Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay's birthplace was Ogden Utah on September 15 1915. Fawn, a member of the Mormon church's most prestigious family, merged her writing expertise and impressive research skills to create a stunning biography of Joseph Smith. No Man knew My History appeared in 1945. The name was taken from the title of a sermon given by Joseph Smith in 1844, when he amazed his audience by stating: "You don't know me, and you have never heard my heart. My life story isn't known to any one. I don't know. Fawn an older woman, aged 29 said: "Since that moment of honesty at least three scores writers have risen to the challenge." Some have deified and abused his character, whereas others have tried to pinpoint the issue. The problem isn't because there's not enough evidence but rather they are wildly divergent. The task is to sort out personal testimony from third party fraud and then blending Mormon and non-Mormon narratives into a coherent historical facts. This is exciting and it's enlightening. Fawn Brodie's career was devoted to this aim. Thaddeus S. Stevens is immortalized in her work and the fruits of her studies. The Devil's Drive (1959) The Slaughter of the South. The Story of Sir Richard Burton (1967) Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon, An Intimate historiography (1974) The posthumous.





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