relations with the Great Basin's Native populations that threatened to disrupt US claims to the region. The chapter highlights anti-Mormon prejudice and the Mormons' continued suspicion of government officials and non-Mormons. It also talks about the military conflict that erupted between the US federal government and the Mormons in 1857.
Keywords: Mormons, US government, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, political independence, Great Basin, anti-Mormon prejudice, non-Mormons
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