Moses
Wilson brags of his action in the attack on Whitmer Settlement, October
31, 1833. Discovered Hiram Page disguised as a woman, had him given 60
or 70 lashes with a hickory withes, flogged 10 or 15 others, should have
killed the men, did whatever they wanted with the women, and enslaved
the children. |
Introduction |
In
September 1838, Don Carlos Smith, Lorenzo D. Barnes, and Harrison Sagers
are appointed
to go
east and south to raise funds to buy out the mobbers in Daviess County,
and to trade Mormon farms "in the east" for mobbers' farms
in Daviess. On September 30, Don Carlos and George A. board the Kansas
at Richmond landing and find Mormon attorney David R. Atchison,
who was also a general in the state militia is also on board, as are
several old Jackson county
enemies, including Generals Samuel Lucas and Moses Wilson, who had participated
in the 1833 expulsion of Mormons from Jackson. |
The next day, the Kansas
arrived at DeWitt, where |
Martha
Jane Coray Notebook
(Lucy, 755756) |
|
Biographical
Sketches (1853)
(Lucy, 755756) |
|
History
of the Church
4:394395 |
we found Elder
J. E. Page G[e]orge M. Hinkle with a few Saints surrounded by
a mob of 200 who threatened them with extermination
Gen Atchison {at} told them to make a vigorous defence if they were
attacked
by the mob give them a decent fight said he |
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we found about seventy
of the brethren, with their families, surrounded by an armed mob
of two hundred men. When the boat landed, the women
and children were much frightened, supposing that we also were mob.
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we found about seventy of the brethren, with their
families, surrounded by an armed mob of upwards of two hundred.
The women and children there were much frightened,
expecting it was a boat loaded with mobbers.
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{he} <we> held
a consultation on the propriety of stopping with the brethrenbut as
{our} our Mission was urgeant and we destitute
of arms we concluded to go ahead and when the boat
had taken in her necessary suplies of fuel we did so |
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We would have stopped,
and assisted them what we could, but we were unarmed, and, upon consulting
together, it was thought advisable for us to fulfill our mission; so we
returned to our boat, and proceeded on our journey. |
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We would have stopped
and assisted them, but being unarmed, we thought it best to fulfill our
mission. |
[756] {the con} the
conversation immediately turned upon the Mormons |
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[756] From this onward,
the "Mormons" were the only subject of conversation, and nothing
was heard but the most bitter imprecations against them. |
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From this onward the
"Mormons" were the only subject of conversation, and nothing was
heard but the most bitter imprecations against them. |
Gen Wilson proceeded
to relate an account of his heroic deeds {during}
in driving the saints reference Page 6 of Gorge Smiths journal {fell}
See george Smiths Record fell in with Carlos at my father
in Laws about the 21 of March 1838 were together about 3 weeks [Next pages
blank.] |
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General Wilson related
many of his deeds of noble daring in the Jackson
mob, one of which was the following: |
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General Wilson related many of his deeds of noble daring in the Jackson
mob, one of which was the following:
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I went, in company with forty others, to the house of one Hiram
Page, who was a Mormon, in Jackson county. We got logs and
broke in every door and window at the same instant; and, pointing our
rifles at the family, we told them, we would be God
dd if we did'nt shoot every one of them, if Page did not come out.
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I went, in company with forty others, to the house of Hiram
Page, a Mormon, in Jackson county. We got logs and broke in
every door and window at the same instant; and pointing our rifles at
the family, we told them, we would be dd if we didn't shoot every
one of them, if Page didn't come out.
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withe: "A band consisting of a tough flexible shoot of a willow etc.,
or of several such shoots twisted together; such a shoot used for binding,
tying, or plaiting.The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary
(no entry in Webster's 1828 Dictionary). |
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At that, a tall woman made her appearance, with a child in her arms.
I told the boys, she was too dd tall. In a moment the boys stripped
her, and found it was Page. I told them to give him a dd good one.
We gave him sixty or seventy blows with hickory withes which we had prepared.
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At that, a tall woman made her appearance, with a child in her arms.
I told the boys she was too dd tall. In a moment the boys stripped
her, and found it was Page. I told them [395] to give him a dd good
one. We gave him sixty or seventy blows with hickory withes which we had
prepared.
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Then, after pulling the roof off this house, we went to the next dd
Mormon's house, and whipped him in like manner. We continued until we
whipped ten or fifteen of the God dd
Mormons, and demolished their houses that night.
[757]
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Then after pulling the roof off the house, we went to the next dd
Mormon's house, and whipped him in like manner. We continued until we
whipped ten or fifteen of the dd Mormons, and demolished their houses
that night.
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In the course of the conversation, Wilson said, that the best plan was,
to rush into the "Mormon" Settlement, murder the men, make slaves
of the children, take possession of the property, and use the women as
they pleased.
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In the course of the conversation, Wilson said that the best plan was
to rush into the Mormon settlements, murder the men, make slaves of the
children, take possession of the property, and use the women as they pleased.
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