Item Detail
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8124
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13
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8
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English
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The Mormon Church-State Confrontation in Nineteenth Century America
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Journal of Church and State
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Spring 1988
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273-89
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Driggs traces the conflict between the Church and the government, giving a chronolgical description of the second half of the nineteenth century. He feels the Mormons, particularly with regard to plural marriage, were forced into submission by federal legislators, judges, and prosecutors. Today, in contrast, Mormons are generally in the mainstream of American society.
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"A New Future Requires a Past"
From the Outside Looking In : Essays on Mormon History, Theology, and Culture
Honoring Juanita Brooks : A Compilation of 30 Annual Presentations from the Juanita Brooks Lecture Series
'Lawyers of Their Own to Defend Them':
Legal and Judicial History of the Church
Mormon Polygamy : A Bibliography, 1977-92
Mormons, Freethinkers, and the Limits of Toleration
Solemn Covenant : The Mormon Polygamous Passage
Taming the Past to Conquer the Future : The Pioneer Jubilee of 1897
The LDS Church's Campaign against the Equal Rights Amendment
The Worldwide Church : Mormonism as a Global Religion
Twentieth-Century Polygamy and Fundamentalist Mormons in Southern Utah
Undermined Establishment : Church-State Relations in America, 1880-1920 -
A Book of Commandments for the Government of the Church of Christ
Great Basin Kingdom : An Economic History of the Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900
History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Period I : History of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, by Himself
Nauvoo : Kingdom on the Mississippi
Quest for Empire : The Political Kingdom of God and the Council of Fifty in Mormon History
The Burned-Over District : The Social and Intellectual History of Enthusiastic Religion in Western New York, 1800-1850
The Kingdom of God in Illinois : Politics in Utopia
The Mormons