- Rey Pratt
Infobox person
name=Ray Lucero Pratt
birth_date=birth date|1878|10|11
birth_place=Salt Lake City, Utah
parents=Helaman Pratt (father), Emmeline Victoria Billingsley Pratt (mother)
death_date=dda|1931|04|14|1878|10|11Rey Lucero Pratt (
11 October 1878 –14 April 1931 ) servedThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for 23 years as president of its Mexican Mission and for six years as ageneral authority . Pratt helped establish the church inMexico and among Spanish-speaking populations in theUnited States andArgentina . He also translated LDS Church materials into Spanish, wrote magazine articles and spoke regularly at general conference.Pratt was born in
Salt Lake City ,Utah Territory , the fourth child and second son ofHelaman Pratt and Emmeline Victoria Billingsley Pratt. When Rey was nine, the Pratts moved to Mexico to help settle Colonia Dublán, a Mormon colony in the northern state ofChihuahua . Rey grew up in Mexico, learning to appreciate its history and people.Rey and Mary "May" Stark were married on
8 August 1900 in the Church'sSalt Lake Temple .Apostle
Orson F. Whitney set Pratt apart as a missionary on4 October 1906 . On1 November , Pratt arrived by train inMexico City and reported to the mission home. He served for nearly a year under President Hyrum S. Harris, during which he presided over theToluca conference for seven months. Then, on25 August 1907 , Harris announced that Pratt would replace him as President of the Mexican Mission. Harris set Pratt apart on29 September and the Pratts moved toMexico City shortly thereafter.Church membership in
Mexico more than doubled during Pratt's first six years as mission president. By 1911, over a thousand Church members lived in the Mexican Mission.However, Mexico’s political climate gradually worsened.
Porfirio Diaz , Mexico’s longtime dictator, lost control of the government and revolution ensued. Shortly after serious fighting began inMexico City in 1913, theFirst Presidency authorized the Pratts and the American missionaries to return to theUnited States . The Pratts moved toSalt Lake City in September 1913. Two years later, the First Presidency again instructed the Pratts to move, this time toManassa, Colorado , and establish missionary work amongMexicans in the United States. After five years, in November 1918, Church leaders moved the mission headquarters toEl Paso, Texas , making it closer to the center of the vast mission territory.In March 1921, Pratt reopened missionary work in Mexico with eight missionaries. In November, jurisdiction of the Juárez Stake in
Chihuahua was transferred to the Mexican Mission. This made Pratt president of all the Spanish-speaking organizations in the Church. He continued to expand the mission, opening up work in southernCalifornia in 1924 and establishing a Los Angeles branch. Pratt’s duties expanded further in January 1925, when Church leaders called him to be a President of the Seventy. He was surprised when the Brethren did not release his from his mission president duties, but he accepted both callings.In the October 1925 general conference, Church President
Heber J. Grant announced that ApostleMelvin J. Ballard and Seventy Rulon S. Wells would go with Pratt to establish the LDS Church inSouth America . Pratt’s fluent Spanish became indispensable, since neither Wells nor Ballard could speak it. The three boarded the ship Voltaire on14 November 1925 in New York City, sailing past theStatue of Liberty . The Voltaire stopped inBarbados ,Rio de Janeiro andMontevideo en route toBuenos Aires ,Argentina . The ship arrived at Buenos Aires on 6 December; the three disembarked at seven in the morning and immediately set to work.In their first week in Argentina, the missionaries baptized six people who had been awaiting their arrival. They also held their first sacrament meeting. They expected to have continued success among the German and Italian immigrants, but the work soon became much more difficult. After a few weeks of hardships, the missionaries shifted their attention to the Spanish-speaking areas of Buenos Aires. They preached mostly in those areas until their departure for the United States in July 1926, after preaching to thousands of people.
Pratt returned from South America to find Mexico caught up in another internal war, this time over the issue of
separation of church and state . The Mexican government had decided to enforce the 1917 Constitution by prohibiting foreign-born ministers from holding authority in Mexico. Despite being prohibited from acting in an official capacity, Pratt continued to attend Church meetings in Mexico.The final years of Pratt’s life were busy, and the constant traveling gradually wore him down. Just after the April 1931 General Conference, Pratt stayed in Salt Lake City to undergo a
hernia operation. While recovering in the hospital, Pratt experienced complications. His condition quickly deteriorated, and he died on14 April 1931 . [ [http://images.archives.utah.gov/data/81448/2259926/2259926_0000104.jpgState of Utah Death Certificate] ] He left behind his wife and ten living children. On17 April , hundreds of people filled theSalt Lake Assembly Hall atTemple Square for Pratt’s funeral. President Heber J. Grant and other General Authorities spoke at the service. They expressed regret that Pratt had not lived to see the Church grow large in Mexico.Rey L. Pratt was also responsible for translating many of the hymns of the church into Spanish. The only other person who did a considerable amount of this work was
Eduardo Balderas .ee also
*
Pratt-Romney family Notes
External links
* [http://jared.pratt-family.org/ Pratt Family Association:" Documents and photographs of Rey Pratt's family, particularly his parents]
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