Joseph and Hyrum Smith go to Daviess county
in August 1838 on report of two Mormons being murdered during the Gallatin
election. Call on Judge Black for water, ask him to enforce the laws.
Judge signs statement that he would and agrees to meet with locals. Peace
agreement signed at Lyman Wight's house, but provocateurs from
Millport make threats, whip Mormon men, etc. §
General Atchison confirms mob of 200, orders out militia and disperses
them §, but the mob returns. General Doniphan orders
Col. Hinkle to call out the Caldwell county militia to defend Far West §.
Mob of 300400 surrounds 70 Mormon families at DeWitt, southwest
of Kirtland §. Petitions are sent to the governor
and Judge King while Rev. Bogart's militia pillages along Log and Long
Creeks §. |
|
In June 1843, Missouri officials try to arrest Joseph Smith
in Illinois on charges of treason. In early in July the municipal court
of Nauvoo sits to consider granting a writ of habeas corpus. (This
would prevent Missouri officials from taking him out of the state.) There
is not much question of the outcome, with Stake President William Marks
presiding as chief justice and associate justices being Daniel H. Wells, Newel
K. Whitney, George W. Harris, Gustavus Hills and Hiram Kimball. However,
the testimony of Hyrum Smith, Parley P. Pratt (h),
Brigham Young, George W. Pitkin, Lyman Wight, and Sidney Rigdon is interesting
for recollections and perspectives they provide for Missouri events of
1838. |
|
Joseph
and Hyrum never apart even six months |
¶ |
HYRUM SMITH sworn. Said that the defendant now in court is
his brother,
and has been for more than two years past. I have been
acquainted with him ever since he was born, which was thirty seven years
December last, and I have not been absent from him at any one time, not
even the space of six months since his birth
|
|
TS 4, no. 16 (July 1, 1834): 246256. |
Gallatin
election, August 1838
Mob threatens extermination |
|
whilst he was in the State of Missouri, that the People
commonly called Mormons, were threatened with violence and extermination,
and on or about the first Monday in August 1838, at the election at Gallatin,
the county seat in Daviess county; the citizens who were commonly called
Mormons were forbidden to exercise the rights of franchise, and from that
unhallowed circumstance an affray commenced, and a fight ensued among the
citizens of that place, and from that time a mob commenced gathering in
that county threatening the extermination of the Mormons; |
|
|
Heard
two Mormons murdered
Joseph and Hyrum to Daviess |
|
the said Smith and myself upon hearing that mobs were collecting
together, and that they had also murdered two of the citizens of the same
place, and would not suffer them to be buried; the said Smith and myself
went over to Daviess county to learn the particulars of the affray, |
|
|
False
report |
|
but upon our arrival at Diahman, we learned that none were
killed but several were wounded |
|
|
Overnight
at Lyman's (Adam-ondi-Ahman)
Drought
To Judge Black's for water with a few others |
|
we tarried all night at Col. Lyman Wight's, the next morning the weather
being very warm and having been very dry for some time previously, the springs
and wells in that region were dried up; on mounting our horses to return,
we rode up to Mr. Black's, who was then an acting Justice of the Peace,
to obtain some water for ourselves and horses; some few of the citizens
accompanied us there, |
|
|
Joseph
asks for enforcement of laws
Black puts it in writing |
|
and after obtaining the refreshment of water, Mr. Black was
asked by said Joseph Smith Senior, if he would use his influence to see
that the laws were faithfully executed and to put down mob violence, and
he gave us a paper, written by his own hand, stating that he would do so.
|
|
Senior:
Joseph's and Hyrum's father has died. |
Joseph
asks Black for meeting with prominent citizens |
|
He also requested him to call together the most
influential men of the county on the next day that we might have an interview
with them; to this he acquiesced, |
|
|
Peace
agreement
Good feelings on both sides |
|
and accordingly the next day they assembled at the house of
Col. Wight and entered into a mutual covenant of peace, to put down mob
violence and to protect each other in the enjoyment of their rights: after
this we all parted with the best of feelings and each man returned to his
own home. |
|
|
Mob
of hundreds at Millport |
|
This mutual agreement of peace however did not last long;
for but a few days afterwards the mob began to collect again until several
hundreds rendezvoused at Millport, a few miles distant from Diahman. |
|
|
Steal livestock
Make threats, whip, starve men, women, children
Provocateurs
|
|
They immediately commenced making aggressions
upon the citizens called Mormons, taking away their hogs and cattle, and
threatening them with extermination or utter extinction; saying that they
had a cannon and there should be no compromise only at its mouth: frequently
taking men, women and children prisoners, whipping them and lacerating their
bodies with hickory withes, and tying them to trees and depriving them of
food until they were compelled to gnaw the bark from the trees to which
they were bound in order to sustain life; treating them in the most cruel
manner they could invent or think of, and doing every thing they could to
excite the indignation of the Mormon [247] people to rescue them, in order
that they might make that a pretext of an accusation for the breach of the
law and that they might the better excite the prejudice of the populace
and thereby get aid and assistance to carry out their hellish purposes of
extermination. |
|
|
Messengers to King, Atchison,
Doniphan |
|
Immediately on the authentication of these facts, messengers
were despatched from Far West to Austin A. King, Judge of the fifth judicial
district of the State of Missouri, and also to Major General Atchison, Commander-in-chief
of that division, and Brigadier General Doniphan, giving them information
of the existing facts, and demanding immediate assistance. |
|
|
Atchison finds 200300 vigilantes
Orders out militia |
|
Gen. Atchison returned with the messengers and went immediately
to Diahman and from thence to Millport, and he found the facts were true
as reported to him;that the citizens of that county were assembled
together in a hostile attitude to the amount of two or three hundred men,
threatening the utter extermination of the Mormons, he immediately returned
to Clay county and ordered out a sufficient military force to quell the
mob. |
|
|
Disperse mob, but gather again |
|
Immediately after they were dispersed and the army returned;
the mob commenced collecting again soon after: |
|
|
Doniphan to Far West with 60 insubordinate
men
Sidney and Hinkle: send them back |
|
we again applied for military aid, when General Doniphan came
out with a force of sixty armed men to Far West; but they were in such a
state of insubordination that he said he could not control them, and it
was thought advisable by Col. Hinkle, Mr. Rigdon and others that they should
return home; |
|
|
Doniphan to Hinkle: call out militia |
|
General Doniphan ordered Col. Hinkle to call out the militia
of Caldwell and defend the town against the mob, for said he, you have great
reason to be alarmed, |
|
|
Mob of 200 at Hunter's Mill
Hundreds at Millport, Daviess county |
|
for said he, you have great reason to be alarmed, for he said
Neil Gillum from the Platte country had come down with 200 armed men and
had taken up their station at Hunter's mill, a place distant about 17 or
18 miles north west of the town of Far West, and also that an armed force
had collected again at Millport, in Daviess county, consisting of several
hundred men, |
|
|
Mob at DeWitt |
|
and that another armed force had collected at DeWitt, in Carroll
county, about 50 miles south east of Far West, where about 70 families of
the Mormon people had settled upon the bank of the Missouri river at a little
town called DeWitt. |
|
|
Mob of 300400
surround DeWitt
Suffering from hunger |
|
Immediately a messenger, whilst he was yet talking, came in
from DeWitt, stating that three or four hundred men had assembled together
at that place armed cap-a-pie, and that they threatened the utter extinction
of the citizens of that place if they did not leave the place immediately,
and that they had also surrounded the town and cut off all supplies of food,
so that many of them were suffering with hunger. |
|
cap-a-pie: from head to foot |
Doniphan advises petition to governor
Also sent to Judge King |
|
Gen. Doniphan seemed to be very much alarmed, and appeared
to be willing to do all he could to assist, and to relieve the sufferings
of the Mormon people; he advised that a petition be immediately got up and
sent to the Governor. A petition was accordingly prepared and a messenger
despatched immediately to the Governor, and another petition was sent to
Judge King. |
|
|
Mobs on north, northwest, south |
|
The Mormon people throughout the country were in a great state
of alarm, and also in great distress; they saw themselves completely surrounded
with armed forces on the north and on the north west and on the south, |
|
|
Samuel Bogart's 150 pillage in the south
|
|
and also Bogart, who was a Methodist
preacher, and who was then a captain over a militia company of 50 soldiers,
but who had added to his number out of the surrounding counties about a
hundred more, which made his force about 150 strong, was stationed at Crooked
Creek, sending out his scouting parties, taking men, women and children
prisoners, driving off cattle, hogs and horses, entering into every house
on Log and Long Creeks, rifling their houses of their most precious article,
such as money, bedding, and clothing, taking all their old muskets and their
rifles or military implements, threatening the people with instant death
if they did not deliver up all their precious things,
|
|
Original:
Bogard
See the Crooked River battle page at the Far West Cultural
Center. |
Driving
people to Far West |
|
and enter into a covenant to leave the state or
go into the city of Far West by the next morning, saying that "they
calculated to drive the people into Far West, and then drive them to hell."
|
|
|
Sashiel Gillum
and Sashel Woods pillage |
|
Gillum also was doing the same on the north west side of Far
West; and Sashel Woods, a Presbyterian minister, was the leader of the mob
in Daviess county; and a very noted man of the same society was the leader
of the mob in Carroll county; and they were also sending out their scouting
parties, robbing and pillaging houses, driving away hogs, horses and cattle,
taking men, women and children and carrying them off, threatening their
lives and subjecting them to all manner of abuses that they could invent
or think of. |
|
Original:
Sashall |
Governor no help |
¶ |
Under this state of alarm, excitement and distress, the messengers
returned from the Governor and from the other authorities, bringing the
fatal news, that the Mormons could have no assistance. They stated that
the Governor said that "the Mormons had got into a difficulty with
the citizens, and they might fight it out for all what he cared. He could
not render them any assistance." |
|
|
DeWitt
settlers to Far West
Many starved to death
Buried on the way side without ceremony |
¶ |
The people of DeWitt were obliged to leave their homes and
go into Far West; but did not until after many of them had starved to death
for want of proper sustenance, and several died on the road there, and were
buried by the way side, without a coffin or a funeral ceremony, and the
distress, sufferings, and privations of the people cannot be expressed.
All the scattered families of the Mormon people, in all the counties except
Daviess, were driven into Far West, with but few exceptions. |
|
|
Refugees
without housing two months
Badly injured |
¶ |
[248] This only increased their distress, for many thousands
who were driven there, had no habitations or houses to shelter them, and
were huddled together, some in tents and others under blankets, while others
had no shelter from the inclemency of the weather. Nearly two months the
people had been in this awful state of consternation, many of them had been
killed, whilst others had been whipped until they had to swathe up their
bowels to prevent them from falling out. |
|
|
General
Parks comes from Richmond |
|
About this time, General Parks came out from Richmond, Ray
county, who was one of the commissioned officers who was sent out to Diahman,
and I myself and my brother Joseph Smith Senior, went out at the same time. |
|
|
Don
Carlos's wife and children wade the Grand, 3 miles through snow |
|
On the evening that General Parks arrived at Diahman,
my brother, the late Don Carlos Smith's wife came in to Col. Wight's about
eleven o'clock at night, bringing her two children along with her, one about
two years and a half old, the other a babe in her arms. She came in on foot,
a distance of three miles, and waded Grand River, and the water was then
about waist deep, and the snow about 3 inches deep. |
|
wife:
Agnes Moulton Coolbrith (18111828)
children: Agnes C. Smith (b. August 1836)
Sophronia C. Smith (b. May 1838)
Agnes' most well-known child, Josephine (Ina) Coolbrith née Smith,
would be born in Nauvoo, March 1841. |
Home
burned |
|
She stated that a party of the mob, a gang of ruffians, had
turned her out of doors, had taken her household goods and had burnt up
her house, and she had escaped by the skin of her teeth.Her husband
at that time was in Virginia, and she was living alone. |
|
Lyman
Wight furious |
|
This cruel transaction excited the feelings of the people
in Diahman, especially Col. Wight (h) (swh),
and he asked Gen. Parks, in my hearing, how long we had got to suffer
such base violence? |
|
|
Parks
and Joseph turn Lyman loose |
|
Gen. Parks said he did not know how long. Col. Wight then
asked him what should be done? Gen. Parks told him "he should take
a company of men, well armed, and go and disperse the mob wherever he should
find any collected together, and take away their arms." Col. Wight
did so precisely, according to the orders of Gen. Parks. And my brother
Joseph Smith Sen. made no words about it. |
|
Adam-ondi-Ahman
is on the northern bank of the Grand. |
Lyman
stops the burnings |
|
And after Col. Wight had dispersed the mob and put a stop
to their burning houses belonging to the Mormon people and turning women
and children out of doors, which they had done up to that time to the amount
of 8 or 10 houses which were consumed to ashesafter being cut short
in their intended designs, the mob started up a new plan. |
|
|
Mob
burns own homes to provoke Mormons |
|
They went to work and moved their families out of the county
and set fire to their houses, and not being able to incense the Mormons
to commit crimes; they had recourse to this stratagem to set their houses
on fire and send runners into all the counties adjacent, to declare to the
people that the Mormons had burnt up their houses and destroyed their fields,
and if the people would not believe them, they would tell them to go and
see if what they had said was not true. |
|
|
Mormons
didn't do it |
|
Many people came to see, they saw the houses burning, and
being filled with prejudice, they could not be made to believe but that
the Mormons set them on fire, which deed was most diabolical and of the
blackest kind, for indeed the Mormons did not set them on fire, nor meddle
with their houses or their fields. |
|
|
Mormons
had bought the burned houses |
|
And the houses that were burnt, together with the pre emption
rights, and the corn in the fields, had all been previously purchased by
the Mormons of the people and paid for in money and with wagons and horses
and with other property, about two weeks before; but they had not taken
possession of the premises; but this wicked transaction was for the purpose
of clandestinely exciting the minds of a prejudiced populace and the Executive,
that they might get an order, that they could the more easily carry out
their hellish purposes, in expulsion or extermination or utter extinction
of the Mormon people. |
|
|
Joseph
and Hyrum survey destruction in Adam-ondi-Ahman
Write Atchison |
|
After witnessing the distressed situation of the people in
Diahman, my brother Joseph Smith Senior and myself returned back to the
city of Far West, and immediately dispatched a messenger, with written documents,
to General Atchison, stating the facts as they did then exist, praying for
assistance if possible, and requesting the editor of the "Far West"
to insert the same in his newspaper, but he utterly refused to do so. |
|
|
Appeal
to governor |
|
We still believed that we should
get assistance from the Governor, and again petitioned him, praying for
assistance, setting forth our distressed situation; |
|
|
Militia
ordered out to protect |
|
and in the mean time the presiding Judge of the County Court
issued ordersupon affidavits made to him by the citizensto the
Sheriff of the county, to order out the Militia of the county to stand in
constant readiness, night and day, to prevent the citizens from being massacred,
which fearful situation they were exposed to every moment. Every thing was
very portentous and alarming. |
|
|
Army
approaches |
|
Notwithstanding all this, there was a ray of hope yet existing
in the minds of the people that the Governor would render us assistance;
and whilst the people were waiting anxiously for deliverancemen women
and children frightened, praying and weepingwe beheld at a distance,
crossing the prairies and approaching the town, a large army in military
array, brandishing their glittering swords in the sunshine, and we could
not but feel joyful for a moment, thinking that probably the Governor had
sent an armed force to our relief, notwithstanding the awful forebodings
that pervaded our breasts. |
|
|
Surround
Far West |
|
But to our great surprise, when the army arrived
they came up and formed a line in double file in one half mile on the
east of the city of Far West, and despatched three messengers with a white
flag [249] to come to the city. |
|
|
Morrmon
representatives |
|
They were met by Captain Morey with a few other individuals,
whose names I do not now recollect. |
|
|
Hyrum
overhears "negotiations" |
|
I was myself standing close by, and could very
distinctly hear every word they said. Being filled with anxiety, I rushed
forward to the spot, expecting to hear good newsbut alas! and heart-thrilling
to every soul that heard them |
|
|
Army
wants 3 out, then will massacre rest |
|
they demanded three persons to be brought out
of the city before they should massacre the rest. The names of the persons
they demanded, were Adam Lightner, John Cleminson and his wife. |
|
|
3
offered chance to save their lives |
|
Immediately the three persons were brought forth
to hold an interview with the officers who had made the demand, and the
officers told them they had now a chance to save their lives, for they calculated
to destroy the people and lay the city in ashes. |
|
|
3
refuse offer |
|
They replied to the officer, and said, "If the people
must be destroyed, and the city burned to ashes, they would remain in the
city and die with them." |
|
|
Army
1.5 miles from city |
|
The officers immediately returned, and the army retreated
and encamped about a mile and a half from the city. |
|
|
Mormon
white flag
Bogart shoots at messenger |
|
A messenger was immediately despatched with a while flag
from the Colonel of the Militia of Far West, requesting an interview with
General Atchison and General Doniphan; but as the messenger approached the
camp, he was shot at by Bogard, the Methodist preacher. The name of the
messenger was Charles C. Rich, who is now Brigadier General in the Nauvoo
legion. |
|
|
Sees
Doniphan
Atchison ordered back to Liberty (too sympathetic to Mormons) |
|
However, he gained permission to see General Doniphan; he
also requested an interview with General Atchison. General Doniphan said
that General Atchison had been dismounted by a special order of the Governor
a few miles back, and had been sent back to Liberty, Clay county. He also
stated that the reason was that he (Atchison,) was too merciful unto the
Mormons, |
|
"My wife informs
me in this Letter that the Rev Mr Bogart a Methodist Preacher who was
the Leader of the Missouri mob in the persecution of the Saints, has
Shot a man during the Election who died in few hours. Mr Bogart has
had his trial & is to be hung on the 4th day of July next." WWJ
1:483, July 13, 1840. |
Boggs replaces him with Lucas |
|
and Boggs would not let him have the command,
but had given it to General Lucas, who was from Jackson County, and whose
heart had become hardened by his former acts of rapine and bloodshed, he
being one of the leaders in murdering, driving, plundering and burning some
two or three hundred houses belonging to the Mormon people in that county
in the years 1833 and 1834.
To be continued
|
|
Lucas
in 1833: ¶ Missouri Persecutions
(18331834) (2) |
|
|
Joseph Smith's Far West
Expulsion from Missouri
Far West
Missouri
|