Source:Brannan, Samuel. Scoundrel's Tale : The Samuel Brannan Papers

Watchers
Source Scoundrel's Tale: The Samuel Brannan Papers
Author Brannan, Samuel
Bagley, Will
Coverage
Place United States
Colorado, United States
Wyoming, United States
California, United States
Oregon, United States
New Mexico, United States
Nevada, United States
Utah, United States
Washington, United States
Arizona, United States
Idaho, United States
Montana, United States
Year range 1800 - 1899
Surname Brannan
Subject Church records
Religion Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication information
Type Book
Publisher Arthur H. Clark Co.
Date issued c1999
Place issued Spokane, Washington
Citation
Brannan, Samuel, and Will Bagley. Scoundrel's Tale: The Samuel Brannan Papers. (Spokane, Washington: Arthur H. Clark Co., c1999).
Repositories
Family History Libraryhttp://www.familysearch.org/eng/library/fhlcatal..Other

Subject Summary

Through letters and other documents by Samuel Brannan and his contemporaries, Will Bagley offers the first honest and accurate portrait of one of the most colorful and important figures in California and Mormon history. An early convert to Mormonism, a protege of Joseph Smith, and an early leader of the Mormon Church in New York, Brannan led eastern church members to Yerba Buena (San Francisco) aboard the ship Brooklyn in 1846. They were the first group of American emigrants to reach California by sea. Brannan's dreams of empire, nurtured in contacts with national Democratic leaders, were undercut by the United States conquest of California and Mormon settlement in Utah, but the discovery of gold in 1848, which he played a key role in publicizing, soon made him rich supplying the miners. For a while he was reputedly the richest man, and certainly one of the most powerful, in California. Having broken with Brigham Young and the Mormans, Brannan pursued other interests, from mines and railroads to vineyards and a recreational spa, from San Francisco's Vigilance Committee to filibustering in Hawaii and Mexico. Drink, womanizing, divorce, and bad investments brought him down. He died having spent his last impoverished years pursuing another dream of empire, involving mining and colonization in Sonora.

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