From Deseret News archives:
Young's will is on the block
Alderfer Auction Co. of Hatfield, Pa., will auction what is believed to be Young's original last will via phone, live, absentee and eBay bidding on June 8. Bids, which start at $25,000, may top $60,000.
"I would be very anxious to see it," Brigham Young University history professor Ronald Walker said. "Most historians of 19th-century Utah would see this as an important piece of the Brigham Young puzzle. It would be a very significant find because it is historically important and biographically important."
Dated Nov. 14, 1873, the document details monetary allotments left among 18 of Young's wives and 47 children when he died on Aug. 29, 1877, at age 76. The 12-page manuscript is signed by Young 12 times and initialed by him nine times. Notable Latter-day Saint figures, such as Joseph F. Smith, also signed the document as witnesses.
"That's more than almost any Brigham Young document ever sold," Bench said about the last will and testament. "It's a very unusual document, and this kind of thing doesn't turn up very often."
The auction company acquired the document through a northeast Pennsylvania estate, near the company's location. Alderfer Fine Arts auctioneer Brent Souder said the estate wished to be anonymous, so background is not known on how the last will and testament was obtained.
Bench said the document was probably acquired through Thomas L. Kane, a non-Mormon former Army colonel who befriended the Mormons and was good friends with Young. Some of Kane's papers, which BYU owns, included an early draft of Young's will that was canceled in 1873.
Walker, a scholar with the Joseph Fielding Smith Institute, said the document itself prompted historical controversy.
"When he died, there was a long, extended lawsuit over the will, and it was challenged by some of the children in the family who felt that they had been overlooked," he said. There also was confusion over what belongings were church property and what belongings were personal property.
Comments
- Small plane crashes near Lehi 3:37 p.m.
- Increase anti-tobacco campaigns? 3:25 p.m.
- 4th Redskins starting RB of season 3:23 p.m.
- 'Bama wins $32M bet on Saban 3:22 p.m.
- Texas preps strike Nike deal 3:21 p.m.
- IOC withholds Jones' 100-meter gold 3:18 p.m.
- Texas' Brown gets new $5 million deal 3:16 p.m.
- Liukin saving college gymnastics 3:15 p.m.
- Pettitte, Yankees agree 3:14 p.m.
- Stocks ended higher 2:59 p.m.
- Hot Rod behind mic for Lakers
- Cougars use depth to beat ASU
- Max Hall wants to look ahead
- Non-BCS schools not given fair shot
- Snow brings big chill
- Panel passes BCS playoff bill
- Jazz go up against 'the best'
- Many seek to wipe clean misdeeds
- Haws playing like a veteran
- Doctor calls Mitchell 'naive,' 'inept'
- Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
287 - Letters: Global warming a lie
225 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
206 - BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall
176 - Cougars going back to Vegas
150 - Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil
145 - Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax
132 - George lost in rivalry hatefest
121 - Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
100 - Revive full food tax?
98
My wife Lisa and I would prefer never to argue. But that's not going to...
For the latest news in the health care debate and how it affects you...
Being classless would be to press the entire game with a huge lead and...
Why don't you tell us all about Obama's illustrative background and...
On the Utah Flash Owners Blog, Anderson says, "The economy has made things...
This measure will stimulate the economy. A number of studies have shown that...
Dear Intellectuals? You are the main probelm with this country. You sit and...
Always so amusing to watch people comment on things they claim to hate, that...
I really hope someone asked her what she thinks of the Mormons.
What are BOWL Games for??? They haven't ALWAYS been about determining a...
Haws has been inconsistent and has shown himself to be every bit as selfish...
You said it yourself. "He is average to an above average coach". NBA...



You can be the first to comment on this story.