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Luke S. Johnson |
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Luke S. JohnsonLuke S. Johnson (1807-1861) (also found as Luke Johnson and Luke Samuel Johnson) was a leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and an original member of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles from 1835 to 1838. He served in the Quorum with his younger brother, Lyman E. Johnson and Orson Hyde, his brother-in-law. Luke Samuel Johnson was born November 3, 1807, in Vermont, a son of John Johnson and Elsa Jacobs. He wrote of his family in an autobiographical sketch: Johnson was an educator and a physician. He married Susan H. Poteet on November 1, 1833. This marriage produced six children. Later in life, he practiced plural marriage and had a total of fifteen children. Church Membership and ServiceLuke Johnson was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints on May 10, 1831 by Joseph Smith, Jr. By October of 1831, he had been ordained an Elder and went on a LDS mission to southern Ohio with Robert Rathburn. Later in 1831, he joined Sidney Rigdon in preaching the gospel in areas of Pennsylvania and Ohio. Their efforts brought about fifty new members into the young church, including Elder Rigdon's mother and other members of the Rigdon family. Johnson was ordained to the office of high priest by Joseph Smith, Jr. on October 25, 1831. With Seymour Brunson and Hazen Aldrich, he served as an LDS missionary in Ohio, Virginia, and Kentucky in 1832-33, baptizing more than a hundred persons on their journey. He was a member of the Kirtland LDS high council which was formed on February 17, 1843. On June 26, 1834, Johnson marched with Zion's Camp, suffering with cholera on the journey. At age 27, Johnson was chosen and ordained one of the original members of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles on February 15, 1835. Shortly after the Council was formed, the new Apostles were sent on missions. Johnson served in the Eastern United States, New York and Upper Canada. He returned to Kirtland, Ohio in late 1836. Johnson and his family traveled with Brigham Young and Wilford Woodruff to Utah, as part of the first group of 143 pioneers in July 1847. Johnson settled in St. John, Tooele County, Utah where he served as Bishop of a local LDS congregation. He died December 9, 1861 in the home of Orson Hyde. Reference
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