Robert B. Thompson

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Robert Blashel Thompson (October 1, 1811August 27, 1841) was an associate of Joseph Smith, Jr., a Danite and leader in the Latter Day Saint movement, and an official historian of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

Thompson was born in Great Driffield, Yorkshire, England. He joined the Methodists at an early age and participated in preaching in Yorkshire. In 1834, Thompson emigrated to Upper Canada and settled in Toronto.[1] In May 1836, he was baptized a member of the Church of the Latter Day Saints by Parley P. Pratt, a missionary who was preaching in Toronto. On July 22, 1836, Thompson was ordained an elder in the church by John Taylor.

Thompson moved to Kirtland, Ohio, where the majority of Latter Day Saints were gathering. In June 1837, he and his new wife, Mercy R. Fielding,[2] returned to Upper Canada as missionaries for the church. They returned to Kirtland in March 1838.

In 1839, the Thompsons attempted to settle in Missouri with a large number of other Latter Day Saints. While in Missouri, Thompson was a Danite and participated in the Mormon War. He was standing next to Apostle David W. Patten when Patten was killed at the Battle of Crooked River.[3]

In March 1939, Thompson was the clerk to the disciplinary council convened by Brigham Young that excommunicated a number of prominent Latter Day Saints and Danites, including George M. Hinkle, Sampson Avard, John Corrill, Reed Peck, W.W. Phelps, Frederick G. Williams, Thomas B. Marsh, Burr Riggs, and others.[4]

At a conference of the church in May 1839, Thompson, Almon W. Babbitt and Erastus Snow were appointed to be a traveling committee that was charged with "gather[ing] up and obtain[ing] all the libelous reports and publications which had been circulated against the Church."[5]

On September 15, 1840, Thompson delivered the funeral oration at the funeral of Joseph Smith, Sr., the presiding patriarch of the church.[6] In October 1840, Thompson succeeded Elias Higbee as official Church Historian, and in November of that year, Thompson and Higbee together drafted a petition to the United States Congress for redress of the grievances of the Latter Day Saints from their experiences in Missouri.[7]

Thompson was a colonel and an aide-de-camp in the Nauvoo Legion.[8] On May 1, 1841, he became an associate editor of the Times and Seasons newspaper in Nauvoo, Illinois. Due to the unhealthy conditions Thompson and chief editor Don Carlos Smith worked under in the offices of the Times and Seasons, both men died from tuberculosis in August 1841. He was survived by his wife and one daughter.

Thompson wrote the words to a hymn called "See, the Mighty Angel Flying", which is included in the 1985 English-language LDS Church hymnal as hymn #330.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Andrew Jenson, LDS Biographical Encyclopedia 1:284.
  2. ^ Thompson and Fielding had been married in Kirtland on June 4 by Joseph Smith, Jr.
  3. ^ D. Michael Quinn (1994). Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power (Salt Lake City: Signature Books).
  4. ^ Joseph Smith (B.H. Roberts ed.) 1902. History of the Church 3:283–284.
  5. ^ Joseph Smith (B.H. Roberts ed.) 1902. History of the Church 3:345.
  6. ^ Joseph Smith (B.H. Roberts ed.) 1902. History of the Church 4:191–197.
  7. ^ Joseph Smith (B.H. Roberts ed.) 1902. History of the Church 4:237, 250–251.
  8. ^ Joseph Smith (B.H. Roberts ed.) 1902. History of the Church 4:411.