The circumstances by which we are surrounded are such as to cause
feeling of no ordinary character. In all the Conferences held
hitherto, in this city and in Nauvoo, we have enjoyed the society of
our late lamented President, Heber C. Kimball; and his being called
away from a useful field in which he had long labored, should remind
us that each of us, at any moment, may be called to close our career
here for time, and to await our reward in the resurrection. We can but
rejoice that our brother, in his long life and labors in the Church,
was a pattern of humility, faith and diligence, and was instrumental
in the hands of God in bringing many thousands to a knowledge of the
truth. The blow which has fallen upon us in being deprived of his
company, counsel and instruction, should remind us of the necessity of
diligence in the discharge of all our duties, that, like him, we may
be prepared to inherit celestial glory, and to associate with Joseph
and Hyrum Smith and David Patten, and the martyrs who have gone
before.
The incidents that have been brought to our notice by our brethren who
have spoken during the Conference, give rise to a series of
reflections in relation to our early history as a people, which, I
presume, it would be well for us all to review. There are some in this
Territory who have been in the Church thirty-six, thirty-seven
or thirty-eight years, but a great many of the people have been in
only a few years. A very large portion of our population have been
reared here, and consequently a brief sketch of the early incidents of
our history may not be unprofitable to any.
When Joseph Smith took the plates of Mormon from the hill Cumorah, he
was immediately surrounded by enemies, and though he was a young man
of unexceptional character, he was compelled to go from place to
place, while translating the work, to avoid persecution. The press and
the pulpit denounced him as an impostor and his followers as dupes. As
soon as he preached the doctrine of baptism for the remission of sins,
and organized a Church with six members, he was arrested and brought
before a magistrate, honorably discharged by him, and immediately
arrested again and hurried into an adjoining county, where he was
insulted, spit upon, and kept without food during the day, and then
given crusts of bread and water. The next day he was taken before
magistrates who, after a rigid examination, found no fault in him. A
mob resolved to "tar and feather" him, but through the instrumentality
of the constable, who previously treated him roughly, but who now
became his friend, he made his escape in safety. All these proceedings
were instigated by clergymen and professors of religion in high
standing. A similar spirit of persecution was manifested in a greater
or less degree in every place where the Gospel was proclaimed, not
only against Joseph Smith, but also against other Elders who preached
the word.
This system of persecution continued, especially in the shape of
vexatious law suits, numbering some fifty in all, up to the day of his
death, and in all of which a most vicious and vindictive spirit was
manifested outside of judicial questions. In every case he was
honorably acquitted, and upon the charge of treason upon which he was
detained in Carthage jail, when murdered, he had not even been
lawfully examined before a magistrate. In all these trials except one
he had been before persons religiously opposed to him—his enemies were
his judges—and all this while every act of his life was prompted by a
firm desire to do good to his fellow men—to preach the Gospel of
peace, to magnify the high and holy calling he had received from the
Lord, and thereby lead back to the ancient faith of Jesus Christ his
fellow beings who had fallen into darkness.
Vexatious law suits not accomplishing the work to the satisfaction of
the persecutors of the Saints, mob violence was resorted to, as being
more effective. On the 25th day of March, 1832, in Hyrum, Portage Co.,
Ohio, Joseph Smith was dragged from his bed and carried to the woods,
daubed with tar and feathers, and otherwise ill-treated. The following
is his account of the outrage:
"On the 25th of March, the twins before mentioned, which had been sick
for some time with the measles, caused us to be broke of our rest in
taking care of them, especially my wife. In the evening I told her she
had better retire to rest with one of the children, and I would watch
with the sickest child. In the night she told me I had better lie down
on the trundle bed, and I did so, and was soon after awoke by her
screaming 'murder!' when I found myself going out of the door, in the
hands of about a dozen men, some of whose hands were in my hair, and
some had hold of my shirt, drawers, and limbs. The foot of the trundle
bed was towards the door, leaving only room enough for the door to
swing. My wife heard a gentle tapping on the windows, which
she then took no particular notice of (but which was unquestionably
designed for ascertaining whether we were all asleep), and soon after
the mob burst open the door and surrounded the bed in an instant, and,
as I said, the first I knew, I was going out of the door in the hands
of an infuriated mob. I made a desperate struggle, as I was forced
out, to extricate myself, but only cleared one leg, with which I made
a pass at one man, and he fell on the door steps. I was immediately
confined again; and they swore by God they would kill me if I did not
be still, which quieted me. As they passed around the house with me,
the fellow that I kicked came to me and thrust his hand into my face,
all covered with blood (for I hit him on the nose), and with an
exulting horse laugh, muttered, 'Ge, gee, God damn ye, I'll fix ye.'
"They then seized me by the throat, and held on till I lost my breath.
After I came to, as they passed along with me, about thirty rods from
the house, I saw Elder Rigdon stretched out on the ground, whither
they had dragged him by the heels. I supposed he was dead. I began to
plead with them, saying, 'You will have mercy and spare my life, I
hope,' to which they replied, 'God damn ye, call on your
God for help,
we'll show ye no mercy;' and the people began to show themselves in
every direction; one coming from the orchard had a plank, and I
expected they would kill me, and carry me off on the plank. They then
turned to the right and went on about thirty rods further, about sixty
rods from the house and thirty from where I saw Elder Rigdon, into the
meadow, where they stopped, and one said, 'Simonds, Simonds'
(meaning, I suppose, Simonds Rider), 'pull up his drawers, pull up his
drawers, he will take cold.' Another replied, 'Ain't ye going to kill
'im, ain't ye going to kill 'im?' when a group of mobbers collected
a
little way off and said, 'Simonds, Simonds, come here;' and Simonds
charged those who had hold of me to keep me from touching the ground
(as they had all the time done), lest I should get a spring upon them.
They went and held a council, and, as I could occasionally overhear a
word, I supposed it was to know whether it was best to kill me. They
returned after a while when I learned they had concluded not to kill
me, but pound and scratch me well, tear off my shirt and drawers, and
leave me naked. One cried, 'Simonds, Simonds, where's the tar bucket?'
'I don't know,' answered one, 'where 'tis, Eli's left
it.' They ran
back and fetched the bucket of tar, when one exclaimed, 'God damn it,
let us tar up his mouth;' and they tried to force the tar-paddle into
my mouth; I twisted my head around, so that they could not, and they
cried out, 'God damn ye, hold up your head and let us give ye some
tar.' They then tried to force a vial into my mouth, and broke it in
my teeth. All my clothes were torn off me except my shirt collar, and
one man fell on me and scratched my body with his nails like a mad
cat, and then muttered out, 'God damn ye, that's the way the Holy
Ghost falls on folks.'
"They then left me, and I attempted to rise, but fell again. I pulled
the tar away from my lips, so that I could breathe more freely, and
raised myself up, when I saw two lights. I made my way towards one of
them, and found it was Father Johnson's. When I had come to the door,
I was naked, and the tar made me look as though I had been covered
with blood; and when my wife saw me she thought I was mashed
all to pieces, and fainted. During the affray abroad, the sisters of
the neighborhood had collected at my room. I called for a blanket,
they threw me one, and shut the door. I wrapped it around me and went
in." History of Joseph Smith, Mill. Star, vol. 14, page 148.
I will add that the exposure of the child above referred to, to the
night air, caused its death. This murdered child was doubtless the
first martyr of the last dispensation.
In a revelation given Sept., 1831, the Lord said, "It is my will that
the Saints retain a strong hold in the land of Kirtland for the space
of five years."
The Saints owned several farms in Kirtland. Mr. Lyman, a Presbyterian,
also owned a grist mill there, and many of us got our grinding done at
his mill, although our brethren owned mills two or three miles
distant. We had commenced building the Kirtland Temple. A portion of
the city site had been surveyed, and many of the Saints who had
recently come in were building houses on the lots. Mr. Lyman
associated himself with a combination to starve us out. The
authorities proceeded to warn all the Latter-day Saints out of the
township, and formed a compact not to employ us or sell us grain,
which was scarce at the time. Mr. Lyman had 3,000 bushels of wheat, but
refused to let us have it at any reasonable price, and it was believed
we were so destitute of money that we would have to scatter abroad.
The warning out of town was designed to prevent our becoming a
township charge, the law of Ohio being that if a person, who had been
warned out of town, applied for assistance, he was to be carried to
the next town and so on till he was taken out of the State or to the
town from which he formerly came.
We were obliged to send fifty miles for grain, which cost us one
dollar and six cents per bushel delivered in Kirtland. Mr. Lyman's
grain remained unsold and his effort to starve us taught us better
than to longer patronize his mill, although it cost us the trouble of
going two or three miles to mills belonging to our brethren. We built
a magnificent temple and a large city. We paid our quota of taxes and
we were as noted and remarkable for our industry, temperance, thrift
and morality there, as our people are at the present day. We also
patronized a Mr. Lyon, who was a gentlemanly outside merchant, but the
moment he got an opportunity he united with our enemies to oppress us.
We sent our children to school to Mr. Bates, a Presbyterian minister,
who soon after went into court and bore false witness against the
Elders, and further testified on oath that every "Mormon" was
intellectually insane. This lesson did admonish us not to longer
entrust the education of our youth to canting hypocrites.
For several years we had used the paper of Geauga Bank at Painesville,
as money. A loan of a few hundred dollars was asked for by Joseph
Smith, with ample security, but was refused, and Elder Reynolds Cahoon
was told they would not accommodate the "Mormon Prophet," although
they acknowledged the endorsers were above question, simply because it
would encourage "Mormonism." So much of their specie was drawn by
Joseph Smith during the three succeeding days, as greatly improved
their tempers, and they said to Elder Cahoon, "Tell Mr. Smith he must
stop this, and any favor he wants we are ready to accord him."
Subsequently application was made to the Legislature of the State for
a bank charter, the notes to be redeemed with specie and their
redemption secured by real estate. The charter was denied us on the
grounds that we were "Mormons," and soon a combination of apostates
and outsiders caused us to leave Kirtland, the most of our property
unsold; and our beautiful Temple yet remains a lasting monument of our
perseverance and industry. The loss sustained through this persecution
was probably not less than one million dollars.
MISSOURI.
On the 20th day of July, 1831, at Independence, Jackson County, Joseph
Smith set apart and dedicated a lot as the site of the Temple of the
center stake of Zion, ground having been purchased for this purpose,
and it still is known as the "Temple lot." The Saints entered lands in
different parts of the county, built houses, opened farms, constructed
mills, established a printing office (owned by W. W. Phelps and Co.,
and the first in Western Missouri), and opened a mercantile
establishment, the largest, in the county, owned by Messrs. Gilbert
and Whitney.
In July, 1833, a mob was organized by signing a circular, which set
forth that the civil law did not afford them a sufficient guarantee
against the "Mormons," whom they accused of "blasphemously pretending
to heal the sick by the administration of holy oil," and consequently
they must be either "fanatics" or "knaves." Under the influence
of
Methodist, Baptist and Presbyterian ministers, they tore down the
printing office of the Evening and Morning Star, which cost some
$6,000. They stripped and tarred and feathered Bishop Partridge and
Elder Charles Allen, and seized several other Elders and cast them
into prison, compelled Gilbert and Whitney to close their store, and
soon after broke it open and scattered their goods to the four winds.
They tore down twenty houses over the heads of the inmates, and
whipped and terribly lacerated with hickory withes many of the Elders,
killed Andrew Barber, and severely wounded many others; robbed the
houses of their property, and finally expelled fifteen hundred people
from the county. They also destroyed some two hundred and sixteen
dwellings, and much of the land, being valuable timber land, became
public plunder. The Saints were robbed of most of their horses,
cattle, implements of husbandry, etc. The total loss in these
transactions is estimated at half a million dollars.
"Horrible to relate, several women thus driven from their homes gave
birth to children in the woods and on the prairies, destitute of beds
or clothing, having escaped in fright. It is stated on the authority
of Solomon Hancock, an eyewitness, that he, with the assistance of
two or three others, protected one hundred and twenty women and
children for the space of ten days, who were obliged to keep
themselves hid from their pursuers, while they were hourly expecting
to be massacred, and who finally escaped into Clay county, by finding
a circuitous route to the ferry."
They could be traced by the blood from their feet, on the burnt
prairie. This occurred in the month of November, and is a specimen of
the kindness that law-abiding Latter-day Saints received at the hands
of those who had power over them. The Saints were so law-abiding that
not a single process had been issued against any member of the Church
in Jackson County up to the organization of the mob, although all the
offices, civil and military, were in the hands of their enemies.
Prominent in these cruelties as actors and apologists were the
Revds. Isaac McCoy and D. Pixley, the former a Baptist and the
latter a Presbyterian missionary to the Indians.
CLAY COUNTY.
The arrival of the Saints in Clay county was a blessing to the
inhabitants, who had just opened small prairie farms and planted them
with Indian corn, much of which was unharvested. They had cattle on
the bottoms and hogs in the woods. The majority of the people received
the Saints with gladness and gave them employment, and paid them in
corn, pork and beef. The wages were low, but sufficient to supply the
more pressing wants of the people. From time to time Joseph Smith
forwarded money from Kirtland to Bishop Partridge to supply the most
needy. The mob in Jackson County sent committees to stir up the
feelings of the people of Clay against the Saints. For some time their
oft-repeated efforts to do so were unsuccessful. Parties of the mob
would come over from Jackson and seize our brethren and inflict
violence upon them. The industry of our people soon enabled them to
make some purchases of land, and then their numbers were increased by
arrivals from the east. The mob of Jackson County continued their
endeavors to stir up dissatisfaction among the people of Clay county
against the Saints. At length the citizens of Clay county held a
public meeting and requested the "Mormons" to seek another home, when
the Saints located in the new county of Caldwell, which contained only
seven families, who were bee hunters. As the county was mostly prairie,
their business was not very profitable, and they gladly embraced the
opportunity of selling their claims.
Caldwell county, being nearly destitute of timber, was regarded by the
people of upper Missouri as worthless. Every Saint that could raise
fifty dollars entered forty acres of land, and there were few but what
could do that much, while many entered large tracts. The Saints
migrated from the east and settled Caldwell in great numbers.
In three years they had built mills, shops, school, meeting and
dwelling houses, and opened and fenced hundreds of farms. Our industry
and temperance rendered our settlements the most prosperous of any in
Missouri, while they embraced all of Caldwell, most of Davis, and
large portions of Clinton, Ray, Carrol and Livingston counties, when
the storm of mobocracy was again aroused and aided by the Governor of
the State, Lilburn W. Boggs, who issued the order expelling all the
Latter-day Saints from the State under penalty of extermination. This
caused the loss of hundreds of lives through violence and suffering.
Houses were plundered, women were violated, men were whipped, and a
great variety of cruelties inflicted, and a loss of property amounting
to millions was sustained, while anyone that would renounce his
religion was permitted to remain.
Joseph and Hyrum Smith, Alexander McRae, Lyman Wight and others were
for several months thrust into prison, and in one instance, while
there, were fed on human flesh and tantalized with the inquiry, "How
they liked Mormon beef" —it being the flesh of some of their murdered
brethren.
The Lord softened the hearts of the people of Quincy, Illinois, and
while the hundreds of Saints were fleeing over the snow-clad prairies
of Missouri, not knowing where to go, the people of Quincy were
holding public meetings, raising subscriptions and adopting
measures to give the fugitives employment and succor, for which our
hearts overflow with gratitude.
As soon as the Saints were all expelled from Missouri, Joseph Smith
went to Washington and laid the grievances of the people before the
President and Congress of the United States. Mr. Van Buren said, "Your
cause is just, but we can do nothing for you." Mr. Clay, when appealed
to, said we "had better go to Oregon." Mr. Calhoun informed Mr. Smith
it would involve the question of State rights, and was a dangerous
question, and it would not do to agitate it. Mr. Cass, as chairman of
the Senate committee, to which the petition was referred, reported
that Congress had no business with it.
Elder John P. Green went east, and published an appeal in behalf of
the Saints, holding public meetings in Cincinnati and New York, and
received some small contributions for the assistance of the most
needy.
As soon as Joseph Smith escaped from Missouri to Illinois, he
purchased lands at a place known as Commerce, in Hancock county, and
commenced the survey of a city which he called Nauvoo, the word being
derived from the Hebrew, meaning beauty and rest. Although the
situation was handsome, it was famed for being unhealthy. There were
but few inhabitants in the vicinity, but many graves in the burying
ground, and much of the subsequent sickness was the result of exposure
and the want of suitable means of nursing the sick. The swamps in the
vicinity of Nauvoo were soon drained, and the lands around put under
cultivation. Numerous dwellings and several mills were erected, and
thrift and prosperity, the invariable results of industry and
sobriety, were manifest.
Demands were made from Mis souri for the persons of Joseph and Hyrum
Smith. Joseph was arrested and tried at Monmouth, before Judge Stephen
A. Douglas, and honorably discharged. His principal attorney in this
case was the Hon. O. H. Browning, now U.S. Secretary of the Interior.
This suit cost him upwards of three thousand dollars. He was soon
again arrested on a demand from Missouri, and discharged by Judge
Pope, of the U.S. District Court. This time it cost him twelve
thousand dollars. Not long after this second acquittal he was again
arrested in Lee County, Illinois, and an attempt made, in the face of
the State authorities, to kidnap him into Missouri. Nauvoo sent out
three hundred men and rescued him. He was afterwards discharged by the
municipal court of that place, and Thomas Ford, Governor of Illinois,
sanctioned his discharge.
In 1844 Joseph and Hyrum were arrested on a charge of treason, under
pledge of the executive that they should have a fair trial, but they
were murdered by one hundred and fifty men with blackened faces;
merchants and men that we had sustained in business, and apostates,
took a leading part in bringing this about.
EXPENSES ATTENDANT UPON THE ARREST OF JOSEPH SMITH.
Joseph Smith, the Prophet, was subjected, during his short ministerial
career of fifteen years, to about fifty vexatious law suits. The
principal expense was incurred in liquidating lawyers bills, and the
brethren's time and expenditure in attending courts to defend the
Prophet from mob violence.
Magistrates court expenses were generally one hundred dollars. The
Prophet paid Generals Doniphan and Atchison for legal services at
Richmond, Mo., in 1838-9, sixteen thousand dollars; but this amount
was fruitlessly expended, as the benefits of the law were not
accorded to him, because of the predominance and overruling power of a
mob.
At the Prophet's trial at Monmouth, Ill., in 1841, before Judge
Douglas, the lawyers' fees and expenses amounted to three thousand
dollars.
His next trial was before Judge Pope, U.S. District Court, in 1842-3,
the expenses of which may be reasonably estimated at twelve thousand
dollars.
Cyrus Walker charged ten thousand dollars for defending Joseph in his
political arrest, or the attempt at kidnapping him at Dixon, Ill., in
1843. There were four other lawyers employed for the defense besides
Walker. The expenses of the defense in this trial were enormous,
involving the amounts incurred by the horse companies who went in
pursuit to aid Joseph, and the trip of the steamer Maid of Iowa, from
Nauvoo to Ottawa, and may be fairly estimated at one hundred thousand
dollars.
When the mantle of Joseph Smith fell upon Brigham Young, the enemies
of God and His kingdom sought to inaugurate a similar career for
President Young; but he took his revolver from his pocket at the
public stand in Nauvoo, and declared that upon the first attempt of an
officer to read a writ to him in a State that had violated its
plighted faith in the murder of the Prophet and Patriarch while under
arrest, he should serve the contents of this writ (holding his loaded
revolver in his hand) first; to this the vast congregation assembled
said, Amen. He was never arrested.
APPEAL TO THE GOVERNORS OF THE STATES.
In 1845, the storm of mobocracy raging around us, we sent an appeal to
the President of the United States, and to the Governor of every State
in the Union, except Missouri, of which the following, addressed to
Governor Drew, of Arkansas, is a copy to the Governor, he being the
only one from whom an answer was received—
"To His Excellency Thomas S. Drew, Governor of Arkansas.
"Nauvoo, Ill., May 1, 1845.
"Honorable Sir—Suffer us, sir, in behalf of a disfranchised and long
afflicted people, to prefer a few suggestions for your serious
consideration, in hope of a friendly and unequivocal response, at as
early a period as may suit your convenience, and the extreme urgency
of the case seems to demand.
"It is not our present design to detail the multiplied and aggravated
wrongs that we have received in the midst of a nation that gave us
birth. Some of us have long been loyal citizens of the State over
which you have the honor to preside, while others' claim citizenship
in each of the States of this great confederacy. We say we are a
disfranchised people. We are privately told by the highest authorities
of this State, that it is neither prudent nor safe for us to vote at
the polls; still we have continued to maintain our right to vote,
until the blood of our best men has been shed, both in Missouri and
the State of Illinois, with impunity.
"You are doubtless somewhat familiar with the history of our
extermination from the State of Missouri, wherein scores of our
brethren were massacred, hundreds died through want and sickness,
occasioned by their unparalleled sufferings, some millions of our
property were confiscated or destroyed, and some fifteen thousand
souls fled for their lives to the then hospitable and peaceful shores
of Illinois; and that the State of Illinois granted to us a
liberal charter, for the term of perpetual succession, and under its
provisions private rights have become invested, and the largest city
in the State has grown up, numbering about twenty thousand
inhabitants.
"But, sir, the startling attitude recently assumed by the State of
Illinois forbids us to think that her designs are any less vindictive
than those of Missouri. She has already used the military of the
State, with the Executive at their head, to coerce and surrender up
our best men to unparalleled murder, and that, too, under the most
sacred pledges of protection and safety. As a salve for such unearthly
perfidy and guilt, she told us, through her highest Executive officer,
that the laws should be magnified, and the murderers brought to
justice; but the blood of her innocent victims had not been wholly
wiped from the floor of the awful arena, where the citizens of a
sovereign State pounced upon two defenseless servants of God, our
Prophet and our Patriarch, before the Senate of that State rescued one
of the indicted actors in that mournful tragedy from the sheriff of
Hancock county, and gave him an honorable seat in her halls of
legislation. And all others who were indicted by the grand jury of
Hancock county for the murders of Generals Joseph and Hyrum Smith, are
suffered to roam at large, watching for further prey.
"To crown the climax of those bloody deeds, the State has repealed all
those chartered rights by which we might have defended ourselves
against aggressors. If we defend ourselves hereafter against violence,
whether it comes under the shadow of law or otherwise (for we have
reason to expect it both ways), we shall then be charged with treason,
and suffer the penalty; and if we continue passive and nonresistant,
we must certainly expect to perish, for our enemies have sworn it.
"And here, sir, permit us to state that General Joseph Smith, during
this short life, was arraigned at the bar of his country about fifty
times, charged with criminal offenses, but was acquitted every time by
his country, or rather his religious opponents almost invariably being
his judges. And we further testify, that as a people we are
law-abiding, peaceable, and without crimes; and we challenge the world
to prove the contrary. And while other less cities in Illinois have
had special courts instituted to try their criminals, we have been
stript of every source of arraigning marauders and murderers who are
prowling around to destroy us, except the common magistracy.
"With these facts before you, sir, will you write to us without delay,
as a father and friend, and advise us what to do? We are, many of us,
citizens of your State, and all members of the same great confederacy.
Our fathers, nay, some of us, have fought and bled for our country,
and we love her dearly.
"In the name of Israel's God, and by virtue of multiplied ties of
country and kindred, we ask your friendly interposition in our favor.
Will it be too much to ask you to convene a special session of your
State Legislature, and furnish us an asylum where we can enjoy our
rights of conscience and religion unmolested? Or will you in a special
message to that body, when convened, recommend a remonstrance against
such unhallowed acts of oppression and expatriation, as this people
have continued to receive from the States of Missouri and Illinois? Or
will you favor us by your personal influence, and by your official rank? Or will you express your views concerning what is called
the Great Western Measure, of colonizing the Latter-day Saints in
Oregon, the northwestern Territory, or some location, remote from the
States, where the hand of oppression shall not crush every noble
principle, and extinguish every patriotic feeling?
"And now, honored sir, having reached out our imploring hands to you
with deep solemnity, we would importune with you as a father, a
friend, a patriot and statesman; by the constitution of American
liberty; by the blood of our fathers, who have fought for the
independence of this Republic; by the blood of the martyrs which has
been shed in our midst; by the wailings of the widows and orphans; by
our murdered fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, wives and
children; by the dread of immediate destruction from secret
combinations now forming for our overthrow; and by every endearing tie
that binds men to men, and renders life bearable, and that, too, for
aught we know, for the last time, that you will lend your immediate
aid to quell the violence of mobocracy, and exert your influence to
establish us as a people in our civil and religious rights, where we
now are, or in some part of the United States, or at some place remote
therefrom, where we may colonize in peace and safety as soon as
circumstances will permit.
"We sincerely hope that your future prompt measures towards us will be
dictated by the best feelings that dwell in the bosom of humanity; and
the blessings of a grateful people, and of many ready to perish,
shall come upon you.
"We are, sir, with great respect,
"Your obedient servants,
"Brigham Young, Chairman.
"W. Richards, |
"Orson Spencer, |
"Orson Pratt, | Committee.
"W. W. Phelps, |
"A. W. Babbit, |
"Jno. M. Bernhisel,|
"In behalf of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, at
Nauvoo, Ill.
"P.S.—As many of our communications postmarked at Nauvoo, have failed
of their destination, and the mails around us have been intercepted by
our enemies, we shall send this to some distant office by the hand of
a special messenger."
The following reply was received from Governor Drew—
"Executive Office, Little Rock,
Ark., May 27, 1845.
"Hon. Brigham Young, President of the Committee of Twelve of Christ's
Church of Latter-day Saints at Nauvoo, Ill.
"Sir—Your letter of the 1st inst. has been received, and claims my
earnest attention. I must acknowledge my inability to serve your
people by calling an extra Session of the General Assembly of this
State for the object contemplated. And although I do not know that
prejudice against your tenets in Arkansas would weigh aught against
the action of that body, in refusing to furnish within our borders an
asylum from the oppression of which you so sorely complain; yet I am
sure the representatives of the people would long hesitate to extend
to any class of citizens exclusive privileges, however innocent their
motives, aims, objects or actions might appear, when the prospects of
collision, from causes of which in your case I know nothing, appear so
evident from the two very recent manifestations presented in the
States of Missouri and Illinois. I have no doubt Illinois,
prompted by the kindest of sympathies for your people in the late
struggle and overthrow they encountered in Missouri, extended a
liberal helping hand, but to repent her supposed folly. Could
Arkansas, after witnessing the same scene reenacted in Illinois,
calculate on anything short of a like catastrophe?
"I am not sufficiently informed of the course taken against you by the
authorities of the State of Illinois, in the difficulties detailed in
your communication, to justify a recommendation from me to the
Legislature to remonstrate against the acts of Illinois—the detailed
statement of facts afforded me by your communication being of an ex
parte character. But were I regularly informed of all the facts from
both parties, and felt able to form a correct opinion as to the
justice of the course pursued by the State of Illinois, yet I am of
opinion that this State would not have, nor would I have as its chief
Executive officer, the right to interfere in the least with the
internal concerns or police of the State of Illinois, or of any other
neighboring State, where its operations do not distract or in any way
affect the good order of the citizens of the State of Arkansas. There
are instances, but they are rare, where the interposition of one State
to arrest the progress of violence in another, would be at all
admissible. Such, for instance, as where the public authorities of the
State affected are palpably incompetent to quell an insurrection
within her limits, and the violence is likely to extend its ravages
and bad influence to such neighboring State, or where a proper call
has been made for succor.
"Nor can I afford to exercise my official rank as chief Executive of
this State, in behalf of a faction in a neighboring State; and I
humbly conceive that my personal influence would add nothing to your
cause, unless it should prove to be a just one, in which event public
opinion will afford you support of a character more lasting in the eye
of an enlightened public, than wiser and greater men than your humble
servant—than official rank, or force backed by power. It is true that
while prejudice may have the ascendancy over the minds of the
neighboring community, your people may be exposed more or less to loss
of life and destruction of property; I therefore heartily agree with
you in the proposed plan of emigration to the Oregon Territory—or to
California—the north of Texas, or to Nebraska; thereby placing your
community beyond the reach of contention, until, at least, you shall
have had time and opportunity to test the practicability of your
system, and to develop its contemplated superior advantages in
ameliorating the condition of the human race, and adding to the
blessings of civil and religious liberty. That such a community,
constituted as yours, with the mass of prejudice which surrounds and
obstructs its progress at this time, cannot prosper in that or any of
the neighboring States, appears very evident from the signal failures
upon two occasions under auspices at least as favorable as you could
reasonably expect from any of the States.
"My personal sympathies are strong for the oppressed, though my
official station can know nothing but what is sanctioned by the
strictest justice, and that circumscribed to the limited jurisdiction
of my own State; and while I deplore, as a man and a philanthropist,
your distressed situation, I would refer you to the emphatic and
patriarchal proposition of Abraham to Lot; and whilst I allude to the
eloquent paraphrase of one of Virginia's most gifted sons, wherein he circumscribed the bounds of our domain within to the great
valley of the Mississippi, I would only add that the way is now open
to the Pacific without let or hindrance. Should the Latter-day Saints
migrate to Oregon, they will carry with them the good will of
philanthropists, and the blessing of every friend of humanity. If they
are wrong, their wrongs will be abated with many degrees of allowance,
and if right, migration will afford an opportunity to make it manifest
in due season to the whole civilized world.
"With my hearty desires for your peace and prosperity, I subscribe
myself respectfully yours,
"Thomas S. Drew."
This correspondence shows us the necessity of our being united in
sustaining the Latter-day Saints, that we may not build up, by our own
acts, a power to renew persecution again in our midst.
EXPULSION FROM ILLINOIS.
In September, 1845, the mob commenced burning the houses of the Saints
in the southern part of the county of Hancock, and continued until
stopped by the sheriff, who summoned a posse comitatus, while few but
Latter-day Saints would serve under him. The Governor sent troops and
disbanded the posse. The murderers of Joseph and Hyrum had a sham
trial and were acquitted. A convention of nine counties notified us
that we must leave the State. The Governor informed us through General
John J. Harding and Hon. Stephen A. Douglas, that we could not be
protected in Illinois. We commenced our emigration west on the 6th of
February, 1846. During that month some twelve hundred wagons crossed
the Mississippi, many of them on the ice. Everybody that was able to
leave continued to do so until late in the summer, and the outfits
with which they left were insufficient, while the winter and spring
weather was inclement, which caused a great deal of suffering.
While the strength of Israel had gone westward, the Illinois mob
commenced their hostilities with redoubled fury. They whipped,
plundered and murdered men, abused women and children, and drove all
the scattering ones into Nauvoo, then laid siege to the place and
bombarded it for three days, killing several persons and wounding
others, and peremptorily expelled the remainder across the river into
Iowa, after robbing them of the remainder of the property they
possessed, and leaving them on the shore to perish.
Their encampment was probably one of the most miserable and distressed
that ever existed. All who were able, by any possible means, had got
away; those left were the poor and the helpless. Great numbers were
sick, and they were without tents or conveniences of any kind to make
them comfortable. Encamped on the foggy bottoms of the Mississippi
River, they were scorched with fevers, without medicine or proper
food.
In this helpless condition a merciful Providence smiled on them by
sending quails, so tame that many caught them with their hands; yet
many perished within sight of hundreds of houses belonging to them and
their friends, which were under the dominion of the Rev. Thomas S.
Brockman and his mob legions, who viciously trampled the constitution
and laws of Illinois, and the laws of humanity, under their feet.
The victims continued to suffer until the camps in the west sent them
relief. For a more full description of these scenes, I read from the
historical address of Col. (now General) Thomas L. Kane, who was an
eye witness.
"A few years ago," said Colonel Kane, "ascending the Upper
Mississippi, in the autumn, when its waters were low, I was compelled
to travel by land past the region of the Rapids. My road lay through
the Half-breed Tract, a fine section of Iowa, which the unsettled
state of its land-titles had appropriated as a sanctuary for coiners,
horse thieves, and other outlaws. I had left my steamer at Keokuk, at
the foot of the Lower Fall, to hire a carriage, and to contend for
some fragments of a dirty meal with the swarming flies, the only
scavengers of the locality.
"From this place to where the deep water of the river returns, my eye
wearied to see everywhere sordid, vagabond, and idle settlers, and a
country marred, without being improved, by their careless hands. I was
descending the last hillside upon my journey, when a landscape in
delightful contrast broke upon my view. Half encircled by a bend of
the river, a beautiful city lay glittering in the fresh morning sun;
its bright new dwellings, set in cool green gardens, ranging up around
a stately dome-shaped hill, which was crowned by a noble edifice,
whose high tapering spire was radiant with white and gold. The city
appeared to cover several miles, and beyond it, in the background,
there rolled off a fair country, chequered by the careful lines of
fruitful husbandry. The unmistakable marks of industry, enterprise,
and educated wealth everywhere, made the scene one of singular and
most striking beauty. It was a natural impulse to visit this inviting
region. I procured a skiff, and rowing across the river, landed at the
chief wharf of the city. No one met me there. I looked, and saw no
one. I could hear no one move, though the quiet everywhere was such
that I heard the flies buzz, and the water ripples break against the
shallow of the beach. I walked through the solitary street. The town
lay as in a dream, under some deadening spell of loneliness, from
which I almost feared to wake it, for plainly it had not slept long.
There was no grass growing up in the paved ways; rains had not
entirely washed away the prints of dusty footsteps.
"Yet I went about unchecked. I went into empty workshops, rope-walks
and smithies. The spinner's wheel was idle; the carpenter had gone
from his workbench and shavings, his unfinished sash and casing.
Fresh bark was in the tanner's vat, and the fresh chopped lightwood
stood piled against the baker's oven. The blacksmith's shop was cold;
but his coal heap and lading pool, and crooked water horn were all
there, as if he had just gone off for a holiday. No work-people
anywhere looked to know my errand.
"If I went into the gardens, clinking the wicket-latch loudly after
me, to pull the marigolds, heartsease, and lady-slippers, and draw a
drink with the water-sodden well-bucket and its noisy chain; or,
knocking off with my stick the tall, heavy-headed dahlias and
sunflowers, hunted over the beds for cucumbers and love-apples—no one
called out to me from any opened window, or dog sprang forward to bark
an alarm.
"I could have supposed the people hidden in the houses, but the doors
were unfastened; and when at last I timidly entered them, I found dead
ashes white upon the hearths, and had to tread a tip-toe, as if
walking down the aisle of a country church, to avoid rousing
irreverent echoes from the naked floors. On the outskirts of the town
was the city graveyard; but there was no record of plague there, nor
did it in anywise differ much from other Protestant American cemeteries. Some of the mounds were not long sodded; some of the
stones were newly set, their dates recent, and their black
inscriptions glossy in the mason's hardly dried lettering ink. Beyond
the graveyard, out in the fields, I saw, in one spot hard by where the
fruited boughs of a young orchard had been roughly torn down, the
still smoldering remains of a barbecue fire, that had been
constructed of rails from the fencing around it. It was the latest
sign of life there. Fields upon fields of heavy-headed yellow grain
lay rotting ungathered upon the ground. No one was there to take in
their rich harvest.
"As far as the eye could reach they stretched away—they sleeping, too,
in the hazy air of autumn. Only two portions of the city seemed to
suggest the import of this mysterious solitude. On the southern
suburb, the houses looking out upon the country showed, by their
splintered woodwork and walls battered to the foundation, that they
had lately been the mark of a destructive cannonade. And in and around
the splendid Temple, which had been the chief object of my admiration,
armed men were barracked, surrounded by their stacks of musketry and
pieces of heavy ordnance. These challenged me to render an account of
myself, and why I had had the temerity to cross the water without
written permit from a leader of their band.
"Though these men were generally more or less under the influence of
ardent spirits, after I had explained myself as a passing stranger,
they seemed anxious to gain my good opinion. They told the story of
the Dead City; that it had been a notable manufacturing and commercial
mart, sheltering over twenty thousand persons; that they had waged war
with its inhabitants for several years, and had been finally
successful only a few days before my visit, in an action fought in
front of the ruined suburb; after which they had driven them forth at
the point of the sword. The defense, they said, had been obstinate,
but gave way on the third day's bombardment. They boasted greatly of
their prowess, especially in this battle, as they called it; but I
discovered they were not of one mind as to certain of the exploits
that had distinguished it, one of which, as I remember, was, that they
had slain a father and his son, a boy of fifteen, not long residents
of the fated city, whom they admitted to have borne a character
without reproach.
"They also conducted me inside the massive sculptured walls of the
curious Temple, in which they said the banished inhabitants were
accustomed to celebrate the mystic rites of an unhallowed worship.
They particularly pointed out to me certain features of the building
which, having been the peculiar objects of a former superstitious
regard, they had, as a matter of duty, sedulously defiled and defaced.
The reputed sites of certain shrines they had thus particularly
noticed; and various sheltered chambers, in one of which was a deep
well, constructed, they believed, with a dreadful design. Beside
these, they led me to see a large and deep chiseled marble vase or
basin, supported upon twelve oxen, also of marble, and of the size of
life, of which they told some romantic stories. They said the deluded
persons, most of whom were emigrants from a great distance, believed
their Deity countenanced their reception here of a baptism of
regeneration, as proxies for whomsoever they held in warm affection in
the countries from which they had come. That here parents 'went into
the water' for their lost children, children for their parents, widows for their spouses, and young persons for their lovers;
that thus the Great Vase came to be for them associated with all dear
and distant memories, and was therefore the object, of all others in
the building, to which they attached the greatest degree of idolatrous
affection. On this account, the victors had so diligently desecrated
it, as to render the apartment in which it was contained too noisome
to abide in.
"They permitted me also to ascend into the steeple, to see where it
had been lightning-struck the Sabbath before; and to look out, east
and south, on wasted farms like those I had seen near the city,
extending till they were lost in the distance. Here, in the face of
the pure day, close to the scar of the divine wrath left by the
thunderbolt, were fragments of food, cruises of liquor, and broken
drinking vessels, with a bass drum and a steamboat signal bell, of
which I afterwards learned the use with pain.
"It was after nightfall when I was ready to cross the river on my
return. The wind had freshened since the sunset, and the water beating
roughly into my little boat, I edged higher up the stream than the
point I had left in the morning, and landed where a faint glimmering
light invited me to steer.
"Here, among the dock and rushes, sheltered only by the darkness,
without roof between them and the sky, I came upon a crowd of several
hundred human beings, whom my movements roused from uneasy slumber on
the ground.
"Passing these on my way to the light, I found it came from a tallow
candle in a paper funnel shade, such as is used by street vendors of
apples and peanuts, and which, flaming and guttering away in the bleak
air off the water, shone flickeringly on the emaciated features of a
man in the last stage of a bilious remittent fever. They had done
their best for him. Over his head was something like a tent, made of a
sheet or two, and he rested on a partially ripped open old straw
mattress, with a hair sofa cushion under his head for a pillow. His
gaping jaw and glazing eye told how short a time he would monopolize
these luxuries; though a seemingly bewildered and excited person, who
might have been his wife, seemed to find hope in occasionally forcing
him to swallow, awkwardly, sips of the tepid river water, from a
burned and battered bitter-smelling tin coffee pot. Those who knew
better had furnished the apothecary he needed; a toothless old
bald-head, whose manner had the repulsive dullness of a man familiar
with death scenes. He, so long as I remained, mumbled in his patient's
ear a monotonous and melancholy prayer, between the pauses of which I
heard the hiccup and sobbing of two little girls, who were sitting
upon a piece of drift wood outside.
"Dreadful, indeed, was the suffering of these forsaken beings; bowed
and cramped with cold and sunburn, alternating as each weary day and
night dragged on, they were, almost all of them, the crippled victims
of disease. They were there because they had no homes, nor hospital,
nor poorhouse, nor friends to offer them any. They could not satisfy
the feeble cravings of their sick; they had not bread to quiet the
fractious hunger cries of their children. Mothers and babes, daughters
and grandparents, all of them alike, were bivouacked in tatters,
wanting even covering to comfort those whom the sick shiver of fever
was searching to the marrow.
"These were Mormons, in Lee county, Iowa, in the fourth week of the
month of September, in the year of our Lord 1846. The city—it was Nauvoo, Ill. The Mormons were the owners of that city, and the
smiling country around. And those who had stopped their ploughs, who
had silenced their hammers, their axes, their shuttles, and their
workshop wheels; those who had put out their fires, who had eaten
their food, spoiled their orchards, and trampled under foot their
thousands of acres of unharvested bread; these were the keepers of
their dwellings, the carousers in their Temple, whose drunken riot
insulted the ears of the dying.
"I think it was as I turned from the wretched night watch of which I
have spoken, that I first listened to the sounds of revel of a party
of the guard within the city. Above the distant hum of the voices of
many, occasionally rose distinct the loud oath-tainted exclamation,
and the falsely intonated scrap of vulgar song; but lest this requiem
should go unheeded, every now and then, when their boisterous orgies
strove to attain a sort of ecstatic climax, a cruel spirit of
insulting frolic carried some of them up into the high belfry of the
Temple steeple, and there, with the wicked childishness of inebriates,
they whooped, and shrieked, and beat the drum that I had seen, and
rang in charivaric unison their loud-tongued steamboat bell.
"They were, all told, not more than six hundred and forty persons who
were thus lying on the river flats. But the Mormons in Nauvoo and its
dependencies had been numbered the year before at over twenty
thousand. Where were they? They had last been seen carrying in
mournful train their sick and wounded, halt and blind, to disappear
behind the western horizon, pursuing the phantom of another home.
Hardly anything else was known of them; and people asked with
curiosity, 'What had been their fate—what their fortunes?'"
OCTOBER 9TH
The rear of the camp of the Saints that were driven out of Nauvoo, as
we left them last evening lying on the banks of the Mississippi—a very
uncomfortable and distressing situation—were frequently annoyed by the
firing of cannon from the opposite side of the river, many of the shot
landing in the river, but occasionally some would pass over into the
camp. One of them, picked up in the camp, was sent as a present to the
Governor of Iowa.
The Rev. Thomas S. Brockman, leader of the mob who expelled the Saints
from Nauvoo, said when he entered the city, that he considered he had
gained a tremendous triumph; but there is no language sufficient to
describe the ignominy and disgrace that must attach, in all time to
come, to him and his associates, in the accomplishment of so brutal a
work on an innocent and unoffending people on account of their
religious opinions.
The settlements of Iowa on the west side of the Mississippi River were
scattering, extending back about seventy miles. We passed through
these settlements on our journey westward, that is, President Young
and the party that left Nauvoo in the winter. We diverged a little
from the regular route in order to be in the vicinity of the
settlements of Missouri. Our brethren scattered wherever there was an
opportunity to take jobs from the people, making rails, building log
houses, and doing a variety of work, by which they obtained grain for
their animals and breadstuff for themselves. We were enabled to do
this while moving slowly. In fact, the spring rains soon rendered the
ground so muddy that it was impossible to travel but a very short
distance at a time. Soon after, when the grass grew, this divergence
from the road southerly was discontinued, by pursuing a
direction further north, until we reached a point on the east fork of
Grand River, where the President's company commenced a settlement
called Garden Grove, then another called Pisgah was commenced on the
west fork of the same river. These streams and a number of others had
to be bridged at a heavy expense, which was done by the advanced
parties. Our travel west of the settlements, before we reached the
Missouri River, was about 300 miles. The country was in the possession
of Pottawattamie Indians. They, however, had sold their lands to the
United States, and were to give possession the following year. We were
delayed building ferry boats and crossing the Missouri River. A large
portion of our people crossed at a point now known as Omaha city; some
crossed a little below, at Bellevue, or what we sometimes termed
Whiskey Point, there being some missionaries and Indian traders there,
who occupied their time in selling whiskey to and swindling the
Indians.
We were met there by Captain James Allen, of United States dragoons,
with an order from the War Department to enroll five hundred volunteers
for the war in Mexico. The volunteers were enrolled in a very few
days. A portion of our wagons had crossed the Missouri at this time,
and the residue of our people, from whom the volunteers were drawn,
were scattered on the way two hundred miles towards Nauvoo. The men,
however, volunteered, leaving their families and teams on the prairies
without protectors, and very materially weakened the camp, because
they were the flower of the people. They marched direct for
Leavenworth, and there received the arms of infantry, and then marched
for California by way of Santa Fe. Their commander, Lieutenant-Colonel
Allen, died at Leavenworth, and they were subsequently placed under
the command of Lieutenant-Colonel P. Saint George Cooke. They made a
march of 2050 miles, to San Diego. History may be searched in vain for
a parallel to this march of infantry. During a portion of this route
they were on three-quarter rations, a portion on half rations, and a
large portion of it on quarter rations of bread, their only meat being
such draught animals as were unable to proceed further. They were, at
one time, temporarily relieved from this pressure through an encounter
with a herd of wild bulls. These men were discharged on the coast of
California; but the Government, finding it necessary to maintain some
show of force in the southern part of California, requested a company
of them to reenlist, which they did, and served for a term of six
months.
The departure of all these men from our party, left a great burden on
the shoulders of those who remained. President Young gathered them
together to a place now called Florence, which we denominated Winter
Quarters. While there we built seven hundred log houses, one
water-power and several horse mills for grinding grain, and some
hundred and fifty dugouts, being a kind of cave dug in the earth, or
houses half underground.
We gathered up the families of the battalion the best we could, but a
great many were sick. Our exposures through the season, being deprived
of vegetable food, and the overwork through so much bridge and road
making, brought on sickness; and all who were in Winter Quarters
remember it as being a place where a great many persons were
afflicted, and many died.
Our brethren who were on the other side of the river established camps in various localities. There were probably two thousand wagons
scattered about on the east side of the river in different parts of
the Pottawattamie country, each grove or camping ground taking the name
of its leader. Many of those names are still retained, the various
camping grounds being known as Cutler's, Perkins', Miller's, &c.
Elders Orson Hyde, P. P. Pratt and John Taylor, left the camp and went
on a mission to England. Brother Benson, accompanied by other
brethren, went to the east to solicit donations from our eastern
friends. I am not aware of the exact amount that was donated, but it
was only a trifle. There were a few old clothes also contributed,
which I believe were scarcely worth the freight. Christian sympathy
was not very strong for the Latter-day Saints. But we feel very
thankful to those who did contribute, and shall ever remember with
kindness their generosity towards the Saints.
We were here visited by Col. Thos. L. Kane, of Philadelphia, an
extract from whose historical address was read yesterday. He visited
our camp and saw our condition, and was the only man, I believe, who
by words and deeds manifested that he felt to sympathize with the
outraged and plundered people called Latter-day Saints. It may be that
he was not the only man, but he was the only man who made himself
conspicuous by his sympathy towards us. It is true that we have had
men come here, as merchants and officers, who have expressed to us
that they did have great sympathy with us at that time. It does us a
great deal of good now to hear them say so, we did not know anything
about it then.
In the spring of 1847, President Young, with one hundred and
forty-three pioneers, started in search of a place of settlement. We
started early, before there was a particle of grass in the Platte
valley. We carried our food with us, and fed our animals on the
cottonwood bark, until the grass grew, and managed to get along,
making the road for six hundred and fifty miles, and followed the
trappers' trail about four hundred miles more until we arrived in this
valley. The whole company arrived here on the 24th of July, 1847.
There were a few bushes along the streams of City Creek, and other
creeks south. The land was barren; it was covered with large black
crickets, which seemed to be devouring everything that had outlived
the drouth and desolation. Here we commenced our work by making an
irrigation ditch, and planting potatoes, which we had brought from the
States; and late as it was in the season, with all the disadvantages
with which we had to contend, we raised enough to preserve the seed,
though very few were as large as chestnuts. For the next three years we
were reduced to considerable straits for food. Fast-meetings were
held, and contributions constantly made for those who had no
provisions. Every head of a family issued rations to those dependent
upon him, for fear his supply of provisions should fall short.
Rawhides, wolves, rabbits, thistle roots, segos, and everything that
could be thought of that would preserve life, were resorted to; there
were a few deaths by eating poisonous roots. A great deal of the grain
planted here the first year grew only a few inches high; it was so
short it could not be cut. The people had to pull it. A great many got
discouraged and wanted to leave the country; some did leave. The
discovery of gold mines in California by the brethren of the
battalion, caused many of the discontented to go to that paradise of
gold.
During all these trials President Young was firm and decided;
he put on a smile when among the people, and said this was the place
God had pointed out for the gathering place of the Saints, and it
would be blessed and become one of the most productive places in the
world. In this way he encouraged the people, and he was sustained by
men who felt that God had inspired him to lead us here.
President Young went back to Winter Quarters the first season, and in
1848 returned with his family. John Smith, my honored father, who was
subsequently Patriarch of the whole Church, and who had been President
of the Stake in Nauvoo, presided during the absence of President
Young. I think that, for a man of his age and health, it was, in many
respects, a very unpleasant position to be placed in, for all the
murmuring, complaining, faultfinding, distress, hunger, annoyances,
fears and doubts of the whole people were poured into his ear. But God
inspired him, although a feeble man, to keep up their spirits, and to
sustain the work that was entrusted to him until the arrival of the
President next season.
In three years—1850, the idea of a man issuing rations to his family
to keep them from starving had passed away; but the grasshopper war of
1856 inflicted upon us so great a scarcity, that issuing rations had
to be resorted to again. Through all these circumstances no one was
permitted to suffer,
- George A. Smith