Item Detail
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25998
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0
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18
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English
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King Follett : Revisiting His Death, Burial, and Funeral(s)
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Journal of Mormon History
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April 2015
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41
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2
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Salt Lake City, UT
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Mormon History Association
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182-200
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King (his first name) and his wife, Louisa, were among the farmers in Ohio whose attention was caught by the preaching of Mormon missionaries near Kirtland. Their allegiance to the young church and its young prophet was so strong that they followed the Mormon movement from Kirtland to Missouri and later to Nauvoo. King Follett's name is startlingly familiar because it was attached to one of Joseph Smith's significant discourses, explaining a distinctive principle of theology that has become part of the LDS theology of eternal progress and essential to understanding the nature of God and human beings. [From the article]
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Sacred Places Volume 3 : Ohio and Illinois : A Comprehensive Guide to Early LDS Historical Sites
Saints and Sickness : Medicine in Nauvoo and Winter Quarters
The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt
The Disciple as Witness : Essays on Latter-day Saint History and Doctrine : In Honor of Richard Lloyd Anderson
The King Follett Discourse : A Newly Amalgamated Text
The King Follett Discourse : Joseph Smith's Greatest Sermon in Historical Perspective
The Life of Joseph Smith, the Prophet
The Nauvoo City and High Council Minutes
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