Emery Fletcher


Emery George Fletcher was a Latter Day Saint leader who served as the fourth president of The Church of Jesus Christ succeeding Isaac Whiting in that office after Whiting's death in 1922. During his tenure, the Cutlerites fulfilled a long-cherished dream of their founder, Alpheus Cutler, by relocating their church headquarters from Clitherall, Minnesota to Independence, Missouri, within sight of the Temple Lot. This move had the unintended consequence, however, of commencing a division between the Minnesota and Missouri branches of the church, which led to a short-lived schism after Fletcher's death.

Early years

Fletcher was born in Clitherall, Minnesota on 22 July 1868. He married Ethel Florence Minton in Fergus Falls, and had four children with her. Following her death in 1908, he subsequently married Emily Augusta Whiting on 18 April 1915 in Clitherall, but this marriage produced no children.

Moving to Zion

Prior to 1920, there had only been one Cutlerite congregation, in Clitherall. However, during the early 1920s, a majority of this congregation elected to relocate to Independence, Missouri near the Temple Lot, where they purchased land and erected a building which became their new church headquarters.
Independence was an urban environment, in sharp contrast to rural Clitherall. According to Rupert Fletcher, president of the Cutlerite church from 1958 to 1974 and author of Alpheus Cutler and The Church of Jesus Christ, the schism that would lead to the founding of the so-called True Church of Jesus Christ after Emery's death was precipitated by what Rupert called "the lack of communication and a wide difference in environment." Whereas the Minnesota congregation were primarily "members of a rural society, engaged in agrarian pursuits," the Missouri members lived and worked "in an urban community." "The problems and needs of each have little in common with the other", wrote he, and this often "caused disunity." However, following the death of "True Church" founder Clyde Fletcher, this schism was rapidly healed, and the Cutlerite people reunited around the leadership of then-president Rupert Fletcher.
Fletcher died on 21 July 1953, one day before what would have been his eighty-fifth birthday. He is buried in Clitherall with several other early Cutlerite pioneers in the Mt. Pleasant Cemetery.

Children

All of Emery Fletcher's children were by his first wife, Ethel Minton: