Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Peter Whitmer Sr. (April 14, 1773 – August 12, 1854) was an early member of the Latter Day Saint movement, and father of the movement's second founding family. Whitmer was born in Pennsylvania and married Mary Elsa Musselman.

  2. Peter Whitmer Sr. (17731854) Peter Whitmer Sr. was born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He and his wife, Mary Musselman, moved to Fayette, New York, by 1809. In 1829, the Whitmer family boarded Joseph Smith, Emma Hale Smith, and Oliver Cowdery during the Book of Mormon translation.

  3. In 1809 the Peter Whitmer family settled in the township of Fayette, New York. Peter not only established a prosperous farm in Fayette, he gave civic service as an overseer of district highways and as a school trustee. Among his peers, Peter was known as a hard-working, God-fearing man.

  4. Apr 27, 2022 · Peter Whitmer, Sr. (1773–1854) was an early member of the Latter Day Saint movement, and father of the movement's second founding family. Peter Whitmer, Sr. was born April 14, 1773 in Pennsylvania and married Mary Elsa Musselman.

    • Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
    • Richmond, Ray, Missouri, United States
    • April 14, 1773
  5. Whitmer, Peter, Sr. Biography. 14 Apr. 1773. –13 Aug. 1854. 2. Farmer. 3. Born at Harrisburg, Dauphin Co., Pennsylvania. 4. Son of Peter Whitmer and likely Maria Salome. 5. Member of Presbyterian church. 6. Married Mary Musselman, before 1798, in Pennsylvania. 7. Lived in Lebanon Township, Dauphin Co., by 1800. 8. Moved to Fayette, Seneca Co.,

  6. When Peter Whitmer Sr. was born on 14 April 1773, in Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, United States, his father, Christian Witmer, was 26 and his mother, Elizabeth Barbara Ebersohl, was 24. He married Mary Elsa Musselman in 1797, in Pennsylvania, United States.

  7. People also ask

  8. So Joseph, Hyrum, and Samuel Smith, Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, and Peter Whitmer Jr. became the first official members of the Church. All these young men had been baptized and had seen the gold plates. Four important events in Church history happened at or near the Whitmer’s log home: