Mormon Passage of George D. Watt
Mormon Passage of George D. Watt: First British Convert, Scribe for Zion
Ronald G. Watt
Copyright Date: 2009
Published by: University Press of Colorado,
https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc
Pages: 294
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt4cgrhc
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Book Info
Mormon Passage of George D. Watt
Book Description:

Nineteenth-century Mormonism was a frontier religion with roots so entangled with the American experience as to be seen by some scholars as the most American of religions and by others as a direct critique of that experience. Yet it also was a missionary religion that through proselytizing quickly gained an international, if initially mostly Northern European, makeup. This mix brought it a roster of interesting characters: frontiersmen and hardscrabble farmers; preachers and theologians; dreamers and idealists; craftsmen and social engineers. Althoughthe Mormon elite soon took on, as elites do, a rather fixed, dynastic character, the social origins of its first-generation members were quite diverse. The Mormon Church at its beginning provided a good study in upward mobility. George D. Watt, for instance, was a self-educated convert with both unusual, for the time and place of frontier Utah, clerical skills and ambitions to improve his status. A man with intellectual pretensions, he had little formal training but a strong will, avid curiosity, and appetite for knowledge. Those traits made up for what he lacked in schooling and drew him into what served as intellectual circles among the Mormon elite and, later, on the church's disenchanted fringe. They also made him for a time essential to Brigham Young as a clerk and reporter but sent him into religious and social exile, due to a contest of wills with his employer that Watt had no chance of winning,. Reputed to have been the first of the many English converts to the LDS church, Watt's repeatedly demonstrated ability to learn quickly made him an early master of Pitman shorthand, just then coming into use. Employing this skill, he made two important contributions to Mormon literature: First, he more than anyone created, based on that shorthand, the Deseret Alphabet, which now is a curiosity but then was an innovation that, intended to create a unique Mormon orthography and pedagogy, stands well for the broad attempt to build in Utah the wholly self-sufficient culture of the Kingdom of God. Second, his efficient note taking allowed him to take down the sermons of Young and other church leaders and publish them in the Journal of Discourses, an indispensible historical record. In addition Watt learned, thought, and wrote about a variety of subjects, from horticulture to spiritualism, which helped define him as a resident Utah intellectual. He eventually left the Mormon Church, but the records of his domestic life before and after that decision provide a rich portrait of the working of polygamous households, particularly complicated ones in his case. Despite his accomplishments, because of his potential, George Watt's story is at heart a tragedy. His breach with Young resulted in social isolation, poverty, and rejection by friends and associates. He never, though, lost his sense of independence or his avid mind. Whether facing an economic affront or pressing, in writing, his own conclusions about life and God, he engaged the challenge where he found it.

eISBN: 978-0-87421-758-2
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. I-IV)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.1
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. V-V)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.2
  3. ILLUSTRATIONS
    ILLUSTRATIONS (pp. VI-VI)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.3
  4. PREFACE
    PREFACE (pp. VII-X)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.4
  5. INTRODUCTION: “ON THE LORD’S BUSINESS”
    INTRODUCTION: “ON THE LORD’S BUSINESS” (pp. 1-8)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.5

    On May 15, 1868, an argument between Brigham Young, the president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and George D. Watt, his clerk, erupted in Young’s Salt Lake City office. Feeling desperate about the financial pressures of his suffering family, Watt was asking for $5.00 a day, a raise of $1.50. The labor-management discussion rapidly turned heated. Young grudgingly guessed he would have to pay Watt what he demanded but thought that he did not deserve it. As far as Young was concerned, no one in the office worked hard enough for the pay he received. Watt...

  6. 1 EARLY LIFE IN BRITAIN
    1 EARLY LIFE IN BRITAIN (pp. 9-33)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.6

    On May 18, 1812, in the St. George Parish in Manchester, England, a son was born to James Watt and Mary Ann Wood Watt. More than a month later, this boy was christened George Darling Watt after his mother’s oldest brother.¹ He was born just as the Industrial Revolution was sweeping Great Britain. Manchester, located in the English Midlands, is approximately two hundred miles north of London and thirty-nine miles east of the port city of Liverpool. The Industrial Revolution changed Britain from a rural, agricultural nation to one with large cities teeming with factories.

    Life in these factory towns...

  7. 2 JOURNEY TO AMERICA AND NAUVOO
    2 JOURNEY TO AMERICA AND NAUVOO (pp. 34-57)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.7

    The desire to emigrate to Zion was virtually a continuation of conversion to Mormonism. George D. Watt had realized early that linking his fortunes to the restoration of the gospel would take him from his native land to the United States. In fact, two weeks after he was baptized, Watt prophesied that they would all go to America. Heber C. Kimball in 1854, talking about prophecy, commented, “One night we met with a small company of the new members in Preston, Lancashire, and brother George commenced reading the Book of Mormon.” After he finished reading, he said, “The land of...

  8. 3 MISSION TO BRITAIN
    3 MISSION TO BRITAIN (pp. 58-81)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.8

    Early in May 1846, the Watt family left New York City, returning to Liverpool less than four years after they had left. They stayed in Liverpool for about two months, where Watt learned about the joint stock company that would benefit Mormon emigrants. Then Reuben Hedlock, president of the British Mission, assigned him to go north to Scotland. Great Britain had been racked by the devastating potato blight that had struck Ireland in 1845, reducing the harvest to a fraction of its expected plentitude so that famine and starvation swept across Ireland. The British cabinet under Prime Minister Sir Robert...

  9. 4 ACROSS THE WIDE ATLANTIC AND ON TO ZION
    4 ACROSS THE WIDE ATLANTIC AND ON TO ZION (pp. 82-107)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.9

    George D. Watt’s second voyage from Liverpool to Zion in America would take him to the Utah Territory, a place he had never seen before. He had experienced the sea and river voyages, but he would now need to learn the skills of packing a wagon and driving oxen. He knew from reading Orson Pratt’s diary that he must travel vast plains, uninhabited barrens, and jagged mountains.¹ This assurance of novelty and, almost certainly, adventure, motivated him to begin a journal that covered from January 28, 1851 to August 14, 1851. Assuredly he planned to publish it, for he exercised...

  10. 5 LIFE AND TIMES IN UTAH: POLITICS IN THE TERRITORY
    5 LIFE AND TIMES IN UTAH: POLITICS IN THE TERRITORY (pp. 108-124)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.10

    George Watt was now in Zion. He had been tested in the mission field and had passed admirably, preaching God’s word to thousands. Now he was ready to dwell with the Saints. He had missed the experiences of those who had left Nauvoo, sojourned at Winter Quarters, and traveled on to the Great Salt Lake Valley. He also did not voyage on the ship Brooklyn or march with the Mormon Battalion, except vicariously through the prism of the Millennial Star, which sometimes distorted and omitted important parts of the story. After reaching Zion, he had a vivid view of the...

  11. 6 REPORTER FOR ZION
    6 REPORTER FOR ZION (pp. 125-140)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.11

    After arriving in the territory, Watt had to make a living and support his family. His chosen field of stenography would be confirmed as his profession but not without some controversy. When the problems ended, he had a strong and definite place in President Brigham Young’s office and status among the people of Zion.

    Unlike most of the immigrants who left to become farmers in the rural areas, Watt sought other avenues for employment in the new city. He had no desire to farm for his living. He wanted a position as a stenographer, but those positions were almost unknown....

  12. 7 DESERET ALPHABET
    7 DESERET ALPHABET (pp. 141-159)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.12

    It seems peculiar that Brigham Young and the Mormons, people involved in building a religious community in the American West, would create an orthographic reform movement to change the alphabet and the form of the written word. This initiative captivated George D. Watt for fifteen years. He was its instructor and phonetic expert. His skill and training were vital and needed.

    Alphabetical reformers existed before and after Brigham Young. Benjamin Franklin, while serving as a diplomat in London, designed a new alphabet in 1768. He interested his friend Noah Webster, compiler of the dictionary, in orthographic reform. The greatest reformer...

  13. 8 FAMILY AND LIFE IN SALT LAKE CITY
    8 FAMILY AND LIFE IN SALT LAKE CITY (pp. 160-187)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.13

    Between the time that George D. Watt left Nauvoo in 1846 and he returned to the Great Salt Lake Valley from England in 1851, Mormons had begun to practice polygamy openly. Mormonism taught that a man could not be saved in the hereafter without a posterity. The larger the posterity, the larger one’s kingdom would be, and for this reason, the Mormons practiced polygamy. When Watt arrived in Utah, he had a sickly wife and only one surviving son. Knowing about the principle of plural marriage, he determined to take another wife. Over about a decade and a half, he...

  14. 9 A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS: INTELLECTUAL ACTIVITIES
    9 A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS: INTELLECTUAL ACTIVITIES (pp. 188-209)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.14

    The 1850s in Utah saw the organization of a plethora of cultural and intellectual organizations in which Watt participated. Because of these groups, he expanded his mind and began to think beyond religion. He learned about governments, wars, scientific advancements, drama, music, and agriculture. He became a member of this intellectual and cultural elite and closely associated with some of the greatest minds in the church. During this period, he truly became a self-made man.¹

    One of the first of these organizations started on January 8, 1855, when Brigham Young met with a committee of Wilford Woodruff; Robert L. Campbell,...

  15. 10 SERMONS OF OBEDIENCE: TRAVELING WITH BRIGHAM YOUNG AND TO BRITAIN
    10 SERMONS OF OBEDIENCE: TRAVELING WITH BRIGHAM YOUNG AND TO BRITAIN (pp. 210-224)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.15

    Perennially the Mormon leadership sent missionaries to the eastern United States and especially to Britain, converting many to their religion. Brigham Young had called the faithful to gather to Zion. The poor came with the aid of the Perpetual Emigrating Fund Company, which was a revolving loan account. By the end of 1868, more than twenty thousand immigrants had arrived in Utah territory. By 1860 settlements had spread north from Bountiful to Cache Valley and then finally in 1863 to Bear Lake. Expansion south had begun with the settlement of Utah Valley, Provo in particular. By 1861 the Mormons had...

  16. 11 LIFE-CHANGING EVENTS: LEAVING THE OFFICE, BUSINESSMAN
    11 LIFE-CHANGING EVENTS: LEAVING THE OFFICE, BUSINESSMAN (pp. 225-246)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.16

    When George D. Watt returned from Britain in August 1867, he resumed his usual duties of clerk and reporter. He traveled with President Brigham Young, took phonographic reports, and even preached. Everything appeared to be the same. Within his heart, though, things were not the same. He had certain financial obligations that could not be met. He determined to talk to Young about his financial expectations. This discussion became a life-changing experience for him. His life thereafter left the safe climes of the president’s office. Economically, socially, and religiously, life became different for him and his family.

    Within two weeks...

  17. 12 SPIRITUAL WANDERINGS: APOSTASY AND SPIRITUALISM
    12 SPIRITUAL WANDERINGS: APOSTASY AND SPIRITUALISM (pp. 247-262)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.17

    Watt moved his family into their completed house in Kaysville before Christmas 1869. He left his longtime home in the capital city of Utah and Mormonism and took up residence in the hinterland—the provinces. The local people did not understand his digressive path. He would find no Mormons who would give him a sympathetic ear there.

    Located twenty-one miles north of Salt Lake City, Kaysville was one of the main communities in Davis County. The town was settled in 1849, and in 1851 the new inhabitants built a school that they also used as a church meetinghouse. By 1853...

  18. 13 FAMILY AND FARM LIFE IN DAVIS COUNTY
    13 FAMILY AND FARM LIFE IN DAVIS COUNTY (pp. 263-284)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.18

    When Watt moved his family in 1869 to his farm about three miles northeast of Kaysville, he was fifty-eight years old and had four wives.¹ By then Elizabeth had given birth to four children, and Sarah and Martha each had one child.² Watt found himself with a very young family and three wives who were still of child-bearing age. He rejoiced whenever a new baby arrived. In August 1869, a few months after the birth of Martha’s oldest child, he wrote, “I bless you, my dear, and our boy, and pray that from you may spring a race of men,...

  19. Index
    Index (pp. 285-293)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.19
  20. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 294-294)
    https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt4cgrhc.20