Romney's Family Tree: Plenty of ****ing Going On Back Then

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Polygamy Prominent in GOP Presidential Hopeful Mitt Romney's Family Tree
Saturday, February 24, 2007

SALT LAKE CITY - While Mitt Romney condemns polygamy and its prior
practice by his Mormon church, the Republican presidential candidate's
great-grandfather had five wives and at least one of his great-great
grandfathers had 12.

Polygamy was not just a historical footnote, but a prominent element in the
family tree of the former Massachusetts governor now seeking to become the
first Mormon president.

Romney's great-grandfather, Miles Park Romney, married his fifth wife in
1897. That was more than six years after Mormon leaders banned polygamy and
more than three decades after a federal law barred the practice.

Romney's great-grandmother, Hannah Hood Hill, was the daughter of
polygamists. She wrote vividly in her autobiography about how she "used to
walk the floor and shed tears of sorrow" over her own husband's multiple
marriages.

Romney's great-great grandfather, Parley Pratt, an apostle in the church,
had 12 wives. In an 1852 sermon, Parley Pratt's brother and fellow apostle,
Orson Pratt, became the first church official to publicly proclaim and
defend polygamy as a direct revelation from God.

Romney's father, former Michigan Gov. George Romney, was born in Chihuahua,
Mexico, where Mormons fled in the 1800s to escape religious persecution and
U.S. laws forbidding polygamy. He and his family did not return to the
United States until 1912, more than two decades after the church issued "The
Manifesto" banning polygamy.

"When you read the family's history, you realize how important polygamy was
to them," said Todd Compton, a Mormon and independent historian who wrote a
book about the polygamous life of the church's founder, Joseph Smith. "They
left America and started again as pioneers, after they had done it over and
over again previously."

B. Carmon Hardy, a polygamy expert and retired history professor at
California State University-Fullerton, said polygamy was "a very important
part of Miles Park Romney's family."

Hardy added: "Now, very gradually, as you moved farther away from it, it
became less a part of it. But during the time of Miles Park Romney, it was
an essential principle of the Romney family life."

Other Mormons have run for the White House, including Romney's father in
1968 and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, in 2000. But Mitt Romney's stature as a
leading 2008 contender has renewed questions about his faith and its
doctrines.

At the same time, polygamy remains a part of current events.

HBO is airing a television series, "Big Love," that features a man in Utah -
where the Mormon church is based - with three wives. Self-proclaimed "Mormon
fundamentalist" Warren Jeffs, formerly on the FBI's 10 most wanted list,
faces charges for facilitating polygamy among his breakaway church's 10,000
members in Utah and Arizona.

Romney has joked about polygamy, saying in various settings that to him,
"marriage is between a man and a woman ... and a woman and a woman." But in
serious moments he has called the practice "bizarre" and noted his church
excommunicates those who engage in it.

An introductory film played at his fundraisers and campaign appearances
features his wife, Ann, talking about their 37-year marriage. Romney himself
notes they started as high school sweethearts.

This month, Ann Romney tried a different tack, taking a lighthearted jab at
her husband's main Republican competitors, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and
former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, as she introduced Romney at a
Missouri GOP dinner.

The biggest difference between her husband and the other candidates, Ann
Romney said, is that "he's had only one wife."

McCain has been married twice; Giuliani three times.

The Romney campaign had no comment for this story.

Joseph Smith, who founded the Mormon church in 1830, quietly introduced
polygamy. He believed it had roots in the Old Testament and was necessary to
reach the highest salvation in heaven. Smith is believed to have had 33
wives.

Brigham Young expanded the practice after the church's migration from the
Midwest to Utah, which began in 1846. He is said to have had 55 wives.
Historical texts show Young also asked Orson Pratt to publicly proclaim the
church's belief in polygamy in 1852.

In 1862, while Utah was a territory, President Abraham Lincoln signed the
Morrill Anti-Bigamy Act, banning plural marriage. In 1882, Congress also
passed the Edmunds Act, an anti-polygamy law. That was followed in 1887 by
the Edmunds-Tucker Act, which disincorporated the church and threatened to
seize its nonreligious real estate as part of the crackdown on polygamy.

In 1890, Mormon President Wilford Woodruff issued "The Manifesto," in which
he declared the church no longer taught or permitted plural marriages.

Nonetheless, the law of polygamy - Smith's revelation that God authorized
polygamy - remains in Article 132 of the church's Doctrine and Covenants. In
addition, Mormon widowers who remarry today believe they will live in
eternity with their multiple wives.

Mormon genealogical records, among the most detailed and complete of any
religion, show that two of Mitt Romney's great-great grandfathers, Miles
Romney and Parley Pratt, had 12 wives each.

Compton, the polygamy scholar, disputes that. He believes Miles Romney only
had one wife because the records do not show the dates for his other 11
marriages or any offspring from them.

Miles Romney and his one clearly documented wife, Elizabeth Gaskell, had 10
children. Among them was Miles Park Romney, one of Mitt Romney's
great-grandfathers.

Miles Park Romney had five wives. With his first wife, Hannah Hood Hill, he
had 11 children. Among them was Gaskell Romney, Mitt Romney's paternal
grandfather.

Hannah Hood Hill's autobiography offers an eyewitness account of the Romney
family's polygamous past. Hardy, the Cal-State historian, found it amid
research for his upcoming book, "Doing the Works of Abraham: Mormon
Polygamy."

Hood Hill wrote of Miles Park Romney: "I felt that was more than I could
endure, to have him divide his time and affections from me. I used to walk
the floor and shed tears of sorrow. If anything will make a woman's heart
ache, it is for her husband to take another wife. ... But I put my trust in
my heavenly father, and prayed and pleaded with him to give me strength to
bear this great trial."

Miles Park Romney's final marriage, to Emily Eyring Smith, came in 1897,
more than six years after "The Manifesto."

Gaskell Romney, Mitt Romney's grandfather, was not a polygamist. He married
Anna Amelia Pratt, the daughter of polygamists and the granddaughter of
Parley Pratt, the apostle with 12 wives. Their marriage took place Feb. 20,
1895, in Dublan, Mexico.

Gaskell Romney had moved to Mexico with his parents in 1884 amid the
proliferation of U.S. laws prohibiting "unlawful cohabitation." Anna Pratt
was born in Utah, but had emigrated to Mexico and lived in one of nine
Mormon colonies established over the border.

Gaskell Romney and Anna Pratt had seven children, including George Wilcken
Romney, the former Michigan governor. He lived with his parents in Mexico
until 1912, when the family returned to the United States.

George Romney married Lenore LaFount, who does not appear to have polygamy
in her family tree. The couple, now deceased, had four children, including
Mitt Romney.
 
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