James Moyle

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Moyle's former residence in Washington, D.C.

James Henry Moyle (September 17, 1858 – February 20, 1946)[1] was a prominent American politician in Utah.

Biography

Moyle was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to a Cornish American family.[2] He was the grandson of John Rowe Moyle, a Mormon pioneer and master stonemason for the Salt Lake Temple.[3][4][5] From about 1879-1881 Moyle served as a missionary in North Carolina for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He then went to the University of Michigan where he received a law degree.[6]

Politics and Public Service

After law school, Moyle returned to Utah and quickly ran for County Attorney being elected in 1886.[7] He was re-elected in 1887 as County Attorney and won election to the house in the territorial legislature of 1888. He was appointed chairman of the committee on education.[8] During his tenure in the house, Moyle introduced the bill that located the Utah capitol where it is currently located today.

Moyle was the founder of the Utah Democratic Party.[1] He was the Democratic Party's candidate for governor in the 1900 and 1904 Utah elections, losing to Heber Manning Wells and John Christopher Cutler respectively[9] and ran on the Democratic and Progressive tickets in 1914 for the Senate, ceding to Reed Smoot.[10] Moyle served as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury from 1917 to 1921 in the administration of Woodrow Wilson, the first member of the LDS Church to be appointed to a subcabinet position.[11] In 1933 he was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who knew Moyle well having served together in the Wilson administration, as Commissioner of the United States Customs Service and in 1939 as a special assistant to Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau.[10]

Church service

Moyle served as a member of the High Council of the Ensign Stake in Utah for three decades.[10] From 1928 to 1933 he served as president of the Eastern States Mission of the LDS Church. This mission covered New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware the District of Columbia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Jersey.[12] Moyle created an innovative radio proselyting program, in all total overseeing 764 programs on various stations throughout the mission.[13] During his administration West Virginia and Western Maryland were separated off into the East Central States Mission.

Death

Moyle died in 1946 at the age of 87. His son Henry D. Moyle became an Apostle of the LDS Church in 1947.[14]

Notes

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  11. Winder, Michael K., Presidents and Prophets: The Story of America's Presidents and the LDS Church. (American Fork: Covenant Communications, 2007) p. 210
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  14. LDS Church Almanac

References

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