Martin Harris Pageant.
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Martin Harris Pageant.
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Martin Harris Pageant.
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Biographical History
The Mormon pageant "Martin Harris: the man who knew" is a musical play written by James S. Rhett about Martin Harris's role as a witness to the divine origin of the Book of Mormon. The play which is held annually was first produced in Clarkston, Utah in 1983. Harris was born May 18, 1783 in Easton, N.Y.; died July 10, 1875 in Clarkston, Utah. He was a New York farmer who served as scribe to Joseph Smith, founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and had a vision confirming the divine origin of the Book of Mormon the publication of which he subsequently helped finance.
In 1982, Valdo Benson, a regional representative of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, asked Rhett S. James, a teacher at the Logan LDS Institute of Religion, to write a historical musical play representing the life of Martin Harris. Martin Harris was one of the three witnesses of the gold plates from which Joseph Smith translated the Book of Mormon. Harris died on July 10, 1875 in his son's Cache Valley home in Clarkston, Utah. Benson told James that Denzel Clark, the Mayor of Clarkston, and the Clarkston citizens were building the Martin Harris Memorial Amphitheater in the small town for cultural and civic activities for communities throughout the valley in Utah and Idaho. Clark gained the support of both Governor Matheson from Utah and Governor Evans from Idaho, as well as L. Tom Perry of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and Ezra Taft Benson, president of the quorum. Both Perry and Benson were Cache Valley natives. The Martin Harris Pageant was just one of the many events that would be held at the amphitheater.
In 1982, Rhett James wrote the script and lyrics, Norma and Frank Dupree composed the music accompanying the prose in 1982. By August of 1983, the pageant was performed for its first season. The audience totalled 35,000. Copyrights for the script and music were retained by James and the Duprees. Donations from both the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and the community were used to finance the production. Rhett James's Martin Harris: The Man Who Knew was also published at this time in its script form with endnotes. The proceeds from sale of the books were donated to finance the pageant's first three productions.
Support for the production exchanged hands between LDS church sponsored regional and area events for the next few years. Concerned about the longevity of the pageant, Denzel Clark was eager to transfer responsibility for the event over to the LDS church. On May 17, 1990, Robert L. Backman, Director of the Missionary Department, assumed responsibility for the production and placed it under the direction of the department's exhibits committee.
The LDS church asked the pageant's original committee leadership to serve as the presidency. Denzel Clark became the president; Rhett James and Dwayne Huff, the pageant's director, were asked to serve as his counselors. Almost two years later, on February 21, 1992, Clark was set apart by Marlin K. Jensen, a member of the Quorum of the Seventy. His counselors were later set apart by Alexander Morrison from the Area Presidency.
Initially, the pageant was organized as a community project for Cache Valley, though members of the church were involved in its planning. Now, under the direction of the LDS church, the pageant serves as an education tool for its members. It is also used for missionary work for the LDS church.
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Religion
Book of Mormon
Mormon Church
Mormon Church
Mormonism (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints)
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Clarkson (Utah)
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Clarkson (Utah)
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