Dan Jones' Testimony (1845) |
Welchman Dan Jones, captain
of the Mississippi river steamshipMaid of Iowa was baptized in the icy
river on January 19, 1843. When Joseph and Hyrum started for Carthage on June
24, 1844, Jones was of the men who accompanied them. When the others were asleep
on the 26th, Joseph asked Dan if he was afraid to die. Dan said, "'Has
that time come, think you? Engaged in such a cause I do not think that death
would have many terrors,' I replied. 'You will yet see Wales, and fulfill the
mission appointed you ere you die' he said." "Martyrdom"
(Jones), 101; also Comprehensive History
6:601.
Soon after the martyrdom Dan began that mission and bore the following testimony
at the April 1845 conference in Manchester, England.
Determined to bear witness | Elder Dan Jones, from Wales, rose,
under an attack of the fever and ague, and remarked that he believed it was the intention of the evil one to prevent him from speaking that evening, but he was determined to bear his testimony in spite of every opposing power. He said that be came not in the character of a delegate: be represented no conference; for if he had but baptized one, he should be able to represent three. |
Millennial
Star vol. 5 no. 11 (April 1845), 170. Delegates had been invited to discuss plans for a Joint Stock Company to aid imposverished converts. |
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His tribe | But he would speak of a nation renowned in history, one of the most ancient nations of the earth, who had never been subdued, and to whom be hoped to be instrumental in hearing the tidings of the work of God, in the last days. He enlarged on the characteristics of his people in a manner, and with an eloquence, that told how ardently he loved his native tribe and his fatherland. | |||
Search for truth | He remarked that, for many years, as a mariner, be had been in search of the principles of truthhe had sought it in almost every climeamong the red men of the woods, or the civilized denizens of the city, but be had found it not until he came in contact with the followers of the prophet of the Lord, the notorious Joseph Smith; but of that despised individual he would bear his testimony, and though he might feel more at home among a tribe of Indians, or on the deck of a ship, than upon that platform and before such an audience, yet he would not flinch from bearing a faithful testimony to the character of the servant of the Lord. | |||
With
the prophet in Carthage Effect on the people |
He had been with him in the domestic circle, he had been with him in peril and in prison, and only left him about an hour before the murderous deed of his assassination was perpetrated; and he had now come in obedience to the counsel of the martyred prophet, as a messenger to his native land, to bear testimony of the work for which his brother had died, and which he had sealed with his blood. (We would here remark that we are utterly incapable of doing anything like justice to the address of Captain Jones, for though delivered while struggling with disease, such was its effect upon ourselves, and we also believe upon others, that we ceased to write, in order to give way to the effect produced upon our feelings.) | Thomas Ward, Second Counselor in the mission presidency, was the editor of the Star. | ||
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