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Joseph Smith America
Joseph Smith Liberty Jail
Joseph Smith in Liberty Jail

It began in 1839. The Prophet Joseph Smith, finally free after more than four months of imprisonment in Liberty, Missouri, had settled in Illinois, and the Saints had begun building what would become the city of Nauvoo. With the Missouri persecutions fresh in their minds, the Saints sought redress for the grievances they had suffered, but they were not successful.1

Frustrated, Joseph determined to seek help from the federal government. After all, weren’t all Americans guaranteed the protections found in the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments to the United States Constitution? The very first of these is generally taken as a guarantee of the right to practice religion freely.

The Prophet Visits the President

Joseph Smith left Nauvoo for Washington, D.C., with Sidney Rigdon, Elias Higbee, and Orrin Porter Rockwell in a two-horse carriage “to lay before the Congress of the United States, the grievances of the Saints while in Missouri.”2 Joseph and Judge Higbee met with President Martin Van Buren on November 29, 1839. At first Van Buren was inconsiderate of the Prophet’s plea. However, as the discussion progressed, the president promised to reconsider his position and “felt to sympathize with [the Mormons], on account of [their] sufferings.”3

President Martin Van Buren
President Martin Van Buren

After their visit with President Van Buren, the Prophet and Elias Higbee stayed two months in the East, trying to gain support from senators and representatives who might be willing to espouse their cause.4 They met with President Van Buren again in February 1840. 5 By this time, Van Buren had lost any sympathetic feelings he might have had for the Church. According to the Prophet, the president treated them rudely and declared: “Gentlemen, your cause is just, but I can do nothing for you. … If I take up for you I shall lose the vote of Missouri.”6

Joseph Smith’s disappointing visit to Washington, D.C., became a turning point for him. His people had been abused and unjustly treated in Missouri, and the president of the United States had refused to help. The Church leaders would remember this neglect when the time came for another presidential election.

The 1844 Election Cycle Begins

In Nauvoo the Times and Seasons published an editorial on October 1, 1843, titled “Who Shall Be Our Next President?” It did not suggest any specific names but concluded that the candidate must be “the man who will be the most likely to render us assistance in obtaining redress for our grievances.”7  On November 4, 1843, Joseph Smith wrote letters to John C. Calhoun, Lewis Cass, Richard M. Johnson, Henry Clay, and Martin Van Buren, the five leading candidates for the presidency of the United States. Each letter described the persecutions the Mormons had suffered at the hands of the state of Missouri and then asked the pointed question, “ ‘What will be your rule of action relative to us as a people,’ should fortune favor your ascension to the chief magistracy?”8 Only Calhoun, Cass, and Clay responded to Joseph Smith’s letters, and they expressed little sympathy for the cause of the Saints.

When the Prophet realized that none of the leading candidates for the presidency would pledge to support redress for the Saints, he held a historic meeting in the mayor’s office at Nauvoo on January 29, 1844, with the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and others. It was unanimously decided that Joseph Smith would run for president of the United States on an independent platform.9 Thus began one of the most fascinating third-party presidential campaigns in American history. 

On January 29, 1844, the Prophet Joseph Smith formally decided to run for the office of president of the United States.

Said Joseph Smith: “I would not have suffered my name to have been used by my friends on any wise as President of the the United States, or candidate for that office, if I and my friends could have had the privilege of enjoying our religious and civil rights as American citizens, even those rights which the Constitution guarantees unto all her citizens alike.  But this as a people we have been denied from the beginning.  Persecution has rolled upon our heads from time to time, from portions of the United States, like peals of thunder, because of our religion; and no portion of the Government as yet has stepped forward for our relief.  And in view of these  things I feel it to be my right and privilege to obtain what influence and power I can, lawfully, in the United States, for the protection of injured innocence.”10

What did he hope to accomplish? After the infamous extermination order, after the Saints were pushed from Missouri losing life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness from mobs under the approving direction

 of local and state government, after the six months of false imprisonment in Liberty, Missouri and after settling and beginning to build the city of Nauvoo the frustrated Joseph Smith became determined to seek help from the federal government.

Joseph Smith following his contact with the other candidates for the highest office he penned, “I hate the imbecility of American statesmen; I detest the shrinkage of candidates for office from pledges and responsibility.”11

Joseph Smith’s Platform

Joseph Smith campaign Poster
Joseph Smith Campaign Poster

Joseph wasted little time in preparing a platform for his campaign. He met with William W. Phelps and dictated to him the headings for a political pamphlet titled General Smith’s Views of the Powers and Policy of the Government of the United States,12 the foundation document for his presidential platform. The platform didn’t specifically mention the Latter-day Saints’ persecution in Missouri; instead, it offered solutions for many of the nation’s most pressing problems.

On February 7, 1844, Joseph Smith published “General Smith’s Views of the Powers and Policy of  the Government of the United States.”  “Make HONOR the standard with all men” was his political motto.”13

The most important plank in Joseph’s platform concerned the powers of the president. Joseph wanted to give the chief magistrate “full power to send an army to suppress mobs … [without requiring] the governor of a state to make the demand.”14

Eliminating slavery was another important part of his platform. He wrote in General Smith’s Views: “The Declaration of Independence ‘holds these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness;’ but at the same time some two or three millions of people are held as slaves for life, because the spirit in them is covered with a darker skin.”15 Instead of simply calling for the abolition of slavery, Joseph Smith’s platform would have Congress “pay every man a reasonable price for his slaves out of the surplus revenue arising from the sale of public lands, and from the deduction of pay from members of Congress.”16

The platform also proposed changes to Congress. Joseph wanted to reduce congressional pay from eight dollars to two dollars per day. He wanted to have only two members of the House of Representatives for every one million people.17

In addition, Joseph favored extensive prison reform, forming a national bank, and annexing Oregon and Texas.18He favored extending the United States “from the east to the west sea,” but only if Native Americans gave their consent.19

On February 24, the Prophet had 1,500 copies of the pamphlet printed. Copies were mailed to the president of the United States and his cabinet, the justices of the Supreme Court, senators, representatives, editors of principal newspapers, postmasters, and other prominent citizens.20 

General Smith’s Views is an intriguing document. Many of Joseph Smith’s proposals came to pass, although not necessarily in the way he had envisioned: the power of the presidency was increased by Abraham Lincoln during the U.S. Civil War; the Civil War led to emancipation of the slaves; the penal system improved, although not to the extent that Joseph prescribed; and Oregon and Texas did become part of the United States. The Union’s borders soon stretched from sea to sea, but without the consent of Native Americans. Elder John A. Widtsoe evaluated General Smith’s Views as “an intelligent, comprehensive, forward-looking statement of policies, worthy of a trained statesman.”21

The Campaign

Joseph Smith Presidential Campaign
Joseph Smith Presidential Campaign

On April 9, 1844, during general conference, the campaign began to take on a unique nature. Brigham Young announced that elders would be called to both “preach the Gospel and electioneer.” 22   During the latter part of the meeting, when President Young called for volunteers to serve these missions, 244 men stepped forward.23

Additional electioneer missionaries were called, bringing the total to at least 337. On April 15 they were assigned to all 26 states in the Union and to the Wisconsin Territory.24  Not only the number but also the quality of missionaries called was striking. Ten members of the Quorum of the Twelve—Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, Orson Hyde, Parley P. Pratt, William Smith, Orson Pratt, John E. Page, Wilford Woodruff, George A. Smith, and Lyman Wight—served as electioneer missionaries.25

The Quorum of the Twelve scheduled a series of conferences to be held all over the United States. The Illinois state convention, held at Nauvoo on May 17, 1844, formally nominated Joseph Smith for president of the United States and Sidney Rigdon for vice president. The delegates organized a national convention to be held in Baltimore, Maryland, on July 13.26

The journal of Wilford Woodruff describes the activities of an electioneer missionary. Elder Woodruff left Nauvoo on May 9 in company with George A. Smith, Jedediah M. Grant, and Ezra Thayer for an electioneer mission that would last just nine weeks. During that time he recorded that he spoke in at least six “political meetings.” He spoke at many more religious meetings than political gatherings, and he always kept his religious sermons and political speeches separate. The political gatherings were usually held the night before or very soon after the traditional Church conferences.27

Elder Woodruff and at least four other members of the Quorum of the Twelve attended the Massachusetts state convention in Boston on July 1, 1844.28  Elder Woodruff recorded in his journal: “The Melodeon was crowded in the evening, and it was soon evident that a large number of rowdies were in the galleries and felt disposed to make [a] disturbance.” One young man rose and made a series of disruptive remarks, and fighting broke out. The police were called in to restore order. Elder Woodruff recorded, “One person got badly cut in the face but not dangerous. The meeting was soon broken up.”29  Despite the disturbance, Brigham Young wrote in a letter to Willard Richards, “All this did us good in Boston.”30 

“I have been conversant with the great men of the age; and, last of all I feel that I have met with the greatest, in the presence of … General Joseph Smith,” wrote one voter.  “General Smith is the nation’s man, and the man who will exalt the nation.”  A straw poll taken aboard th St. Louis steamer Osprey revealed that Joseph received more votes from passengers than either Martin Van Buren or Henry Clay.  “General Joseph Smith, the acknowledged modern Prophet,” report the St. Louis Organ newspaper, “from the common mode of testing the success of candidates for the Presidency, to wit, by steamboat elections, HE [Smith] WILL BEAT ALL THE OTHER ASPIRANTS TO THAT OFFICE TWO TO ONE!31

Of the twenty-six states voting in 1844, the electoral vote of Illinois, a toss-up for the Whigs and Democrats, was pivotal to winning the election.  Joseph Smith was to play a key role in Illinois’s presidential choice, the reason being, on December 31, 1843, Latter-day Saints residing in the greater Nauvoo area numbered 25,980.32  Putting that number in context, Washington D.C. at the time had a populace of 23,364 and St. Louis, 16,469 residents.33 As mayor of Nauvoo, Lieutenant General of the Nauvoo Legion, religious leader of a people who would vote as a block, Smith’s political sway would have been felt in the ballot box had not tragic events prevented his campaign from gaining the needed momentum to propel him into the White House.

Assassination Ends the Campaign

In the meantime, William Law and others in Illinois were plotting to take the life of Joseph Smith. Dr. Wall Southwick recounted a meeting he had attended in Carthage, Illinois, wherein the enemies of the Prophet had gathered together from every state in the Union but three. They were concerned that Joseph’s “views on government were widely circulated and took like wildfire.” According to Southwick, they believed that if the Prophet “did not get into the Presidential chair this election, he would be sure to the next time; and if Illinois and Missouri would join together and kill him, they would not be brought to justice for it.”34 Dr. Southwick’s statement suggests that the Prophet’s presidential campaign was at least a contributing cause for his assassination.

Joseph Smith was martyred on June 27, 1844, at the Carthage Jail, ending his brief presidential campaign. Although he did not gain redress for the wrongs suffered by the Saints in Missouri, his campaign had brought much favorable public attention to the Church. Many years later, President Ezra Taft Benson said, “We should be ‘anxiously engaged’ in good causes and leave the world a better place for having lived in it (D&C 58:27).”35Joseph Smith’s presidential campaign had sought to make the United States a better place, not only for the Latter-day Saints, but for all Americans.

Why Joseph Smith Ran for President

Joseph Smith really was not a contender for winning the campaign so why did he run?

“I would not have suffered my name to have been used by my friends on anywise as President of the United States, or candidate for that office, if I and my friends could have had the privilege of enjoying our religious and civil rights as American citizens, even those rights which the Constitution guarantees unto all her citizens alike. But this as a people we have been denied from the beginning. Persecution has rolled upon our heads from time to time, from portions of the United States, like peals of thunder, because of our religion; and no portion of the Government as yet has stepped forward for our relief. And in view of these things, I feel it to be my right and privilege to obtain what influence and power I can, lawfully, in the United States, for the protection of injured innocence.”  – Joseph Smith, History of the Church, 6:210–11.

“…if I lose my life in a good cause I am willing to be sacrificed on the altar of virtue, righteousness and truth, in maintaining the laws and Constitution of the United States, in need be, for the general good of mankind – Smith, History of the Church,  6:210-11.

Epilogue

 On June 25, 1976, Governor Christopher S. Bond of Missouri “formally rescinded” the extermination order and expressed personal regret “for the injustice and undue suffering which was caused by the 1838 oreder.”34

On March 24, 2004, members of the Illinois House of Representatives considered a resolution that called for a formal apology to Latter-day Saints for injustices committed over 150 years ago against their forebears in Illinois.

  1. For a history of the afflictions suffered by the Latter-day Saints in Missouri, see Church History in the Fulness of Times: Student Manual, 2nd ed. (Church Educational System manual, 2003), 193–210. It is available online at www.ldsces.org.

  2. History of the Church, 4:19.

  3. History of the Church, 4:40.

  4. See History of the Church, 4:40, 43–44.

  5. Some histories maintain that Joseph Smith met with Martin Van Buren only once, on November 29, 1839. See Church History in the Fulness of Times, 221 andH. Roberts, A Comprehensive History of the Church, 2:30. However, the History of the Church also has an entry on February 6, 1840, that describes the Prophet visiting Van Buren. Historians disagree over whether this entry is simply a retelling of the visit on November 29, 1839, or the recording of a second, distinct visit on February 6, 1840.

  6. History of the Church, 4:80.

  7. Times and Seasons, Oct. 1, 1843, 344.

  8. History of the Church, 6:65; emphasis in original.

  9. See History of the Church, 6:188.

  10. See History of the Church, 6:189, 197. History of the Church refers to the pamphlet as Views of the Powers and Policy of the Government of the United States. However, when it was published, it was titled General Smith’s Views of the Powers and Policy of the Government of the United States.

  11. Joseph Smith was nominated by the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on January 29, 1844, in Nauvoo, Hancock County, Illinois. Joseph Smith, History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 7 vols. (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1980, 6:210-211.

  12. Joseph Smith to Henry Clay, 13, May 1844, Nauvoo, Illinois, as cited in Times and Seasons [Ebenezer Robinson and Don Carlos Smith, November 1839 - February 1846, Nauvoo, Illinois] 5 (1 June 1844): 544-48.

  13. Joseph Smith, "General Smith's Views of the Power and Policy of the Government of the United States" (Nauvoo, Ill." John Taylor, 1844), 10.

  14. History of the Church, 6:206.

  15. History of the Church, 6:197.

  16. History of the Church, 6:205.

  17. See History of the Church, 6:205.

  18. See History of the Church, 6:205, 208.

  19. History of the Church, 6:206.

  20. Smith, History of the Church, 6:269-70.

  21. See History of the Church, 6:224–26.

  22. A. Widtsoe, Joseph Smith: Seeker after Truth, Prophet of God (1991), 219.

  23. History of the Church, 6:322.

  24. See History of the Church, 6:325.

  25. See Times and Seasons, Apr. 15, 1844, 504–6.

  26. See K. Garr, Joseph Smith: Presidential Candidate (2008), 55–62.

  27. See History of the Church, 6: 386, 390–91.

  28. Wilford Woodruff’s Journal, 1833–1898, ed.G. Kenny, typescript, 9 vols. (1983–84), 2:394–419; spelling and punctuation modernized.

  29. The Apostles electioneering in the East did not hear of the death of Joseph Smith until July 9, 1844.

  30. Wilford Woodruff’s Journal, 2:415; spelling modernized.

  31. History of the Church, 7:210

  32. 2005 Church Almanac: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Dalt Lake City: Deseret News, 200), 632

  33. United States Federal Census, 1840

  34. See Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History, ed. Donald Q. Cannon, Richard O. Cowan, and Arnold K. Garr (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2000), 351.