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Founded by former Disney executive Jeff Simpson in 1995, Excel Entertainment began when four Latter-day Saint-oriented record labels and the separate Excel Distribution company were acquired.
The Harvest Hills Cooperative Community or Harvest Hills 'commune' was a communitarian experiment in communalism established in the late 1960s by the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (renamed the "Community of Christ" in the year 2000), in keeping with early Latter-day Saint notions of "religious communism" alluded to in the New Testament.
Rojas convinced his parents, though none of them were Latter-day Saints, to send him to the LDS Church-owned Academia Juárez in Colonia Juárez so he could learn English.
The town was founded in 1907 and named Winn in 1912, but renamed in 1914 to honor Latter-day Saint leader James E. Talmage.
Thomas Leiper Kane (January 27, 1822 – December 26, 1883) was an American attorney, abolitionist, and military officer who was influential in the western migration of the Latter-day Saint movement and served as a Union Army colonel and general of volunteers in the American Civil War.
In the Latter Day Saint tradition, Apostles and prophets are believed to be the foundation of the church, with Jesus Christ himself the chief cornerstone.
Latter-day Saint Egyptologist John Gee, however, believes that eyewitness descriptions during Joseph Smith's lifetime described a complete document, free of lacunae.
It was named after William Budge, a prominent Latter-Day Saint missionary who baptized Karl G. Maeser.
Charles W. Penrose (1832–1925), member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint
She is the older sister of fellow New Zealand female professional basketball player and Latter-day Saint Natalie Taylor.
Church of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times, a Latter Day Saint sect formed in the 1950s by Joel LeBaron
Don Carlos Smith (1816–1841), leader, missionary, and periodical editor in the early days of the Latter Day Saint movement
Several other Latter-day Saint scholars, including George L. Mitton and Rhett S. James, have called Quinn's research on Stephens into question.
Franz M. Johansen (born 1928 in Huntsville, Utah) is a Latter-day Saint sculptor and an emeritus professor at Brigham Young University (BYU).
In April or May 1832, Aldrich was taught about the Latter Day Saint movement by missionaries Orson Pratt and Lyman E. Johnson and was baptized in Bath, New Hampshire.
Hugh B. Brown (1883–1975), American and Canadian attorney, educator, and Latter-day Saint leader
In 1849, Emmett traveled to Utah Territory, but shortly thereafter he left the Latter Day Saint church and moved to Tuolumne County, California.
James H. Wallis (1861–1940), Latter-day Saint hymnwriter, editor and Patriarch
Joel H. Johnson (1802–1883), Latter-day Saint missionary and hymn writer
John W. Woolley (1831–1928), American Latter Day Saint and one of the founders of the Mormon fundamentalism movement
Karen Lynn Davidson (born 1943), Latter-day Saint hymnwriter, author and literary critic
Lavina Fielding Anderson (born 1944), Latter Day Saint scholar, writer, editor, and feminist
Luke S. Johnson (1807–1861), American leader in the Latter Day Saint movement
Matthew B. Brown (1964–2011), Latter-day Saint writer and historian
Although she has written at times broadly on the history of Latter-day Saint women her main focus has been on Eliza R. Snow and her literary works.
Hamilton and his associates have also been praised by Darius Gray, an African-American Latter-day Saint who went to Wyoming to try to defuse the situation in 1969, for taking a non-violent route in voicing their concerns.
Brady Udall — Novelist often using Latter Day Saint movement themes
In turn this article is largely the same as Fred E. Woods, "Nathaniel H. Felt: An Essex County Man," in Regional Studies In Latter-day Saint Church History in New England, Donald Q. Cannon, Arnold K. Garr and Bruce A. Van Orden, eds.
:For the nineteenth century Latter Day Saint leader and missionary, see Oliver Granger.
Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History, (Arnold K. Garr, Donald Q. Cannon, Richard O. Cowan, and Richard Neitzel Holzapfel, Deseret Book Company, Salt Lake City, November 2000) ISBN 1-57345-822-8
Robert H. Daines (1905-1985), American academic and Latter-day Saint
Robert H. Daines III (born 1934), American academic and Latter-day Saint
Andrew Jenson, Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia, volume 4, "Original Pioneers of Utah"
Samuel C. Bennett (1810–1893), English-born physician and Latter Day Saint leader
Gilbert Woodrow Scharffs (born 1930), an American Latter-day Saint religious educator and author
Paul Schettler (1827–1884), a Latter-day Saint leader and interpreter
He was an expert on eastern European history but also wrote on Latter-day Saint history, specifically his ancestor Heber C. Kimball and the Mormon Trail.
Brian Adam — first Latter-day Saint member of the Scottish Parliament, and later became a government minister
In 1897, mobs burned one of South Carolina's first Latter-day Saint meetinghouses in Centerville.
J. C. Little and G. B. Gardner published an unofficial hymnal 1844 in Bellows Falls, Vermont, which is the first Latter Day Saint hymnal to include any music.