Background
Whitney was the son of Horace K. Whitney and Helen March Kimball.
Whitney was the son of Horace K. Whitney and Helen March Kimball.
Whitney"s father, Horace, had set type for the original publication of the Deseret News and worked as a printer with the newspaper for 21 years. Whitney was a politician, journalist, poet, historian and academic. In 1878, as a young man, Whitney began a career in writing with the business office of the Deseret News, later becoming a reporter and the city editors
In 1896 and 1897, Whitney taught English and Theology at Brigham Young College in Logan, Utah.
In 1899, Whitney accepted the position of Assistant Church Historian and served in that position until he was called as an apostle. Whitney was also involved in the politics of Salt Lake City and Utah.
He served on the Salt Lake City Council in 1880, acted as City Treasurer from 1884 to 1890, and served as a State Senator in 1898, and again in 1901. Poetical s (1889-1890) 4 John West. Taylor disagreed with the Manifesto entirely.
Matthias F. Cowley felt that it should apply only to the United States.
In February of the next year, Marriner West. Merrill died, which left three vacancies in the quorum. At a general conference of the church on April 8, 1906, Whitney was called as an apostle, along with George F. Richards and David O. McKay. Whitney died in Salt Lake City after being hospitalized for influenza.
He was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.
In 1905, two members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles resigned over a dispute regarding the 1890 Manifesto, which prohibited any further plural marriages within the church.