Autobiography of Orson
Hyde to 1842. Orphaned at seven in Connecticut. Makes his way to the Western
Reserve (Ohio), where he joins Sidney Rigdon's Campbellite congregation
in Kirtland §. Under Sidney's tutelage, he studies
English and religion, is ordained an elder, and proselytes for the Campbellites.
Converts to Mormonism, 1831 §; numerous missions detailed.
Zion's Camp briefly mentioned §. Ordained an apostle
and with the Twelves takes another mission to the East §.
Details of 1836 debate with Presbyterian minister in Scarborough §.
Briefly mentions three-year mission to Jerusalem. |
This sketch is part
of the series, "History of Brigham Young," published in the Millennial
Star, 18631865. It was originally published in the Deseret
News in 1858. |
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HISTORY OF ORSON
HYDE |
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MS 26, no. 47 (Nov. 19, 1864): 742744 // DN, May 5, 1858. Source
Bracketed numbers refer to MS page numbers. |
Birth
1805
Mother dies 1812
11 children |
¶ |
I, Orson
Hyde, son of Nathan Hyde and Sally Thorpe, was born in Oxford, New Haven
County and State of Connecticut, January 8, 1805. At the age of seven years,
my mother, a pious and godly woman, according to the light that then was,
and member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, died soon after being delivered
of a son, named Ami. Having given birth to eight sons and three daughters
in the following order, according to my best recollection: Abijah, Harry,
Laura, Nathan, Sally, Asahel, Horatio, Maria, Charles, Orson and Ami. |
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Father
Shoemaker
War of 1812
Drowns |
¶ |
My father, a boot and shoemaker by
trade, was a very talented man; quick, athletic, and naturally witty and
cheerful. He was kind and affectionate, except when under the influence
of strong drink (a habit to which he was somewhat addicted). After the death
of my mother, my father enlisted into the army of the United States, and
was in the campaign in Canada, under General Brown,was in most of
the battles fought there, several times slightly wounded,was on the
frontier along the line, and etc., in the war with Britain in 1812 and 1813.
Some four or five years after, in attempting to swim a river in Derby, Connecticut,
he was taken with the cramp and drowned. |
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Family
splits up |
¶ |
After the death of my mother, the
family was scattered abroad, and took their chances in life under no special
protector or guide, save that of a kind Providence who ever watches, with
care, over the lonely orphan and hears the plaintive cry of the young sparrows,
bereft of their parent mother. |
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Raised
by Nathan Wheeler until 18 years old |
¶ |
At this early age, I was placed in
the care of a gentleman by the name of Nathan Wheeler, or rather, fell into
his hands, residing in Derby in the same county. This was a very good family,
but quite penurious. With Mr. Wheeler I continued until I was eighteen years
of age, and would have continued longer; but from the consideration that
suitable encouragement was not offered to me for education, and etc., I
concluded that my services from seven to eighteen years of age, would abundantly
repay Mr. Wheeler for his care [745] and expense in rearing me up to that
time. |
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Western
Reserve
14 years old
600 miles |
¶ |
In the meantime Mr. Wheeler removed
and came to the Western Reserve in Ohio, having failed in business in Derby.
He first visited the Western Reserve by himself, purchased a farm in Kirtland,
and sent for me and his nephew, Nathan Wooster, to come out the next spring.
Accordingly, Mr. Wooster and myself started early the next season (I then
being fourteen years of age). This was a hard trip for a youngster to perform
on foot, with knapsack upon the back, containing clothes, bread, cheese,
and dried beef for the journey, and obliged to keep up with a strong man,
travelling from 30 to 38 miles per day, until we had performed the entire
distance of 600 miles. |
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Wheeler's
family to Kirtland
Age 18, strikes out on his own |
¶ |
Mr. W. then sent to the east for the balance of
his family, who came on the next season in the care of Captain Isaac
Morley,
a resident of Kirtland, where they arrived in safety. The farm being a new
one, and heavily timbered, it was the hardest kind of labor to prepare it
for cultivation. This being done, and Mr. Wheeler being again in easy circumstances,
I concluded to strike out for myself, having had comparatively no chance
for mental or literary improvement, and no very flattering prospects held
out to me that I should be able to enjoy such opportunity at any future
time, should I continue longer with Mr. W., consequently, at the age of
18 years, in the face of the remonstrances of Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler, I made
my first debut into the world with the following outfit: one suit of homemade
woollen clothes (butternut colored), two red flannel shirts, also homemade,
two pairs of socks, one pair of coarse shoes on the feet, one old hat and
six and a quarter cents in clean cash. |
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W.:
Wheeler |
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¶ |
With this outfit and capital stock
in trade, on the 8th day of January, 1823, I went forth from my old home
to carve out my fortune and destiny under my own guidance, for ought I then
knew. |
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Works
for Grandison Newell, Kirtland |
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My first strike
was to hire out for six months to Grandison Newel, at 6 dollars per month,
to work in a small iron foundry. There I learned to mold clock bells, and
irons, sleigh shoes and various other articles. My wages for this term of
service, were carefully saved, together with some perquisites, and compensation
for extra labor, which in the aggregate, amounted to enough to buy me a
good suit of clothes, boots, hat, and etc. |
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Did
Joseph Conspire to Murder Grandison Newell? |
Cards
wool for Orrin Holmes |
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This being accomplished, I began
to straighten up a little. I then hired for six months more to Mr. Orrin
Holmes of Chagrin (now Willoughby) to card wool, and being a raw hand at
the business, I could not get very high wages. The machines were in Kirtland. |
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Clerks
in Whitney's red store in Kirtland |
¶ |
I next went into
the store of Gilbert and Whitney in Kirtland to serve as clerk, where I
continued for a year or two, then hired two carding machines to run for
one year, the same where I was engaged a year or two before. The proprietors
being well acquainted with me took my own obligation for the rent without
security. The carding season came on, and the machines (two in number under
the same roof) being put in good running order, operations began. |
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N. K. Whitney and
Company was not formed until late 1826 or early 1827. Orson's reference
here is to N. K. Whitney's store. ¶
Newel K. Whitney |
New
mill competition destroyed
Carding
Store |
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A new machine having been placed
on the same stream, a few miles above, I feared that my business would be
cut short. But unfortunately for the proprietors of the new mill, their
dam broke way in a freshet, and they were unable to repair it during the
carding season, which gave to me almost the entire carding of the country.
During this season I paid my hired help, and also my rent, and cleared about
600 dollars in cash. This I thought was doing very well for a boy. When
winter came on, I went into Gilbert and Whitney's store again, under moderate
wages, and continued there until the spring. |
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1827
work |
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Then in 1827, business being rather
slack in the store, I went to work for the same parties, making pot and
pearl ashes. |
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On the ashery: ¶
Newel K. Whitney |
Methodist
convert, class leader |
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This season there was a Methodist
camp meeting about six miles distant from Kirtland, which I attended, and
became a convert to that faith. I enjoyed myself as well as the light and
knowledge I then had would allow me. I believe that God had mercy and compassion
upon me, and that if I had died at that time, I should have received all
the happiness and glory that I could appreciate or enjoy. [744] The revival
that began at that camp meeting spread much in Kirtland. A class was formed
there, and I was appointed class leader. |
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Reports
of golden bible |
¶ |
About this time some vague reports
came in the newspapers that a "golden bible" had been dug out
of a rock in the state of New York. It was treated, however, as a hoax.
But on reading the report, I remarked as follows"Who knows but
that this 'golden bible' may break up all our religion, and change its whole
features and bearing?" Nothing more was heard of it for a long time
in that section. |
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Campbellites
Sidney Rigdon
Joins Rigdon |
¶ |
Not long after this,
the Campbellite doctrine began to be preached in Mentor and in Kirtland.
Elder S. Rigdon was its chief advocate there. Being forcibly struck with
the doctrine of immersion or baptism for the remission of sins, and many
other important items of doctrine which were advocated by this new sect,
and which were passed over by the Methodists as not essential, I left the
Methodists and became a convert to this new faith. |
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¶ Sidney
Rigdon |
Lives,
studies with Rigdon in Mentor |
¶ |
Feeling that one day I might be called
to advocate it, and feeling my great deficiency in learning, I resolved
to go to school. Accordingly, I took up my abode in Mentor, in the house
of Elder Sidney Rigdon, and began the study of English grammar under his
tuition. Elder Rigdon took unwearied pains and care to instruct me in this
elementary science. |
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Burton
Academy
1829 returns to Mentor, lives in library
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¶ |
After spending several months in
this way, studying day and night, I went two quarters to the Burton Academy
and placed myself under the tuition of the preceptor, Reuben Hitchcock,
Esq. (since judge of the court). Here I reviewed grammar, geography, arithmetic
and rhetoric; then returned to Mentor and spent one season with a young
man by the name of Matthew J. [sic, S.] Clapp, at his father's house, where the public
library was kept. Here I read history and various other works, scientific
and literary; |
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MS 26, no. 48 (Nov. 26, 1864): 760761. |
Ordained
elder, mission with Sidney, 1829 |
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and in the fall of the year was ordained
an elder in this new church, and went on a mission with Elder Rigdon to
Elyria, Loraine County, and also to Florence in Huron County. There we baptized
a great number of people into the new faith, organized several branches
of the Church, and returned again to Mentor. This I think was in the fall
of 1829. |
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1830
teaches school in Florence
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¶ |
Early in the
spring of 1830, I returned to Elyria and Florence, and became the pastor of the churches raised up
the fall previous. During the fall and winter of 1830, I also taught school
in Florence. |
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Illiterate
missionaries |
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During this
fall, Samuel H. Smith, Ziba
Peterson, F. G. Williams and Peter
Whitmer came along through that section, preaching the "golden bible"
or "Mormonism," I encountered them; but perceiving that they were
mostly illiterate men, and at the same time observing some examples of superior
wisdom and truth in their teaching, I resolved to read the famed "golden
bible," as it was called. |
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Samuel H. Smith: should be Oliver
Cowdery
Original: Zibar |
Denounces
Book of Mormon
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¶ |
Accordingly, I procured the book
and read a portion of it, but came to the conclusion that it was all a fiction.
I preached several times against the "Mormon" doctrine or rather
against the "Mormon" bible. On one occasion, the people of Ridgeville,
near Elyria, sent for me to preach against the "Mormon" bible.
I complied with the request, and preached against it. The people congratulated
me much, thinking that "Mormonism" was completely floored. |
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Begins
to believe, closes school
Rigdon, Gilbert, Whitney, had converted |
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But I, for the first time, thought
that the "Mormon" bible might be the truth of heaven; and fully
resolved before leaving the house, that I would never preach against it
anymore until I knew more about it, being pretty strongly convicted in my
own mind that I was doing wrong. I closed up my school and my preaching
in that section, and resolved to go to Kirtland on a visit to my old friends.
Elder S. Rigdon, Gilbert and Whitney,
and many others of my former friends had embraced the "Mormon"
faith. |
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Joseph
arrived in Kirtland in early February 1831. |
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I ventured to tell a few of my confidential
friends in Florence my real object [761] in visiting Kirtland. The Prophet,
Joseph Smith, Jun., had removed to that place. My object was to get away
from the prejudices of the people, and to place myself in a position where
I could examine the subject without embarrassment. |
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1831
clerks for Whitney and Gilbert
Hears Joseph speak |
¶ |
Accordingly, in the
summer of 1831, I went to Kirtland, and under cover of clerkship in the
old store of Whitney and Gilbert, I examined "Mormonism." Read
the "Mormon" bible carefully through, attended meetings of the
"Mormons" and others, heard the arguments pro and con, but was
careful to say nothing. I prayed much unto the Lord for light and knowledge,
for wisdom and spirit to guide me in my examinations and investigations.
Often heard the Prophet talk in public and in private upon the subject of
the new religion; also heard what the opposition had to say. Listened also
to many foolish tales about the Prophettoo foolish to have a place
in this narrative. I marked carefully the spirit that attended the opposition,
and also the spirit that attended the "Mormons" and their friends; |
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3 months
investigation
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and after about three months of careful
and prayerful investigation, reflection and meditation, I came to the conclusion
that the "Mormons" had more light and a better spirit than their
opponents. I concluded that I could not be the loser by joining the "Mormons,"
and as an honest man, conscientiously bound to walk in the best and clearest
light I saw, I resolved to be baptized into the new religion. |
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Baptized,
ordained |
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Hence, I attended the Saints' meeting
in Kirtland, Sunday, October 30, 1831, and offered myself
a candidate for baptism, which was administered to me by the hands of Elder
Sidney Rigdon; was confirmed and ordained an elder in the Church on the
same day under the hands of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and Sidney Rigdon. |
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TS 5,
no. 7 (Apr. 1, 1844): 481, gives the more likely date as the first Sunday
in October, which would be the 2nd. Orson attends the October 25– 26 conference
as an elder.
Minutes of October. 25–26, 1831 |
Evidence
comes later
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Not until about three days after
did I receive any internal evidence of the special approbation of Heaven
of the course I had taken. When one evening behind the counter, the Spirit
of the Lord came upon me in so powerful a manner, that I felt like waiting
upon no one, and withdrew in private to enjoy the feast alone. |
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Begins
to testify
Cold indifference |
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This, to me, was a precious season,
long to be remembered. I felt that all my old friends (not of the "Mormons")
would believe me, and with a warm and affectionate heart, I soon went out
among them, and began to talk and testify to them what the Lord had done
for me; but the cold indifference with which they received me, and the pity
they expressed for my delusion, soon convinced me that it was not wise to
give that which is holy unto dogs, neither to cast pearls before swine. |
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High
priest
Mission with Hyrum to Campbellite friends
Organize branches, heal sick |
¶ |
A few days after this, I attended
a conference in the town of Orange, at which
I was ordained a high priest under the hands of Joseph Smith, and appointed
on a mission to Elyria and
Florence in connection with Brother Hyrum Smith. In these places we were
the means of converting and baptizing many of my old Campbellite friends,
raised up and organized two or three branches of the Church, laid hands
on several sick persons and healed them by prayer and faith. |
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MS 26, no. 49 (Dec. 3, 1864): 774776. According to ¶ Minutes
of October 25–26, 1831, Oliver performs all the High Priesthood
ordinations. |
Returns
to Kirtland |
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After confirming the Churches and
bearing a faithful testimony to them and to all people, in the midst of
much opposition, we returned again to Kirtland. I found Brother Hyrum a
pleasant and an agreeable companion, a wise counsellor, a father and a guide. |
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Mission with Samuel H. Smith
Slow of speech, uneducated, much faith, integrity |
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Soon after our
return to Kirtland, I was sent on another mission, in company with Brother
Samuel H. Smith, a younger brother of the Prophet, who was a man slow of
speech and unlearned, yet a man of good faith and extreme integrity. |
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¶
Samuel H. Smith |
Mission
(1832) east
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We journeyed
early in the spring of 1832, eastward together, without "purse or scrip,"
going from house to house, teaching and preaching in families, and also
in the public congregations of the people. Wherever we were received and
enter-[775]tained, we left our blessing; and wherever we were rejected,
we washed our feet in private against those who rejected us, and bore testimony
of it unto our Father in Heaven, and went on our way rejoicing, according
to the commandment. |
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¶
D&C 84 |
Westfield,
New York |
¶ |
When in Westfield, New York, we preached
to a crowded audience. I was speaker. After the discourse, a gentleman rose
up and requested that a brief history of Joseph Smith be given to the people
previous to his finding the plates. I remarked that I was not acquainted
with the early history of Joseph Smith, and consequently was unable to comply
with the request, but observed that his younger brother was present who
might, if he felt disposed, favor them with an account of the early life
of his brother. |
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Samuel
declines to speak |
¶ |
Samuel arose and said, that as it
was the early history of his own brother that they required, it might be
thought that, in consequence of his near kin, his statements might not be
free from partiality, and respectfully declined the task. |
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Joseph's
reputation impugned |
¶ |
The gentleman who first made the
request then stated that he had been acquainted with Joseph Smith from his
boyhood. It was then observed that he was a suitable person to give his
history. Accordingly he began to do so. |
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Speaker's
reputation impugned |
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He soon came to where he said Joseph
did some mean act and ran away. Another gentleman in the congregation, knowing
that the speaker had recently run away from his former place of abode for
his mean acts and come there, here interrupted the speaker by asking him
how long it was after Joseph ran away till he started? This question so
discomfited the speaker that he sat down amid the hisses and uproar of the
multitude. So, but little of the history of Joseph Smith was given at that
meeting. |
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Spafford
branch, baptize 14 |
¶ |
From this place we hastened on to
Spafford where there was a small branch of the Church; and by our ministry
added 14 members. |
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Boston
branch
Bradford branch |
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We then hastened on to Boston,
Massachusetts, preaching and teaching by the way and baptizing some. We
raised up a branch in Boston of some 25 or 30 members. Preached also in
Lynn and baptized a few, who were attached to the Boston Branch. Also raised
up a branch of some thirty in Bradford, Massachusetts. |
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Saco,
Farmington, Maine |
¶ |
Then proceeded on to Saco, in Maine,
where we preached several times. From thence proceeded to Farmington where
we raised up a branch of about 20 in number. |
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Calls
on sister, Laura North
Cold reception |
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Returned by way of Bradford and Lowell;
called on my sister, Mrs. North. Although separated from her for 25 years
she received me very coolly on account of my religion. |
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Rejects
message |
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I told her that the Lord had had
particular respect for herhad not sent her this message by a strangera
man whom she knew not, and consequently one in whom, she had no confidence;
but has taken your own mother's sondandled upon the same knee, nursed
at the same breast and like Joseph in Egypt, separated from his kinsfolk
and compelled to make friends among strangers. This brother comes to you
with this message in the name of the Lord. |
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¶ |
This answer filled my heart with
sorrow for her unbelief. Indeed, I could hardly restrain my feelings on
the occasion; still I did, and replied to my sister by the following interrogatives: |
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She replied: "If the Lord had
sent you I should think he would have prepared my heart to receive your
message, which he has not done." |
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God
sent Jesus to Jews |
¶ |
"Laura, do you think that God
sent his Son with a message to the Jews?" |
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"Yes," was the reply. |
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Not
ready to receive |
¶ |
"Did he, or did he not, prepare
their hearts to receive it?" She was silent; and with a heart ready
to burst with grief, I turned away from my sister, being confident that
her heart was fully set to reject my message, and bade her adieu, resolving
to be slow to call upon anymore of my relatives that I might be exempted
from the duty of washing my feet against my own kindred in case of being
rejected, leaving them to be warned and dealt with by strangers. |
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North
does not want Samuel to return |
¶ |
Mr. North, her
husband, a very good man in the estimation of his acquaintances, loving
popular religion and money also, gave me to understand that I was welcome
at his house on account of relationship, but that he did not care to entertain
my colleague, Brother Samuel H. Smith. Oh,
thought I, that you were worthy [776] before God to entertain him! I cared
not for his invitation, as I thought more of Samuel than of anyone in his
house, and stayed only long enough to discharge my duty, and never again
voluntarily returned. |
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Baptized
in Providence, violent opposition |
¶ |
From Lowell we returned to Boston;
and from thence we went to Providence, Rhode Island, and there baptized
some ten or fifteen persons amid most violent opposition. We had to flee
in the night, sleep under the fence and under an apple tree. |
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Returns
to Kirtland |
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Went back to Boston and then started
for home, where we arrived late in December. |
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Mission
hardships |
¶ |
This was one of the most arduous
and toilsome missions ever performed in the Church. To travel two thousand
miles on foot, teaching from house to house, and from city to city, without
purse or scrip, often sleeping in schoolhouses after preachingin barns,
in sheds, by the wayside, under trees, and etc., was something of a task.
When one would be teaching in private families, the other would frequently
be nodding in his chair, weary with toil, fatigue and want of sleep. We
were often rejected in the afterpart of the day, compelling us to travel
in the evening, and sometimes till people were gone to bed, leaving us to
lodge where we could. We would sometimes travel until midnight or until
nearly daylight before we could find a barn or shed in which we dare to
lie down; must be away before discovered least suspicion rest upon us. Would
often lie down under trees and sleep in daytime to make up loss. |
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Spring
1833 Pennsylvania, Ohio |
¶ |
In the spring of 1833, I, in company
with Hyrum Smith, went on a mission to Elk
Creek township, Erie County,
Pennsylvania, where we labored several weeks, and baptized a number of persons
into a branch of the Church, previously raised up there by the ministry
of John F. Boynton (h) and others. We
also preached considerably in North East Township, Ohio, and in other places
while passing to and fro, baptizing some few by the way. Returned to Kirtland
in the summer. |
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Summer
1833: Jackson County
|
¶ |
During this same summer I was appointed
to go up to Jackson County, Missouri, in company with Elder John
Gould,
with special instructions to the Saints there from the Prophet Joseph in
Kirtland. |
|
MS 26, no. 50 (Dec. 10, 1864): 790792. |
1,000
miles on foot and raft |
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We started on foot with our valises
on our backs, a distance of about one thousand miles. We travelled about
forty miles per day through a sickly fever and ague country, swimming rivers,
and pushing our clothes over on a log or raft before us. |
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Jackson
county mob
Skirmishes |
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We arrived in Jackson County about
the beginning of the Saints' troubles there. We delivered our letters and
documents, and were sometimes surrounded by the mob, who threatened to wring
our heads off from our shoulders. Several little skirmishes took place while
there, and some few were killed and wounded. |
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Saints
flee to Clay county
November 1833 returns to Kirtland |
¶ |
Times began to be warm, and expulsion
seemed inevitable. The Saints began to flee over the river to Clay County,
and we, having done all we could, took a steamer for St. Louis on our return
home. We arrived home in Kirtland in the month of November 1833. |
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1834
mission to Pennsylvania, New York |
¶ |
In the winter and spring of 1834,
I took another mission to Pennsylvania, Elk
Creek, in company with Elder
Orson Pratt (h),
to preach the gospel and to call a company to go up that summer to Missouri.
We went as far east as Genesee, New York. |
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May
1834 collects funds for Zion's Camp |
¶ |
In the month of
May, the company started from Kirtland for Missouri. I went round by Florence to collect some money due me there, for the benefit of the camp. I obtained
between one and two hundred dollars, met the camp near Dayton, and turned
[791] in myself and my money to strengthen the camp. |
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Governor Dunklin refuses to help |
¶ |
On our way up on the north side of
the Missouri River, when nearly opposite Jefferson
City, the place of residence
of Governor Daniel Dunklin, governor of the state, I, with Brother Parley
P. Pratt (h), was deputed to go and see
him, and ascertain if he could not do something towards reinstating our
people upon their lands and take some steps to punish our persecutors. But
he referred us to the courts of the respective counties in which our aggrievances
originated, and said that he entertained no doubt but that these courts,
that had full jurisdiction, would do us ample justice in the case. |
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Judiciary
against the Saints |
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He knew better. He knew that both
magistrates, constables, judges and sheriffs were engaged in the mob, and
were sworn to destroy us. He well knew that to refer us to these courts
for justice, was like referring us to a band of thieves to sue for the recovery
of stolen property. The courts would do nothingthe governor would
not if he could, and the President of the United States, at the head of
all political power, could not correct one error in any branch below him,
neither redress us in any way. Heaven blot out such a government from the
records and family of nations. We were compelled to return with the same
knowledge and comfort that we had beforeGod with us, and everybody
else against us. |
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Summer
1834 returns to Kirtland |
¶ |
Returned from Missouri the same summer. |
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Marries
Marinda Johnson |
¶ |
On the 4th day of September following,
I was married, in Kirtland, to Miss Marinda N. Johnson, daughter of John
and Elsa Johnson, by Elder Sidney Rigdon. |
|
John
Johnson
Luke and Lyman
Johnson are Marinda's brothers. |
Apostle |
¶ |
This winter the Twelve
Apostles were chosen, and I, being one of that number, was appointed, with
the entire quorum, to take a mission through the states, and hold conferences
in all the churches. |
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1835
mission of the Twelve to Vermont and New Hampshire |
¶ |
In the spring of 1835, the Twelve
started, and went through to the states of Vermont and New Hampshire, preaching
and baptizing, holding conferences and strengthening the churches, regulating
and putting them in order. Returned to Kirtland in September of the same
year. |
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1836
mission to New York |
|
In the spring of 1836, I took a mission
to the state of New York, in company with several others of the Apostles.
I labored in the vicinity of Rochester. |
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Joseph
and Hyrum |
|
Fell in with Joseph and Hyrum at
Buffalo, on their way to Canada, and took dinner with them at a hotel. |
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Upper
Canada |
Parley
P. Pratt, Canada |
|
I next proceeded to Canada
to join Elder Parley P. Pratt (h), who
had previously gone there, and had called for help. Elder Pratt and myself
labored in company for a season. |
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In
Toronto Orson publishes the first missionary tract, A Prophetic Warning
in August 1836. (A month earlier it had been published in [SHOWREF=MA.) A second
edition is published in England, August 1837, ehere it is used as the principal
tract until the spring of 1840. Crawley bibiography, 6364. |
Debates Presbyterian in Scarborough |
¶ |
At one meeting
a learned Presbyterian priest came in just at the close, and bade us a challenge
for debate. We, at first, declined, saying that we had all the labor we
could attend to without debate. But nothing would answer the priest but
debate. We then said, debate it should be. Accordingly, time and place were
agreed upon, and also the terms and conditions. |
|
Parley
returns |
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Before the debate came off, Elder
Pratt was called home as a witness in a case at law, and left me to meet
the champion alone. |
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An
acre of people |
|
The time arrived, and about one acre
of people assembled in a grove, wagons arranged for pulpits opposite each
other, and presently the priest came with some less than a mule-load of
books, pamphlets and newspapers, containing all the slang of an unbelieving
world. |
|
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Debate
Lunch |
|
The meeting was duly opened by prayer.
All things being ready, the battle began by a volley of grape and canister
from my battery, which was returned with vigor and determined zeal. Alternate
cannonading, half hour each, continued until dinner was announced. An armistice
was proclaimed, and the parties enjoyed a good dinner with their respective
friends. |
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Debate
resumes
Opponent quits |
¶ |
After two hours, the forces were
again drawn up in battle array. The enemy's fire soon became less and less
spirited, until, at length, under a well directed and murderous fire from
the long "eighteens" with which Zion's fortress is ever mountedto
wit: the Spirit of Godthe enemy raised his hand to heaven and exclaimed,
with affected contempt, "Abominable! I have heard enough of such stuff." |
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I immediately rejoined, "Gentlemen
and ladies, I should consider it highly dishonorable to continue to beat
my [792] antagonist after he has cried enough," so I waived the subject. |
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The priest did not appear to think
half so much of his scurrilous books, pamphlets and newspapers, when he
was gathering them up to take away, as when he brought them upon the stand.
Their virtue fled like chaff before the wind. |
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Baptizes
40 |
|
About forty persons were baptized
into the Church in that place (Scarborough) immediately after the debate.
Jenkins was the name of the priest. It is highly probably that he has never
since challenged a "Mormon" preacher for debate. |
|
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Parley
and Marnda to Canada
Return to Kirtland in fall |
¶ |
When Elder Pratt returned to Canada,
my wife came with him, and joined me in that country. We continued to labor
in Markham, Scarborough and Toronto during the season, and returned to Kirtland
in the fall, after raising up several branches of the Church. |
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Studies
Hebrew |
|
Engaged this winter in reading Hebrew. |
|
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Spring
1837 mission to England
Baptizes 1,500 |
¶ |
Spring of 1837, went on a mission
to England, in company with Elders Heber C.
Kimball, Willard Richards (h), John
Goodson, Isaac Russell, John Snider and Joseph
Fielding. Labored in Lancashire and Yorkshire, and baptized about fifteen
hundred souls by our united labors, and returned again to Kirtland, May
21, 1838. |
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Summer
1838 moves to Far West
Sick
|
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This summer I removed with my family
to Far West, in Missouri, where I was taken sick, soon after my arrival,
with bilious fever, and did not fully recover until the spring of 1839. |
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|
¶ |
Few men pass through life without
leaving some traces which they would gladly obliterate. Happy is he whose
life is free from stain and blemish. |
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October
1838 sin |
¶ |
In the month of October, 1838, with
me it was a day of affliction and darkness. I sinned against God and my
brethren; I acted foolishly. I will not allude to any causes for so doing
save one, which was, that I did not possess the light of the Holy Ghost. |
|
Affidavit
of Thomas B. Marsh and Orson Hyde |
Brethren
kind |
|
I lost not my standing in the Church,
however; yet, not because I was worthy to retain it, but because God and
his servants were merciful. Everlasting thanks to God, and may his servants
ever find mercy. |
|
Hyrum
and Heber were encouraging |
|
Brothers Hyrum
Smith and H. C. Kimball, men of noted kindness of heart, spake to me words
of encouragement and comfort in the hour of my greatest sorrow. But Hyrum
is gone! Peace to his ashes and blessings upon his posterity. Heber lives,
and may he and his posterity live to tread upon the necks of the enemies
of God. I seek pardon of all whom I have offended, and also of my God, in
the name of Jesus Christ. Amen. |
|
Heber
C. Kimball
Heber C. Kimball (h1) |
Moves
to Commerce
Ague nearly fatal
|
¶ |
I located with the Saints in Commerce,
since Nauvoo. Here I took the ague, which lasted me for months, and which
came well nigh killing me and also my family. |
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Mission
to Jerusalem |
|
At the April conference in 1840,
reduced to a mere skeleton, I was appointed, in company with Elder John
E. Page, to go on a mission to Jerusalem, and startedgone nearly three
years. Performed the mission, but Elder Page did not. |
|
Orson's
Letter of Introduction
¶ John E. Page |
December
1842 return to Nauvoo |
|
Returned to Nauvoo latter part of
December, 1842, the particulars of which, and my subsequent history, are
contained in the general records of the Church. |
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Orson Hyde
Orson Hyde's 1835 Complaint
Thomas B. Marsh and Orson Hyde Affidavits
Orson Hyde's 1840 Letter of Introduction
Biographies
|