Alpheus Cutler , founder and first president of the Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite) Alpheus Cutler was a
Latter Day Saint leader and contemporary of
Joseph Smith who converted to Smith's
Church of Christ in January 1833, being baptized in western
New York by
David W. Patten. Cutler attended Smith's
School of the Prophets in
Kirtland, Ohio, and assisted in the construction of the
Kirtland Temple there. In 1838, during the dedication of cornerstones for the (never-built)
Far West Temple, Cutler was named by Smith as "chief architect and master workman of all God's holy houses". Cutler was later appointed a member of the
Nauvoo Temple construction committee, after enduring the
expulsion of the Latter Day Saints from
Missouri. In
Nauvoo, he served on the High Council, and was named to Smith's Council of Fifty. Prior to Smith's murder in 1844, Cutler was called on a mission to the "
Lamanites" (as
Native Americans were often called by the Saints). However, he had not yet departed when Smith was
assassinated on June 27 at the
jail in Carthage, Illinois. Smith's death produced a profound
leadership crisis in his movement, with members torn between competing claimants for Smith's prophetic mantle. These included Smith's
Quorum of the Twelve, led by
Brigham Young;
James Strang, a newly baptized convert; and
Sidney Rigdon, who had served as Smith's First Counselor in the
First Presidency. At first, Cutler threw in his lot with the Twelve. He continued to work on the Nauvoo Temple, where he was allegedly "
sealed" to his spouse Lois on February 14, 1846, having received his endowment on October 12, 1843, prior to Smith's death.
LDS Church records indicate that Cutler was sealed to six other women during this timeframe, but members of his church adamantly deny this or any assertion that Cutler—or Smith, for that matter—approved of or practiced
plural marriage. Cutler would later insist that the temple had not been finished by the "sufficient time" given in the revelation authorizing its construction; this proved pivotal for his own claims to legitimacy when he chose to start his own church organization.
Breaking with the Twelve When Brigham Young decided to commence the Saints' trek to the
Salt Lake Valley, he appointed Cutler as Captain of "Emigrating Company No. 3," one of twenty-five such travelling units into which the Mormon pioneers were organized. Cutler established
Cutler's Park,
Nebraska in 1846, and was appointed presiding member of the municipal High Council on August 9 of that year. Barely one month later, he was asked to find a new location for a settlement; on September 11, he selected the site that would become
Winter Quarters. Sometime prior to 1849, Cutler made a decision to withdraw from the main church body under the Twelve, and to go his own way. In the fall of 1847, Young had sanctioned his request to conduct the mission work among the Indians to which Joseph Smith had assigned him, and Cutler had commenced his efforts with nearby tribes. All seemed well at first. However, the arrival of
apostle Orson Hyde at nearby
Kanesville, Iowa in early 1848 changed the situation. Cutler became the subject of lurid rumors concerning his Indian mission, with spurious reports indicating that he had been elected as the "Generalissimo" of a union of "thirty-seven nations". Further tales of alleged disloyalty to the Twelve by Cutler among the "Lamanites" fueled the fire; a visit by
Ezra T. Benson,
George A. Smith and others to Cutler's mission only partially calmed the situation. Although Young wrote to Cutler, offering him aid to move west, a house in
Salt Lake City and a warm welcome once he arrived, the "Old Fox" (as Cutler was affectionately called) refused to go. Hyde ultimately became convinced that Cutler considered himself to be a greater authority than the council over which he (Hyde) presided, and ordered his mission suspended. Insisting that Cutler had become an enemy to Young's organization, the Kanesville High Council
excommunicated him on April 20, 1851. Young labored to bring Cutler back into the fold, writing of an ardent desire to see his old friend and promising him protection against any enemies he might have in the church. Even as late as 1856, long after Cutler had founded his own organization, Young indicated to LDS Church
general authorities that he would forgive everything if Cutler would only come to
Utah.
Iowa and Minnesota But Cutler had no intention of going to Utah. Having broken with Young's organization, he set about creating his own. Having been forced to abandon his mission in 1851 under pressure from local
Indian Agents and government authorities, Cutler and his followers relocated to
Manti, Iowa, in the southwestern part of that state. On September 19, 1853, Cutler organized
The Church of Jesus Christ, claiming that he had seen a special celestial sign (two crescent-moons with their backs together) which Joseph Smith had allegedly told him to wait for before commencing this "reorganization" of the church. From the beginning, Cutler claimed that Smith's church had been "rejected" by God for its alleged "trangrassions", and that only he possessed the power to reorganize it. Thus, claimed Cutler, his new organization was the sole legitimate continuance of Smith's work. According to Cutler, the misdeed that brought about the rejection of Smith's church was its failure to complete the Nauvoo Temple within the "sufficient time" mentioned in
Doctrine and Covenants 124:31-32; Smith's church had accordingly ceased to exist as a legitimate entity. This did not mean that Smith's restored priesthood had been withdrawn from the earth, said Cutler, for he viewed the church and the priesthood as two separate things. While the former had been rejected, said he, the latter had not, and now remained solely with him as the seventh and final member of a furtive "Quorum of Seven" appointed by Smith to carry on his authority independently of the rejected church. All previous members of this quorum had died or apostatized, said Cutler; hence, he and he alone possessed power to "reorganize" Smith's church. While in Manti, the Cutlerite church attained its highest membership figure: 183 persons. The church endeavored to establish a United Order in Manti, but this attempt failed. Furthermore, Manti was being visited during this period by missionaries from the
Reorganized Church, a rival group that accepted the leadership of Smith's eldest son,
Joseph Smith III. Many Cutlerites chose to accept "young Joseph", and joined his organization; among them was Cutler's son, Thaddeus. On August 10, 1864, shortly after Cutler's death, those members of his church who had remained loyal to him relocated to
Clitherall and
Freedhem, Minnesota, in response to an alleged vision. RLDS Church evangelists followed the Cutlerites to their new home and culled many more from their ranks, ultimately leaving Cutler's church with a mere three elders and a few members. The remaining Cutlerites refused to give up, however, constructing a new church building in Clitherall and establishing a church corporation in 1912 to finally effect the ideals of Joseph Smith's
United Order.
Moving to Independence and recent history . The Cutlerite church porch is barely visible to the right of their church sign. In 1928, a portion of the Cutlerite remnant moved to Independence, where they built their present headquarters close to the
Temple Lot and were gradually joined by nearly all of the other members. The Cutlerite settlement in Clitherall was ultimately abandoned, though the meetinghouse and some of the homes remain church property to this day. Schisms rent the diminutive group in 1953 and 1980; the former began as a dispute over succession in the presidency following the death of
Emery Fletcher in 1953. The Minnesota congregation did not agree with the subsequent succession of
Erle Whiting to the office of Church President, and selected
Clyde Fletcher as their leader, instead. Fletcher's organization, called the
True Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite), remained identical to its Independence counterpart in all respects except for its leadership and ceased to exist upon Fletcher's death in 1969, which healed the schism. The 1980 schism came about when the church rejected the claims of former member
Eugene O. Walton, who claimed to be "The
One Mighty and Strong" prophesied by Joseph Smith. Walton left that year and founded the
Restored Church of Jesus Christ, which differs substantially with its parent organization on several points of doctrine. The Cutlerites do not conduct missionary work or actively solicit converts, because they believe that God rejected the "
Gentiles" following the death of Joseph Smith, and thus there can be no more active missionary work among them (as is done in the LDS Church and other Latter Day Saint churches). Membership was listed at 22 in 1957, and has declined further since then. ==Doctrines==