followHIM - Voices of the Restoration #10 • Liberty Jail • Dr. Gerrit Dirkmaat • Oct 20-26 • Come Follow Me
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Discussion (0)
Hello, everyone, and welcome to follow him.
We are continuing with our voices of the restoration lessons.
Our topic here is Liberty Jail, and we brought with us, as we always do, one of our voices of the continuing restoration, who is Dr. Garrett Dirkmott, whom we love to have on here.
Hank and I are both enrolled in the Dirk Moss Academy, which we affectionately call it.
A topic here is, to me, when I was a kid, I thought that is the dumbest name for a jail ever, Liberty Jail.
Today we're going to get some backstory.
Hank, when you think Liberty Jail, what comes to mind right off?
John, I've said this every once in a while in our years together, but if Joseph Smith just gives us sections 121, 123, he's a prophet.
Now, that's one of hundreds of incredible sections of doctrine covenants, the book of Mormon,
the pearl of great price.
But there is something almost magical about these sections.
I think of them as like 200 years before their time.
How to win friends and influence people, Section 121.
And then how do you get through dark times?
Joseph goes from Section 121 verse 1, oh God, where art thou, to Section 123, verse 17?
let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power.
It's a change that takes place because of what it's taught.
You don't need to know the history of 121 through 123 to appreciate them,
but when you know the history, and that's what Garrett's going to do today,
it's 3D.
This comes out.
The text changes.
I'm recalling one of the handcart pioneers that said we became acquainted with God in our extremities.
This is one of those, the worst situation you can imagine.
And like you said, Hank, these incredible words, thoughts and ideas and scripture come out of that place.
I like what you said, Hank, about the history.
I can't think of anybody better than Garrett to help us out here.
I'm going to get snug here, get my popcorn, and get ready to learn.
Get it ready?
Yeah.
Well, especially if you want me to cover history leading up to it.
I mean, we could talk all day just about the revelation itself and how powerful a teacher.
this is, and one of the reasons why people will refer to Liberty Jail as that temple prison,
right? Because Joseph certainly is going to reveal things that touch people's hearts even
today. I was actually in a conversation with someone not terribly long ago. They expressed the
opinion that they didn't think that anything that wasn't received as a dictated revelation
from God should be considered scripture.
It's a pretty avant-garde position to take,
but they're trying to make the argument that unless the prophet is saying,
here I'm dictating a revelation, and you get the paper out, you write it down,
if you expand it beyond that,
if you start saying that someone's sermon should be scripture,
or that a proclamation should be scripture,
you're no longer doing what a revelation is.
I said, well, if that were the case,
then you'd lose a lot.
of sections of the Doctrine and Covenants.
You'd lose Doctrine and Covenants, Section 121, 22, and 23.
You'd lose 127 and 128.
You'd lose Section 2 and Section 13.
You'd lose a lot of things.
In fact, you'd even lose Section 109 of the Curtin Temple Dedicatory Prayer.
If that's the argument you're making, you'd also lose Section 137.
So I start listing off all these.
They stop me like, oh, actually, you don't need to list anymore.
As soon as you said doctrine and covenants 121, I agree with you.
There are things that can be canonized that are not received the same way, because that
revelation meant so much to them, meant so much to them that as soon as they realized that
their position they'd staked out would cost them this revelation, they said, yeah, actually,
I changed my mind.
I won't lose 121 for anything.
So that I'm going to stay with.
speaks to people both in their own difficulties and then also in the difficulties they see
around them in the world, and in many ways gives us this insight into Joseph Smith as who he is
when he's going through something difficult as well. You know, when you say, let's talk about
some history of Missouri, I mean, there's a lot of things we could talk about. As a brief
overview. The Saints are driven out of Jackson County. They live essentially as refugees in temporary
settlements outside of the county in 1834 and 1835. Eventually, the Missouri legislature decides to try to
care of their Mormon problem. I mean, it really is kind of an embarrassment to Missouri. The fact that
you have a whole bunch of residents of your state who purchase property, some of it from
the government, that are not being allowed to access the property that they bought on the
basis of indiscriminate mob violence. So it's not like the Latter-day Saints sold everything
they had in Jackson County in 1834 when they're violently driven out. They still own all
of that land. They just don't have the ability to access it because of armed violence.
The Saints, of course, are continually petitioning the courts and the government.
I think Missouri is one of the places where Joseph really learns that a corrupt, local,
and state government can be just as or more tyrannical than any dictatorship on earth.
because at the time, state governments had an awful lot of power.
The federal government was limited in its power, especially prior to the American Civil War.
And the idea of majority rules, the idea of democracy, that we tend to look at as a very, very positive thing, right up until you end up being a hated minority group.
And if you're a hated minority group inside of a political entity like a state or even a county or even at a town level, it will always be more politically advantageous for politicians to further inspire hate of a hated minority group, then it will be to defend them.
you gain votes by saying what are these Mormons doing and you lose votes by saying hey guys what if we like didn't drive them off their land and stuff that's not a way to win votes in 1834 Missouri 1835 Joseph I think it's here that he's learning it writ large before look they dealt with local oppression for sure I mean Colesville is persecuting Latter-day Saints
But the state of New York isn't persecuting Latter-day Saints.
Local, corrupt, individuals filing claims against them.
They're doing things.
Lucy Harris is doing things in New York.
The state of New York itself is not sending a militia to arrest Joseph Smith.
It's these little petty fiefdoms, the little local governments that are exercising authority.
And the same thing happens in Ohio.
When the Saints arrive in Ohio, Iber Howe, the publisher of the first anti-Mormon book that Mormonism unveiled, the editor of the Painesville Telegraph, he brags about the fact that they undertook every legal means of driving the Mormons from their county.
You can actually see this in the political record.
You can see them deliberately trying to prevent Latter-day Saints from gaining voting rights, to prevent Latter-day Saints from
exercising their local township rights, to give you an idea, prior to 1834, one Dr. Philastas
Hurlbutt, the good doctor.
The good doctor, and by good we mean not a doctor at all.
He was born a doctor.
That was his proper name.
And it was.
You know, he's excommunicated from the church for committing adultery while he's on his
mission.
Then he begs to get back into the church, gets back into the church.
then is excommunicated almost immediately thereafter
because he again attempts to commit adultery
then undertakes a speaking circuit
speaking out against the church claiming
that he's some kind of insider
he has all kinds of inside information
because he's an elder in the Mormon church
everyone's like oh you mean you're an adult man
but he claimed that he had this inside information
he's going to actually take his rhetoric
so far that he's going to publicly call
for Joseph's murder
and according to George A. Smith, he's going to say, I'm going to wash my hands in the blood
of Joseph Smith. Well, that's going to go to a court. It's going to go to a trial that
Joseph Smith fears that Dr. Flassus Hurlbutt will wound, beat, or kill him is what the record
says. The judge, in a time when Latter-gay Saints don't win court cases, it's bad enough that
the judge actually sides with Joseph Smith and puts Dr. Follett's.
asses hurlbut under a bond to keep the peace. Essentially, you have to put up a certain amount of
money. And if you make any more threats or if you violently attack Joe's first family, you're going to
lose this money, you know, as well as whatever criminal stuff goes on. After he is essentially
convicted of that, he's publicly declaring that he wants to murder Joseph Smith. And he's publicly
declaring it enough that a court in Ohio in 1834 says, yeah, that's not okay. After,
After, the court says, yes, you were making death threats against Joseph, the town of
Kirtland elects him to a public office.
Kind of gives you an idea of where local governments are in their attempt to persecute
Latter-day Saints using these local legal means.
You have this happening all over Missouri, both on the local.
local level, but then you also have it happening on county levels and on state levels
because the state of Missouri actually has a problem.
They have thousands of residents of their state that have been dispossessed violently,
that they don't actually have any legal means of saying they can't go to their homes,
but you have no political will to actually marshal troops to go get them back to their homes,
because then you lose the election.
So in 1836, Missouri does something that they think will help alleviate the problem.
They take a portion of the state that is relatively uninhabited.
They create a new county in 1836 called Caldwell County.
Now, this county, it's much more populated to the south of it, which is Clay County,
and it's much more populated to the north of it, which is Davies County.
And frankly, the land in Caldwell County, I apologize to anyone from Missouri listening,
who happens to live in Caldwell County, but since there's like four people who live there now,
I'm pretty sure they're not listening.
Besides the missionaries, maybe, right?
Oh, look, there's missionaries there, yeah.
But even most of them are in Adam and Diamonds.
So, I mean, even they're in Davies County, even they know to be in a different county.
And look, if you're looking for like a sandwich or something, you've got to go to Gallatin,
you've got to go to Davies County.
You're not getting anything in Caldwell County.
But the legislature establishes Caldwell County, for lack of a better term, the way they see it is a type of Latter-day Saint, or they would say Mormon, Indian Reservation, meaning we're going to create a county for the Mormons to live in.
I know it's going to come as a huge shock and a surprise to all of your listeners that they choose a county that's not the best land.
that isn't very inhabited and say, oh, yeah, the Mormons could have this. It's stunning. It's
never happened before in American history that poor land was chosen for such things, but that's what
they do. This is where Far West is going to be established. Now, the Saints actually embrace this,
because at least they now have somewhere they can go. Caldwell County's established for the express
purpose of settling Latter-day Saints. All these saints that are refugees in Clay County, they now start
moving to far west. And far west will rapidly rise as a city. The saints in Caldwell County,
they are happy that they're there. But as more and more saints start moving to Missouri,
the land to the north in Davies County, it's much better land. It just is. There's a lot of land in
Caldwell County that it's kind of swampy. It's not drained very well. You can discover this if you go to
Hans Mill today. And if you go to Hans Mill after it rained, you're going to know about it.
Yeah. It is mud. You'd be calling a tow truck, yeah. Yeah, you're going to be calling a tow truck.
I mean, there are some nice parts, and Far West is actually some of the best parts of Caldwell County,
but it's in the extreme western portion of the county. Much of the county is not that great for farming.
whereas to the north in Davies County, it's really good land. It's fertile, it's great. Limeon
White starts off by settling in Davies County and he establishes a ferry across the Grand River.
Because of that, you start having other Latter-day Saints and start to settle around there.
If you start having more and more Latter-day Saints, settling in the Adam-on-Diamond
area, especially after Joseph Smith receives the revelation declaring this is Adam-on-Diamond.
in late 1837 and then especially in early 1838, you have more and more Latter-day Saints
settling in Davies County, not in Caldwell County.
Now, this is going to precipitate a problem.
As far as the Missourians are concerned, Caldwell County is where all Mormons should live.
For the Latter-day Saints, for their part, they have this crazy idea we've talked about before
that because they're American citizens, they can live wherever they want.
They start settling in other places.
Now, they're happy they have Far West.
They're happy they have this base of operation.
But as they move to Missouri, they live wherever they want because it's America and you can live
wherever you want.
missourians on the other hand are not okay with them exercising that ride probably the best
example of just blatant anti-mormon antagonism in missouri comes from a little town that
you may not even know about probably don't talk about a whole lot your average church member doesn't
and that is de witt there's a little town in the wit that's on a bend
in the Missouri River, it is not very close to these other Latter-day Saints settlements.
And it's in a much more populated county.
It's in Carroll County.
What happens in 1837?
The panic of 1837 destroys immigration to the West.
I mean, in American history, when there's an economic downturn, especially when it's tied
to land prices, you have this stopping of the movement West.
Why? Well, how am I going to move west? Well, I sell my farm in New York, and I sell it for a certain amount of money, and then I move to Missouri, and I buy five times the size of farm with the same amount of money. I mean, the same thing goes on in America today. If I live in San Diego and I've got a home on the beach, and that sounds pretty awesome. But if I did, and I sold it, I could move to Idaho and probably buy a very substantial house with the same amount of money.
that I made. I'd buy way more land. I could buy a much bigger house. Think of that in terms of
farming. We think about it in terms of housing. Like, you know, if I live in California and I sell my
house and I moved to Nebraska, I'm probably getting a better house. Similarly, if I live in Connecticut
and I sell my well-established 40-acre farm, I'm going to sell it for a pretty high dollar
value, but I'm going to be able to take that money and I'm going to be able to go to the frontier
and I'm going to be able to buy hundreds of acres with that money.
Yeah, I'm going to have to start from scratch and cut down trees, but I've increased the amount
of acreage I have by hundreds with the same amount of money.
What you need for that westward land movement to work is an economy where people have
money to buy your house, buy your farm in Connecticut.
Whenever these panics happen, suddenly your land's not worth as much.
You can't sell it for what it's worth, you can't sell it for what you all want it, so you no longer are moving.
It happens to Missouri a great deal, and if you read Missouri newspapers, you'll see them commenting on the fact that the flow of immigrants to Missouri slowed down because of the economic conditions.
Latter-day Saint immigration to Missouri doesn't just continue during the panic of 1837.
It actually increases.
You have a lot of Latter-day Saints moving to Missouri.
They're not the only people moving, but relatively during this economic crisis, they are among some of the only people going there.
And so if you're a Missourian, what you feel is there are thousands of Mormons coming here, and there's not really a whole lot of other people coming here, because Mormons aren't moving to Missouri because they want to live in Missouri.
They're moving to Missouri because God commanded them to move to Missouri.
And that's a different type of immigration.
It's not, I'm going here for economic reasons, I'm going here to get a nice farm, I'm going here because God told me to go here.
And this really increases in January of 1838.
So in January of 1838, things have gotten so bad in Kirtland.
The Kirtland Safety Society has collapsed.
You have multiple members of the Kormon.
the 12 apostles who've apostatized, you have going out of the church, if not all the way out
yet, the three witnesses, many of the eight witnesses. It's a really terrible time for Joseph
and for the church. And eventually in January, Joseph Smith receives a revelation. This is not in the
doctrine and covenants. You're going to go try and find it. Be like, I think Garrett lied. But,
no, it really is a revelation Joseph Smith receives. In January of 1838,
that commands him and all of the faithful members that are still left in Kirtland to move to
Missouri.
After January of 1838, you have an increased flood.
So at a time when you have the lowest amount of immigration, when that economic crisis is
really hit.
So spring of 1838, nobody's moving to Missouri, except for thousands of Latter-day Saints
that are moving there, because they're not moving there.
because they've heard there's no mosquitoes or ticks. They're moving there because God told them
to go there. Well, where are they going to go? Well, they're going to go places where their
Latter-day Saints are already living. You have some settlements in Adam and Diomondiomen
that suddenly you have hundreds and then thousands moving. In Far West, you have thousands
and then even more thousands that are coming. DeWitt in Carroll County is a
great example where almost overnight, hundreds of Latter-day Saints moved to this county.
Now, Carroll County is quite populated. In the immediate moment, they're not really any threat
politically to Carroll County. They don't even make up 10% of the county. They are not a threat.
They're moving into this essentially failed community where no one was living and no one's
paying taxes. So you'd think that the residents of Carroll County, Missouri would be kind of happy.
oh, hey, at least we're getting tax funds from this now.
The exact opposite happens.
Like I said, this is a great test example of how whatever the excuses we give for why there's violence in Missouri,
DeWitt demonstrates that all of them are pretty shallow.
The residents of Carroll County almost immediately come to the Latter Day Saints and demand that they leave.
Okay, well, we bought this land.
When the Laterary Saints don't leave, they start to undertake a terrorist campaign.
They start randomly getting up on the hills outside of DeWitt and shooting guns into the town.
So if you're walking around DeWitt, you know, a bullet goes past you.
As things start to get worse in Missouri with the other Missouri violence, these residents feel even more emboldened.
And they eventually tell them, we're demanding that you leave.
and they get a cannon, and they put it up on the hill above the town,
and they tell the Latter-day Saints that if you don't leave,
we're going to start shelling the town with a cannon.
In these early stages of violence in the Mormon War in Missouri,
the governor tries to maintain order.
We talked about this with Jackson County,
but lawlessness is terrifying to border state governors,
because the same lawlessness that allows Mormons to be driven out of town
from lands that they legally purchased, is the same type of lawlessness that could have them
take you out of the state capital, too.
Once you say that there's no rule of law, boy, mob violence is scary to the frontier,
because you don't have the ability to put it down very well.
You're a thousand miles away from any other help from someone else.
They try to tamp down difficulties if they can.
what you find with DeWitt is just how egregious this is.
The governor is going to have a militia general marches troops to DeWitt to try to stop this violence.
Well, that general will write back and say, I can't stop this.
When I try to order my troops to intervene, they go join the mob.
When I ask them, what are their grievances against?
the Mormons, why are they doing this? What's the compromise that we can affect? Their answer is
they've done nothing to us. We just don't want them living here. Well, that's pretty hard to
negotiate. It's one thing to say like, hey, you guys are taking more water rights than I thought
we would. Let's talk about, but when the answer is, we don't want you to exist. I mean,
that's a tough negotiating position. I guess we won't. I mean, what are you supposed to
say. The residents of DeWitt will write to Joseph Smith and say, well, what do we do? They're
threatening to shoot a cannon into our town. Joseph says, we can't have people get killed.
So he just tells the saints in DeWitt to evacuate, leave all their stuff, and leave all their
land, and move to far west. When historians try to place there, where does the Mormon war in
Missouri start. And the Mormon War is this conflict in 1838 that's going to eventually lead to the
Hans Mill massacre, to the extermination order, and to the imprisonment of Joseph Hiram and others
in Richmond and the Liberty Jail. This is the lead-up to those events in counties like Davies County,
where there's a significant Latter-day Saint population that is moving in.
Now, this is where Adam-on-Diamond is.
If you're a local politician, well, when the first several dozen Latter-day Saints show up,
it's very politically advantageous for you to simply become a vociferous anti-Mormon,
to say, what are we doing, letting these Mormons in our county, they shouldn't be here?
And that's going to give you a lot of credibility.
The problem with staking out an anti-Mormon position as a politician is if more and more
Latter-day Saints keep moving to the place where you live, well, they're probably not going
to vote for you.
For some crazy reason, they're not going to be voting for you if your entire political
life is based upon hating them.
So in Davies County, things are becoming much.
much more tense because as dozens and dozens and dozens more Latternay Saints move there,
all of the existing politicians, like Adam Black, for instance,
Adam Black is one of the people who factors prominently in the violence in the Mormon War.
Well, he, in 1836, is already trying to run and lobby on an argument of keeping all Mormons
out of Davies County.
unsurprisingly, when Latter-day Saints moved to Davies County, who's someone they don't like?
Well, Adam Black, because he hates us and is trying to keep us from the county.
And it really comes to a head with the 1838 elections.
Election Day was very different back then than it is now.
Most places had polling places set up in the county seat.
So look, if you think elections are difficult that expensive,
to run today. Imagine back then where you don't even have tax money really coming in very much
for these local governments. How are you going to have polls all over the state? In most places
they don't. In most places, everybody has to travel to the county seat of the county that they live
in to cast a vote, obviously in person, on each election day. That means that when election
day comes around, every person living in the county is all going to the county seat.
It turns election day, it sometimes can be almost like a fair-like atmosphere, because if
you're somebody hawk and straw hats, you know when you're going to have a lot of customers.
Think of your county fair now, but only this is on election day. You have everybody coming
together to vote, there is oftentimes quite the distribution of hard liqueurs at these things
and it becomes a kind of festive atmosphere because everybody's getting together. They have to
in order to vote. The fact that everyone's getting together means that there's also a lot more
opportunities for things to go south because there's a lot of people and a lot of personalities
he's involved. In Gallatin, which is the county seat of Davies County, one of the men who's running
for a state office is a man by the name of William Penniston. Now, Peniston, he has been vociferously
anti-Mormon in his rhetoric, and he's a Whig politician. Most Latter-day Saints in Missouri were
Democrats. Now, if you're a leader of the Democratic Party in Missouri, that sounds great. I'm excited
that you're, okay, come on in. But if you're from the other political party, well, not only do I
have a problem with these Latter-day Saints because they are Latter-day Saints, I also have a problem
with these Latter-day Saints because they're voting wrong. Now, again, this is a dark time in American
history. Back then, people used to hate each other just for belonging to the wrong political
party or voting the wrong way, as someone perceived it. Today, it doesn't happen. Today, no one ever
hates anyone just on the basis of who they voted for. But back then, boy, you could have all
kinds of hatred espoused simply because someone belonged to the wrong political party or voted
for the wrong person for president. As the Latter-A Saints are moving in to Davies County,
this Whig politician, William Benison, he's crunching the numbers because everybody,
he's getting together, they're all coming together for these votes, and he can see, in the
distance, this large Mormon contingent coming from Adam on Diomen, and he's well aware that if they
go to that polling place, that they're not going to vote for him. Not only is he an overt
anti-Mormon, he's also a wig and they're Democrats. So he does the tried and true thing that you can do
in American politics, when you think that you're going to lose the election.
That is, try to suppress votes.
What he does is he tries to create a mob right there at the polling place.
He gets on top of a cannon outside of the polling place.
I have no idea why there's a cannon outside of the polling place, but there is one.
He gets on top of a cannon.
What a subtle reminder to the Latter-day Saints, especially if they're in DeWitt.
See this canon?
Remind you of anything?
Yeah.
Interesting.
He gets on top of this cannon, and he begins to harangue the local Missourians around it.
Now, of course, some of these Missourians are Democrats.
They probably do want to see the Latter-day Saints vote because they don't want Penniston to win.
But there's something.
Partisan politics are very stark in the 1830s and the 1840s.
I know that everyone today will say things like, we have never been more politically divided as a country.
Well, we did have a civil war.
I don't know if you, I get it that when you're going through it, it feels like it's the most divided it's ever been.
But also, we did have a civil war.
It always feels like it's the worst ever.
But it was very stark in the 1830s as well.
I mean, there's a reason why newspapers were called.
the Richmond Whig and the Illinois Democrat because they weren't even trying to hide their
partisanship. They were simply saying, anyone who believes opposite of me is terrible and everything
that I put in this paper is going to attack the other party. And that's all they do. It's constantly
attacked the other party. As powerful, as partisan party politics were in the 1830s, there was
one thing that bridged that partisan gap in Missouri, and that was hatred of
Latter-day Saints. Penison gets up on that canon, as the Latter-day Saints are trying to come
forward to where the polling place is, and he begins to harangue the crowd. You're not going to let
these Mormons vote, are you? These Mormons aren't even supposed to live in our county. They're
supposed to live in Caldwell County? What are they doing here? Then there's obviously one more
thing that in the South, in the 1830s, that is greater than partisan politics, and even greater
than anti-Mormon hatred, that is racial hatred. Peniston,
uses bigoted racist language to try to inspire violence against the Latter-day Saints.
And he does so, and I'm sure he's also passive-aggressively, although not terribly
passive-aggressively, reminding people why the Saints were driven out of Jackson County
in the first place, because they were meddling with slaves, so-called, they were inviting
free black members, the church to join their church and to move to Missouri. So he gets up on that
canon and he says, these Mormons have no more a right to vote than any of our expletive N-words is what
he says. Using this as a terminology, not just of slaves, I mean, even if you are a free person
of color, you don't have the right to vote. He uses this racialized racist language as a
means of trying to inspire the violence, that actually does the trick.
It's essentially the same way we don't let our slaves vote, the same way we don't let
free blacks vote, we are not going to let Mormons vote in our state.
It does the trick. Immediately a band of ruffians mob forms, and they try to prevent
physically the Latter-day St. Men from going to the polling place.
like grabbing them, pulling them back.
The Latter-day Saints, for their part,
felt that they had a right to vote
because they were Americans.
And so the, again,
wait, wait, way, way.
There's a lot of bold,
the Latter-day Saints just keep pushing
these bold narratives
that, as an American,
that they have a right to vote,
they have a right to buy land,
they have right to live on the land that they buy.
Frankly, it's a surprise
that the Latter-day Saints weren't violently attacked earlier.
But the Latter-day Saints try to push past the mob to go vote anyway.
People start swinging fists and people start tearing up fence rails
and people start clubbing each other and a brawl ensues.
This is often considered the beginning of the Mormon War in Missouri.
It's the beginning point of this.
Now, again, this is the 19th century.
Often, the first reports that come out are always ridiculously wrong.
Again, doesn't happen today that the first reports you get from something are wrong.
But back then, both members of the Missouri government as well as Missouri residents and Latter-day Saints, the initial reports they get are that this is a bloody catastrophe.
Joseph gets an initial report that dozens of Latter-day Saints were murdered trying to vote.
The state of Missouri and residents of Davies County, they're getting reports that,
oh, yeah, there we were, just minding our own business.
I was just talking about philosophy and quoting Seneca to my fellow Missourian,
and then the Mormons showed up and just started killing everybody.
It's crazy. It's crazy. They just showed up and started killing everybody.
The narrative coming out of both sides, or at least the first things that they're hearing,
is that first of all, dozens of people are dead.
Second of all, the other side indiscriminately started killing people.
So all of a sudden, both sides are ratcheted up.
Now, look, there's a lot of things that are hard to do.
to verify in the 19th century. I get it. It's hard. We don't have documents. One of the easiest
things to verify is whether or not someone's dead. It's actually pretty simple. You go there,
and if the person's dead, well, then you know that they're dead. And if they're not dead,
then it becomes pretty difficult to argue that people were murdered because they're not dead.
Oh, yeah, they killed a bunch of people. Okay, name one of them. I'm sure they did.
And that's where you're left with.
Because once you're saying someone's dead, it is a very verifiable thing.
Saying someone got punched, well, okay, let's find the person who got punched, and I wasn't
right.
Saying someone's dead is, that's pretty stark.
Either Bill is dead or Bill isn't dead.
We can find that out pretty quickly.
Joseph, for his part, he leads the Caldwell County militia, members of the church,
up to Davies County to go get the bodies back of.
the people that they think were murder.
On their way there, they find out
they get reports, oh, actually
dozens of people are wounded,
some people are severely
hurt, but no one actually
is dead. It was a brawl, it was
violent, but no one's actually dead.
On either side?
On either side. No one's actually dead.
There's lots of people who are beat up.
They were at the wrong side
of a sporting event at this point.
There was a fracas in the crowd,
but no one's actually
dead.
Joseph, with his group,
stops at Adam Black's
house because he's the Justice of the Peace.
He's going to be the person determining
what charges are going to be filed.
Joseph says, look, we know you're on record
saying how much you hate Mormons.
You don't want Mormons living in the county.
I just want to know from you
that as you prosecute this, that you're going to do it
fairly.
Of course, Adam Black,
you know, puts his hand to his forehead.
Dear me, my dear sir, how could you possibly, possibly, I'm insulted that you would even think that I would allow anything other than the rule of law?
Oh, oh, I'm almost faint because of it.
He makes all kinds of protestations that, of course,
he would only follow the rule of law.
And then as soon as Joseph Smith leaves, he sends out to a local anti-Mormon judge
an affidavit essentially saying that the Mormons came to my house and threatened that they
were going to kill me.
We have no Latter-day Saint reference to that at all.
But he sends this essentially false report that the Latternay Saints came to his house and told
them they were going to kill him, which again further stirs up rhetoric in Davies County.
A mob begins to collect in Davies County with the stated intention that they're going to invade Caldwell County and they're going to destroy the Mormons.
At this point, the governor, what is he supposed to do? DeWitt has taught him, I can't actually order the militia to defend the Mormons because they won't actually do it.
They'll fight.
that they'll just go join them. We're not going to help the Mormons.
The governor actually tells Joseph and the residents of Caldwell County, look, you have your
county militia. If people come to you, you need to defend yourself. You need to look to your
own defense. We're not going to be able to do it. What do you do now if you're Joseph Smith and
you're receiving report after report after report that the, you're not going to be able to do it? That the
The Davies County residents, along with supporting people from other counties around, are massing
weapons and ammunition and planning an invasion of the county.
Do you just sit there and wait for them to come and kill you?
Well, what do you do?
So they make a pretty fateful decision that they can't just sit around and wait, that if they
do, they'll allow their enemies to become so powerful that they'll come and kill them.
they make a preemptive strike.
They take an expedition into Gallatin, into Davies County.
They don't kill anybody.
They don't shoot anybody.
They don't attack anybody.
But they go to where the mob has been assembling all of their weapons and food for their expedition.
And they destroy it.
And they loot some of it.
They take it back.
They feel like, yeah, all we're doing is taking back goods that you've already stolen from us and your other mob things.
So that ratchets up the rhetoric even more.
Because look at how lawless these Mormons are.
Yeah, I guess, yeah, lawless because they're preventing people from coming to attack them.
And again, no one's died yet.
With reports like that, you then have things like, on the southern border of Caldwell County, you have Clay County.
In Clay County, you have their militia activated.
They are led by a man by the name of Samuel Bogart.
Samuel Bogart
takes his militia
and he actually crosses the border into southern Caldwell County
and begins attacking Latter-day Saint settlements.
They take several men hostage.
Wow.
When Joseph and the folks in Far West hear
about these violent attacks and these kidnappings
in Southern Caldwell County,
they assume
incorrectly.
They assume
that it must be a mob that's doing it
because they're acting like a mob.
They're burning fields
and they're kidnapping people
and they assume
well, this mob's attacking
settlements in Caldwell County,
we need to go stop them.
What they don't know
is that it's not a mob.
That it's actually
the official Missouri State Militia for Clay County and that Samuel Bogart is officially
mustered as a militia leader, but he's just acting like a mob.
The leader of the Caldwell County Militia is David W. Patton,
David W. Patton, also the head of the Corn of the Twelve Apostles, he leads the Latter-day Saints
out to go find this mob that's burning everything and attacking and kidnapping Latter-day Saints.
They don't know that it's the Missouri State militia.
It's acting like a mob.
They think it's a mob.
It's doing things in Caldwell County.
So it couldn't possibly be another militia from another county because...
They wouldn't cross the county line.
Yeah, why would they be there?
But it's actually the militia.
David W. Patton takes the Caldwell County militia and they catch up to...
this mob at Crooked River. This is where the Battle of Crooked River takes
place. Again, the Latter-day Saints think they're dealing with a lawless mob. David W. Patton
is quite courageous, perhaps not the greatest of tacticians. When they catch up to them,
it's near sunset. What that means is the Latter-day Saints have to cross the river to the
encampment on the other side where they think the mob is encampinghammed.
but it means that the sun is right behind them as they're crossing the river,
which means they are perfectly silhouetted against the sky, their bodies, in a firing line, essentially.
It's not probably the most tactically sound attack that's made,
but it is very ostentatious, so ostentatious that the militia and Bogart,
they are completely unprepared for.
And the Latternay Saints come charging down and across the river and they drive what they think is the mob from the field.
There are several people killed on both sides, including David Patton and Simeon Carter.
Jared Carter's brother, Simeon Carter, is killed there as well.
There are several members of the militia as well.
The Latter-day Saints, again, think they're doing exactly what the governor told them to do.
You're going to have to defend yourself with your county militia.
So, they defend themselves with their county militia.
Again, the problem is,
Bogart is a liar, hard to believe.
And the Latter-day Saints actually get back some of their captains.
I mean, they'd get their kidnapped people back.
They have all kinds of validation that this really was appropriate.
These men were kidnapped and being held.
Bogart tells the governor, he's got a lot of explaining to do at this point.
Because not only is he operating in Caldwell County when he's not supposed to, he just lost.
The worst thing you could do as a militia commander is be on the losing side.
That's how you get deposed as a commander.
So his report to the governor is, there we were, minding our own business.
And out of nowhere, these Mormons came in and just started shooting and killing everybody.
and he grossly inflates the number of people that are dead.
I mean, at this point, the governor could have done an investigation.
Governor Boggs could have said, okay, Bogart, I have your report here.
I'm going to send a couple of my men to actually investigate and find out what exactly you were doing,
why you were where you were when they attacked,
and chief among them,
I'm going to find out whether or not there really are dozens of people dead,
because once again, it's very simple to find out of dozens of people are dead.
It's the easiest thing in the world to determine.
Here are the men that are members of your roles.
How many of them are dead?
If the answer is two of them and not dozens of them,
then that's different than what you said.
The governor could have investigated and he doesn't.
He instead immediately responds by proclaiming the Latter-day Saints as enemies of the state
and by issuing the infamous extermination order.
After the Battle of Crooked River and these inflated reports,
You get this very fateful letter that is sent by Governor Boggs to his generals.
Sir, since the order of this morning directing you to cause 400 mounted men to be raised within your division,
I've received by Amos Rees Esquire of Ray and Wiley C. Williams Esquire, one of my aides, information of the most appalling character,
which entirely changes the face of things and places the Mormon
in an attitude of an open and armed defiance of the laws.
And having made war upon the people of this state,
your orders are therefore to hasten your operation with all possible speed,
the Mormons must be treated as enemies
and must be exterminated,
or driven from the state, if necessary,
for the public peace.
Their outrages are beyond all the scription.
Now, a couple of things about that.
I always wonder why we have a tendency to kind of soft pedal this.
Would we talk about what happened?
In the movie, you know, it's a very dramatic scene.
It shows Lilburn Boggs at his desk.
And he says, the Mormons must be treated his enemies.
and then he, like, looks out the window, very pregnant, pause,
or if necessary, like, looks back, exterminated.
Well, that's not what his order says.
His order doesn't say they must be treated as enemies,
and if necessary, exterminated.
His order says,
the Mormons must be treated as enemies
and must be exterminated.
or driven from the state, if necessary.
Driven from the state is option number two.
It's not option number one.
And think about what this order is saying.
If I go and I commit a crime, I'm indicted.
A warrant is issued for my arrest.
I am arrested, and then I'm brought before a judge,
and I am charged with a specific crime.
Garrett thought that Dak Prescott would be a good fantasy football quarterback this year.
He's put on trial for that.
But it's specific, and because of our constitution, it is not generalized.
This is a statement that all Mormons, whether they were part of David W. Patton's group in Crooked River,
or not. The Mormons, anyone who belongs to the religion, any person must be treated as enemies and must be
exterminated? We talk about the extermination order a lot, but we don't stop to consider what
it's actually saying. There's a hundred men among the Latter-day Saints that are involved in the
election day brawl and gallatin or in the Battle of Crooked River. There's probably upwards of
10,000 Latter-day Saints living in Missouri. All of them are guilty. All of them lose their right
to trial. All of them lose their right to their property. They lose their right to their lives.
all of them do?
Imagine if someone were to make a similar argument today that a person living in the country,
a group of them, let's say, let's say a hundred of them, commit a horrible crime,
and someone orders the extermination of every member of that religion or group,
even if you want to claim, which they don't think it means this, but if they did, even if you want to claim, well, it just means forcibly removed from the state, taking away all of their property rights and all of their personal rights and eliminating every protection that's given to you in the Bill of Rights, even if that's what it is. It's still the most egregious thing. It will serve as the basis for the violence that is going to be.
to take place and the justification for it.
It's debated whether or not the Livingston County militia is aware of this order by the time
that they perpetrate the Hans Mill Massacre.
Certainly some of their members say that they're acting on the governor's orders.
They at least will claim after the fact that they're doing it under orders.
but that's really neither here nor there,
whether they had read the order or not,
the same number of Latter-day Saints are murdered.
I told you Caldwell County,
not exactly Super Farmville County,
not exactly the best place,
especially the eastern portion of the county,
like I said, has got a lot of drainage issues.
That's where Hans Mill is.
Hans Mill established right there along this creek
is a settlement that is growing. It wasn't founded by a Latter-day Saint, but it's a growing
small Latter-day Saint community. In the Livingston County militia, far west is an extreme
western Caldwell County. Hans Mill is in, it's not extreme eastern, but it's much more
eastern Caldwell County. The county's kind of like a rectangle, if you're thinking about it
this way. It's pretty far away from far west. But it's very far away. But it's
very close to the border of Livingston County, the next county.
The Livingston County militia, with men mounted on horses, crosses the border into Caldwell County,
they surround this isolated little settlement.
And to just demonstrate how outside of what we consider to be the law,
this movement is. I've heard, obviously not terribly intelligent detractors, but I've heard
detractors say things like, well, what happened to Hans Mill? I mean, it's, it's Mormon's fault
because the militia came to try to arrest him and they just started shooting at him. And so
what do you expect him to do? They want to portray Hans Mill as if it's some kind of like
Waco, Texas, David Koresh thing where there's an attempt to serve some warrants and people are shot,
And that causes the whole thing.
We don't have any accounts that that's what happened.
All of our accounts from Hans Mill are that as the sun is about to go down,
these hundreds of men on horses ride into the town and they begin shooting everyone.
There's no attempt to arrest anyone.
Not only is there no attempt to arrest anyone, we have multiple accounts.
of men running out in front of the horses, waving their arms and saying, we surrender, we surrender,
and those people being shot where they stand.
This is not an attempt to arrest.
This is not an attempt to serve warrants on people who they think were involved in the Battle of Crooked River,
which, spoiler alert, none of them were.
So even if that's what this was, was an attempt to get those people that none of them were part of that.
And the best demonstration of just how horrific this is and just how indiscriminate the violence is is the case of Amanda and Warren Smith.
Amanda and Warren Smith don't live in Hans Mill.
Amanda and Warren Smith live in Ohio.
So after Joseph Smith receives the revelation that all of the faithful members are supposed to leave Ohio and move to Missouri, Amanda and Warren Smith, because they're faithful, they begin setting their affairs in order in order to go to Far West because that's what the prophet commanded them to do.
So they go.
They go and it's pretty slow going.
Again, you have to remember, far west is a thousand miles away from Kirtland.
Not exactly over super easily traversed terrain either.
This is super rural parts of Missouri.
So it takes months for some people to get from Ohio to Missouri.
Amanda Smith and her family have been making this week's long journey trying to get to far west.
they just so happen to stop for the night in Hans Mill.
They don't live in Hans Mill.
They stop there on their way to get to Far West, which is their ultimate destination.
And in one of the most horrific tragedies of all early church history, it just so happens.
that the same night they stop there in Hans Mill is the same night that the mob attacks.
She will give several accounts of what happens, but she's talking about the violence being enacted on them even before they get to Hans Mill.
When they cross the border into Missouri, they're already being harassed by Missouri and saying that they're going to kill them.
As she writes, when we were traveling, minding our own business, we were stopped by a mob of men.
They told us if we went one more step, they would kill us all.
They took all of our guns from us.
They robbed them.
And they made us go back five miles on the road.
I mean, five miles when you're walking it, it's a considerable amount of distance.
They put a guard around us and they kept us there three days.
and then they let us go.
So her and her family were kidnapped by these lawless mobs.
They were robbed by these lawless mobs.
Kidnap for three days.
What crime had Amanda and Warren Smith committed?
They clearly had nothing to do with any of the violence that had happened in Missouri.
They were walking through the state.
This is the United States of America.
This is not some kind of tyrannical communist regime where people can't walk somewhere without papers.
They are walking through the state.
They are robbed.
They are held hostage and kidnapped and forcibly undergar.
forced to stay somewhere for three days?
Well, after they are allowed to start going again,
she writes that we traveled 10 miles and came to a small town composed of one grist
sawmill, eight or 10 houses all belonging to the saints, our brothers, and there we
stop for the night.
Amanda and Warren Smith have nothing to do with Hans Mill.
They are happy to have a place to stay for the night after this harrowing ordeal, which, given their route of trajectory, probably happened in Livingston County, actually, because that would have been the county they were likely traveling through.
A little before sunset, a mob of 300 armed men came upon us.
Our men called for the women and children to run for the woods while they ran into an old blacksmith shop, for they feared if we all ran together, they would rush upon us and kill us.
men, women, and children. The mob fired on us before we even had time to start from our camp.
Now, you'll notice in her affidavit, she's going to continually say the mob. It's not a mob.
It's literally the official Livingston County militia of the state of Missouri. This is the
marshaled up the actual militia of Livingston County. Protect the citizens, right? Yeah, they're here to
protect this, the citizens of this state. The mob fired on us before we had time to even start
running from our camp. Our men took off their hats and they swung them in the air and cried
quarter, meaning we surrender, until they were all shot down. The mob paid no attention to their
cries or to their entreaties, but fired indiscriminately. I took my little girls, my boys I could not
fine. And I ran for the woods. The mob encircled us on all sides except the bank of the creek.
So I ran down the bank. So if you remember, there's a stream there. That's where Hans Mill is.
Once she realizes that they're surrounded by these horsemen, she goes to the creek. I mean, again,
that the one place they have is getting across this creek that's there. My boys, I could not find. I ran for
the woods, the mob encircled us on all sides, accepting the bank of the creek, so I ran down
the bank and crossed the mill pond on a plank and ran up the hill on the other side into the
bushes. The bullets whistled by me like hailstones, and they cut down the bushes on all sides
of me. Now, I want you to think about this. This is a woman holding hands of little girls
running away
and bullets are hitting the trees all around them.
These poor excuses for human beings
are attempting to shoot
little girls and women as they are running away from them.
One girl was wounded by my side,
This is not one of her little girls, but another little girl.
And she fell over a log, and her clothes happened to hang up on the log in the sight of the mob.
And the mob, supposing her clothes to be her body, fired at that.
As she's going over this log, it tears off her clothes.
And so they keep shooting at the clothes.
After it was all still, our people cut out 20 bullets from that log.
That's how many shots were fired at this little girl.
I sat down to witness this awful scene.
When they had done firing, they began to howl as one would have thought all the infernos had come up from the lower regions.
They plundered the principal part of our goods.
They took our horses and our wagons, and they ran off.
howling like demons.
After they had gone, I came down to witness and behold the awful scene.
Oh, horrible, horrible, what a sight.
My husband and one son, ten years old, lay lifeless upon the ground.
And one son, six years old, was wounded very badly.
His hip shot off all to pieces, and the ground covered.
with the dead and the dying.
There were three little boys
who crept under the blacksmith bellows
to hide.
One of them received
three wounds. He lived three weeks and died.
He was not mine, but the other
two were. And
one of them had his brains all
shot out.
And the other, his hip, shot
to pieces.
We know from the other account
that
her 10-year-old son,
Sardis was not dead. He was initially just wounded. And then the leader of the Livingston
County militia of the state of Missouri, seeing him wounded on the ground, puts a gun to his
head, and reportedly says, Nits make lice, if I let him live, he'll just become another
expletive Mormon. And then murders him. Realize my readers for a moment this scene.
Amanda Smith continues.
Nothing but horror and distress.
It was sunset.
The dogs were filled with rage, howling over their dead masters.
The cattle caught the scene of the scent of innocent blood and bellowed,
and a dozen helpless widows.
Thirty or forty now orphaned and fatherless children,
screaming and grieving for the loss of their husbands and fathers,
the groans of the dying and the wounded.
All of this.
was enough to melt the heart of anything but a Missouri mob.
There were 15 dead and 10 wounded,
and two more died the next day.
There were no men left to bury the dead.
So they were thrown into an old well that was dry
and covered with straw and dirt.
The next day the mob came back,
back and told us that we must leave the state or they would kill us all. It was cold.
They had taken all of our teams and all of our clothes. Our men were all dead and wounded.
I told them they might kill me and my children. They sent word from time to time that if we did
not leave the state, they would come and make a breakfast of us. We had to do our own milling and get our own
would. We had no men left to help us. I started on the 1st of February for the state of Illinois
without any money, mobbed all the way. I drew my own team. I slept out of doors. I had four
small children, and we suffered with hunger and cold and fatigue, and for what?
for our religion
where in a blessed land of liberty
deny your faith or die
was the cry
she goes on to mention
some of the people that are in the mob
because the point of this affidavit
was to list off all of her property that was taken
she begins to list it off
then she says in short my all
my whole damages are worth more than the state of Missouri is worth, and I believe that she is correct
in having her husband and her 10-year-old son murdered and her 6-year-old son essentially left for
dead with his hip shot off. I mean, the miraculous faith and story of the healing of her son
I think has been well told, but she talked about the fact that many of the men were killed
after they were already wounded.
The mob went and shot the men over fear that they weren't dead.
I saw one of them afterwards, and I said, what were they intending when they came here?
He said that they intended to kill everything that breathes.
I will leave to this honorable government to say what my damages should be.
what would they have for their fathers and mothers and wives and children shot for?
Now, Amanda Smith is one of my heroes of church history because
think about the fact that the only reason she's at Hans Mill
is because she followed the prophet.
She doesn't live in Hans Mill.
She lives in Ohio.
They are at Hans Mill because a prophet received a revelation from the Lord
commanding the faithful to move to Far West.
So they did it.
This faithful husband of hers, Warren, is murdered where he stands
because he happened to be a Mormon and happened to be a Mormon and happened to be
walking through the wrong part of Missouri on the wrong day, the wrong time.
When Amanda Smith talks about this again, she says,
I felt the loss of my husband, but not as I should have if he had apostatized.
He died in the faith and in the hopes of a glorious resurrection.
As for myself, I felt an unshaken confidence.
confidence in God through it all. I had been personally acquainted with the prophet Joseph
Smith for many years. I had seen Joseph's walks and I knew him to be a prophet of God,
and that buoyed me up under every trial and privation. I would say to anyone listening,
when you decide that you're going to take the evil report about the prophet Joseph Smith
from some detractor, that you do so by rejecting Amanda Smith's testimony, because she is saying
that she personally knew him and knew him to be a good man and knew him to be a prophet.
And she lost her son and her husband in following him to be a prophet.
She didn't come away from that and say, I guess he's not really a prophet anymore.
more. She has a better testimony than any so-called insider who thinks they know about
Joseph Smith. She's someone who actually knew him and then suffered as a result of the violence
against Latter-day Saints. She will later give her testimony where she says,
I have drank the dregs of the cup of sorrow and affliction,
as well as partaken of the blessings of an all-merciful God.
I've drank from the fountain of life freely.
I've seen the Lord's power manifest in a great degree.
I've seen the lame leap as in heart,
and the eyes of the blind open,
and as it were, the dead rays to life all in my own family.
She goes on to talk about how she's miraculously given birth to children without pain.
She says, I have the greatest reason to rejoice and to thank my Heavenly Father.
And do I do thank and praise His Holy Name for His blessings to me.
And I do pray, I do pray that I may ever be faithful unto the end,
that I may, with my posterity, be crowned with eternal lives in the kingdom of our God,
in the name of Jesus, amen.
There's a faith that I could only wish to emulate.
She doesn't believe because things work out.
She believes because the Holy Spirit has told her that the prophet is a true prophet,
and this is God's kingdom.
The fact that these horrible things happen to her,
it's not the deciding factor in her testimony.
I mean, what a powerful statement to say.
I felt the loss of my husband, but not the same way I would have if he had apostatized.
Because she's certain she'll be with her husband again.
And he died a faithful man following a prophet.
That's a tough thing to read.
We could read accounts of the violence that takes place in Missouri all day long.
I would become increasingly irrationally emotional,
unfortunately, I think in part because when you study these people and you study their lives
and you read all their statements and you fall, you start to feel connected to them
when you read these horrific things happening to them, it becomes difficult.
Tell us what you're reading from.
Does she have an autobiography, were these affidavits submitted to, as they were
are asked to do. So she submits a couple of affidavits on what happened to we're in Missouri,
then also gives a little bit of a life sketch. The latter thing that I read was from her
life sketch that she gives later in life. Look, there's power in reading what people actually
have to say. It's not simply that because I'm inarticulate that it doesn't carry the same power
to tell you what happened. It's also the fact that
hearing her testify in her own words, the power of the Holy Spirit testifies to her testimony.
And I think you can feel that when you read it.
And it is not a cheaply purchased testimony.
It is one that is dearly, dearly paid for.
And one that, I mean, frankly, it's part of the reason.
why it's hard for me when people are cavalier in their detraction of the church or these saints
or of the gospel, because our beliefs and our history are bought with a price.
The faith that we have is bought, purchased by women like Amanda Smith, who through
unimaginable horrors didn't say, okay, that's too much. If this was true, then this wouldn't have
happened. It's interesting because, you know, the violence in Missouri is so terrible that John
Coral, he's one of the early leaders of the church in Missouri, he will apostatize. But he doesn't
become one of these like super embittered apostates. He actually kind of explains it in the history
that he writes, that, look, these are good people.
They just can't possibly be right.
If this was really God's people, then there wouldn't be this violence enacted on them constantly.
They wouldn't be treated that way.
I always think that there's that great Book of Mormon passage because of the exceedingly great
length of the war.
There's some that have been hardened, and there's some that.
Turn to God.
But I think for application purposes today, for people listening today,
please be hesitant and be careful with the legacy of faith that people like Amanda Smith have given to you.
Because while we all suffer and we all have trials and we all have questions,
we all go through difficulties, I absolutely believe at one point you're going to have to explain to someone like that
why you decided to stop believing. Let's just see whether or not your explanation carries a lot of
weight given the things that she suffered through. My guess is not.
in the aftermath of Hans Mill
the horrific violence of Hans Mill
it's horrifying as these reports come in
to Joseph in Far West
at the same time the militia is marching to Far West
now that the governor's declared an extermination order
Far West though is a much tougher nut to crack than Hans Mill
especially after Hans Mill
the Latter-day Saints are ready.
We're not going to have you just ride in here and start murdering people.
There are 5, 6, 7,000 people inside of Far West,
which means that if the militia is going to attack,
it is going to be a bloodbath
because they're not just going to let it happen after what happened in Honsville.
This is where one of the greatest traders of Latter-day Saint history
that we unfortunately don't know about.
I mean, look, there's some that are household names.
I mean, Dr. Phyllasis Hurl, but you're not going to forget that.
John C. Bennett, spoiler alert, we'll talk about him at some point.
I don't know if I will.
Someone will.
But one of the greatest traders in Latter-Dade St. History is George Hinkle.
George Hinkle is someone who,
decides that once the Mormons are declared to be enemies of the state, well, that means
I could be tried for treason. I could be executed for being with these Mormons. So, he begins
to have clandestine conversation with members of the Missouri militia, promising them that he can
deliver them Joseph and Iro Smith if they, of course, grant him immunity.
Of course, he's a good, loyal citizen. I can perform this great service.
So George Hinkle, who is meeting with these members of the militia. Now, of course,
Joseph wants to do anything to stop the violence, especially with how horrific it is.
I mean, remember, Joseph had the option of deciding that they were going to be violent with DeWitt,
and instead said, just evacuate.
He had the option of using that Caldwell County militia violently in Gallatin,
and yes, they go and destroy the arms and food of the mob,
but they don't kill anybody.
He could have decided that he was going to really take matters in his own hands
and start really violently resisting.
But he's not looking for that.
He's looking for peace.
Hinkle lies to Joseph and tells him, hey, I've talked to leaders of the militia, and they want to have a peace conference.
They saw how horrible everything that happened at Hans Mill.
We want to get all the leaders together of the militia and of the Latter-A Saints, and we're going to discuss how to stop there being any more violence.
If you had to say what one of Joseph's failings was, it's hard to call it a failing, but from a historical perspective,
once you know all the answers, like, so as a historian, it's easy because you're like,
no, don't trust him.
He's terrible.
I know, because I've read his journal and he's a liar.
It's easy when you have all the information to be like, this is a terrible mistake.
But Joseph, he loves other people so much that he tends to really trust them, even when there
should be some bells and alarms going off saying, maybe don't trust him all the way.
Joseph could have had his alarms go up a little bit when George Hinkle is saying, hey, I've been talking to a bunch of the leaders of the militia.
I mean, already there should have been like, hmm, wait.
Really, have you?
It's an interesting position that you've taken, but he trusts George Hinkle.
He believes that he's a good man, and George Hinkle says, I've been talking to the leaders of the militia.
They want to have this peace conference.
we're all going to go out on arm. We'll go out. They'll come unarm. We'll meet down outside of Far West. We'll settle this. And Joseph goes out to this peace conference and is immediately, along with Hiram and Parley Pratt and other Latter-day Saint leaders, they're all immediately arrested. That's when they infamously are ordered to be shot. And Alexander Donovan intervenes and belays the order and says that, yeah, I'll hold anyone before an earthly,
tribunal so help me god did george hinkle say something like okay here they are he doesn't kiss him
on the cheek if you're wondering but they're well aware i mean once he comes out you know it's here's the
leaders and then they're just immediately arrested joseph realizes then just what a betrayal this was
the worst part about this is isn't that he's been betrayed the worst part is the whole point of going out there
was to discuss things to stop more violence from happening.
Well, now they're left leaderless.
Instead of, if the mob's coming in to kill and loot and burn, the militia coming in, resisting that,
well, there's no one there to order the resistance because all their leaders are arrested.
And, of course, you know, hinkle, oh, hey, no worries, everything's fine.
And Joseph said, just let the militia come in.
He just continues to lie.
The men are arrested.
They're going to kind of have a little bit of an odyssey, actually, in their Missouri incarceration.
Because one of the problems, now that the Missouri state militia is now plundering violently all of Far West,
now that they're just going to Mormon settlements and just taking whatever they want,
how do we justify this violence?
How do we justify the murders at Hans Mill?
Well, we have to justify them by claiming that Joseph Smith was leading an open insurrection.
Well, what happens if we put Joseph Smith on trial?
And even though we're the ones handpicking the jury,
even though we're the ones like stacking everything in our favor,
what happens if he's acquitted?
if the entire justification of the war of murdering all these people, of stealing all this land, of enacting all this violence, is that Joseph Smith has enacted treason against the state of Missouri, what if he's acquitted?
Then that means all of the violence and all of the things that happened were not actually justifiable.
and the state of Missouri is liable for all the lives they've destroyed?
What it means is the state of Missouri is actually really afraid to put Joseph on trial.
He ends up getting arraigned in multiple different places,
in part because they're trying to see where they might have the strongest case against him.
He gets arraigned in Clay County.
He gets arraigned in Davies County.
He gets arraigned in Jackson County.
He gets arraigned in all these different places because they're not sure where they want to have the trial go forward because they got one shot at this.
What happens if they lose?
Then it's a disaster if they lose.
And Garrett couldn't Latter-D Saints be called to testify?
Yeah, so obviously you have tons of witnesses.
As much anti-Mormon hatred as there is in the country in the 1830s,
the violence coming out of the Mormon war in Missouri is so bad and so hard to justify.
I mean, look, Crooked River is easy to sweep under the rug.
Yeah, these bunch of crazy Mormons came and they attacked us and two of our men died and two of theirs died.
crooked river is super easy to spin in the newspapers very difficult to spin hans mill
how many of the living in county militia were killed oh zero of them okay and how many
women and men and children were wounded and killed in hans mill it becomes an embarrassment
that's much harder to justify even in the national press to the point where
even someone as Mormon hating as Iber Howe is again the editor of the painsville
telegraph the person who wrote the first anti-mormon book even he is like you can't
just murder people yeah they're diluted they're fanatics you should do whatever you can
you can't just kill them what's going on in Missouri is seen as an embarrassment because
it's beyond even the Missouri pale, even the pale for the United States of what's allowed.
Political violence, you know, rhetoric and actions, sure. Illegal detentions, rigging elections,
all of those things, fine. But boy, it becomes hard to justify murdering kids.
It becomes a lot harder to figure out how we needed to shoot a 10-year-old and a 6-year-old.
We just had to.
If we didn't shoot them, what would we ever do?
And then, unfortunately, what happens in the aftermath of Joseph surrendering is the Missouri
militia goes on essentially a weeks-long looting spree where they assault the Latter-day Saints.
They burn some of their houses down.
There are horrific, violent assaults that take place.
place. And I can't in this venue share those with you because they're so horrific. But I can give
you the link that you can put up to Hiram Smith's affidavit where Hiram Smith explains the
things that happened. If someone reads it, they will never again say the words, you know,
there were faults on both sides. They won't say it. They'll read it and they will come away
and say, I cannot believe that anyone could be so horrific.
This is part of what inspires Joseph Smith's letters from Liberty Jail.
Imagine you're Joseph Smith.
You are now incarcerated in this cell.
The only thing you hear is all of the violence that's being enacted on all of these people
that you love.
you can do nothing and it's daily day after day the few letters and information you get
is more information about just how violently the latter day saints are being treated
Joseph hears these reports we are talking murders we are talking assaults we're talking
sexual assaults this is horrific indiscriminate violence being purpose
portrayed against the people that he loves.
Joining in the fray are apostates like William McClellan, former member of the Corm of the Twelve
Apostles, who goes to Emma's house while Joseph is incarcerated and robs Emma's house.
You get the beginning of this in the well-known story that you've heard probably at church
multiple times.
This is when they're first incarcerated in Richmond jail.
They're first in Richmond before they go to liberty.
In Richmond jail, they are all chained together, these prisoners, Parley Pratt's among them.
Then Parley Pratt will later write a letter to the church historian's office explaining what happened at Richmond jail when they were arrested.
This is part of his letter.
Parley Pratt wrote, We were guarded night and day by about ten men.
who stood over us with loaded pistols in hand.
At night, we were all stretched on the floor in a row upon our backs and tried to sleep,
but the hard floor, the cold, and the inability to change our position because of the chains,
and the noise of the guards effectually prevented sleep.
In one of those tedious nights, we'd lain if we were in sleep till the hour of midnight had passed.
Our ears and hearts had been pained while we had listened for hours,
to the obscene jests and horrid o's and dreadful blasphemy,
and filthy language of our guards,
Colonel Price being at their head.
This is the sterling price of Civil War fame.
And by fame, I mean infamy
because he's a terrible general in the Civil War,
and so couldn't happen to a nicer guy.
While we'd listened for hours to their obscene,
our ears and our hearts were pain,
as they recounted to each other
their deeds of rape and murder and robbery,
which they committed among the Mormons,
while at far west and in the vicinity.
They boasted of defiling by force wives and daughters and virgins by shooting and dashing out the brains of men, women, and children.
I'd listened till I'd become so disgusted, shocked, and horrified, and so filled with a spirit of indignant justice that I could scarcely refrain from rising to my feet and rebuking the guards, but I had said nothing to Joseph or anyone else, though I lay next to him and knew that he was awake.
On a sudden he rose to his feet, and he spoke in the voice of thunder, or as a roaring
line, uttering as near as I can recollect, the following words.
Silence ye fiends of the infernal pit.
In the name of Jesus Christ, I rebuke you and command you to be still.
I will not live another minute, and hear such language.
Seize such talk, or you or I die this minute.
He ceased to speak.
He stood erect in terrible majesty, chained and without a weapon, calm, unruffled, and dignified
as an angel. He looked down upon the quailing guards, whose weapons were lowered or dropped
to the ground, whose knees smote together, and who shrinking into a corner, or crouching
at his feet, begged his pardon, and remained quiet till a change of the guards.
I have seen the ministers of justice clothed in magisterial robes, and criminals arraigned before them while life was suspended upon breath in the courts of England.
I've witnessed a Congress in solemn session to give laws to nations.
I've tried to conceive of kings of royal courts of thrones and crowns, and of emperors assembled to decide the fate of kingdoms.
But dignity and majesty I've seen but once, as it stood in chains at midnight in a dungeon in an obscure village of Missouri.
Your brother, Parley Pratt, you get a little bit of this from the very beginning, part of what is weighing on Joseph is not his horrible conditions, which of course they are horrible.
so it's not to say they're fine, they're not fine, but it's this violence that he is constantly
hearing, just horrific violence. We all know Doctrine and Covenants, Section 121, 22, and 23,
but those are all parts of a larger letter that Joseph Smith wrote to the saints, to
larger letters. You can go through and see which portions come from which. They've got a lot of
time on their hands. By the time that this letter is being written, it's March. They've been
incarcerated for months at this point. Again, not ever being brought to trial, being arraigned
in different places, being treated terribly, hearing constantly these threats of violence being
told every day that they're going to be executed, things like that.
The whole letter is gigantic.
If we were to read the whole thing, the entire podcast would now be the follow-him,
Joseph Smith letter from Liberty Jail podcast, because there'd be nothing left.
It's huge.
Joseph says this, brethren, we are more ready and willing to lay claim upon your fellowship
and your love.
For our circumstances are calculated to awaken our spirits to a sacred remembrance of everything.
We think that yours are also, and nothing therefore can separate us from the love of God
and fellowship one with another, and that every species of wickedness and cruelty practiced upon us
will only tend to bind our hearts together and to seal them together in love.
We have no need to say to you, but that we are held in bonds without cause.
Neither is it needful that you say unto us that we are driven from our homes and smitten without cause.
we mutually understand
that if the inhabitants of the state of Missouri
had let the saints alone
and had been as desirable for peace as they were
there would have been nothing but peace and quietude in this state
unto this day
we should not be in this hell
surrounded with demons
if not those who are damned
those who shall be damned
and where we are compelled to hear nothing
but blasphemous owes
and witness a scene of blasphemy and drunkenness and hypocrisy
and debaucheries of every description.
And again, the cries of orphans and widows
would not have ascended up to God.
The blood of innocent women and children,
yea, and of men also would not have cried to God against them.
It would not have stained the soil of Missouri.
But, oh, the unrelenting hand,
an inhumanity and murderous disposition of this people.
It shocks all nature.
It beggars and defies all description.
It is a tale of woe, too lamentable a tale, too sorrowful a tale, too much to tell for the contemplation.
It's too much to think of for a moment, too much for human beings.
It can't be found among the heathens.
It can't be found among the nations where kings and tyrants are enthroned.
It can't be found among the savages of the wilderness.
Yay, I think it cannot be found among the wild and ferocious beasts of the forest.
That a man should be mangled for sport.
That a woman be robbed of all of their last morsel of substance
and then to be violated to be gratified the hellish desires of a mob and left.
to perish with their helpless offspring, clinging around their necks.
But this is not all.
After a man is dead, he must be dug up from his grave, and mangled the pieces for no other purpose
than to gratify their spleen against the religion of God.
They practice these things upon the saints who have done them no wrong, who are innocent,
who are virtuous, who love the Lord their God, who are willing to form.
forsake all things for Christ.
These things are awful to relate, but they are true.
It must needs be that offenses come, but woe to them by whom they come.
O God, where art thou, and where is the pavilion that coverth thy hiding place?
We tend to read these letters.
Sometimes we'll even describe them as if it was Joseph Smith having, you know, his own little pity party.
That Joseph is sitting there in agony because of just how short that prison cell is.
Just how cold it's been all winter with no blankets because the mob is stolen the blankets.
Just how terrible a condition it is with no real clean straw to sleep on.
Those things are all true.
But that's not why Joseph is saying, oh, God, where art thou?
In this time of horrific trial,
Joseph is turned outward, not inward.
He is thinking about the suffering of others,
not the suffering of himself.
Now, the Lord in his response will certainly bring up much of the suffering
that Joseph will be going through.
But when you read the fullness of the letter,
you find that what's really motivating it
is Joseph trying to figure out
how could God
let all of these horrible, horrible, horrible things happen
to the people that he loves.
So you started the portion of one of the sections,
oh God, where art thou?
But that's where our sections
starts. And everything preceding that was part of that original letter. All part of the same
letter. Those are all the lines immediately preceding that statement. Yeah. Which helps us see he was
thinking of the saints everywhere. Yep. It also helps us understand why part of that portion ends
with him saying, let thine anger be kindled against our enemies. And in thy fury of thine heart with
thy sword, avenge us our wrongs, remember thy suffering saints, oh, our God, and thy servants
will rejoice in that name forever. It is because he is hearing this continual, just unending
statements of the violence that's being taken against the saints that he asked the question
in the first place. And then there's a huge portion of the letter in between at this point
where he talks more about things, where he says, we receive some
letters last evening, one from Emma, and we have in the Voices of the Restoration, one of these
letters from Emma that are just a balm of Gilead to Joseph's soul to hear from his wife.
Same with Mary Fielding, who will be writing to Hiram Smith. They receive these letters, and it gives
them some hope and knowing their families are safe and that they're okay. Last evening, one from
Emma and one from Don Carlos Smith and one from Bishop Partridge, all breathing a kind and
consoling spirit. We were much gratified with their contents. We had been a long time without
information, and when we read those letters, they were to our souls as the gentle air is refreshing.
Our joy was mingled with grief because of the suffering of the poor and much injured saints.
and we do not need to say to you
that the floodgates of our hearts were hoisted
and our eyes were a fountain of tears.
But those who have not been enclosed in the walls of a prison
without cause or provocation
can have but little idea
how sweet the voice of a friend is.
One token of friendship from any source whatsoever
awakens and calls into action every sympathetic feeling.
It brings up in an instant everything that has passed.
It seizes the present with a vivacity of lightning.
It grasps after the future with a fierceness of a tiger,
and it retrogrades from one thing to another until finally all enmity,
malice, and hatred,
and past differences and misunderstandings and mismanagements
lie slain victims at the feet of hope
and when the heart is sufficiently contrite
then the voice of inspiration steals along and whispers
my son peace be unto thy soul
thine afflictions and thy adversity
shall be but a small moment
It's interesting that in reading the full letter, Joseph's saying that part of what puts him in the proper mindset to receive this revelation is these kind words receiving letters from those who are on the outside, that it allows for the inspiration.
our listeners will recognize oh god where art thou from verse one of 121 and then
that question ends in verse 6 and then you just filled everything between verse 6 and is it
verse 7 where the answer comes my son peace be unto thy soul wow I love the context and
this is gut-wrenching stuff today
Yeah, it's a heavy topic, unfortunately, but as Joseph wrote, these things are hard to relate, but they are true.
Doctrine in Covenants 123, as part of the second letter that Joseph writes, they are supposed to make an account of what happened.
But it's also the reason why when you read some of these accounts that you understand why Joseph says in that letter that,
that the deeds that have been done would make the devil himself palsy,
that it is so incredibly horrific that there's no way to describe how terrible it is.
There's more portions of this that are excerpted out that become part of the letter.
A good portion of this, it actually comes from the second letter that Joe,
Joseph writes, this one a couple of days later, most likely.
But behold, there are many called, and fewer chosen.
That's one of the lines that we've always said, if Joseph wasn't a prophet for any other
reason, I mean, he is a prophet for knowing exactly human character, doesn't he?
And it's funny because we always still seem surprised when someone exercises unrighteous
dominion.
And yet Joseph says it's the nature of almost all men.
You should actually be stunned if you ever.
see someone have power and not use it unrighteously. Because it's the nature to use it
unrighteously. Anyway, in the second letter, I'll give you a little bit of context there. Again,
it's so long, I can't read everything. So I'm sure someone's like, oh, why don't you read this part?
Well, because there's a lot. Among the rest of the general affairs that we have transacted in
their honorable counsel, they've taken cognizance of the testimony of those who were murdered at
Hans Mill, and those who are martyred with David W. Patton, he killed the Battle of Crooked
River, and elsewhere, and have passed some decisions peradventure in favor of the Saints and
those who are called to suffer without cause. These decisions will be made in their time,
and they will take into consideration all those things that offend. We have a fervent desire
that in your general conferences that everything should be discussed with a great deal of care
and propriety, lest you grieve the Holy Spirit, which shall be poured out at all times upon your
heads when you are exercised with those principles of righteousness that are agreeable to the mind
of God and are properly affected one toward another, and are careful by all means to remember
those who are in bondage and in heaviness and in deep affliction for your sakes. And if there are any
among you who aspire after their own aggrandizement and seek after their own opulence while their brethren
are groaning in poverty and under sore trials and temptations? And they cannot be benefited
by the intercession of the Holy Spirit, which makeeth intercession for us daily by day and night
with groanings that cannot be uttered. We ought at all times to be very careful that such high-minded
never have place in our hearts, but condescend to men of lowest state, and with all long-suffering
bear their infirmities of the week.
Behold many are called, but fewer chosen.
And why are they not chosen?
Because their hearts are set so much upon the things of this world.
So you get the context of that.
What follows all of that?
Why are they not chosen?
You actually go directly into the ends of the earth shall inquire after thy name.
Those two portions coming together.
Then you have this lead-in to Doctrine and Covenants Section 123.
That's also a portion of this second letter in between those two parts.
Now, brethren, I would suggest for the consideration of the conference,
because he's writing to this church conference, of its being careful and wisely understood
the council or conferences that our brethren scattered abroad who understand the spirit of the
gathering, that they fall into the places of refuge and safety that God shall open unto them
between Curtland and Far West. They already know there are many that have gone to Quincy at this
point. Those that are from the east and are from the west and from the far country and
countries let them fall in somewhere between those two boundaries in the most safe and quiet
places they can find. And let this be the present understanding until God shall open a more
effectual door for us for further consideration. I mean, we know that they're going to end up in
Navu. They don't know that they're going to end up in Navu. So this is gather somewhere in
between, somewhere in between Kirtland and Far West, find some more safe, and God's going to
open things up. Now, there's nowhere to go. Exactly. Yeah. Don't go. Don't go.
to Missouri. I'll tell you that. Let's take a flyer on Missouri until God shall open a more effectual
door for further consideration. We again further suggest for the consideration in council of the
council that there be no organizations of large bodies upon common stock principles in property
or large companies or firms until the Lord shall signify it in a proper manner as it opens
the dreadful field for avarousness and indolent and corrupt-hearted to pray upon
the innocent and virtuous and honest.
We have reason to believe that many things were introduced among the saints before God
had signified the times, and notwithstanding the principles and plans may have been good,
yet aspiring men, or in other words, men who had not the substance of godliness about them,
perhaps undertook to handle EdgeTools, children you know are faithful.
of tools, while they are not yet able to use them.
So he's using this example that...
Wow.
Look, a kid wants to play with a sharp knife.
The fact they want to play with a sharp knife is they shouldn't.
He's talking about some of the apostates that apostatize in Missouri.
Some of the people that are purchasing property for the church in their name with church
funds, but then are using the fact that it's in their name to maintain the property.
So you can see why Joseph sees this as a problem.
Your humble servant or servants intend to henceforth disabrevate everything that is not in
accordance with the fullness of the gospel of Jesus Christ and is not of a bold and frank
and upright nature.
They will not hold their peace as in times past when they see iniquity.
beginning to rear its head for fear of traitors or the consequences that shall flow
by reproving those who creep in unawares that they might get something to destroy the
flock.
Joseph here is kind of admitting some of this is my fault.
And it's my fault because I saw people doing things that weren't right and I was too afraid
to say something.
look nobody is more compassionate than Joseph that's actually the problem he's actually saying
the problem is i let people preach false doctrines i let people act in ways they shouldn't
because i was afraid if i reproved them that they would apostatize why is he afraid of that
because that's literally what happened he tells david and john whitmer not to sell any of the
property in Missouri, they sell it anyway? And apostasy. I think he's saying, I should have
intervened sooner when people first started speaking out against the church. Instead, I didn't
want to, because I didn't want to upset anybody. Not telling any of your listeners to call up their
nearest, no longer active uncle and reprove them to hell because they're not, that's not what I'm
saying. What I'm saying is Joseph learns by sad experience that as difficult as it is to
confront someone who is slandering the church or teaching false doctrine or acting in a way that
undercuts the testimony of others, not dealing with it actually causes a bigger problem.
Part of the reason why people are excommunicated for apostasy isn't just because the church
is desperate to, it's because people who are preaching false things undermine the faith
of the other sheep, the other parts of the flock.
It's not about that person.
Frankly, you can privately hold just about any opinion you want.
want and be a member of the church. You can in your mind be like, nope, they never should
have changed that to 18 years old for missionary age. Nope, that was wrong. These guys are just so
immature. There's no possible way. They shouldn't have done it. You can think that in your mind
all day long. If you start an internet site called Why Men Should Be 23 before they go on
missions.com, and you start standing up in every meeting saying the prophets have been deceived
into lowering the mission age to 18, I know, I've researched it, they should be 23.
Well, you're not holding a private position anymore. How do I know that your position isn't
personal? Because I know it. That's how I know. The great way of knowing whether or not you're
holding your beliefs to yourself is whether or not I know about them. Because if I know about
them, they're no longer personal beliefs because somehow I know. I mean, look, everybody has
different opinions about things. There are certainly things that I think in my mind, I wonder
if someday X or I wonder if we'll ever understand why. But God has ordained that only
prophets receive revelation for the church, which means, regardless of how much book learning
I think I have, however wonderfully informed on a topic I think I might be, however greatly
intelligent I put myself up, only a prophet has the ability to declare doctrine for the church.
not self-designated experts.
I have no keys.
I have no power.
I'm absolutely a believer.
I absolutely believe these things.
And also, no one should ever follow literally anything I ever say, if it ever in any way, conflicts with what a prophet of God has to say.
Because they are the only ones who can declare.
doctrine. I can tell you what happened in the past. Only they can tell you what's going to happen
in the future. I can tell you a letter someone wrote in the past. Only they hold the keys
that will enable people to be exalted and become like God. I think in Liberty Jail, Joseph Smith
learns many things. One of the things he learns is that as a prophet,
he's going to have to be more willing to be more courageous in calling out the false teachings
and the false doctrines that he has in some ways allowed.
You sure blessed me today. Oh, my goodness. So much more going on than in his mind.
It's hard that I have to be sitting in this dark prison. It's everybody.
loved ones the saints who have believed him and followed him and david w patten laid down their lives
oh man they are suffering and the helplessness and this doesn't make any sense why are we here
thank you for the back stories of that that was hard to hear that's humbling all of it has been
i think everyone listening will go whoa we have different trials today tell us eventually
Okay, they're there. It's winter 1838, 39. Was it about five months? Then what finally happens? When did they actually have liberty out of liberty jail?
They've attempted to escape several times. For some crazy reason, as they're being held without trial illegally, they believe that their incarceration is also illegal. And so they're like, look, there's those Latter-day Saints go again.
so let me get this straight you're going to illegally incarcerate me i mean look in america
we have a rid of habeas corpus for a reason because our founding fathers
what happened under the british was that the british would simply arrest people
and leave them in jail forever and never actually bring them to trial if i bring them to trial
again they might be acquitted so i'll just leave them in jail then what are you going to do well
They're in jail and they're under jail of His Majesty's authority.
One of the early aspects of American fundamental rights was this idea to this right to a speedy trial, a right to face your accusers, which what would happen in the early days before the revolution, I mean, the British would have you arrested.
Oh, we've heard you're a traitor conspiring with some people.
Who says that?
Yeah.
We don't know.
You're not entitled to know that.
Well, I mean, you're throwing me in jail for the rest of my life over it? Yeah.
Well, I mean, but isn't there a reason?
There's a reason. We have a report that you're, but that you didn't get to actually face your accuser.
Built into the Bill of Rights is this idea that you have a right to a speedy trial and that you have the right that you are arraigned and that your trial is brought forward.
Today, we have a jurisprudence that is so much more developed that we often do.
see people being arrested, then on the basis of their defense attorneys wanting more time
to prepare for trial, trials sometimes don't occur until years after someone's actually
arrested. But it's not because the government refuses to start the trial. It's usually on the
basis of the defense wanting more time to prepare. And in general, judges are going to grant that
because you got one shot at this, and if you're guilty, that's it, you're done.
In the 19th century in America, trials were much more rapid.
I mean, you do not have the same kind of developed American jurisprudence.
You can even look at the trials that Joseph Smith involved in.
When he's put on trial, it's not, okay, we'll take several months, and then we're going
to recess for a few more months.
No, it's like, yeah, tried, and here you are.
We're going to charge you for disturbing the peace by preaching the book of Mormon.
now you're on trial for disturbing the peace
for preaching the Book of War
the defense is now
even Carthage jail right
I mean they're arraigned
on the charge of destroying the press on riot
and they're immediately released on bond
for a future trial date
things happen quickly
but here you are five and a half months in Missouri
you haven't even started any trial
although Hiram Smith will say
that the grand jury
that is impaneled in Davies County,
that the grand jury are participants in the Hans Mill massacre.
So that the people deciding whether or not they are guilty
are actually the people who perpetrated the massacre themselves.
Then, because you have to wear a lot of hats in early frontier America,
the grand jurors would get up from the grand jury box
and then go pick up their gun and guard them for the rest of the night because they were actually the prison guards as well.
It's a completely fair trial where the people deciding whether or not you're guilty are also the guards of the trial who are also the people who perpetrated the massacre at Hans Mill, as Hiram says in his affidavit,
and the only excuse they made was that the governor had ordered them to do it.
Missouri is still in this position where if they're brought to trial, they might still be acquitted because there's no evidence that Joseph Smith made war on the state of Missouri.
The further we dig into it, the more we're going to find that that militia, that the Crooked River battle, was actually operating illegally in Caldwell County and arresting people illegally, the more evidence comes to four, the more it's going to seem,
especially in the court of public opinion.
This is all a sham.
This is all a sham.
So Missouri is at a tight spot.
If we tend them to trial,
not only is it going to be a very public trial
because the whole nation knows about this,
a lot of really bad information is going to come out
about what Missourians have done.
Every Mormon on the stand is going to talk about what's happened to them.
All these affidavits are going to be collected of what's happened to them.
we're going to look terrible.
Even if we get a conviction, we're going to look terrible.
Second of all, what if we don't get a conviction?
We have literally stolen hundreds of thousands, millions of dollars of property from the Saints.
The justification that we made is we've appropriated all of their land to pay for the war that they started.
What happens if Joseph acquitted, then I guess they didn't start the war.
and all the land we stole, we're now liable for.
Not to mention all the murders that have taken place.
Not one of those members of the Livingston County Militia ever has to sit one day in a court
explaining why they murdered children.
If we go to trial, they might be acquitted.
The problem, though, is if we release them and we drop the charges,
Well, then we're saying there's no evidence that they committed a crime, and on the basis of that crime, we had dozens of people murdered and millions of dollars of property destroyed or stolen.
If we drop the charges and release them, we're admitting that all of this violence was done without injusticeification.
I think they settle on a deliberate plan.
hey look these guys have already tried to escape a few times what if we just let them escape
then we get to retain the moral high ground hey we we would have convicted them if we
ever started the trial which we didn't even though we were six months into it and we
were never planning on starting the trial but but if we would have we would have convicted
that they probably wouldn't have made that argument I'm making that argument for them
but had we put them on trial, we would have convicted them.
And if you drop the charges, then, of course, you are completely liable.
If we let them escape, we get to pretend that they are guilty and that we would have convicted
them as being guilty, but without the embarrassment of the trial that would have made us look
terrible. So, their guards apparently are instructed to turn the other direction as they
scamper off through the woods. And look, having been told that they're going to be executed
every day for six months, they're not willing to just wait around. And let's just see how
this plays out. So they leave. That'll be the basis for Missouri later claiming,
oh, Joseph Smith's a fugitive from justice, saying the words Missouri and justice together is probably
the greatest contradiction ever stated in a single sentence from the 1830s. Then they'll get back,
he'll join with the Saints, they'll purchase that plot in commerce, and then they will eventually
begin to build up Navu. Which is what we're going to talk about next time.
Ah, there we go. I think we're looking at Relief Society and Baptisms for the Dead.
Oh, those are going to be awesome.
Hank, as you mentioned at the beginning, ending with not just let us do all things that lie in our power, but what's the word I'm leaving out?
Let us cheerfully.
In that setting, he said that, in that setting is incredible.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Brigham Young, actually, he made a similar comment talking about the Liberty Jail incarceration that Joseph,
was still happy, that he was still, I mean, it was difficult, but he was not morose, native cheery
temperament. Joseph is certainly someone who practices what he preaches about trying to be
positive, even in horrible situations. His belief in God never wavered and God had through
it all, don't you think? I think absolutely. It was,
something that he'd experienced before. I mean, we talked about this with the early Missouri
violence. When he asked God, why is this happening? When is this going to stop? The answer he got
was be still and know that I'm God. He got a similar answer five years later when it wasn't
just saints going through it from afar, but him and his own family going through it as well,
what he got was simply that he needed to have faith.
That is one of the most difficult things to do to go through a suffering scene, yet to circle
back around, you look at Amanda Smith, and what she went through is absolutely horrific, yet
at the same time, she maintained her faith and her belief, even though she had every justification
to say that's it. I'm out. When Brigham's talking about this later, he says that he accompanied
Joseph Smith to far west from Indiana, and he says, was Joseph a military officer? No. A civil officer?
No. A politician. No. Was he a man that meddled with anyone's business in the world
besides his own and tried to save the children of men by sharing the gospel? A proper citizen.
a man that observed law and order as much as any man that ever lived. His character is as well
known to me as mine is to any other man in this congregation. He's speaking in the 1860s. So,
there's a lot of people who are members now who didn't ever actually personally know Joseph.
I mean, they're 20 years removed from Joseph's murder. So he's trying to tell them that he knew
Joseph. He says, did he ever give wrong counsel? Never. Did he ever do an evil thing or anything
it was wrong. If he did, no man ever lived that was more willing to repent and confess of it than
Joseph was. He had his weaknesses like all other men did. But to give counsel or to perform an act
worthy of condemnation, I am at the defiance of earth and hell to prove anything against Joseph
Smith in his religious character. This persecution has been related to you. You've heard a good
deal of talk. I can inform this congregation what it was that got him from jail.
it was the faith of the saints and the power of God that was upon them.
No person ever saw Joseph with cast down countenance.
The spirit of his mission on him all the day long was always full of cheerfulness
and always had a word of comfort to speak to his friends.
I speak this because these people are not acquainted with those circumstances.
Joseph was in jail because he was a lover of truth and a follower.
of the Lord Jesus Christ and receive revelation from heaven. He received the priesthood and keys thereof
because he'd established the kingdom of God on earth the Lord had called him to step forth in this
benighted generation to plant the stand of liberty and freedom in every son and daughter of Adam
and to set up the standard of Zion and to call upon the nations to come unto Christ and be saved.
that's a pretty good testimony
yeah boy wow
beautiful way to bring this to a close
somebody who actually knew him
and knew him well
well this has been amazing
I think a lot of people
maybe have heard the name Amanda Smith before
Amanda Barnes Smith
and have heard that story
of the miraculous healing of her boy's hip
but boy more backstory today makes her even more
of a hero to me
yeah amazing
We're going to be back, and we're going to be back with Dr. Garrett-Dirk-Mott.
Thank you so much for sharing this time with us today.
It's been wonderful being with all of you.
Join us again soon for another episode of Follow Him.
