Fawn Mckay
Fawn Brodie McKay was born on September 15, 1915 was a native of Ogden Utah. Fawn McCay was born Ogden Utah in 1915 and raised by the Mormon church's founder family. She used her creativity in writing and her extraordinary expertise in research to compose an amazing, psychohistorical biographical work of Joseph Smith. It was published in the year 45 with the name, "No Man Knows My History". This title was inspired by the funeral sermon of Joseph Smith who was the creator of the Church of Latter-Day Saints. His audience was shocked by his saying: "You don't even know my name. There is no way to know the depths of my soul." Nobody knows my story. It's impossible for me to reveal it. Fawn (29 year old) wrote that she has been honest since the moment she made her statement, three-hundred writers have risen to the event. The documents do not lack, they just contradict each with respect to each other. Compiling these documents - - sifting through first-hand and third-hand sources, and integrating the Mormons' stories to those of those of non-Mormons into a true history - is challenging. It is fascinating and informative. Fawn brodie was professionally dedicated to the task. Thaddeus S. Stevens became immortalized through her works and the fruit of her research. "The Devil's Drive" (1959) The Southern Scourge. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon and An Intimate Historical History (1974).
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