Joel H. Johnson

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Joel H. Johnson
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Personal details
Born (1802-03-23)March 23, 1802
Grafton, Massachusetts, United States
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Kane County, Utah Territory, United States
Resting place Johnson Cemetery
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Occupation Hymn Writer
Spouse(s) Anna Pixley
Susan Bryant
Lucinda Alzina Bascom
Janet Fife
Margaret Therekold
Parents Ezekiel Johnson
Julia Hills

Joel Hills Johnson (March 23, 1802 – September 24, 1882) was a Latter Day Saint missionary and hymn writer, most famous as the author of "High on the Mountain Top" (hymn #5 in the 1985 LDS hymnbook, English edition). Johnson was also the founder of Enoch, Utah.

Early life

Johnson was born in Grafton, Massachusetts.[1] His parents were Ezekiel Johnson and Julia Hills. When Johnson was still a child, his family moved to Vermont. Johnson eventually moved to Cincinnati and then back east to Pomfret, New York.

Latter Day Saints

Around the year 1830, Johnson sold his farm in Pomfret and moved to Amherst, Ohio.[2] It was in Amherst where Johnson was baptized a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon)on June 1, 1831.[3] Soon afterwards, he became president of the church's Amherst branch. He went on a mission to New York in 1832.

Kirtland and Ramus

In 1833, Johnson moved to Kirtland, Ohio, where he operated a saw mill. He went on another mission to both Ohio and Kentucky in 1835, and often preached and baptized in the vicinity of Kirtland.[1] Johnson was an organizer of the Kirtland Camp in 1838. He stopped at Springfield, Illinois, and did not continue to Missouri, thus avoiding the Mormon War of 1838. He organized a branch in Springfield and became the first Latter Day Saint to preach in Carthage, Illinois.[1] Johnson later had a large amount of success in baptizing families that lived along Crooked Creek. After this, Johnson directed his new converts in the forming of the town of Ramus (now Webster, Illinois).[4] The Ramus Stake was organized on July 4, 1840, with Johnson as president.[5]

In 1846, mobs forced Johnson to flee Ramus and moved to Knox County, Illinois.[3] He later joined the Saints at Winter Quarters, Nebraska.

Book of Mormon

A poem written in 1841 by Johnson is sometimes used by opponents of the authenticity of the Book of Mormon to demonstrate that Oliver Cowdery at times wavered in his testimony as one of the Three Witnesses of the Book of Mormon:[6] "... Or prove the gospel was not true / Because old Paul the Saints could kill? / Because the Jews its author slew, / and now reject their Saviour still? … / Or Book of Mormon not his word / because denied by Oliver?"[7]

Defenders of Cowdery argue that to Johnson, supporting the Book of Mormon and following the leaders of the church were one and the same, and that in 1841 Cowdery had been excommunicated from the church. They also note that the use of "denied" in the poem may mean to set aside, and not to speak against, and that this poem involves many statements that are not strictly true, such as that Paul had killed Christians. In other words, it is argued that poetry should not be taken as analytical evidence when it has not been collaborated.[3][6]

Salt Lake City

Johnson arrived in Salt Lake City on October 11, 1848. He crossed the plains in Willard Richards' company.[8] He served as a justice of the peace and as bishop of the Mill Creek Ward. Johnson built a saw mill in Mill Creek Ward from 1849 to 1851 at the mouth of Mill Creek Canyon.[9][10]

In 1849 and 1850, Johnson served in the Utah Territorial Legislature.[1]

Enoch, Utah

Johnson was the founder of Enoch, Utah. He settled there in 1851; when other settlers arrived in 1854, they built a fort which they named "Johnson's Fort".[11]

Johnson later helped settle southern Utah. In 1853, he was appointed to serve as a missionary among the Piedes of Iron County, Utah.[12]

Poetry and hymns

Johnson was a prolific poet and hymn writer. His journal contains 736 hymns.[1] Collections of his writings were published in the pamphlet "Voice from the Mountains" in 1881 and a 344 page book of poems in 1882. His most sung hymn, "High on the Mountain Top", was written on February 19, 1853.[1] The only other hymn by Johnson in the current English edition of the LDS Church hymnal is "The Glorious Gospel Light Has Shone" (no. 283).

Personal life

File:Joel H. Johnson.jpg
Johnson later in life

Johnson was a polygamist and married five women. He married Anna Pixley Johnson on November 22, 1826.[1] He married Susan Bryant on October 20, 1840. He married Lucinda Alzina Bascom, age 29 and Janet Fife, age 17, on October 25, 1845. Both Bascom and Bryant were later divorced from him. Bryant died April 7, 1896 in the Mormon colonies in Mexico and Bascom died October 5, 1885 in Provo, Utah Territory. In 1861, at age 58, he married 20-year-old Margaret Threlkeld. Johnson fathered 25 children[13] and was the brother of Benjamin F. Johnson.[14] Johnson maintained a journal in which was found the earliest source for the interpretation of "hot drinks" in the Word of Wisdom meaning coffee and tea.[15] Johnson has been included in a list of "75 significant Mormon poets."[16]

Death

Johnson died September 24, 1882 in Johnson, Utah Territory (now Kane County, Utah).[1] At Age 80.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Cornwall, J. Spencer. Stories of Our Mormon Hymns (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1975) pp. 69-71.
  2. Mormon History Gazetteer for Ohio (1830–1839)
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  4. Donald Q. Cannon, "Spokes on the Wheel: Early Latter-day Saint Settlements in Hancock County, Illinois", Ensign, February 1986.
  5. Deseret News Church Almanac', 2006 edition, p. 207.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "I Have a Question", Ensign, April 1987.
  7. Times and Seasons (July 15, 1841) 2:482.
  8. Pioneer Details
  9. Jenson, Andrew. Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia (Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1936) p. 444
  10. Tooele Transcript-Bulletin
  11. Utah History Resource Center
  12. Larson, Andrew Karl. Erastus Snow: The Life of a Missionary and Pioneer for the Early Mormon Church. (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1971) p. 251
  13. http://sonsofjoel.net/familynotes.html
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  15. The Word of Wisdom, Caffeine, and Hypocrisy
  16. 75 Significant Mormon Poets