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  1. John Cook Bennett (August 4, 1804 – August 5, 1867) was an American physician and briefly a ranking and influential leader of the Latter Day Saint movement, who acted as mayor of Nauvoo, Illinois, and Major-General of the Nauvoo Legion in the early 1840s.

  2. Sep 2, 2023 · John Cook Bennett Betrays Joseph Smith and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. After Bennett left Nauvoo in May 1842, he claimed he had been the target of an attempted assassination by Nauvoo Danites, who were disguised in drag.

  3. John C. Bennett was born in Fairhaven, Massachusetts. He married Mary A. Barker in 1826 and moved to Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1840, where he was baptized into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He helped draft and secure the Nauvoo city charter that same year.

  4. What did John C. Bennett see in the early Church? A bunch of inexperienced visionaries, some of whom were ripe for sexual experimentation. A naive and newly-formed community that didn't yet have the sort of integrated social infrastructure that would normally flag someone like Bennett as a predatory adventurer far earlier in his career.

  5. May 2, 1995 · The Rev. John C. Bennett, a theologian whose views on religion, politics and social policy influenced American thinking for decades, died on Thursday at a retirement community in Claremont,...

  6. John Cook Bennett | Doctrine and Covenants Central. Image Credit: Church History Library. Back to People of the D&C. D&C 124:16-17. By Susan Easton Black. John was tutored in the practice of medicine by his uncle Dr. Samuel Hildreth, a physician in Marietta, Ohio.

  7. Jan 6, 2024 · January 5, 2024. Download MP3. Dive into the captivating saga of John C. Bennett, an enigmatic figure woven into the intricate tapestry of early Mormonism.

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