Fawn Mckay
Fawn Brodie McKay born on the 15th of September 1915 was a native of Ogden Utah. Fawn McCay was born Utah's Ogden in 1915, and was raised by the Mormon church's founder family. She used her creativity in writing and her extraordinary expertise in research to compose the captivating, psychohistorical biographical work of Joseph Smith. It was released in the year 45 under the title, "No Man Knows My History". It was derived from the title of a sermon that Joseph Smith delivered in 1844. In the sermon, he amazed his audience by stating: "You do not know me and you've never listened to my thoughts. Nobody knows my past. It is not possible for me to share it with you. Wrote the 29-year old Fawn at the time: Ever since the moment when he spoke, at least three-score writers have jumped on the challenge. A lot of them have denigrated him and some have deified him; a few have tried their hands at diagnostics. It's not the fact that these documents lack information, the issue is that they're in complete contradiction. It's not an easy task to put together these documents, separating first-hand accounts from copies that are third-hand and integrating Mormon narratives with non-Mormon ones into a coherent collage. The task is exciting and informative. FawnBrodie embraced this professional project with gusto and enthusiasm. Thaddeus Stewards, which was the product of her writing and research led her to become a well-known writer. "The Devil's Road" (1959) The Scourge of South. Thomas Jefferson. Richard Nixon and An Intimate Historiography (1974).





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