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James Strang

James J. Strang
James Strang daguerreotype (1856).jpg
Founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)
ca. June 1844 – July 9, 1856 (1856-07-09)
Predecessor Joseph Smith
Successor No successor to date
Member of the Michigan House of Representatives
In office
1853 – July 9, 1856 (1856-07-09)
Personal details
Born James Jesse Strang
(1813-03-21)March 21, 1813
Scipio, New York, United States
Died July 9, 1856(1856-07-09) (aged 43)
Voree, Wisconsin, United States
Cause of death gunshot
Resting place Burlington Cemetery
42°40′59.16″N 88°15′30.96″W / 42.6831000°N 88.2586000°W / 42.6831000; -88.2586000 (Burlington Cemetery)
Spouse(s) Mary Perce, Elvira Field, Betsy McNutt, Sarah Wright, and Phoebe Wright
Children Myraette, Mary Strang II, William, Hattie, Charles, Eva, Clement, James Jesse Strang II, Evangeline, David, Gabriel, James Strang, Eugenia
Parents Clement Strang
Abigaile James

James Jesse Strang (March 21, 1813 – July 9, 1856) was an American religious leader, politician and self-proclaimed monarch. In 1844 he founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite), a faction of the Latter Day Saint movement that he claimed to be the sole legitimate continuation of the Church of Christ founded by Joseph Smith fourteen years before. A major contender for leadership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints during the 1844 succession crisis, Strang vied with Brigham Young and Sidney Rigdon for control of the organization in Nauvoo, Illinois before his rejection there subsequently led him to start his own sect. While serving as Prophet, Seer and Revelator of his church, Strang reigned for six years as the crowned "king" of an ecclesiastical monarchy that he established on Beaver Island in the US state of Michigan. Building an organization that eventually rivaled Young's in Utah, Strang gained nearly 12,000 adherents prior to his murder in 1856, which brought down his kingdom and all but extinguished his sect.

In contrast to Joseph Smith, who used the eminently republican title of "President of the Church," Strang taught that the chief prophetic office embodied an overtly royal attribute, by which its occupant was to be not only the spiritual leader of his people, but their temporal king as well. He offered a sophisticated set of teachings that differed in many significant aspects from any other version of Mormonism, including that preached by Smith. To bolster his claims, Strang published translations of two purportedly long-lost works: the Voree Record, deciphered from three metal plates reportedly unearthed in response to a vision; and the Book of the Law of the Lord, supposedly transcribed from the Plates of Laban mentioned in the Book of Mormon. These are accepted as scripture by his followers, but not by any other Latter Day Saint church. Although his long-term doctrinal influence on the Latter Day Saint movement was minimal, several early members of Strang's organization helped to establish the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, which became (and remains) the second-largest Mormon sect. While most of Strang's followers eventually disavowed him, a small but devout remnant continues to carry on his teachings and organization today.


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