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Alexander Badlam

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Called by
  
Joseph Smith

Parents
  
Ezra Badlam Mary Lovis

Spouse(s)
  
Mary Ann Brannan


Called by
  
Joseph Smith

Called by
  
Brigham Young

Name
  
Alexander Badlam

Alexander Badlam Alexander Badlam FAMSF Explore the Art

Born
  
November 28, 1809 Dorchester, Massachusetts, United States (
1809-11-28
)

Resting place
  
Saint Helena Public Cemetery 38°29′33″N 122°28′36″W / 38.4926°N 122.4766°W / 38.4926; -122.4766 (Saint Helena Public Cemetery)

Died
  
November 4, 1894, San Francisco, California, United States

Alexander Badlam, Sr. (November 28, 1809 – November 30 or December 1, 1894) was an early leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and a Mormon pioneer.

Alexander Badlam Alexander Badlam Sr Biography

Badlam was born in Dorchester, Massachusetts. He was a coachmaker by trade. In 1833, Badlam married Mary Ann Brannan in York County, Maine. The couple became members of Joseph Smith's Church of Christ and moved to the Kirtland, Ohio region.

In 1834, Badlam was a member of the Zion's Camp expedition that traveled from Lake County, Ohio to Jackson County, Missouri. On February 28, 1835, Badlam became one of the inaugural members of the First Quorum of the Seventy. In 1835, he settled in Missouri and became a member of the church's Missouri high council.

In 1839, after the "extermination order" was issued, Badlam fled Missouri with the other Latter Day Saints was issued and settled in Nauvoo, Illinois. Badlam was admitted as a member of the Council of Fifty on March 11, 1844, but was dropped from the council on February 4, 1845.

In 1847 and 1848, Badlam presided over the branch of the church in Boston, Massachusetts. In 1849, he traveled from Boston by ship to Sacramento, California to participate in the California Gold Rush. In 1850, he returned to Boston and he and his family traveled by ship to Utah Territory via California as Mormon pioneers. After arriving in Utah, Badlam was readmitted to the Council of Fifty.

By 1855, Badlam had abandoned The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and by 1860 he had moved back to Sacramento. By 1880, he was living in San Francisco, where he died.

Badlam was the brother-in-law to Samuel Brannan, California's first millionaire.

References

Alexander Badlam Wikipedia