Joseph Smith was the first U.S. presidential candidate ever assassinated while campaigning — but almost no one knows why the Prophet decided to run in the first place. After Missouri's extermination order, a president who shrugged, and five candidates who refused to lift a finger, running for president became the last option left to secure the rights of the Latter-day Saints — and every other persecuted minority in America.
In this episode, hosts Jasmin Rappleye, Neal Rappleye, and Stephen Smoot work through Spencer McBride's Joseph Smith for President: The Prophet, the Assassins, and the Fight for American Religious Freedom to unpack the 1844 campaign — what drove it, what it actually proposed, and how it ended in Carthage.
===Informed Saints Credits===
Produced by The Ancient America Foundation
Producer: Spencer Clark
Hosts: Stephen Smoot, Neal Rappleye, Jasmin Rappleye
In this episode:
- The 1838 Mormon War in Missouri, Governor Boggs' extermination order, and the ~800 redress petitions taken to Washington
- The meeting with Martin Van Buren ("Little Van") and his infamous "your cause is just, but I can do nothing" reply
- Joseph's letters to the five 1844 candidates — Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, Martin Van Buren, Lewis Cass, and Richard M. Johnson
- The "states' rights doctrine… a dead carcass, a stink offering" quote — and why you can't map Joseph's politics onto modern parties
- The campaign pamphlet "General Smith's Views of the Powers and Policy of the Government" (printed by John Taylor, ghostwritten by W. W. Phelps)
- The platform: federal protection of civil and religious rights, a smaller and pay-cut Congress, abolishing slavery by 1850, prison reform, a national bank, and westward expansion with Native consent
- Abraham O. Smoot, the electioneering missionaries, and the courthouse mob in Dresden, Tennessee
- The Council of Fifty, the westward look toward Deseret, and how local Hancock County politics fed the road to Carthage
Read the book: Spencer McBride, Joseph Smith for President (Oxford University Press) — https://amzn.to/4vuQg3p
Subscribe for more faithful scholarship every week. Study deeply, believe boldly.
Further Readings and Sources:
https://rsc.byu.edu/book/mormon-redress-petitions
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/history-draft-1-january-31-december-1840/3
www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/minutes-and-discourse-29-january-1844/1
www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/discourse-8-february-1844/1
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/general-smiths-views-of-the-powers-and-policy-of-the-government-of-the-united-states-circa-26-january-7-february-1844/1?
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/articles/religious-freedom?
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/discourse-8-february-1844/1?
www.josephsmithpapers.org/articles/joseph-smiths-letter-to-1844-presidential-candida...
Chapters
- (00:00:00) - Joseph Smith's Presidential Campaign
- (00:01:04) - Joseph Smith for President: Story
- (00:06:24) - Joseph Smith Writes To The Presidential Candidates
- (00:12:20) - Joseph Smith's Run for President
- (00:17:37) - Joseph Smith's Political Campaign
- (00:21:12) - William Phelps' 'Ghost' pamphlet
- (00:23:19) - Joseph Smith on the Abolition of Slavery
- (00:28:34) - Ron Paul: We're Not Fed-fed, but...
- (00:28:49) - Joseph Smith on Westward Expansion
- (00:34:17) - Trump on His Run for President
- (00:34:35) - Joseph Smith's Presidential Campaign and the Council of Fifty