Fawn Mckay

Fawn Brodie McKay born September 15, 1915 was raised in Ogden Utah. She was a member of the Mormon Church's very first family, Fawn McKay was able to direct her innovative writing talents as well as her remarkable researching skills in the creation of an amazing psycho-historical account of Joseph Smith, published in 1945. The book was titled The Only Man is able to know My History. The title comes from the funeral sermon of Joseph Smith, the creator of the Church of Latter-Day Saints. The preacher shocked the audience when he said declaring: "You don't even know my name. You have never known my feelings." Nobody knows my story. I cannot tell it. Fawn wrote the 29-year-old Fawn. Since then there have been at least three writers who have taken on the challenge. They do not have a lack of documents, they just contradict each other. The process of collating the documents, of separating firsthand accounts from third-hand plagiarism of fitting Mormon as well as non-Mormon stories to create a picture that is plausible history. This is exciting as well as informative. FawnBrodie was a dedicated devotee to her career path. The results of her study and writing made her immortalized with world-wide fame: Thaddeus Stevens. Scourge of the South (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon and An Intimate historical history (1974).

Zendaya Fawn Fawn Fawn Alison

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