Fawn Mckay
Fawn McCay Brodie was birthplace at Ogden Utah September 15, 1915. Fawn, a member of the Mormon Church's oldest family, merged her writing expertise and impressive research skills into a brilliant biography on Joseph Smith. No Man Knew My History appeared in 1945. This title is derived from a funeral sermon delivered by the founder of the Church of Latter-Day Saints in 1844. He shocked the congregation with his words: You don't know me you never knew my heart. Nobody knows my story. I'm not able to tell my story. I wrote the 29-year-old Fawn: Since this moment of honesty, at least three-score writers have picked up the battle. Some have deified and abused him, while others attempt to identify the cause. The problem isn't that there aren't enough documents but rather they are wildly divergent. The task of assembling these papers--of sorting first-hand information from a third-party copycatting of Mormon and non-Mormon accounts into a mosaic that makes credible the history. is exciting and enlightening. FawnBrodie was a dedicated devotee to her career path. Thaddeus S. Stevens became immortalized through her works and the fruit of her study. "The Devil's Road" (1959) The Southern Scourge. Thomas Jefferson. A personal history of Richard Nixon (1974) as and posthumously Richard Nixon.





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