Item Detail
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4632
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8
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2
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English
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Jesse Gause, Counselor to the Prophet
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BYU Studies
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Spring 1975
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15
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362-64
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"As we restudy Church history there appears for a few brief moments in 1832 an unobtrusive character who might have become one of the leading authorities of the Church, but instead took his exit as silently as he had entered, never to be heard of again. This man, whose name should also be as well-known to the Latter-day Saints as are the names of Sidney Rigdon, Frederick G. Williams, Hyrum Smith, Joseph Smith, Sen., and John Smith, was Jesse Gause (rhymes with house). Now a virtual unknown, Gause was the first of these men called to be a counselor to the Prophet Joseph Smith. How Jesse Gause came to such prominence and then faded into obscurity is not known among the pages of Church history. Unfortunately, there is so little recorded concerning him that forming a profile of the man is difficult." [Publisher's abstract]
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Jesse Gause : Joseph Smith's Little-Known Counselor
Joseph Smith and the United Firm : The Growth and Decline of the Church's First Master Plan of Business and Finance, Ohio and Missouri, 1832-1834
The Consequential Counselor : Restoring the Root(s) of Jesse Gause
The Joseph Smith Papers : Documents, Volume 3 : February 1833-March 1834
The Latter Day Saints in Ohio : Writing the History of Mormonism's Middle Period
The Life of Dr. Frederick G. Williams :
Counselor to the Prophet Joseph Smith
The Revelations of the Prophet Joseph Smith : A Historical and Biographical Commentary of the Doctrine and Covenants
We'll Sing and We'll Shout: The Life and Times of William W. Phelps