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Frederick G. Williams

Frederick G. Williams
Frederick G. Williams.jpg
Second Counselor in First Presidency
Church of the Latter Day Saints
February 18, 1833 (1833-02-18) – November 7, 1837 (1837-11-07)
Predecessor Sidney Rigdon
Successor Hyrum Smith
End reason Removed from position by vote of the church
Personal details
Born Frederick Granger Williams
(1787-10-28)October 28, 1787
Suffield, Connecticut, United States
Died October 10, 1842(1842-10-10) (aged 54)
Quincy, Illinois, United States
Resting place Early Quincy Cemetery
(now Madison Park)
39°55′52″N 91°22′34″W / 39.931°N 91.3761°W / 39.931; -91.3761 (Early Quincy Cemetery)
Spouse(s) Rebecca Swain
Parents William W. Williams
Ruth Granger

Frederick Granger Williams (October 28, 1787 – October 10, 1842) was an early leader of the Latter Day Saint movement, serving in the First Presidency of the Church of the Latter Day Saints from 1833 to 1837.

Williams was born at Suffield, Connecticut, to William Wheeler Williams and Ruth Granger. He married Rebecca Swain in December 1815. By 1828 he was living in Chardon, Ohio, and he moved to Kirtland in 1830. While in Ohio, he associated himself with Sidney Rigdon and the Disciples of Christ. When Oliver Cowdery and other early Latter Day Saints were traveling through Kirtland, they taught and baptized many in Rigdon’s congregation, including Williams.

On July 20, 1832, Williams was appointed scribe to Joseph Smith and joined the church’s leading council the next year. He was a member of the committee appointed to publish the Doctrine and Covenants, a portion of the church’s canon, as well as the church’s first hymnal, compiled by Smith's wife, Emma, under the auspices of F.G. Williams & Co. in 1835.

In 1837, Williams was elected a justice of the peace in Kirtland, appointed an officer in the Kirtland Safety Society, released from the First Presidency, and moved to Far West, Caldwell, County, Missouri. Although there is no record of an excommunication, Williams was rebaptized in August 1838. He was excommunicated in March 1839 while Joseph Smith was in Liberty Jail, but was restored to fellowship at a church conference presided over by Smith in April 1840. Williams died at Quincy, Illinois.


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