Revision as of 01:51, 12 November 2006 editBRMo (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers8,938 edits revert - WP:NOR← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 07:49, 24 January 2025 edit undoOgamD218 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users8,286 edits ceTags: Mobile edit Mobile app edit iOS app edit App select source | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|1857 massacre of California-bound immigrants by Nauvoo Legion militiamen}} | |||
{{POV}} | |||
{{for-multi|the book|The Mountain Meadows Massacre (book)|the film|The Mountain Meadows Massacre (film)}} | |||
{{good article}} | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2011}} | |||
{{Infobox civilian attack | |||
| title = Mountain Meadows Massacre | |||
| partof = the ] | |||
| image = mmm 1999 cairn.jpg | |||
| image_size = | |||
| image_upright = | |||
| alt = | |||
| caption = The 1999 burial site monument | |||
| map = {{location map|USA Utah}} | |||
| map_size = | |||
| map_alt = | |||
| map_caption = | |||
| location = ], ], U.S. | |||
| target = Members of the ] ] | |||
| coordinates = {{Coord|37.4755|-113.6437|format=dms|type:event_region:US-UT|display=title,inline}} | |||
| date = September 7–11, 1857 | |||
| type = ] | |||
| fatalities = 120–140 members of the ] ]<ref name="King">{{cite magazine |last1=King |first1=Gilbert |title=The Aftermath of Mountain Meadows |url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-aftermath-of-mountain-meadows-110735627/ |magazine=] |publisher=US Government |access-date=February 3, 2019 |date=February 29, 2012}}</ref>{{efn|name=Numbers}} | |||
| injuries = | |||
| perpetrators = *] (Utah Territorial Militia, ] district) | |||
* ] Native American auxiliaries | |||
| weapons = ], ] | |||
| numparts = <!-- or | numpart = --> | |||
| dfens = <!-- or | dfen = --> | |||
| motive = *] about a possible invasion | |||
* ] against outsiders during the ] period | |||
* Possible instigation from ] and other senior ] leadership | |||
| inquiry = | |||
| convicted = ], leader in the local Mormon community and of the local militia | |||
| verdict = | |||
| convictions = | |||
| charges = | |||
| litigation = | |||
| website = <!-- {{URL|example.com}} --> | |||
| module = | |||
}} | |||
The '''Mountain Meadows Massacre''' (September 7–11, 1857) was a series of attacks during the ] that resulted in the ] of at least 120 members of the ] ].<ref name="King"/>{{efn|name=Numbers}} The massacre occurred in the southern ] at ], and was perpetrated by settlers from ] (LDS Church) involved with the Utah Territorial Militia (officially called the ]) who recruited and were aided by some ] ].<ref>{{cite web | url= https://abn.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/history/topics/mountain-meadows-massacre?lang=eng | title= Mountain Meadows Massacre | access-date= December 31, 2022 | archive-date= September 26, 2022 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20220926174708/https://abn.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/history/topics/mountain-meadows-massacre?lang=eng | url-status= dead }}</ref> The wagon train, made up mostly of immigrant families from ], was bound for ], traveling on the ] that passed through the Territory. | |||
The '''Mountain Meadows massacre''' occurred on Friday, ], ] in ], several miles south of ] in Washington County along the portion of the ] that became the overland wagon road to ]. ] militia and some ]s killed an entire ] of ] farming families known as the Baker/Fancher party, traveling from Arkansas to California. Around 120 unarmed men, women and children were killed. Seventeen younger children (none older than six) were not not killed and were temporarily cared for by local families. | |||
After arriving in ], the Baker–Fancher party made their way south along the ], eventually stopping to rest at Mountain Meadows. The party's journey occurred amidst hostilities between ] settlers and the ], with ] rampant amongst the Mormons.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraphs 3, 4, 5, 6|ps=: "War hysteria permeated the area. ... Governor Brigham Young subsequently issued a proclamation of martial law"}}{{sfnp|Lee|1877|p=308|loc=|ps=: "Citizens of Utah: We are invaded by a hostile force, who are evidently assailing us to accomplish our overthrow and destruction."}}<ref name=IvesOnTheColoradoWarHysteria>{{cite journal |title= The Ives Expedition Revisited: A Prussian's Impressions|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/41695038.pdf |issue= 1 |pages= 7, 18, 19 |jstor= 41695038 |first= David H. |last=Miller |year= 1972 |journal= The Journal of Arizona History |volume= 13 |publisher= ] |quote= – outbreak of the Mormon War ... Mormons were already engaged in hostilities with the United States Army forces, – were inciting unrest by intimating that the real purpose of the river expedition was to steal Indian lands ... – Mormon rebels were among the Mohaves inciting them to murder and plunder ... Haskell's impressions of his hosts as treacherous Yankees bent on plundering helpless Mormons.}}</ref> Acting on rumors of hostile behavior on the part of the travelers, local Mormon militia leaders, including ] and ], made plans to attack them as they camped at the meadow. The leaders of the militia, wanting to give the impression of tribal hostilities, persuaded Southern Paiutes to join with a larger party of militiamen disguised as Native Americans in an attack on the wagon train. | |||
] | |||
==Siege on September 7–11 1857== | |||
The settlers were besieged for five days, beginning on Monday, ], ]. Whether Mormons or Paiutes initially attacked the party on Monday is debated. | |||
<ref>Some feel Paiute Indians initiated the attack (perhaps with Mormon encouragement). Others believe that Indians were never involved, and that, from the beginning, the attackers were Mormons disguised as Indians. (Oral tradition among Paiute tribe holds that all its members refused the Mormons' request to participate. Other accounts, including Maj. Carleton's 1859 report presented before Congress and Lee's 1877 Confessions, assert Paiute involvement). Brevet Maj. Carleton of the US Cavalry made a report in 1859 that was submitted in the Congressional record in 1902, detailing his investigation; he noted the different accounts of the attack, including those holding the Indians solely responsible. His own conclusions were accounts that blamed only the Indians were extorted lies. While noting uncertainties, his conclusion held the Mormons and Brigham Young primarily responsible and advocated immediate action against them. He also showed a dislike of Mormons in general, stating the following: | |||
During the militia's first assault, the travelers fought back, and a five-day siege ensued. Eventually, fear spread among the militia's leaders that some immigrants had caught sight of the white men, likely discerning the actual identity of a majority of the attackers. As a result, militia commander ] ordered his forces to kill the travelers. By this time, the travelers were running low on water and provisions, and allowed some members of the militia{{snd}}who approached under a ]{{snd}}to enter their camp. The militia members assured the immigrants they were protected, and after handing over their weapons, the immigrants were escorted away from their defensive position. After walking a distance from the camp, the militiamen, with the help of auxiliary forces hiding nearby, attacked the travelers. The perpetrators killed all the adults and older children in the group, in the end sparing only seventeen young children ages six and under.{{efn|name=Numbers|The exact number of people who were in the wagon party is estimated by authors and historians to range from 120 to around 140. Bagley states that 70 people in the group were women and children known by name and that at least two-thirds of the wagon train consisted of women and children. The size of the party ebbed and flowed depending on where it was in its journey west so the exact number of people in the wagon train at any given time and the exact number of people who were killed remains unknown (though Briggs states that 120 people were killed). The number of children who survived is seventeen according to several sources. Those children (all ages six and under) were deemed too young by the attackers to remember the circumstances of their families' deaths.{{sfnm|1a1=Bagley|1y=2002|1pp=56, 62–66, 388–389 |2a1=Briggs|2y=2006|2p=313|3a1=King|3y=2012|l3loc=Paragraph 12|4a1=Brooks|4y=1991|4pp=10, 14, 101–105, 266|4ps=: The figure of 120 to 140 dead that appears on Page 266, in Appendix XI of Brooks, is taken verbatim from Deputy U.S. Marshal William H. Rogers' Statement, as printed in the February 29, 1860 edition of the ''The Valley Tan'' newspaper}}}} | |||
<blockquote>''"The expenses of the army in Utah, past and to come (figure that), the massacre at the Mountain Meadows, the unnumbered other crimes, which have been and will yet be committed by this community, are but preliminary gusts of the whirlwind our Government has reaped and is yet to reap for the wind it had sowed in permitting the Mormons ever to gain foothold within our borders."''<br>— Maj. Carleton's report May 1859.</blockquote> </ref> | |||
According to ], on Friday morning, he went to the immigrants and convinced them to surrender their weapons and accept an armed one-on-one escort by the Mormon militia to safety from the siege, which the Mormon negotiators claimed was solely the doing of out-of-control Paiutes. Once the escort was underway in single file, a call of "Do your duty!" was given, whereupon all the adult men were shot. The women and older children were then killed by Indians and/or Mormons, depending on what source is to be believed. At least one Mormon man, who was traveling with the party through Utah, was killed in the incident. | |||
Following the massacre, the perpetrators buried some of the remains but ultimately left most of the bodies exposed to wild animals and the climate. Local families took in the surviving children, with many of the victims' possessions and remaining livestock being auctioned off. Investigations, which were interrupted by the ], resulted in nine ]s in 1874. Of the men who were indicted, only Lee was tried in a court of law. After two trials in the Utah Territory, Lee was convicted by a jury, sentenced to death and executed by ] on March 23, 1877. | |||
The party's extensive property was never fully accounted for, but it is widely believed to have been stolen by those who took part in the massacre. | |||
Historians attribute the massacre to a combination of factors, including war hysteria about a possible invasion of Mormon territory and ] against outsiders during the ]. Scholars debate whether senior leadership in the LDS Church, including ], directly instigated the massacre or if responsibility for it lay only with the leaders of the militia. | |||
The bodies were placed in both mass and individual graves, and in 1859 a detachment of U. S. Cavalry erected a rock ] as a monument. On one stone were carved the words: "Here lie the bones of one hundred and twenty men, women and children, from Arkansas, murdered on the 10th day of September, 1857." | |||
==History== | |||
Lee was ] from ] thirteen years after the incident. He was ultimately tried and executed for his crimes. He was the only person to be so punished. Lee admitted his reluctant complicity; in a lengthy confession given prior to his execution | |||
===Baker–Fancher party=== | |||
<ref>John D. Lee (1877). , pp. 238-242.</ref> | |||
{{main|Baker–Fancher party}} | |||
he claimed he was a ] for the many Mormons, including leaders ] and Isaac C. Haight, responsible for the massacre. John D. Lee also spoke bitterly of LDS President ] before his execution. In the same confession, we find the statement, "I have always believed, since that day, that General George A. Smith was then visiting Southern Utah to prepare the people for the work of exterminating Captain Fancher's train of emigrants, and I now believe that he was sent for that purpose by the direct command of Brigham Young." <ref>John D. Lee (1877). , pp. 225.</ref> By other accounts, despite his ill feelings toward the Mormon leader, he maintained Young's innocence with respect to the massacre to his own grave. | |||
In early 1857, the ] was formed from several groups mainly from ], ], ] and ] counties in northwestern ]. They assembled into a ] at Beller's Stand, south of ], to emigrate to southern ]. The group was initially referred to as both the Baker train and the Perkins train, but later referred to as the Baker–Fancher train (or party). It was named after "Colonel" Alexander Fancher who, having already made the journey to California twice before, had become its main leader.<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia| last = Finck| first = James| entry = Mountain Meadows Massacre| date=9 August 2024| encyclopedia = ]|publisher=]| location = Little Rock, Arkansas| entry-url = http://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=129}}</ref> By contemporary standards the Baker–Fancher party was prosperous, carefully organized and well-equipped for the journey.<ref>{{harvp|Bancroft|1889|p=545}}; {{harvp|Linn|1902|loc=Chap. XVI, 4th full paragraph}}.</ref> They were joined along the way by families and individuals from other states, including ].<ref>{{harvp|Bancroft|1889|p=544}}; {{harvp|Gibbs|1910|p=12}}.</ref> The group was relatively wealthy, and planned to restock its supplies in ], as did most wagon trains at the time. | |||
<ref>Will Bagley (2002). ''Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows,'' pp. 311-319.</ref> | |||
===Interactions with Mormon settlers=== | |||
On ] ], the LDS Church posthumously reinstated Lee's membership<ref>Bagley, p. 361.</ref>. | |||
{{See also|War hysteria preceding the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
At the time of the Fanchers' arrival, the ] though legally organized as a democracy, was for all intensive purposes a ] under the leadership of ], the second president of ] (LDS Church), who had established colonies along the ] and the Old Spanish Trail. ] ] had recently issued an order to send federal troops to Utah, which led to rumors being spread in the territory about its motives. Young issued various orders that urged the local population to prepare for the arrival of the troops. Eventually Young issued a declaration of ].{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 3}} | |||
The Baker–Fancher party was refused stocks in Salt Lake City and chose to leave there and take the Old Spanish Trail, which passed through southern Utah.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 2}} In August 1857, the ] ] traveled throughout the southern part of the territory instructing Mormon settlers to stockpile grain.<ref name=PeopleVLee/> While on his return trip to Salt Lake City, Smith camped near the Baker–Fancher party on August 25, 1857, at Corn Creek. They had traveled the {{convert|165|mi|km}} south from Salt Lake City, and ] suggested that the wagon train continue on the trail and rest their cattle at Mountain Meadows, which had good pasture and was adjacent to his ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Little |first1=James A. |title=Jacob Hamblin: A Narrative of His Personal Experience |series=The Faith-Promoting Series |page=48 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Jacob_Hamblin_a_Narrative_of_His_Persona/Ixg1AQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1 |orig-date=1881|date=1909 |edition=2nd |publisher=] |via=]}}</ref> | |||
In 2004 city officials in Washington City, Utah rescinded an earlier decision to erect a statue honoring Lee. Descendants of the Fancher party, among others, strongly objected to any such statue. The sculptor of this statue ended up buying it back from the city. | |||
While most witnesses said that the Fanchers were in general a peaceful party whose members behaved well along the trail, rumors spread about their supposed misdeeds.<ref>{{Cite news| last=Young| first=Brigham| author-link=Brigham Young| title=Interview with Brigham Young| newspaper=]|date=May 23, 1877| volume=26| issue=16| url=https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=2626783| quote=If you were to inquire of the people who lived hereabouts, and lived in the country at that time, you would find, ... that some of this Arkansas company ...boasted of having to helped to kill Hyrum and Joseph Smith and the Mormons in Missouri, and that they never meant to leave the Territory until similar scenes were enacted here.|via=]}}</ref> ] ] Major ] led the first federal investigation of the murders, and the findings were published in 1859. He recorded Hamblin's account that the train was alleged to have poisoned a spring near Corn Creek, resulting in the deaths of eighteen cows and two or three people who ate the contaminated meat. Carleton interviewed the father of a child who allegedly died from this poisoned spring and accepted the sincerity of the grieving father. He also included a statement from an investigator who did not believe the Fancher party was capable of poisoning the spring, given its size. Carleton invited readers to consider a potential explanation for the rumors of misdeeds, noting the general atmosphere of distrust among Mormons for strangers at the time, and that some locals appeared jealous of the Fancher party's wealth.{{sfnp|Carleton|1902}} | |||
==Survivors== | |||
{{totallydisputed-section}} | |||
Seventeen young children were not murdered in the massacre. These children were distributed to local Mormon homes for care. All but one of the children were returned to their families in the east by the US Army. | |||
===Conspiracy and siege=== | |||
An official report issued by Brevet Major Carleton, who was sent by the U.S Army to investigate the Mountain Meadows Massacre, stated that{{Cquote| Murders of the parents and despoilers of their property, these Mormons, rather these relentless, incarnate fiends, dared even to come forward and claim payment for having kept these little ones barely alive; these helpless orphans whom they themselves had already robbed of their natural protectors and support. Has there ever been an act which at all equaled this devilish hardihood in more than devilish effrontery? Never, but one; and even then the price was but '30 pieces of silver'.<ref>Carleton,"SPECIAL REPORT OF THE MOUNTAIN MEADOW MASSACRE BY J. H. CARLETON, BREVET MAJOR; UNITED STATES ARMY,CAPTAIN, FIRST DRAGOONS"</ref> }} | |||
{{main|Conspiracy and siege of the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
The Baker–Fancher party left Corn Creek and continued the {{convert|125|mi|km}} to Mountain Meadows, passing Parowan and ], southern Utah communities led respectively by ]s ] and ]. Haight and Dame were, in addition, the senior regional military leaders of the Iron Military District of the ].<ref name="Walker2008"/>{{rp|p=255}} Over half the employees of the ] iron manufacturing plant were in that militia district.<ref name=IronMission>{{cite encyclopedia|date= 1994b|entry= The Iron Mission |first= Morris A.|last= Shirts|encyclopedia= Utah History Encyclopedia|publisher= ]|isbn= 9780874804256|entry-url= https://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/i/IRON_MISSION.shtml}}</ref> | |||
Carleton goes on to give credit to Mrs. Hamblin for caring for the children, despite reports that members of her family had taken part in the massacre. {{Cquote| Mrs. Hamblin is a simple minded person of about 45, and evidently looks with the eyes of her husband at everything. She may really have been taught by the Mormons to believe it is no great sin to kill gentiles (the Latter-day Saint term for non-Saints) and enjoy their property. Of the shooting of the emigrants, which she had herself heard, and knew at the time what was going on, she seemed to speak without a shudder, or any very great feeling; but when she told of the 17 orphan children who were brought by such a crowd to her house of one small room there in the darkness of night, two of the children cruelly mangled and the most of them with their parents’ blood still wet upon their clothes, and all of them shrieking with terror and grief and anguish, her own mother heart was touched. She at least deserves kind consideration for her care and nourishment of the three sisters, and for all she did for the little girl, about one year old who had been shot through one of her arms, below the elbow, by a large ball, breaking both bones and cutting the arm half off. }} | |||
As the party approached, several meetings were held in Cedar City and nearby Parowan by local LDS Church leaders pondering how to implement Young's declaration of martial law.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 6}} On the afternoon of Sunday, September 6, Haight held his weekly Stake ] meeting after church services and brought up the issue of what to do with the immigrants.{{sfnp|Morrill|1876}} The plan for a Native American massacre was discussed, but not all the Council members agreed it was the right approach.{{sfnp|Morrill|1876}} The Council resolved to take no action until Haight sent a rider, James Haslam,<ref name=CollectedLegal2>{{Cite book |title=Mountain Meadows Massacre: Collected Legal Papers, Selected Trial Records and Aftermath|volume=2 |date=2017 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-8061-5573-9 |editor-last=Turley |editor-first=Richard E. |location=Norman, Oklahoma |editor-last2=Johnson |editor-first2=Janiece L. |editor-last3=Carruth|editor-link=Richard E. Turley |editor-first3=LaJean Purcell|chapter=Preliminary Material and Daniel H. Wells, Laban Morrill, and James Haslam Testimonies|chapter-url=https://mountainmeadowsmassacre.com/wp-content/transcripts/trial2/0-Preliminary-Material-and-Wells-Morrill-and-Haslam-Testimonies.pdf|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Mountain_Meadows_Massacre/YzopDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0}}</ref>{{rp|p=3437}} out the next day to carry an express to Salt Lake City (a six-day round trip on horseback) for Young's advice, as Utah did not yet have a ] system.{{sfnp|Morrill|1876}} Following the council, Haight decided to send a messenger Joseph Clewes south to ].<ref name=CollectedLegal2/>{{rp|p=3464}}{{sfnp|Morrill|1876}} What Haight told Lee remains a mystery, but considering the timing it may have had something to do with Council's decision to wait for advice from Young.<ref name=MaMM/>{{rp|p=157}} | |||
James Lynch testified that "the children when we first saw them, were in a most wretched and deplorable condition; with little or no clothing, covered with filth and dirt. They presented a sight heart rending and miserable in the extreme." <ref>Brooks, Appendix XII, pp 279-284</ref> | |||
However, Carlton's and Lynch's reports are contradicted by Dr. Forney's report to Congress. He said, "When I obtained the children they were in a better condition than children generally in the settlements in which they lived." | |||
<ref>Senate record, 36th Congress</ref> | |||
The dispirited Baker–Fancher party found water and fresh grazing for its livestock after reaching grassy, mountain-ringed Mountain Meadows, a widely known stopover on the old Spanish Trail, in early September. They anticipated several days of rest and recuperation there before the next {{convert|40|mi|km}} would take them out of Utah. On September 7, the party was attacked by ] militiamen dressed as Native Americans and some Native American ]s.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 8}} The Baker–Fancher party defended itself by encircling and lowering their wagons, wheels chained together, along with digging shallow trenches and throwing dirt both below and into the wagons, which made a strong barrier. Seven immigrants were killed during the opening attack and buried somewhere within the wagon encirclement. Sixteen more were wounded.{{sfnp|Penrose|Haslam|1885}}<ref name="Brigham Young 1986 p. 257">{{cite book|title=Brigham Young: American Moses|first=Leonard J. |last=Arrington|publisher=]|date=1986|page=257|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Brigham_Young/FtmQvP6YPCAC?hl=en&gbpv=0|via=]}}</ref> The attack continued for five days, during which the besieged families had little or no access to freshwater or game food and their ammunition was depleted.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 8}} Meanwhile, organization among the local Mormon leadership reportedly broke down.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 6}} Eventually, fear spread among the militia's leaders that some emigrants had caught sight of white men, and had probably discerned the identity of their attackers. This resulted in an order to kill all the emigrants,<ref>{{Cite journal| last=Walker| first=Ronald W.| author-link=Ronald W. Walker| title='Save the emigrants', Joseph Clewes on the Mountain Meadows Massacre| journal=]| volume=42| issue=1| year=2003| page=150| url=https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3604&context=byusq| quote= ...it was made known by Higbee that the emigrants were to be wiped out.}}</ref> with the exception of small children.<ref name=MaMM>{{Cite book |title=Massacre at Mountain Meadows |url=https://archive.org/details/massacreatmounta00walk_491 |url-access=limited |last1=Walker |first1=Ronald W. |last2=Turley |first2=Richard E.|author2-link=Richard E. Turley |last3=Leonard |first3=Glen M. |year=2008 |publisher=] |location=New York |isbn=978-0-19-516034-5}}</ref>{{rp|pp=174, 178–180}} | |||
==Disputed facts== | |||
{{Panorama|image=File:MountainMeadowsByPhilKonstantin-Reduced.jpg |height=160 |caption=Panorama of the area in 2009<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://americanindian.net/utah2009/mtmeadows/index.html|title=Mountain Meadows Massacre Site in Utah by Phil Konstantin|website=americanindian.net}}</ref>}} | |||
Author Will Bagley wrote: | |||
<ref>Bagley, p. xvi.</ref> | |||
{{Cquote|Reliable history requires accurate data. In the case of Mountain Meadows, we have a record irrevocably colored by dubious folklore and corrupted by perjury, false memory, and the destruction of key documents. Almost every acknowledged ‘fact’ about the fate of these murdered people is open to question.}} | |||
===Killings and aftermath of the massacre=== | |||
The only survivors were young children. According to Bagley, "The reminiscent accounts of the surviving children, subtly shaded by the passage of time and the influence of questionable histories, are problematic, but they are surprisingly reliable and consistent." Accounts from the participants were given years later and are often contradictory and self-serving. Due to the cover-up, source documents disappeared.<ref>Bagley, p. xvi.</ref> Although the various sources agree on the essential story of the massacre on ] ], the sources differ on many of the facts leading up to or following the massacre. As a result, various historians have reached differing conclusions. This section reviews some of the controversies. | |||
{{Main|Killings and aftermath of the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
===Who ordered the massacre?=== | |||
{{multiple image |direction=horizontal |align=center |total_width=660 | |||
Shortly before his execution, Major John D. Lee, the commanding officer at the scene, wrote the following in his last testament, ''The Life and Confessions of the Late Mormon Bishop, John D. Lee'': | |||
|header={{larger|Four of the nine ] indicted in 1874 for murder or conspiracy}}<br />(''Not shown:'' William H. Dame • William C. Stewart • Ellott Willden • Samuel Jukes • George Adair, Jr.) | |||
|image1=JohnDoyleLee.jpg | |||
|caption1=''']''' - Only suspect convicted and executed. Constable, judge, ]. Lee conspired in advance with Haight; led initial siege; falsely offered emigrants safe passage; led unwitting train of victims to their surprise execution. | |||
|image2=Isaac Haight.jpg | |||
|caption2=''']'''— ], battalion commander, director of Deseret Iron Company.<ref name=IronMission/> | |||
|image3=John H. Higbee.jpg | |||
|caption3='''John H. Higbee''' - Accused by Lee and others of giving the command to begin the killings.{{sfnp|Lee|1877|p=236}} Higbee later disavowed responsibility and blamed Lee for the massacre.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|pp=326–329}} | |||
|image4=Philip Klingensmith.jpg | |||
|caption4='''Philip Klingensmith'''- a ] in the church and a ] in the militia. Participated in the killings. After disaffiliation from the LDS Church he ] against his fellow conspirators. | |||
}} | |||
On Friday, September 11, 1857, two militiamen approached the Baker–Fancher party wagons with a white flag and were soon followed by ] and militia officer ]. Lee told the battle-weary emigrants that he had negotiated a truce with the Paiutes. Under Mormon protection, the wagon-train members would be escorted safely back to Cedar City, {{convert|36|mi|km}} away, in exchange for turning all of their livestock and supplies over to the Native Americans.{{sfnp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 9}} Accepting this offer, the emigrants were led out of their fortification, with the adult men being separated from the women and children. The men were paired with a militia escort and when the signal was given,{{sfnp|Lee|1877|p=236}} the militiamen turned and shot the male members of the Baker–Fancher party standing by their side. The women and children were then ambushed and killed by more militia that were hiding in nearby bushes and ravines. Members of the militia were sworn to secrecy. A plan was set to blame the massacre on the Native Americans. | |||
] | |||
{{Cquote|"I cannot go before the Judge of the quick and the dead with out first revealing all that I know, as to what was done, who ordered me to do what I did do, and the motives that led to the commission of that unnatural and bloody deed. | |||
The immediate orders for the killing of the emigrants came from those in authority at Cedar City. At the time of the massacre, I and those with me, acted by virtue of positive orders from Isaac C. Haight and his associates at Cedar City. Before I started on my mission to the Mountain Meadows, I was told by Isaac C. Haight that his orders to me were the result of full consultatation with Colonel William H. Dame and all in authority. It is a new thing to me, if the massacre was not decided on by the head men of the Church, and it is a new thing for Mormons to condemn those who committed the deed." <ref>, 233-234.</ref>}} | |||
The militia did not kill small children who were deemed too young to relate what had happened. Nancy Huff, one of the seventeen survivors and just over four years old at the time of the massacre, recalled in an 1875 statement that an eighteenth survivor was killed directly in front of the other children. "At the close of the massacre there was eighteen children still alive, one girl, some ten or twelve years old, they said was too big and could tell, so they killed her, leaving seventeen."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Huff Cates |first1=Nancy S. |title=The Mountain Meadow Massacre. Statement of one of the Few Survivors. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/85240667/ |via=] |newspaper=] |access-date=September 13, 2021 |date=September 1, 1875}}</ref> The survivors were taken in by local Mormon families.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=56|ps=:"Without a Name of a Home –John M. Higbee"}} Seventeen of the children were later reclaimed by the U.S. Army and returned to relatives in Arkansas.{{sfnp|Brooks|1991|pp=101–105}} The treatment of these children while they were held by the Mormons is uncertain, but Captain James Lynch's statement in May 1859 said the surviving children were "in a most wretched condition, half starved, half naked, filthy, infested with vermin, and their eyes diseased from the cruel neglect to which had been exposed."<ref name=CollectedLegal1/>{{rp|p=247}} Lynch's July 1859 affidavit added that they when they first saw the children they had "little or no clothing" and were "covered with filth and dirt".<ref name=CollectedLegal1>{{cite book |editor1-last=Turley |editor1-first=Richard E. |editor1-link=Richard E. Turley|editor2-last=Johnson |editor2-first=Janiece L. |editor3-last=Carruth |editor3-first=LaJean Purcell |title=Mountain Meadows Massacre: Collected Legal Papers, Initial Investigations and Indictments|volume=1 |publisher=] |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZTopDwAAQBAJ |access-date=September 13, 2021 |date=2017 |isbn=978-0806158952 }}</ref>{{rp|p=250}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/60808571/mountain-meadows-massacre-recounting/|title=Mountain Meadows:An Official Accounting of the Atrocity Written in 1859|via=]|newspaper=]|date=26 July 1875|volume=1|issue=68|page=1}}</ref> | |||
At the trial that resulted in his conviction, the witnesses said that Major Lee made the decisions that directly led to the massacre.<ref>The Mormons considered themselves at war during this period (see ]), and most of the men in the region held military ranks in local militias. ] was Brigadier General over all of Southern Utah as well as a member of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles. William H. Dame was Colonel of the Iron County militia as well as Bishop of the Parowan ward. Isaac C. Haight of Cedar City was Lieutenant Colonel of the Iron County militia as well as Parowan Stake President (over Dame in ecclesiastical matters, but under him in military rank). John M. Higbee of Cedar City was a Major in the Iron County militia, the ranking officer and field commander of the detachment at Mountain Meadows, as well as the first counselor to President Haight in the Parowan stake. </ref> <ref>*Juanita Brooks (1991). ''Mountain Meadows Massacre,'' pp. 194-198; Bagley, pp. 301-306.</ref> | |||
Lee, however, said that he received orders from Lieutenant Colonel Isaac C. Haight, delivered by Major John M. Higbee, "to decoy the emigrants from their position, and kill all of them that could talk. This order was in writing." | |||
<ref>Lee repeats his report of the orders in the immediately following text. "Higbee handed it to me and I read it, and dropped it on the ground, saying, 'I cannot do this.' The substance of the orders were that the emigrants should be decoyed from their strong-hold, and all exterminated, so that no one would be left to tell the tale, and then the authorities could say it was done by the Indians." See Lee, , 233-234.</ref> | |||
Bagley suggests that after a first trial of Lee resulted in a hung jury, the prosecutor may have struck an implicit agreement with the leaders of the church to allow Lee to be convicted at the second trial if charges against the other suspects would be dropped. | |||
<ref>Bagley, pp. 298-301.</ref> | |||
] | |||
Affidavits taken from several participants after Lee’s trial also indicate that the orders to massacre the party came from Colonel William Dame, commander of the Iron County militia, and Lieutenant Colonel Isaac Haight, the militia’s second-in-command. | |||
<ref>Brooks, pp. 84, 93.</ref> | |||
] notes that during the siege messengers made frequent trips between Mountain Meadows and militia headquarters in Cedar City and Parowan, providing ample opportunity for Dame and Haight to issue orders. | |||
<ref>Brooks, pp. 72-73.</ref> | |||
], founder of the Mormon History Association, reports that Brigham Young received the rider, James Haslam, at his office on the same day. When he learned what was contemplated by the militia leaders in Parowan and Cedar City, he sent back a letter stating the Baker–Fancher party was not to be meddled with, and should be allowed to go in peace (although he acknowledged the Native Americans would likely "do as they pleased").<ref name="Brigham Young 1986 p. 257"/><ref name=BYletter/> Young's letter arrived two days too late, on September 13, 1857. | |||
Researchers have disagreed on whether Young may have ordered the massacre. Brooks concludes that Young “did not order the massacre, and would have prevented it if he could.” | |||
<ref>Brooks, p. 219.</ref> | |||
Her conclusion is based largely on a letter from Young to Haight dated ] giving instructions to leave the emigrants alone. The key sentences from Young’s letter are the following: | |||
<ref>The full letter is shown in Brooks, p. 63.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{{Cquote|In regard to the emigration trains passing through our settlements, we must not interfere with them until they are first notified to keep away. You must not meddle with them. The Indians we expect will do as they please but you should try and preserve good feelings with them. There are no other trains going south that I know of. If those that are there will leave, let them go in peace.}} </blockquote> | |||
The livestock and personal property of the Baker–Fancher party, including women's jewelry, clothing and bedstuffs were distributed or auctioned off to Mormons.<ref name="King"/><ref>{{Cite news| last=Klingensmith| first=Philip | title=Mountain Meadows Massacre, Affidavit of Philip Klingensmith| editor-last=Toohy| editor-first=Dennis J.| newspaper=Corinne Journal Reporter|date=September 24, 1872 | location=Corinne, Utah | volume=5| issue=252| pages=1| url=http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/corinne,5359| access-date=February 11, 2019| via=]}}</ref> Some of the surviving children saw clothing and jewelry that had belonged to their dead mothers and sisters subsequently being worn by Mormon women and the journalist J.H. Beadle said that jewelry taken from Mountain Meadows was seen in Salt Lake City.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|pp=174–175}} | |||
On ] Haight had sent an express rider, James Haslam, on the 496-mile round-trip journey to Salt Lake City; Young replied promptly and Haslam reached Cedar City with Young’s letter on ], two days too late to save the emigrants. Brooks, however, faults Young and George A. Smith for preaching militant sermons that set the conditions for the massacre and also for participating in the cover-up. | |||
<ref>Brooks, p. 219.</ref> | |||
===Investigations and prosecutions=== | |||
Bagley, on the other hand, concludes that Young was directly responsible for the massacre by encouraging the Paiutes to attack the party and seize their cattle. | |||
{{Main|Investigations and prosecutions relating to the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
<ref>Bagley, p. 379.</ref> | |||
He cites a recently discovered journal recording a ] meeting of Young with the Southern Paiute chiefs, saying that Young “gave them” all the cattle on the southern route. | |||
<ref>Bagley p.114.</ref> | |||
He suggests that the statement in Young’s letter to Haight, “The Indians we expect will do as they please...”, carried a message that “the Mormons could blame whatever happened on the Paiutes.” | |||
<ref>Bagley, p. 137.</ref> | |||
An early investigation was conducted by Brigham Young,<ref name="Brigham Young 1986 p. 257"/> who interviewed John D. Lee on September 29, 1857. In 1858, Young sent a report to the Commissioner of ] stating that the massacre was the work of Native Americans. The ] delayed any investigation by the U.S. federal government until 1859, when Jacob Forney and U.S. Army ] Major ] conducted investigations.<ref name=Forney-1859>{{Cite news |last=Forney |first=J. |title=Kirk Anderson Esq |newspaper=The Valley Tan |volume=1 |issue=28 |date=May 10, 1859 |page=2 |url=https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=21087086|via=]}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news | last=Forney |first=J. |title=Visit of the Superintendent of Indian Affairs to Southern Utah |newspaper=] |volume=9 |issue=10 |date=May 11, 1859 |page=1 |url=https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=2588248|via=]}}</ref> In Carleton's investigation, at Mountain Meadows he found women's hair tangled in sage brush and the bones of children still in their mothers' arms.<ref name = "Fisher">{{cite web |last1=Fisher |first1=Alyssa |title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre |url=http://www.archaeology.org/online/features/massacre/meadows.html |website=Archaeology |publisher=] |access-date=February 4, 2019 |date=September 16, 2003}}</ref> Carleton later said it was "a sight which can never be forgotten." After gathering up the skulls and bones of those who had died, Carleton's troops buried them and erected a ] and cross.<ref name = "Fisher"/> | |||
Bagley also quotes Lee’s ''Confessions,'' describing a late August conversation with George A. Smith, who was touring the settlements in southern Utah, in which Smith suggested that emigrant trains that made “threats against our people” should be attacked. | |||
<ref>Bagley, pp. 86-87.</ref> | |||
According to legend, the execution command "Do your Duty!" was a direct quote from a communication from Brigham Young, ordering the massacre. Allegedly the message read, "Brethren do your duty."{{citeneeded}} Many letters and documents were allegedly destroyed by the LDS church at the time, in fear of retaliation by the US Army. | |||
<ref>Bagley, p. xvi.</ref> | |||
Carleton interviewed a few local Mormon settlers and Paiute Native American chiefs and concluded that there was Mormon involvement in the massacre. He issued a report in May 1859, addressed to the U.S. Assistant Adjutant-General, setting forth his findings. Jacob Forney, Superintendent of Indian Affairs for Utah, also conducted an investigation that included visiting the region in the summer of 1859. Forney retrieved many of the surviving children of massacre victims who had been housed with Mormon families and gathered them up for transportation to their relatives in Arkansas. Forney concluded that the Paiutes did not act alone and the massacre would not have occurred without the white settlers,<ref name=Forney-1859/> and Carleton report to the ] called the mass killings a "heinous crime",{{sfnp|Carleton|1902}} blaming both local and senior church leaders for the massacre. | |||
Sally Denton, although agreeing with Bagley that Young was directly responsible for the massacre, disagrees regarding the role of the Paiutes in Young’s plans. | |||
<ref>Sally Denton (2003). ''American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows.''</ref> | |||
She notes that the record of Young’s ] meeting with the Paiute chiefs indicates that they resisted Young’s efforts to enlist their support in the Utah War conflict. She also notes that it would have been nearly impossible for the chiefs to travel nearly 300 miles in 6 days to begin the attack on ]. | |||
<ref>Denton, pp. 158-159.</ref> | |||
She views the account of Haslam’s ride and Young’s ] letter to Haight with considerable skepticism, considering these to be part of a plan to establish an alibi for Young. | |||
<ref>Denton, pp. 157-158.</ref> | |||
In March 1859, Judge ], a federal judge brought into the territory after the Utah War, convened a grand jury in ] concerning the massacre, but the jury declined any indictments.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Cradlebaugh |first=John |author-link=John Cradlebaugh |title=Charge (Orally delivered by Hon. John Cradlebaugh to the Grand Jury, Provo, Tuesday, March 8, 1859) |url= http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/valleytan,553 |page=3 |editor-last=Anderson |editor-first=Kirk |newspaper=The Valley Tan |date=March 15, 1859 |volume=1 |issue=20 |via=]}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Cradlebaugh |first=John |author-link=John Cradlebaugh |title=Discharge of the Grand Jury |url=http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/valleytan,632 |pages=3 |editor-last=Anderson |editor-first=Kirk |newspaper=The Valley Tan |date=March 29, 1859 |volume=1 |issue=22 |via=]}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |editor-last=Carrington |editor-first=Albert |editor-link=Albert Carrington |title=The Court & the Army |newspaper=] |date=April 6, 1859 |volume=9 |issue=5 |page=2 |url=http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/deseretnews2,7309 |via=]}}</ref> Nevertheless, Cradlebaugh conducted a tour of the Mountain Meadows area with a military escort.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=225}} He attempted to arrest John D. Lee, Isaac Haight, and John Higbee, who fled before they could be found.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=226}} Cradlebaugh publicly charged Brigham Young as an instigator to the massacre and therefore an "accessory before the fact".{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=225}} Possibly as a protective measure against the mistrusted federal court system, Mormon territorial probate court judge ] arrested Young under a territorial warrant, perhaps hoping to divert any trial of Young into a friendly Mormon territorial court.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=234}} Apparently because no federal charges ensued, Young was released.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=225}} | |||
==Reasons for massacre== | |||
Brooks concluded in her book on the tragedy that, | |||
<ref>Brooks, p. 223.</ref> | |||
{{Cquote|The complete—the absolute—truth of the affair can probably never be evaluated by any human being; attempts to understand the forces which culminated in it and those which were set into motion by it are all very inadequate at best.}} | |||
] on March 23, 1877. Lee is seated, next to his coffin.]] | |||
Brooks asserted that both historic events and emotional responses between Mormons and emigrants contributed to the tragedy. | |||
]'s execution.<ref>{{Cite news |date=14 April 1877 |url=https://archive.org/details/sim_leslies-weekly_1877-04-07_44_1123/page/n20/mode/1up |title=Justice at Last! Execution of John D. Lee for Complicity in the Mountain Meadows Massacre.|work=]|volume=44|issue=1124|via=]|page=107}}</ref>]] | |||
Further investigations were cut short by the ] in 1861,{{sfnp|Brooks|1991|p=133}} but proceeded in 1871 when prosecutors obtained the affidavit of militia member Philip Klingensmith. Klingensmith had been a ] and blacksmith from Cedar City; by the 1870s, however, he had ] and moved to ].{{sfnp|Briggs|2006|p=315}} | |||
The massacre occurred in the context of a larger conflict between the LDS church and the United States. US troops were marching on the Utah Territory in the summer of 1857. Brigham Young, the federally appointed territorial governor, had not been informed by the President or government officials of the army's purpose. He believed this army could renew the violence the Latter-day Saints had experienced in New York, Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois prior to their arduous journey west.<ref>Brooks, pp. 3-30.</ref> "We are invaded by a hostile force who are evidently assailing us to accomplish our overthrow and destruction," he declared ], ]. In anticipation of an attack, he declared martial law in the territory and ordered "hat all the forces in said Territory hold themselves in readiness to March, at a moment's notice, to repel any and all such threatened invasion". Arrington,{{citeneeded}} p. 254. | |||
Lee was arrested on November 7, 1874.<ref>{{cite news|title=John D. Lee Arrested|newspaper=]|date=November 18, 1874|page=16|via=]|url=https://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/digital/collection/desnews3/id/102835/|volume=23|issue=42}}</ref> Dame, Philip Klingensmith, Ellott Willden, and George Adair Jr. were indicted and arrested while warrants to pursue the arrests of four others who had gone into hiding (Haight, Higbee, William C. Stewart, and Samuel Jukes) were being obtained. Klingensmith escaped prosecution by agreeing to testify.<ref>{{Cite web |url= https://library.utahtech.edu/special_collections/Juanita_Brooks_lectures/2002.html | title=Tragedy at Mountain Meadows Massacre: Toward a Consensus Account and Time Line|publisher=]}}</ref> Brigham Young ] some participants including Haight and Lee from the LDS Church in 1870. The U.S. posted bounties of $5000 ] ({{Inflation|US|5000|1870|r=-2|fmt=eq}}{{Inflation/fn|US}}) each for the capture of Haight, Higbee, Stewart, and Klingensmith.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=242}} | |||
Rumors circulated in the region regarding the Fancher party. They were based on statements reportedly made by Fancher party members to non-Mormon traders along the ] claiming the party included members of the "Missouri Wildcats", the mob that killed Mormon founder ] In addition, some reportedly claimed to have been present at the murder of Mormon ] ] earlier that year. These statements have been called into question by various historians due to conflicting accounts of the settlers' journey south through Utah. But relations between Mormons and all non-Mormon emigrants were at best strained, in part because of tension caused by the anticipated war between Utah and the U.S. government. Also, the emotional legacy of the murders of Joseph Smith and others in Illinois in 1844, mob action in LDS settlements, and the ] of 1838 in Missouri, in which Governor Lillburn Boggs had ordered all Mormons to be exterminated or driven from that state, led Mormon settlers to be antagonistic and on alert. | |||
Lee's first trial began on July 23, 1875, in ], before a jury of eight Mormons and four non-Mormons.<ref>{{cite news|title=The Lee Trial|newspaper=]|date= July 28, 1875|page=5}}</ref> One of Lee's defense attorneys was ], a former territorial supreme court justice.<ref>{{cite book|first=Orson F. |last=Whitney|author-link= Orson F. Whitney|title=Popular History of Utah|date=1916|page=305|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Popular_History_of_Utah/6HkUAAAAYAAJ?hl=en|via=]|publisher=]}}</ref> The trial led to a ] on August 5, 1875. Lee's second trial began September 13, 1876, before an all-Mormon jury. The prosecution called Daniel Wells, Laban Morrill, Joel White, Samuel Knight, Samuel McMurdy, Nephi Johnson, and Jacob Hamblin.{{sfnp|Lee|1877|pp=317–378}} Lee also stipulated, against advice of counsel, that the prosecution be allowed to re-use the depositions of Young and Smith from the previous trial.{{sfnp|Lee|1877|pp=302–303}} Lee called no witnesses in his defense,{{sfnp|Lee|1877|p=378}} and was convicted. | |||
John Lee justified his actions in ''The Life and Confessions...'', claiming he was told by Isaac C. Haight, then President of that Stake of Zion: | |||
Lee was entitled under Utah Territorial statute to choose the method of his execution from three possible options: hanging, firing squad, or decapitation. At sentencing, Lee chose to be executed by firing squad.<ref>{{cite news|title=Territorial Dispatches: The Sentence of Lee|newspaper=]|date=October 18, 1876|page=4}}</ref> In his final words before his sentence was carried out at Mountain Meadows on March 23, 1877, Lee said that he was a scapegoat for others involved.{{sfnp|Lee|1877|pp=225–226}} Brigham Young stated that Lee's fate was just, but it was not a sufficient ], given the enormity of the crime.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Young |first1=Brigham|author-link=Brigham Young |date=April 30, 1877 |title=Interview with Brigham Young |url=http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/deseretnews3,150800 |via=Utah Digital Newspapers, J. Willard Marriott Library, ] |work=] |access-date=February 4, 2019 |quote= "I do, and I believe that Lee has not half atoned for his great crime"}}</ref> | |||
{{Cquote|(the emmigrants had) "violated the ordinances of the town of Cedar, and had, by armed force, resisted the officers who tried to arrest them for violating the law. That after leaving Cedar City the emigrants camped by the company, or cooperative field, just below Cedar City, and burned a large portion of the fencing, leaving the crops open to the large herds of stock in the surrounding country. Also that they had given poisoned meat to the Corn Creek tribe of Indians, which had killed several of them, and their Chief, Konosh, was on the trail of the emigrants, and would soon attack them. All of these things, and much more of a like kind, Haight told me as we lay in the dark at the old Iron Works. I believed all that he said, and, thinking that he had full right to do all that he wanted to do, I was easily induced to follow his instructions. | |||
==Criticism and analysis of the massacre== | |||
Haight said that unless something was done to prevent it, the emigrants would carry out their threats and rob every one of the outlying settlements in the South, and that the whole Mormon people were liable to be butchered by the troops that the emigrants would bring back with them from California. I was then told that the Council had held a meeting that day, to consider the matter, and that it was decided by the authorities to arm the Indians, give them provisions and ammunition, and send them after the emigrants, and have the Indians give them a brush, and if they killed part or all of them, so much the better. | |||
===Media coverage about the event=== | |||
{{Main|Media coverage of the Mountain Meadows Massacre|Mountain Meadows Massacre and Mormon public relations}} | |||
]'' magazine.<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|location=New York City|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_harpers-weekly_1859-08-13_3_137/mode/1up|via=]|page=513|volume=3|issue=137|date=13 August 1859|title=The Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Utah Territory}}</ref>]] | |||
Initial published reports of the incident date back at least to October 1857 in the '']''.{{sfnp|Staff|1857}}{{sfnp|Christian|1857}} A notable report on the incident was made in 1859 by Carleton, who had been tasked by the U.S. Army to investigate the incident and bury the still exposed corpses at Mountain Meadows.{{sfnp|Carleton|1902}} The first period of intense nationwide publicity about the massacre began around 1872 after investigators obtained Klingensmith's confession. In 1868 C. V. Waite published "An Authentic History Of Brigham Young" which described the events.{{sfnp|Waite|1868}} In 1872, ] commented on the massacre through the lens of contemporary American public opinion in an appendix to his semi-autobiographical travel book '']''.{{sfnp|Twain|1872}} In 1873, the massacre was given a full chapter in ]'s Mormon history '']''.{{sfnp|Stenhouse|1873|pp=424–458}} The massacre itself also received international attention,<ref>{{cite news |title=The Massacre of the Hundred Emigrants by the Mormons |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84437055/ |via=] |newspaper=]|location=London, England |access-date=August 30, 2021 |date=December 4, 1857}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Treacherous Massacre by Mormons |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84441993/treacherous-massacre-by-mormons-mountai/ |via=]|newspaper=]|location=Liverpool, England |access-date=August 30, 2021 |date=April 27, 1860}}</ref> with various international and national newspapers also covering John D. Lee's 1874<ref>{{cite news |title=Mountain Meadow |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84444576/mountain-meadow-mountain-meadows-massac/ |via=] |newspaper=]|location=Winfield, Kansas |access-date=August 30, 2021 |date=December 3, 1874}}</ref> and 1877 trials as well as his execution in 1877.<ref>{{cite news |title=John D. Lee's Execution |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84442927/john-d-lees-execution-mountain-meadow/ |via=] |newspaper=] |access-date=August 30, 2021 |date=March 24, 1877}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=John D. Lee |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84443187/john-d-lee-execution-in-utah-23-mar-187/ |via=] |newspaper=Green-Mountain Freeman |access-date=August 30, 2021 |date=March 28, 1877}}</ref> | |||
I said, "Brother Haight, who is your authority for acting in this way?" | |||
The massacre has been treated extensively by several historical works, beginning with Lee's own ''Confession'' in 1877, expressing his opinion that George A. Smith was sent to southern Utah by Brigham Young to direct the massacre.{{sfnp|Lee|1877|p=225}} | |||
He replied, "It is the will of all in authority. The emigrants have no pass from any one to go through the country, and they are liable to be killed as common enemies, for the country is at war now. No man has a right to go through this country without a written pass." | |||
In 1910, the massacre was the subject of a short book by Josiah F. Gibbs, who also attributed responsibility for the massacre to Young and Smith.{{sfnp|Gibbs|1910|pp=7–9, 42}} The first detailed and comprehensive work using modern historical methods was '']'' in 1950 by ], a Mormon scholar who lived near the area in southern Utah. Brooks found no evidence of direct involvement by Brigham Young, but charged him with obstructing the investigation and provoking the attack through his rhetoric. | |||
We lay there and talked much of the night, and during that time Haight gave me very full instructions what to do, and how to proceed in the whole affair. He said he had consulted with Colonel Dame, and every one agreed to let the Indians use up the whole train if they could. Haight then said: | |||
Initially, the LDS Church denied any involvement by Mormons, and into the 21st century was relatively silent on the issue. In 1872, it excommunicated some of the participants for their role in the massacre.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=273}} Even after irrefutable evidence surfaced in 1999, the LDS Church didn't officially recognize its members' responsibility for the attack through at least 2002.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/2002/03/06/flirting-with-disaster/2c7e0070-a20e-4500-9490-5fa4472ec386/|newspaper=]|location=Washington D.C.|title=Flirting With Disaster|first=Donna|last=Rifkind|date=6 March 2002|quote=To this day, the Mormon Church has not officially admitted the extent of its members' responsibility for the massacre, even after construction workers at the site in 1999 unearthed evidence that more or less proved the case.|url-access=subscription}}</ref> 150 years after the tragedy in September 2007, the LDS Church published its first official statement of regret on the topic, and told the ] via a church spokesperson that the statement should not be seen as an apology.<ref>{{Cite news |date=September 12, 2007 |title=Mormon Church Regrets 1857 Massacre |url=https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/2007/09/11/mormon-church-regrets-1857-massacre/61717718007/ |first=Paul|last=Foy|agency=]|via=]|quote=Church leaders were adamant that the statement should not be construed as an apology. 'We don't use the word "apology". We used "profound regret"', church spokesman Mark Tuttle told The Associated Press.}}</ref><ref name=Apologizes>{{Cite news |last=Ravitz |first=Jessica |newspaper=] |title=LDS Church apologizes for Mountain Meadows Massacre |url=https://archive.sltrib.com/story.php?ref=/lds/ci_6862682}}</ref><ref>{{Cite magazine|title=LDS Church Expresses 'Regret' for Mountain Meadows Massacre|magazine=]|page=74|url=https://sunstone.org/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/147-74-79.pdf|date=October 2007}}</ref> | |||
"I expect you to carry out your orders."<ref>http://www.xmission.com/~country/reason/lee_mm.htm</ref>}} | |||
In modern times, the murders have been called an act of ]<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Bigler |first1=David L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iHUCBQAAQBAJ |title=The Mormon Rebellion: America's First Civil War, 1857–1858 |last2=Bagley |first2=Will|author2-link=Will Bagley |date=2014-10-22 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-8061-8396-1 |pages=xi, 179, 299 |quote='Terrorism' is not a word to be taken lightly. But the evidence, coupled with long-forgotten Mormon doctrines, demonstrate that the purpose of the Mountain Meadows atrocity was to strike fear into the hearts of intruders ....|via=]|url-access=limited}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Hopper |first1=Shay E. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QgrMDwAAQBAJ |title=An Arkansas History for Young People |last2=Baker |first2=T. Harri |last3=Browning |first3=Jane |date=2007-09-01 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-55728-845-5 |edition=Fourth |pages=200|quote=Prior to the Oklahoma City bombing, the Mountain Meadows massacre was the largest act of domestic terrorism to ever occur on American soil.|via=]|url-access=limited}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Kennon |first=Caroline |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DH5mDwAAQBAJ |title=Battling Terrorism in the United States |date=2017-07-15 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-5345-6141-0 |pages=6, 12|via=]|url-access=limited}}</ref> in many works of literature.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bigler |first=David L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b6clrgEACAAJ |title=Confessions of a Revisionist Historian: David L. Bigler on the Mormons and the West |date=2015 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-692-37120-6 |location=Salt Lake City |page=133 |via=]|url-access=limited|quote=September 11 will mark the anniversary of the most horrific terrorist attack in U.S. history. ... I refer to September 11, 1857. ... It was the most horrific terrorist attack in our nation’s history, not as figured by body count, but in the way its victims were slain.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Esmail |first1=Ashraf |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_tEpEAAAQBAJ |title=Terrorism Inside America's Borders |last2=Eargle |first2=Lisa A. |last3=Hamann |first3=Brandon |date=2021-05-03 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-7618-7074-6 |page=38 |chapter=Significant Historical Accounts of Domestic Terrorism: The Mountain Meadows Massacre (1857)|via=]|url-access=limited}}</ref> and is considered the largest act of domestic terrorism in United States history prior to the 1995 ].<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Hopper |first1=Shay E. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QgrMDwAAQBAJ |title=An Arkansas History for Young People |last2=Baker |first2=T. Harri |last3=Browning |first3=Jane |date=2007-09-01 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-55728-845-5 |edition=Fourth |pages=200|quote=Prior to the Oklahoma City bombing, the Mountain Meadows massacre was the largest act of domestic terrorism to ever occur on American soil.|via=]|url-access=limited}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/2002/03/06/flirting-with-disaster/2c7e0070-a20e-4500-9490-5fa4472ec386/|newspaper=]|location=Washington D.C.|title=Flirting With Disaster|first=Donna|last=Rifkind|date=6 March 2002|quote=Apart from the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, no single incident of civil terrorism—Americans killing Americans—has resulted in more deaths than the Mountain Meadows Massacre.|url-access=subscription}}</ref> Other descriptors include "the darkest deed of the nineteenth century" and "a crime that has no parallel in American history for atrocity".{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=xiii}} LDS historian ] called it "the worst event in Latter-day Saint history",<ref>{{Cite news|publisher=]|url=https://www.npr.org/2008/09/11/94509868/mormon-historians-shed-light-on-sept-11-1857|title=Mormon Historians Shed Light On Sept. 11, 1857|last=Berkes|first=Howard|date=September 11, 2008}}</ref> and historian of the American West ] stated it was "the most brutal act of religious terrorism in America history" before the 2001 ].<ref>{{Cite magazine|date=2007-08-03 |title=Wild West: Rescue of the Mountain Meadows Orphans |url=https://www.historynet.com/wild-west-rescue-of-the-mountain-meadows-orphans/|magazine=Wild West|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
Some may have seen vengeance on the alleged murderers of Joseph Smith as a religious duty, for the following covenant had been added to the ] ] following his martyrdom, where it remained until 1927:<ref>This version of the covenant came from the senate trial of ] who was a Mormon Apostle who had been elected a ] from Utah. In 1903, a protest was filed in the United States Senate to have Hon. Smoot removed from office, on the grounds that he had taken this treasonous oath in the endowment ritual. The content of the oath was revealed by former members of the LDS church. ''U.S. Senate Document 486 (59th Congress, 1st Session) Proceedings Before the Committee on Privileges and Elections of the United States Senate in the Matter of the Protests Against the Right of Hon. Reed Smoot, a Senator from the State of Utah, to hold his Seat.'' 4 vols. (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1906)</ref> | |||
{{Cquote|You and each of you do covenant and promise that you will pray and never cease to pray to Almighty God to avenge the blood of the prophets upon this nation, and that you will teach the same to your children and to your children's children unto the third and fourth generation.}} | |||
===Varying perspectives of the massacre=== | |||
==Memorial markers== | |||
In April 1859, the U.S.Army's First Dragoons of FT.Tejon, California under the command of Brevet Major ] were ordered to Mountain meadows, Utah Territory by General Clarke, commanding the Department of California, to bury the bones of the American Massacre Victims who were murdered in September of 1857. | |||
As described by ], ], and ], historians from different backgrounds have taken different approaches to describe the massacre and those involved:<ref name="Walker2008">{{cite book |last1=Walker |first1=Ronald W. |title=Massacre at Mountain Meadows : an American tragedy |date=2008 |publisher=] |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0199747566}}</ref> | |||
After their arrival, on the ] ], the Dragoons reconnoitered the site and gathered the remains of thirty six victims within a two mile radius of the killing field and selected a burial site. Above the grave, a cairn was constructed of loose granite stones, hauled from the neighboring hills. At the precipice of the monument was placed a cross hewn from red cedar wood. On the traverse side of the twenty four foot North facing cross, an inscription was carved in the wood. | |||
*Portraying the perpetrators (white Mormon settlers) as fundamentally good and the Baker-Fancher party as evil people who committed outrageous acts of anti-Mormon instigation prior to the massacre;<ref name="Nels1942">{{cite book |last1=Anderson |first1=Nels |title=Desert saints : the Mormon frontier in Utah |date=1969 |publisher=] |location=Chicago |isbn=0226017826}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Buttle |first1=Faye Jensen |title=Utah grows, past and present. |date=1970 |publisher=] |location=Salt Lake City |oclc=137245 |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/137245 |access-date=5 July 2022 |language=English}}</ref> | |||
<blockquote>Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. </blockquote> | |||
*Describing the opposite view that the perpetrators were evil and the emigrants were innocent;<ref name="Olson2013"/> | |||
*Portraying both the perpetrators and victims as complicated,<ref name="Olson2013"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Roberts |first1=B.H.|author-link=B.H. Roberts |title=Comprehensive History of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints |date=1965 |volume=4|publisher=] |location=Salt Lake City |isbn=9780842504829|pages=139–145|chapter=The Mountain Meadows Massacre|url=https://archive.org/details/indextocomprehen0004robe/page/139/mode/1up?q=meadow|via=]|url-access=registration}}</ref> and that many different coinciding circumstances contributed to the Mormon settlers committing an atrocity against travelers who, regardless of the authenticity of any accusations of anti-Mormon behavior, did not deserve the punishment of death.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ronald |first1=Walker |title=The New Mormon History: Revisionist Essays on the Past|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_New_Mormon_History/33TZAAAAMAAJ?hl=en |via=] |date=1992 |publisher=] |location=Salt Lake City |isbn=1560850116 |pages=267–301}}</ref> | |||
At the base of the monument, facing north, an engraved granite slab was placed with the words. | |||
<blockquote>Here 120 men, women, and children were massacred in cold blood early in September, 1857. They were from Arkansas.<ref>Carleton,"SPECIAL REPORT OF THE MOUNTAIN MEADOW MASSACRE BY J. H. CARLETON, BREVET MAJOR; UNITED STATES ARMY,CAPTAIN, FIRST DRAGOONS".</ref></blockquote> | |||
Prior to 1985, many textbooks available in Utah Public Schools blamed the Paiute people as primarily responsible for the massacre,<ref name="Nels1942"/> or placed equal blame on the Paiute and Mormon settlers (if they mentioned the massacre at all).<ref name="Olson2013">{{cite thesis |last=Olson |first=Casey W. |date= |title=The Evolution of History: Changing Narratives of the Mountain Meadows Massacre in Utah's Public School Curricula |degree=PhD |page=109 |publisher=] |url=https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/2071 |access-date=}}</ref> | |||
] visited the memorial site on ] ].<ref>Desert News, 6/12/'61,</ref> After observing the above inscription on the cross Brooks quotes from a diary entry by Wilford Woodruff that Brigham Young said, "Vengeance is mine and I have taken a little."<ref>Brooks, chapter 9, p. 182.</ref> One of Young's escort lassoed the cross with a rope, turned his horse, and pulled it down. Brigham Young "didn't say another word," recalled Dudley Leavitt. "He didn't give an order. He just lifted his right arm to the square , and in five minutes there wasn't one stone left upon another. He didn't have to tell us what he wanted done. We understood." (Bigler; Forgotten Kingdom: The Mormon Theocracy in the American West 1847-1896, p. 178) However, Leavitt's story, which Brooks (p. 183) described as a "family legend," is contradicted by later travelers who refer to the monument as standing. Lorenzo Brown went past the monument in 1864, three years after Young's visit, and in his journal he describes seeing the intact cairn, cross, and inscription.<ref>Brooks, p. 183.</ref> | |||
===Theories explaining the massacre=== | |||
On ], ], a memorial marker was dedicated that lists the names of the 82 individuals who were killed and those of the seventeen children that survived. Those in attendance at this dedication were both members of the community and descendants of those killed and those that survived. It is maintained by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Mountain Meadows Association. The 1990 Monument stands on Dan Sill Hill, overlooking the site of the Massacre in the Mountain Meadows Valley below. | |||
Historians have ascribed the massacre to a number of factors, including ], ], and ]. | |||
On ], ], ] ], in conjunction with the Mountain Meadows Association, dedicated a new Monument at the original Mountain Meadows gravesite. In 1859, two years after the Mountain Meadows Massacre, the original monument at this site was established by the U.S. Army. It consisted of a stone cairn topped with a cedar cross and a small granite marker set against the north side of the cairn and dated ] ]. Military officials marked some other burial sites in the valley with simple stone cairns. The Utah Trails and Landmarks Association built a protective stone wall around the 1859 grave site in September 1932. In 1999, the 1932 wall was replaced, and the present Grave Site Memorial was installed. On ] ], workers excavating for the wall around the new monument accidentally uncovered the 1859 Carleton grave. On ] ], the remains recovered from that grave were re-interred in a burial vault inside the new wall, during a private ceremony. The monument was dedicated the following day, ] ]. | |||
====Strident Mormon teachings==== | |||
Mountain Meadows, Utah is on the national Historic Register. | |||
{{Main|Mountain Meadows Massacre and Mormon theology}} | |||
For the decade prior to the Baker–Fancher party's arrival there, Utah Territory existed as a theodemocracy led by Brigham Young. During the mid-1850s, Young instituted a ], intending to "lay the axe at the root of the tree of sin and iniquity". In January 1856, Young said "the government of God, as administered here" may to some seem "despotic" because "...judgment is dealt out against the transgression of the law of God."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Young |first1=Brigham |author-link=Brigham Young|title=The Powers of the Priesthood Not Generally Understood – The Necessity of Living by Revelation – The Abuse of Blessing |url=https://www.boap.org/LDS/Presidents/B-Brigham-Young-1856-1860.txt |website=Book of Abraham Project |publisher=] |access-date=February 4, 2019 |date=January 27, 1856 |quote=Is the spirit of the government and rule here despotic? In their use of the word, some may deem it so. It lays the ax at the root of the tree of sin and iniquity; judgment is dealt out against the transgression of the law of God. If that is despotism, then the policy of this people may be deemed despotic. But does not the government of God, as administered here, give to every person his rights? |archive-date=February 7, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190207015950/https://www.boap.org/LDS/Presidents/B-Brigham-Young-1856-1860.txt |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
An additional monument has been erected near Carrollton, ] near the departure point of 33 members of the Arkansas Emigrant wagon trains. The monument is adjacent to a cemetery and the Carrollton Lodge. The monument includes a 2/3 replica of the rock cairn and the wooden cross that originally marked the mass grave has been erected, along with some other interpretive materials. It was erected by the | |||
In addition, during the preceding decades, the religion had undergone a period of intense persecution in the American Midwest. In particular, they were ] from, and an ] was issued by ], the state of Missouri during the ], during which prominent ] ] was killed in battle. After Mormons moved to ], the religion's founder ] and his brother ] were ]. Following these events, faithful Mormons migrated west hoping to escape persecution. However, in May 1857, just months before the Mountain Meadows massacre, apostle ] was shot dead in Arkansas by Hector McLean, the estranged husband of Eleanor McLean Pratt, one of Pratt's ].<ref>{{cite book |author=Eleanor McLean Pratt| title=]|volume=19|date=May 12, 1857 |pages=425–426 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t1MoAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA425 |access-date=February 10, 2019 |chapter=To the Honorable Judge of the Court, in the town of Van Buren, State of Arkansas, May 12, 1957 (Mrs. Pratt's Letter to the Judge)}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=]|volume=19 |date=May 12, 1857 |pages=426–427 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t1MoAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA426 |access-date=February 10, 2019 |chapter=Further Particulars of the Murder – To Brother Orson (A letter from Eleanor McLean Pratt)}}</ref> Parley Pratt and Eleanor entered a ] (under the theocratic law of the Utah Territory), but Hector had refused Eleanor a divorce. "When she left San Francisco she left Hector, and later she was to state in a court of law that she had left him as a wife the night he drove her from their home. Whatever the legal situation, she thought of herself as an unmarried woman."<ref>{{harvp|Pratt|1975|p=233 }} "When she left San Francisco she left Hector, and later she was to state in a court of law that she had left him as a wife the night he drove her from their home. Whatever the legal situation, she thought of herself as an unmarried woman."</ref> | |||
] | |||
Mormon leaders immediately proclaimed Pratt as another ],<ref>{{cite magazine |url= http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/u?/MStar,2651 |title = Murder of Parley P. Pratt, One of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints |magazine=] |volume=19 |access-date= February 11, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{harvp|Pratt|1975|p=}} "I die a firm believer in the Gospel of Jesus Christ as revealed through the Prophet Joseph Smith ... I am dying a martyr to the faith."</ref> with Brigham Young stating, "Nothing has happened so hard to reconcile my mind to since the death of Joseph." Many Mormons held the people of Arkansas collectively responsible.{{sfnp|Brooks |1991|pp=36–37}} "It was in accordance with Mormon policy to hold every Arkansan accountable for Pratt's death, just as every Missourian was hated because of the expulsion of the church from that state."{{sfnp|Linn |1902|pp=519–520}} | |||
The Mountain Meadows Massacre Monument in Carrollton, Arkansas. | |||
Mormon leaders were teaching that the ] of Jesus was imminent – "...there are those now living upon the earth who will live to see the consummation" and "...we now bear witness that his coming is near at hand".{{sfnp|Young|Kimball|Hyde|Pratt|1845|pp=2 & 5}} Based on a somewhat ambiguous statement by Joseph Smith, some Mormons believed that Jesus would return in 1891{{sfnp|Erickson|1996|p=9}} and that God would soon exact punishment against the United States for persecuting Mormons and martyring Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith, Patten and Pratt.<ref>{{Cite book | |||
==Public perception in the nineteenth century== | |||
| last=Grant| first=Jedediah M.| author-link=Jedediah M. Grant| chapter=Fulfilment of Prophecy—Wars and Commotions| date=April 2, 1854| title=Journal of Discourses| editor-last=Watt| editor-first=George D.|editor-link=George D. Watt| volume=2| place=Liverpool| publisher=] & ]| chapter-url=https://en.wikisource.org/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/Fulfilment_of_Prophecy%E2%80%94Wars_and_Commotions| pages=148–49|quote="It is a stern fact that the people of the United States have shed the blood of the Prophets, driven out the Saints of God,...consequently I look for the Lord to use His whip on the refractory son called 'Uncle Sam';..."| title-link=Journal of Discourses}}</ref> In their ], faithful early Latter-day Saints took an ] to pray that God would take vengeance against the murderers.<ref name=HeberKimballDiary/><ref>{{harvp|Beadle|1870|pp=496–497}} (describing the oath prior to 1970 as requiring a "private, immediate duty to avenge the death of the Prophet and Martyr, Joseph Smith").</ref><ref name=CannonDiary/>{{efn|In 1904, several witnesses said that the oath as it then existed was that participants would never cease to pray that God would avenge the blood of the prophets on this nation", and that they would teach this practice to their posterity "unto the 3rd and 4th generation".<ref>{{harvp|Buerger|2002|p=134}}</ref> The oath was deleted from the ceremony in the early 20th century.<ref>{{harvp|Buerger|2002|pp=139–40}}</ref>}} As a result of this oath, several Mormon apostles and other leaders considered it their religious duty to kill the prophets' murderers if they ever came across them.<ref>{{harvp|Buerger|2002|p=135|ps=: George Q. Cannon's endowment in Nauvoo included, "an oath against the murders of the Prophet Joseph as well as other prophets, and if he had ever met any of those who had taken a hand in that massacre he would undoubtedly have attempted to avenge the blood of the Martyrs." Heber C. Kimball said in the temple he, "covenanted, and will never rest...until those men who killed Joseph & Hyrum have been wiped out of the earth."}}</ref><ref name=HeberKimballDiary>{{cite archive|last=Kimball|first=Heber C.|author-link=Heber C. Kimball|date=21 December 1845 |institution=] | location=Salt Lake City|item-id=MS 3469|collection-url=https://catalog.churchofjesuschrist.org/record/d3fa5858-4a29-4e21-bf13-3ca1637d7284/0?view=summary&lang=eng|collection=Heber C. Kimball journal, 1845 November-1846 January}}</ref><ref name=CannonDiary>{{cite archive|last1=Cannon|first1=Abraham H.|author-link=Abraham H. Cannon|date=6 December 1889 |institution=] | location=Provo, Utah |repository=] |item-id=Vault MSS 62, Vol. 11|box=2, Folder 1|collection-url=https://bhroberts.org/records/0Bjthi-jFrlQb/abraham_h_cannon_records_his_father_george_q_cannon_saying_he_made_the_oath_of_vengeance_in_the_nauvoo_endowment|via=B.H. Roberts Foundation|collection=Abraham H. Cannon Diaries|page=205}}</ref> The sermons, blessings, and private counsel by Mormon leaders just before the Mountain Meadows massacre can be understood as encouraging private individuals to execute God's judgment against the wicked.{{efn|Examples of these teachings include: | |||
When the massacre became public in the decades after the incident, public outcry was widely heard. ] even gave an account, based on his perceptions about the attack, in appendix B of '']'', first published in 1872: <!--1891? 1871? were there different editions? --> | |||
*{{harvp|Quinn|1997|p=247|ps=: The "Diary of Daniel Davis, July 8, 1849", held in the LDS archives states that Young said "if any one was catched stealing to shoot them dead on the spot and they should not be hurt for it".}} | |||
*{{harvp|Young|1856b|p=247|ps=: Young states that a man would be justified in putting a javelin through his plural wife caught in the act of adultery, but anyone intending to "execute judgment...has got to have clean hands and a pure heart...else they had better let the matter alone".}} | |||
*{{harvp|Young|1857b|p=219|ps=: Young states, "f needs help, help him; and if he wants salvation and it is necessary to spill his blood on the earth in order that he may be saved, spill it".}} | |||
*{{harvp|Young|1855|p=311|ps=: "n regard to those who have persecuted this people and driven them to the mountains, I intend to meet them on their own grounds...I will tell you how it could be done, we could take the same law they have taken, viz., mobocracy, and if any miserable scoundrels come here, cut their throats. (All the people said, Amen)."}} | |||
*{{harvp|Quinn|1997|p=260|ps=: "LDS leaders publicly and privately encouraged Mormons to consider it their right to kill antagonistic outsiders, common criminals, LDS apostates, and even faithful Mormons who committed sins 'worthy of death'."}}}} | |||
In ], the teachings of church leaders were particularly strident. Mormons in Cedar City were taught that members should ignore dead bodies and go about their business.<ref>{{cite book|last=Moorman|first=Donald R.| last2=Allred Sessions|first2=Gene|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Camp_Floyd_and_the_Mormons/zKJuAAAAMAAJ?hl=en|title=Camp Floyd and the Mormons|page=142|year=2005|publisher=]|via=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|journal=]|publisher=] |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/43044655|page=51|title=Selections from the Andrew Jenson Collection|volume=47|issue=3}}</ref> Col. William H. Dame, the ranking officer in southern Utah who ordered the Mountain Meadows massacre, received a ] in 1854 that he would "be called to act at the head of a portion of thy Brethren and of the ] (Native Americans) in the redemption of Zion and the avenging of the blood of the prophets upon them that dwell on the earth".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bates |first=Irene M. |date=1993-10-01 |title=Patriarchal Blessings and the Routinization of Charisma |url=https://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/Dialogue_V26N03_11.pdf |journal=] |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=12 |doi=10.2307/45228651 |issn=0012-2157}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|chapter-url=https://collections.lib.utah.edu/details?id=1451401&q=dame&parent_i=1451339|title=Patriarchal Blessings: Transcriptions and Copies|last=Brooks|first=Juanita|author-link=Juanita Brooks|chapter=Patriarchal blessing of William H. Dame, February 20, 1854|page=62|via=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite thesis|first=Harold W. |last=Pease|title=The Life and Works of William Horne Dame|degree=Masters of Arts|url=https://atom.lib.byu.edu/smh/12253/ |institution=]|date=1971|pages=64–66}}</ref> In June 1857, Philip Klingensmith, another participant, was similarly blessed that he would participate in "avenging the blood of Brother Joseph".<ref>{{cite book|first=Anna Jean |last=Backus|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Mountain_Meadows_Witness/x_QRAQAAIAAJ?hl=en|title=Mountain Meadows Witness: The Life and Times of Bishop Philip Klingensmith|location=Spokane|publisher=Arthur H. Clark Co.|date=1995|pages=118,124|via=]}}</ref><ref name=Junius>{{Cite book |last=Wicks |first=Robert S.|chapter-url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/187/oa_monograph/chapter/201663| chapter='To avenge the blood that stains the walls of Carthage jail' |url=https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1041&context=usupress_pubs |title=Junius And Joseph: Presidential Politics and the Assassination of the First Mormon Prophet |last2=Foister |first2=Fred R. |date=2008-09-26 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-87421-526-7 |doi=10.2307/j.ctt4cgn0s|via=]}}</ref>{{rp|p=245}} | |||
<blockquote> {{Cquote|The leaders of the timely white "deliverers" were President Haight and Bishop John D. Lee, of the Mormon Church. Mr. Cradlebaugh, who served a term as a Federal Judge in Utah and afterward was sent to Congress from Nevada, tells in a speech delivered in Congress how these leaders next proceeded: "They professed to be on good terms with the Indians, and represented them as being very mad. They also proposed to intercede and settle the matter with the Indians. After several hours parley they, having (apparently) visited the Indians, gave the ultimatum of the savages; which was, that the emigrants should march out of their camp, leaving everything behind them, even their guns. It was promised by the Mormon bishops that they would bring a force and guard the emigrants back to the settlements. The terms were agreed to, the emigrants being desirous of saving the lives of their families. The Mormons retired, and subsequently appeared with thirty or forty armed men. The emigrants were marched out, the women and children in front and the men behind, the Mormon guard being in the rear. When they had marched in this way about a mile, at a given signal the slaughter commenced. The men were almost all shot down at the first fire from the guard. Two only escaped, who fled to the desert, and were followed one hundred and fifty miles before they were overtaken and slaughtered. The women and children ran on, two or three hundred yards further, when they were overtaken and with the aid of the Indians they were slaughtered. Seventeen individuals only, of all the emigrant party, were spared, and they were little children, the eldest of them being only seven years old. Thus, on the 10th day of September, 1857, was consummated one of the most cruel, cowardly and bloody murders known in our history.}} </blockquote> | |||
Thus, historians argue that southern Utah Mormons would have been particularly affected by an unsubstantiated rumor that the Baker–Fancher wagon train had been joined by a group of eleven miners and plainsmen who called themselves "Missouri Wildcats",{{efn|It is uncertain whether the Missouri Wildcat group stayed with the slow-moving Baker–Fancher party after leaving Salt Lake City.<ref>{{harvp|Brooks|1991|p=xxi}}</ref><ref>{{harvp|Bagley|2002|p=280|ps=: Bagley refers to the "Missouri Wildcats" story as "Utah mythology".}}</ref>}} some of whom reportedly taunted, vandalized and "caused trouble" for Mormons and Native Americans along the route (by some accounts claiming that they had the gun that "shot the guts out of Old Joe Smith").<ref>{{cite journal|journal=]|url=https://issuu.com/utah10/docs/volume_24_1956/s/95982|title=An Historical Epilogue|via=]|volume=24|issue=4|date=1956}}</ref><ref>{{cite AV media|last=Burns |first=Ken|author-link=Ken Burns |date=1996 |title=The West: Death Runs Riot |url=https://www.pbs.org/video/death-runs-riot-ubgazx/ |format=film |publisher=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Williams |first=Chris |date=1993 |url= http://www.youknow.com/chris/essays/misc/mtnmeadows.html |title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre: An Aberration of Mormon Practice |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071014055604/http://www.youknow.com/chris/essays/misc/mtnmeadows.html |archive-date=October 14, 2007}}</ref> They were also affected by the report to Brigham Young that the Baker–Fancher party was from Arkansas where Pratt was murdered.<ref name=PeopleVLee>{{Cite news |last=Young |first=Brigham |author-link=Brigham Young |title=Deposition, People v. Lee |place=Salt Lake City |newspaper=] |date=August 4, 1875 |volume=24 |issue=27 |page=8 |url=https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=2641490|via=]}}</ref> It was rumored that Pratt's wife recognized some of the Mountain Meadows party as being in the gang that shot and stabbed Pratt.<ref>{{harvp|Stenhouse|1873|p=431}} (citing "Argus", an anonymous contributor to the ''Corinne Daily Reporter'' in Corinne, Utah whom the author met and vouched for).</ref> | |||
==Modern depictions in media== | |||
*The play (1978) by Thomas F. Rogers is a depiction of the massacre from the perspective of John D. Lee, and is based heavily on Juanita Brooks' research. | |||
*The play (2000) by Julie Jensen depicts two middle-aged Latter Day Saint (Mormon) women reflecting on the massacre that occurred when they were children. | |||
*The film (2004), directed by Brian F. Patrick, is a documentary of the event. | |||
*The film (2006), directed by Christopher Cain, depicts a love story set at the time of the massacre. | |||
*the novel ''Red Water'' by Judith Freeman is a fictionalized account of John D. Lee's role in the massacre from the perspective of three of his nineteen wives. | |||
== |
====War hysteria==== | ||
] ] who met the Baker–Fancher party before touring ] and neighboring settlements before the massacre]] | |||
*Bagley, Will; ''Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows''; University of Oklahoma Press; ISBN 0-8061-3426-7 (hardcover, 544 pages, October 2002); reviewed in '''' and '''' | |||
{{Main|War hysteria preceding the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
*]; ''History of Utah, 1540-1886''; Chapter 20, The Mountain Meadows Massacre 1857; http://www.utlm.org/onlinebooks/bancroftshistoryofutah_contents.htm | |||
*]<ref>Brooks was a lifelong Latter-day Saint raised in Saint George and a child of the Mountain Meadows Massacre generation.</ref>; ''Mountain Meadows Massacre''; University of Oklahoma Press (Tdr); ISBN 0-8061-2318-4 (softcover, 318 pages, May 1991); first published in 1950. | |||
*] (Brevet Major, U.S. Army); ''Special Report on the Mountain Meadows Massacre'', ] ] (The first published federal report on the massacre). http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/mountainmeadows/carletonreport.html | |||
*Denton, Sally; ''American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows''; Knopf; ISBN 0-375-41208-5 (hardcover, 336 pages, June 2003); reviewed in ''.'' A response from ] is found at | |||
*Gibbs, Josiah F. ''Mountain Meadows Massacre''; http://www.utlm.org/onlinebooks/meadowscontents.htm | |||
*Linn,William Alexander ''THE STORY OF THE MORMONS'' ;Chapter 16,The Mountain Meadows Massacre; http://www.globusz.com/ebooks/Mormons/index.htm | |||
*Lynch,James: Sworn Testimony (] ],=Brooks Appendix XII) | |||
**http://www.nevadaobserver.com/Reading%20Room%20Documents/Letters%20from%20Nevada%20Indian%20Agents%201859.htm | |||
*Mcmurtry, Larry; "Oh What a Slaughter: Massacres in the American West 1846-1890"; Simon & Schuster; ISBN: 074325077X; reviewed in "http://www.bookreporter.com/reviews2/074325077X.asp"*Newspaper Articles | |||
**California | |||
***Los Angles Star(] ]),(] ]),(] ]) | |||
***Western Standard(] ]) | |||
***Mountain Democrat(] ]),(] ]) | |||
****http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/CA/misccal1.htm | |||
**Utah | |||
***Deseret News(] ]) | |||
***Valley Tan((] ]),(] ],=Brooks Appendix XI) | |||
****http://www.lib.utah.edu/digital/unews/ | |||
*Sessions, Gene; ''Shining New Light on the Mountain Meadows Massacre'' (FAIR Conference presentation) | |||
The Mountain Meadows massacre was caused in part by events relating to the Utah War, an 1857 deployment toward the Utah Territory of the United States Army, whose arrival was peaceful. In the summer of 1857, however, the Mormons expected an all-out invasion of apocalyptic significance. From July to September 1857, Mormon leaders and their followers prepared for a siege that could have ended up similar to the seven-year ] problem occurring at the time. Mormons were required to stockpile grain, and were enjoined against selling grain to emigrants for use as cattle feed.<ref name=PeopleVLee/> As far-off Mormon colonies retreated, Parowan and Cedar City became isolated and vulnerable outposts. Brigham Young sought to enlist the help of Native American tribes in fighting the "Americans", encouraging them to steal cattle from emigrant trains, and to join Mormons in fighting the approaching army.<ref name=Overland>{{cite book |last1=Lyman |first1=Edward Leo |title=The Overland Journey from Utah to California: Wagon Travel from the City of Saints to the City of Angels |date=2004 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0874175011 |edition=Hardcover |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Overland_Journey_from_Utah_to_Califo/2Yh5AAAAMAAJ?hl=en}}</ref>{{rp|p=130}} | |||
==Notes== | |||
<!--See http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref(erences/)> tags--> | |||
Scholars have asserted that ]'s tour of southern Utah influenced the decision to attack and destroy the Fancher–Baker emigrant train near Mountain Meadows, Utah. He met with many of the eventual participants in the massacre, including W. H. Dame, Isaac Haight, John D. Lee and Chief Jackson, leader of a band of Paiutes.<ref>{{cite news |last=Martineau |first=James H. |title=Correspondence: Trip to the Santa Clara |newspaper=] |date=September 23, 1857 |volume=9 |issue=5 |pages=3 |url=https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=2576550 |via=]}}</ref> He noted that the militia was organized and ready to fight and that some of them were eager to "fight and take vengeance for the cruelties that had been inflicted upon us in the States."<ref name=Overland/>{{rp|p=133}} | |||
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;" > | |||
Among Smith's party were a number of Paiute Native American chiefs from the Mountain Meadows area. When Smith returned to Salt Lake, Brigham Young met with these leaders on September 1, 1857, and encouraged them to fight against the Americans in the anticipated clash with the U.S. Army. They were also offered all of the livestock then on the road to California, which included that belonging to the Baker–Fancher party. The Native American chiefs were reluctant, and at least one objected they had previously been told not to steal, and declined the offer.{{sfnp|Huntington|1857}} | |||
<references/> | |||
</div> | |||
====Brigham Young==== | |||
{{Main|Brigham Young and the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
] in the massacre. Young was ] leader of the Utah Territory at the time of the massacre.]] | |||
There is a consensus among historians that Brigham Young played a role in provoking the massacre, at least unwittingly, and in concealing its evidence after the fact. However, they debate whether Young knew about the planned massacre ahead of time and whether he initially condoned it before later taking a strong public stand against it. Young's use of inflammatory and violent language{{sfnp|MacKinnon|2007|p=57}} in response to the Federal expedition added to the tense atmosphere at the time of the attack. Following the massacre, Young stated in public forums that God had taken vengeance on the Baker–Fancher party.{{sfnp|Bagley|2002|p=247}} It is unclear whether Young held this view because he believed that this specific group posed an actual threat to colonists or because he believed that the group was directly responsible for past crimes against Mormons. However, in Young's only known correspondence prior to the massacre, he told the Church leaders in Cedar City: | |||
{{blockquote|In regard to emigration trains passing through our settlements, we must not interfere with them until they are first notified to keep away. You must not meddle with them. The Indians we expect will do as they please but you should try and preserve good feelings with them. There are no other trains going south that I know of f those who are there will leave let them go in peace.<ref name=Vengeance>{{Cite book |last=Jones Brown |first=Barbara |title=Vengeance Is Mine: The Mountain Meadows Massacre and Its Aftermath |last2=Turley |first2=Richard E. |authorlink2=Richard E. Turley, Jr. |date=2023 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Vengeance_Is_Mine/8464EAAAQBAJ?hl=en |via=] |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-19-767573-1 |location=New York City}}</ref>{{rp|p=42}}<ref name=BYletter>{{cite archive|last1=Young|first1=Brigham|author-link=Brigham Young|date=10 September 1857 |page=827 |institution=] | location=Salt Lake City|repository=Letterbook, Vol. 3, 1856 August 20-1858 January |item-id=CR 1234 1|collection-url=https://catalog.churchofjesuschrist.org/assets/99279f54-9c69-41a1-ac5d-e6069f9a2920/0/1701|collection=Brigham Young Office Files}}</ref>}} | |||
According to historian MacKinnon, "After the war, U.S. President James Buchanan implied that face-to-face communications with Brigham Young might have averted the conflict, and Young argued that a north-south telegraph line in Utah could have prevented the Mountain Meadows massacre."{{sfnp|MacKinnon|2007|loc=endnote p. 50}} MacKinnon suggests that hostilities could have been avoided if Young had traveled east to Washington D.C. to resolve governmental problems instead of taking a five-week trip north on the eve of the Utah War for church-related reasons.{{sfnp|MacKinnon|2007|p=59}} | |||
A modern forensic assessment of a key affidavit, purportedly given by William Edwards in 1924, has complicated the debate on complicity of senior Mormon leadership in the Mountain Meadows massacre.<ref>{{Cite news |last=De Groote |first=Michael |date=2010-09-07|title=Mountain Meadows Massacre affidavit linked to Mark Hofmann |url=https://www.deseret.com/2010/9/7/20384994/mountain-meadows-massacre-affidavit-linked-to-mark-hofmann |access-date=2020-06-15 |newspaper=]|publisher=LDS Church}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|publisher= ] |last=Jeffreys |first=Keith B. |date=2010 |url= https://cdn.centerforinquiry.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/26/2002/10/22160058/p26.pdf |page=26|title=Mountain Meadows Massacre Artifact Now Believed To Be A Fake |journal=] |volume=22 |issue=4|via=]}}</ref> Analysis indicates that Edwards's signature may have been traced and that the typeset belonged to a typewriter manufactured in the 1950s. The ], which maintains the document in its archives, acknowledges a possible connection to ], a convicted forger and extortionist, via go-between Lyn Jacobs who provided the society with the document.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/50203408-76/affidavit-lee-hofmann-massacre.html.csp |title=Mountain Meadows affidavit Hofmann forgery? |last=Smart |first=Christopher |date=Sep 10, 2010 |work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite press release |title=Probable Hofmann Forgery Uncovered |url=http://history.utah.gov/events_and_news/press_room/forgery.html |publisher=] |date=2010 |access-date=May 26, 2011 |archive-date=September 5, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100905005521/http://history.utah.gov/events_and_news/press_room/forgery.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
==Remembrances== | |||
{{Main|Remembrances of the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
The first monument for the victims was built two years after the massacre, by Major Carleton and the U.S. Army. This monument was a simple cairn built over the gravesite of 34 victims, and was topped by a large cedar cross.{{sfnp|Carleton|1902|p=15}} The monument was found destroyed and the structure was replaced by the U.S. Army in 1864.<ref>{{Cite news |first=George F. |last=Price| url=https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6cc2c6q/21197521 |via=]|newspaper=Union Vedette|location=Salt Lake City|date=June 8, 1864|access-date=May 8, 2021|title=Salt Lake and Fort Mojave W R Expedition, Camp No. 18, Mountain Meadow, Utah, May 25, 1864}}</ref> By some reports, the monument was destroyed in 1861, when Young brought an entourage to Mountain Meadows. Wilford Woodruff, who later became President of the Church, said that upon reading the inscription on the cross, which read, "Vengeance is mine, thus saith the Lord. I shall repay", Young responded, "it should be vengeance is mine and I have taken a little."{{sfnp|Denton|2003|p=210}}<ref>{{cite book|editor-first=Scott G.|editor-last=Kenney|title=Wilford Woodruff's Journal|location=Salt Lake City|publisher=]|date=1984|volume=5|page=577|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Wilford_Woodruff_s_Journal_1833_1898/82EmAQAAIAAJ?hl=en|via=]}}</ref> In 1932, residents of the surrounding area constructed a memorial wall around the remnants of the monument.<ref>{{harvp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 13|ps=: "The most enduring was a wall which still stands at the siege site. It was erected in 1932 and surrounds the 1859 cairn."}}</ref> | |||
Starting in 1988, the ], composed of descendants of both the Baker–Fancher party victims and the Mormon participants, designed a new monument in the meadows; this monument was completed in 1990 and is maintained by the ].<ref>{{harvp|Shirts|1994|loc=Paragraph 13}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title= 1990 Monument |publisher=Mountain Meadows Association |url= https://www.mtn-meadows-assoc.com/Monuments/1990Monument/1990Monument.htm}}</ref> In 1999, the LDS Church replaced the U.S. Army's cairn and the 1932 memorial wall with a second monument, which it now maintains.<ref>{{cite web |title=1999 Mountain Meadows Monument |publisher=Mountain Meadows Association |url= http://www.mtn-meadows-assoc.com/1999_monument.htm |access-date=March 9, 2009}}</ref> In August 1999, when the LDS Church's construction of the 1999 monument had started, the remains of at least 28 massacre victims were dug up by a backhoe. The forensic evidence showed that the remains of the males had been shot by firearms at close range and that the remains of the women and children showed evidence of blunt force trauma.<ref name = "Fisher"/><ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=] |title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre |url=https://archive.archaeology.org/online/features/massacre/meadows.html |publisher=] |date=September 16, 2003}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
In 1955, to memorialize the victims of the massacre, a monument was installed in the town square of ]. On one side of this monument is a map and short summary of the massacre, while the opposite side contains a list of the victims.<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|last=Keckhaver|first=Mike| entry = Mountain Meadows Massacre Monument| date= 2008| encyclopedia = ]|publisher=]| location = Little Rock, Arkansas| entry-url = https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/media/mountain-meadows-massacre-monument-7558/}}</ref> In 2005, a replica of the U.S. Army's original 1859 cairn was built in the community of ],<ref name=Ravitz>{{cite news |last1=Fletcher Stack |first1=Peggy|author1-link=Peggy Fletcher Stack |last2=Ravitz |first2=Jessica |title=Families of Mountain Meadows Massacre victims want crosses at site |url=https://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=6894430&itype=NGPSID&source=rss |newspaper=] |access-date=August 1, 2021 |date=September 14, 2007}}</ref> the former county seat of ].<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia| last = Polston| first = Mike| entry = Carrollton (Carroll County)| date= 27 November 2024| encyclopedia = ]|publisher=]| location = Little Rock, Arkansas| entry-url = https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/carrollton-carroll-county-6192/}}</ref> it is maintained by the ].<ref name="Ravitz"/><ref>{{cite news |last1=Somashekhar |first1=Sandhya |title=Mitt Romney's Mormon faith tangles with a quirk of Arkansas history |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/mitt-romneys-mormon-faith-tangles-with-a-quirk-of-arkansas-history/2012/05/20/gIQAKHVFeU_story.html |newspaper=]|location=Washington D.C. |access-date=August 1, 2021 |date=May 20, 2012}}</ref> | |||
In 2007, the 150th anniversary of the massacre was remembered by a ceremony held in the meadows. Approximately 400 people, including many descendants of those slain at Mountain Meadows and Elder ] of the LDS Church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles attended this ceremony.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.heraldextra.com/news/2007/sep/11/eyring-expresses-regret-for-pioneer-massacre/|title=Eyring expresses regret for pioneer massacre|newspaper=]|location=Provo, Utah}}</ref><ref name=Apologizes/> | |||
In 2011, the site was designated as a ] after joint efforts by descendants of those killed and the LDS Church.<ref name=stack1>{{cite news|last=Stack|first=Peggy Fletcher|author-link=Peggy Fletcher Stack|title=Mountain Meadows now a national historic landmark|url=http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/52107971-78/site-meadows-mountain-church.html.csp|access-date=July 4, 2011|newspaper=]|date=June 30, 2011}}</ref> | |||
In 2014, archaeologist Everett Bassett discovered two rock piles he believes mark additional graves. The locations of the possible graves are on private land and not at any of the monument sites owned by the LDS Church. The Mountain Meadows Monument Foundation has expressed their desire that the sites be conserved and given national monument status.<ref>{{cite news|first=Nichole | last=Osinski |title=Archaeologist: Mountain Meadows Massacre graves found|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/09/20/mountain-meadows-massacre-site/72525842/|date=September 20, 2015|newspaper=]|location=St. George, Utah}}</ref> Other descendant groups have been more hesitant in accepting the sites as legitimate grave markers.<ref>{{cite news |last=Osinski |first=Nichole |date=November 14, 2015 |title=Voices of the Mountain Meadows descendants |url=https://www.thespectrum.com/story/news/2015/11/14/voices-mountain-meadows-descendants/75791834/ |newspaper=]|location=St. George, Utah |access-date=July 16, 2020 }}</ref> | |||
==In Media == | |||
{{see also|Media coverage of the Mountain Meadows Massacre}} | |||
<!-- There have been hundreds of books, movies and articles that mention or cover the massacre as part of a discussion of a larger topic. Limit additions to this section to works that are entirely dedicated to covering the massacre. --> | |||
===Works of non-fiction=== | |||
*''Vengeance Is Mine: The Mountain Meadows Massacre and Its Aftermath'', by ], Barbara Jones Brown, (2023) | |||
* '']'', by ], ], ] (2008) | |||
* ''House of Mourning: A Biocultural History of the Mountain Meadows Massacre'', by Shannon A. Novak (2008) | |||
* ''], ''a documentary film by Brian Patrick (2004) | |||
* '']'', by Sally Denton (2003) | |||
* ''],'' by ] (2002) | |||
* '']'', by ] (1950) | |||
===Works of historical fiction=== | |||
* ''None Left to Tell'', novel by Noelle West Ihli (2024) – Tells the story of the Mountain Meadows massacre from the perspectives of three women and one child who were involved. | |||
* '']'' by ] (2024) – The miniseries examines the fight to gain control of the American West and the violent clash between religion and culture. The main plot has the Massacre as a backdrop. | |||
* ''Variation West'' by ] (2014) – A novel of 4 generations of a family in Utah, beginning with 2 fictional daughters of John D. Lee, with the Mountain Meadows massacre as backdrop. | |||
* '']'' by ] (2007) – The film is a fictional love story between real characters who were involved in the massacre | |||
* ''Red Water'' by ] (2002) – A novel about how the wives of John D. Lee have to come to terms with their husband's actions | |||
* ''Redeye'' by ] (1995) – A novel about a fictional bounty hunter, Cobb Pittman, who with his catch dog, Redeye, tracks down Mormons responsible for the Mountain Meadows Massacre. | |||
* '']'' by ] (1915) – Protagonist Darrell Standing is reincarnated as Jesse Fancher | |||
==See also== | |||
{{portal|Latter Day Saint movement|Utah|National Register of Historic Places}} | |||
* ], a lynching reportedly ordered by Mormon leaders two months later | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ], an attack on Mormons | |||
* ] | |||
* ], an 1838 governor's order that Mormons be "exterminated" or driven from Missouri | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
== References == | |||
=== Citations === | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
===References=== | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Bagley | first=Will | author-link=Will Bagley | year=2002 | title=Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows | place=Norman, Oklahoma | publisher=] | isbn=978-0-8061-3426-0 | title-link=Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows }} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Bancroft | first=Hubert Howe | url=https://archive.org/details/historyutah00bategoog | series=The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft | title=History of Utah, 1540–1886 | author-link=Hubert Howe Bancroft | volume=26 | date=1889 | publisher=History Company }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Beadle | first=John Hanson | year=1870 | title=Life in Utah | chapter=Chapter VI. The Bloody Period. | place=Philadelphia | publisher=National Publishing | pages=177–195 | id=LCC BX8645 .B4 1870 | url=https://archive.org/details/crimeofmormonism00beadrich | lccn=30005377 }} | |||
* {{cite journal | url=https://issuu.com/utah10/docs/uhq_volume74_2006_number4/s/10191755| title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre: An Analytical Narrative Based on Participant Confessions | first=Robert H. | last=Briggs | journal=] | publisher=] | volume=74 | issue=4 | date=2006 | pages=313–333 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Brooks | first=Juanita | author-link=Juanita Brooks | edition=1st paperback | date=1991 | orig-year=1st pub. 1950 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZsOb_BGxW4C | title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre | place=Norman, Oklahoma | publisher=] | isbn=978-0806123189 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Buerger | first=David John | title=The Mysteries of Godliness: A History of Mormon Temple Worship | edition=2nd | place=Salt Lake City | publisher=] | year=2002 | isbn=978-1-56085-176-9 | url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Mysteries_of_Godliness/P08mAQAAIAAJ?hl=en }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Carleton | first=James Henry | author-link=James Henry Carleton | orig-date=1859 | title=Special Report of the Mountain Meadow Massacre | year=1902 | place=Washington | publisher=] | url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_MBYiwjNst6EC }} | |||
* {{Cite news | last=Christian | first=J. Ward | place=San Bernardino | date=October 10, 1857 | editor-last=Hamilton | editor-first=Henry | title=Horrible Massacre of Arkansas and Missouri Emigrants (Letter to G.N. Whitman) | newspaper=] | volume=7 | issue=22 | page=2 | url=https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=LASTAR18571010.2.8 | via=] }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Denton | first=Sally | year=2003 | title= American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows | place=New York | publisher=] | isbn=978-0-375-41208-0 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/American_Massacre/dHSPDQAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0}} | |||
* {{Cite journal | last=Erickson | first=Dan | title=Joseph Smith's 1891 Millennial Prophecy: The Quest for Apocalyptic Deliverance | journal=] | year=1996 | volume=22 | issue=2 | pages=1–34 | url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/23287437.pdf }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Gibbs | first=Josiah F. | title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre | year=1910 | place=Salt Lake City | isbn=978-0-548-30943-8 | publisher=] | id=LCC F826 .G532 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BUoOAAAAIAAJ | lccn=37010372 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Huntington | first=Dimick B. | author-link=Dimick B. Huntington | title=Journal of Dimick B. Huntington | year=1857 | publisher=LDS Church | url=http://www.mtn-meadows-assoc.com/DepoJournals/Dimick/Dimick-2.htm }} Also available at the ]. | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Lee | first=John D. | year=1877 | title=Mormonism Unveiled: or, the Life and Confessions of John D. Lee | url=https://archive.org/details/mormonismunveil00bishgoog | place=St. Louis | publisher=Bryan, Brand & Co.}} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Linn | first=William A. | title=The Story of the Mormons | url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Story_of_the_Mormons/QDdAAAAAYAAJ?hl=en | place=New York City | publisher=] | year=1902 |via=]}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Shirts |first=Morris A. |year=1994 |oclc=30473917 |access-date=December 3, 2019 |chapter-url=https://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/m/MOUNTAIN_MEADOWS_MASSACRE.shtml |chapter=Mountain Meadows Massacre |editor-last=Powell |editor-first=Allan Kent |title=Utah History Encyclopedia |location=Salt Lake City, Utah |publisher=] |isbn=0874804256}} | |||
* {{Cite news| title=Rumored Massacre on the Plains| url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/77320865/| pages=2| editor-last=Hamilton| editor-first=Henry| newspaper=]| date=October 3, 1857| volume=6| issue=21| via=]}} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Stenhouse | first=T.B.H. | title=The Rocky Mountain Saints | year=1873 | place=New York | publisher=] | url=https://archive.org/details/rockymountainsai00sten }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Twain | first=Mark | author-link=Mark Twain | title=] | publisher=American Publishing Co. | year=1872 | chapter=Appendix B: The Mountain Meadows Massacre | location=Hartford, Connecticut | chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/roughingit05twaigoog/page/n598/mode/2up?q=APPENDIX+B | isbn=978-0-19-515979-0 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Waite | first=C.V. (Catharine Van Valkenburg) | author-link=Catharine Van Valkenburg Waite | title=The Mormon Prophet and His Harem: Or, an Authentic History of Brigham Young, His Numerous Wives and Children | year=1868 | place=Chicago | publisher=J.S. Goodman & Co. | url=https://archive.org/details/mormonprophetand00waitiala | isbn=978-0-665-37321-3 }} | |||
* {{Cite web | last1=Young | first1=Brigham | author1-link=Brigham Young | last2=Kimball | first2=Heber C. | author2-link=Heber C. Kimball | last3=Hyde | first3=Orson | author3-link=Orson Hyde | last4=Pratt | first4=Parley P. | author4-link=Parley P. Pratt | last5=Smith | first5=William | author5-link=William Smith (Latter Day Saints) | last6=Pratt | first6=Orson | author6-link=Orson Pratt | last7=Page | first7=John E. | author7-link=John E. Page | last8=Taylor | first8=John | author8-link=John Taylor (Mormon) | last9=Woodruff | first9=Wilford | author9-link=Wilford Woodruff | display-authors=8 | title=Proclamation of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | location=New York | publisher=] | date=April 6, 1845 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1VlgAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA1 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Young | first=Brigham | author-link=Brigham Young | contribution=The Kingdom of God | date=July 8, 1855 | title=Journal of Discourses | editor-last=Watt | editor-first=George D. | editor-link=George D. Watt | volume=2 | place=Liverpool | publisher=] & ] | contribution-url=https://en.wikisource.org/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/The_Kingdom_of_God | pages=309–17 | title-link=Journal of Discourses }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Young | first=Brigham | author-link=Brigham Young | contribution=Instructions to the Bishops, etc. | date=March 16, 1856b | title=Journal of Discourses | editor-last=Watt | editor-first=George D. | editor-link=George D. Watt | volume=3 | place=Liverpool | publisher=] | pages=243–49 | contribution-url=https://en.wikisource.org/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_3/Instructions_to_the_Bishops,_etc. | title-link=Journal of Discourses }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last=Young | first=Brigham | author-link=Brigham Young | contribution=To Know God is Eternal Life—God the Father of Our Spirits and Bodies—Things Created Spiritually First—Atonement by the Shedding of Blood | date=February 8, 1857b | title=Journal of Discourses | editor-last=Watt | editor-first=George D. | editor-link=George D. Watt | volume=4 | place=Liverpool | publisher=] | pages=215–21 | contribution-url=https://en.wikisource.org/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_4/To_Know_God_is_Eternal_Life,_etc. | title-link=Journal of Discourses }} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{cite book|url=http://signaturebookslibrary.org/?p=431|title=The Mountain Meadows Massacre: A Bibliographic Perspective|first=Newell G.|last=Bringhurst|author-link=Newell G. Bringhurst|publisher=]}} | |||
* {{cite archive|last1=Burns|first1=Kathleen T.|date=August 18, 1967 |institution=] | location=New Haven, Connecticut |repository=] |item-id=WA MSS S-2561|collection-url=https://as13dev-new.library.yale.edu/1274.pdf|collection=United States Office of Indian Affairs papers relating to charges against Jacob Forney, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Utah Territory}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Commons category|Mountain Meadows massacre}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
{{Mountain Meadows massacre series|state=expanded}} | |||
{{NRHP in Utah by county}} | |||
{{National Register of Historic Places}} | |||
{{Terrorist attacks in the United States by deaths}} | |||
{{Latter-day Saints}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
* - The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture | |||
* - Utah History Encyclopedia | |||
* detailed history for the massacre and surrounding events. | |||
*, a group described by a columnist for '']'' as "an unusual mix of historians and descendants of massacre victims and perpetrators" | |||
* and articles from '']'' magazine's website | |||
* by the Government of ] | |||
* , October 2002 article from '']'' | |||
* – ] ] article at '']'' | |||
* and articles about ] book at '']'' | |||
* , in text and ] format at the LDS Newsroom | |||
*] ]] | |||
**(The program, ''Investigating History: Mountain Meadows Massacre, Who’s to Blame'', did not actually air on the History Channel until ], ], and was repeated ], ].) | |||
*Center for Studies on New Religions: | |||
* from a website copyrighted by ''The Truth About Anti-Mormonism'' | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* Lane Twitchell's rendering of the event | |||
* – An Arkansas organization consisting of the direct descendants of the people murdered at Mountain Meadows. | |||
* | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 07:49, 24 January 2025
1857 massacre of California-bound immigrants by Nauvoo Legion militiamen For the book, see The Mountain Meadows Massacre (book). For the film, see The Mountain Meadows Massacre (film).
Mountain Meadows Massacre | |
---|---|
Part of the Utah War | |
The 1999 burial site monument | |
Mountain Meadows Massacre (Utah) | |
Location | Mountain Meadows, Utah Territory, U.S. |
Coordinates | 37°28′32″N 113°38′37″W / 37.4755°N 113.6437°W / 37.4755; -113.6437 |
Date | September 7–11, 1857 |
Target | Members of the Baker–Fancher wagon train |
Attack type | Massacre |
Weapons | Guns, Bowie knives |
Deaths | 120–140 members of the Baker–Fancher wagon train |
Perpetrators |
|
Motive |
|
Convicted | John D. Lee, leader in the local Mormon community and of the local militia |
The Mountain Meadows Massacre (September 7–11, 1857) was a series of attacks during the Utah War that resulted in the mass murder of at least 120 members of the Baker–Fancher wagon train. The massacre occurred in the southern Utah Territory at Mountain Meadows, and was perpetrated by settlers from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) involved with the Utah Territorial Militia (officially called the Nauvoo Legion) who recruited and were aided by some Southern Paiute Native Americans. The wagon train, made up mostly of immigrant families from Arkansas, was bound for California, traveling on the Old Spanish Trail that passed through the Territory.
After arriving in Salt Lake City, the Baker–Fancher party made their way south along the Mormon Road, eventually stopping to rest at Mountain Meadows. The party's journey occurred amidst hostilities between Mormon settlers and the U.S. government, with war hysteria rampant amongst the Mormons. Acting on rumors of hostile behavior on the part of the travelers, local Mormon militia leaders, including Isaac C. Haight and John D. Lee, made plans to attack them as they camped at the meadow. The leaders of the militia, wanting to give the impression of tribal hostilities, persuaded Southern Paiutes to join with a larger party of militiamen disguised as Native Americans in an attack on the wagon train.
During the militia's first assault, the travelers fought back, and a five-day siege ensued. Eventually, fear spread among the militia's leaders that some immigrants had caught sight of the white men, likely discerning the actual identity of a majority of the attackers. As a result, militia commander William H. Dame ordered his forces to kill the travelers. By this time, the travelers were running low on water and provisions, and allowed some members of the militia – who approached under a white flag – to enter their camp. The militia members assured the immigrants they were protected, and after handing over their weapons, the immigrants were escorted away from their defensive position. After walking a distance from the camp, the militiamen, with the help of auxiliary forces hiding nearby, attacked the travelers. The perpetrators killed all the adults and older children in the group, in the end sparing only seventeen young children ages six and under.
Following the massacre, the perpetrators buried some of the remains but ultimately left most of the bodies exposed to wild animals and the climate. Local families took in the surviving children, with many of the victims' possessions and remaining livestock being auctioned off. Investigations, which were interrupted by the American Civil War, resulted in nine indictments in 1874. Of the men who were indicted, only Lee was tried in a court of law. After two trials in the Utah Territory, Lee was convicted by a jury, sentenced to death and executed by firing squad on March 23, 1877.
Historians attribute the massacre to a combination of factors, including war hysteria about a possible invasion of Mormon territory and Mormon teachings against outsiders during the Mormon Reformation. Scholars debate whether senior leadership in the LDS Church, including Brigham Young, directly instigated the massacre or if responsibility for it lay only with the leaders of the militia.
History
Baker–Fancher party
Main article: Baker–Fancher partyIn early 1857, the Baker–Fancher party was formed from several groups mainly from Marion, Crawford, Carroll and Johnson counties in northwestern Arkansas. They assembled into a wagon train at Beller's Stand, south of Harrison, to emigrate to southern California. The group was initially referred to as both the Baker train and the Perkins train, but later referred to as the Baker–Fancher train (or party). It was named after "Colonel" Alexander Fancher who, having already made the journey to California twice before, had become its main leader. By contemporary standards the Baker–Fancher party was prosperous, carefully organized and well-equipped for the journey. They were joined along the way by families and individuals from other states, including Missouri. The group was relatively wealthy, and planned to restock its supplies in Salt Lake City, as did most wagon trains at the time.
Interactions with Mormon settlers
See also: War hysteria preceding the Mountain Meadows MassacreAt the time of the Fanchers' arrival, the Utah Territory though legally organized as a democracy, was for all intensive purposes a theocracy| under the leadership of Brigham Young, the second president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), who had established colonies along the California Trail and the Old Spanish Trail. U.S. President James Buchanan had recently issued an order to send federal troops to Utah, which led to rumors being spread in the territory about its motives. Young issued various orders that urged the local population to prepare for the arrival of the troops. Eventually Young issued a declaration of martial law.
The Baker–Fancher party was refused stocks in Salt Lake City and chose to leave there and take the Old Spanish Trail, which passed through southern Utah. In August 1857, the Mormon apostle George A. Smith traveled throughout the southern part of the territory instructing Mormon settlers to stockpile grain. While on his return trip to Salt Lake City, Smith camped near the Baker–Fancher party on August 25, 1857, at Corn Creek. They had traveled the 165 miles (266 km) south from Salt Lake City, and Jacob Hamblin suggested that the wagon train continue on the trail and rest their cattle at Mountain Meadows, which had good pasture and was adjacent to his homestead.
While most witnesses said that the Fanchers were in general a peaceful party whose members behaved well along the trail, rumors spread about their supposed misdeeds. United States Army Brevet Major James Henry Carleton led the first federal investigation of the murders, and the findings were published in 1859. He recorded Hamblin's account that the train was alleged to have poisoned a spring near Corn Creek, resulting in the deaths of eighteen cows and two or three people who ate the contaminated meat. Carleton interviewed the father of a child who allegedly died from this poisoned spring and accepted the sincerity of the grieving father. He also included a statement from an investigator who did not believe the Fancher party was capable of poisoning the spring, given its size. Carleton invited readers to consider a potential explanation for the rumors of misdeeds, noting the general atmosphere of distrust among Mormons for strangers at the time, and that some locals appeared jealous of the Fancher party's wealth.
Conspiracy and siege
Main article: Conspiracy and siege of the Mountain Meadows MassacreThe Baker–Fancher party left Corn Creek and continued the 125 miles (201 km) to Mountain Meadows, passing Parowan and Cedar City, southern Utah communities led respectively by Stake Presidents William H. Dame and Isaac C. Haight. Haight and Dame were, in addition, the senior regional military leaders of the Iron Military District of the Nauvoo Legion. Over half the employees of the Iron County iron manufacturing plant were in that militia district.
As the party approached, several meetings were held in Cedar City and nearby Parowan by local LDS Church leaders pondering how to implement Young's declaration of martial law. On the afternoon of Sunday, September 6, Haight held his weekly Stake High Council meeting after church services and brought up the issue of what to do with the immigrants. The plan for a Native American massacre was discussed, but not all the Council members agreed it was the right approach. The Council resolved to take no action until Haight sent a rider, James Haslam, out the next day to carry an express to Salt Lake City (a six-day round trip on horseback) for Young's advice, as Utah did not yet have a telegraph system. Following the council, Haight decided to send a messenger Joseph Clewes south to John D. Lee. What Haight told Lee remains a mystery, but considering the timing it may have had something to do with Council's decision to wait for advice from Young.
The dispirited Baker–Fancher party found water and fresh grazing for its livestock after reaching grassy, mountain-ringed Mountain Meadows, a widely known stopover on the old Spanish Trail, in early September. They anticipated several days of rest and recuperation there before the next 40 miles (64 km) would take them out of Utah. On September 7, the party was attacked by Nauvoo Legion militiamen dressed as Native Americans and some Native American Paiutes. The Baker–Fancher party defended itself by encircling and lowering their wagons, wheels chained together, along with digging shallow trenches and throwing dirt both below and into the wagons, which made a strong barrier. Seven immigrants were killed during the opening attack and buried somewhere within the wagon encirclement. Sixteen more were wounded. The attack continued for five days, during which the besieged families had little or no access to freshwater or game food and their ammunition was depleted. Meanwhile, organization among the local Mormon leadership reportedly broke down. Eventually, fear spread among the militia's leaders that some emigrants had caught sight of white men, and had probably discerned the identity of their attackers. This resulted in an order to kill all the emigrants, with the exception of small children.
Panorama of the area in 2009Killings and aftermath of the massacre
Main article: Killings and aftermath of the Mountain Meadows Massacre Four of the nine Nauvoo Legion militiamen indicted in 1874 for murder or conspiracy(Not shown: William H. Dame • William C. Stewart • Ellott Willden • Samuel Jukes • George Adair, Jr.)John D. Lee - Only suspect convicted and executed. Constable, judge, Indian Agent. Lee conspired in advance with Haight; led initial siege; falsely offered emigrants safe passage; led unwitting train of victims to their surprise execution.Isaac C. Haight— Stake President, battalion commander, director of Deseret Iron Company.John H. Higbee - Accused by Lee and others of giving the command to begin the killings. Higbee later disavowed responsibility and blamed Lee for the massacre.Philip Klingensmith- a Bishop in the church and a private in the militia. Participated in the killings. After disaffiliation from the LDS Church he turned state's evidence against his fellow conspirators.
On Friday, September 11, 1857, two militiamen approached the Baker–Fancher party wagons with a white flag and were soon followed by Indian Agent and militia officer John D. Lee. Lee told the battle-weary emigrants that he had negotiated a truce with the Paiutes. Under Mormon protection, the wagon-train members would be escorted safely back to Cedar City, 36 miles (58 km) away, in exchange for turning all of their livestock and supplies over to the Native Americans. Accepting this offer, the emigrants were led out of their fortification, with the adult men being separated from the women and children. The men were paired with a militia escort and when the signal was given, the militiamen turned and shot the male members of the Baker–Fancher party standing by their side. The women and children were then ambushed and killed by more militia that were hiding in nearby bushes and ravines. Members of the militia were sworn to secrecy. A plan was set to blame the massacre on the Native Americans.
The militia did not kill small children who were deemed too young to relate what had happened. Nancy Huff, one of the seventeen survivors and just over four years old at the time of the massacre, recalled in an 1875 statement that an eighteenth survivor was killed directly in front of the other children. "At the close of the massacre there was eighteen children still alive, one girl, some ten or twelve years old, they said was too big and could tell, so they killed her, leaving seventeen." The survivors were taken in by local Mormon families. Seventeen of the children were later reclaimed by the U.S. Army and returned to relatives in Arkansas. The treatment of these children while they were held by the Mormons is uncertain, but Captain James Lynch's statement in May 1859 said the surviving children were "in a most wretched condition, half starved, half naked, filthy, infested with vermin, and their eyes diseased from the cruel neglect to which had been exposed." Lynch's July 1859 affidavit added that they when they first saw the children they had "little or no clothing" and were "covered with filth and dirt".
Leonard J. Arrington, founder of the Mormon History Association, reports that Brigham Young received the rider, James Haslam, at his office on the same day. When he learned what was contemplated by the militia leaders in Parowan and Cedar City, he sent back a letter stating the Baker–Fancher party was not to be meddled with, and should be allowed to go in peace (although he acknowledged the Native Americans would likely "do as they pleased"). Young's letter arrived two days too late, on September 13, 1857.
The livestock and personal property of the Baker–Fancher party, including women's jewelry, clothing and bedstuffs were distributed or auctioned off to Mormons. Some of the surviving children saw clothing and jewelry that had belonged to their dead mothers and sisters subsequently being worn by Mormon women and the journalist J.H. Beadle said that jewelry taken from Mountain Meadows was seen in Salt Lake City.
Investigations and prosecutions
Main article: Investigations and prosecutions relating to the Mountain Meadows MassacreAn early investigation was conducted by Brigham Young, who interviewed John D. Lee on September 29, 1857. In 1858, Young sent a report to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs stating that the massacre was the work of Native Americans. The Utah War delayed any investigation by the U.S. federal government until 1859, when Jacob Forney and U.S. Army Brevet Major James Henry Carleton conducted investigations. In Carleton's investigation, at Mountain Meadows he found women's hair tangled in sage brush and the bones of children still in their mothers' arms. Carleton later said it was "a sight which can never be forgotten." After gathering up the skulls and bones of those who had died, Carleton's troops buried them and erected a cairn and cross.
Carleton interviewed a few local Mormon settlers and Paiute Native American chiefs and concluded that there was Mormon involvement in the massacre. He issued a report in May 1859, addressed to the U.S. Assistant Adjutant-General, setting forth his findings. Jacob Forney, Superintendent of Indian Affairs for Utah, also conducted an investigation that included visiting the region in the summer of 1859. Forney retrieved many of the surviving children of massacre victims who had been housed with Mormon families and gathered them up for transportation to their relatives in Arkansas. Forney concluded that the Paiutes did not act alone and the massacre would not have occurred without the white settlers, and Carleton report to the U.S. Congress called the mass killings a "heinous crime", blaming both local and senior church leaders for the massacre.
In March 1859, Judge John Cradlebaugh, a federal judge brought into the territory after the Utah War, convened a grand jury in Provo concerning the massacre, but the jury declined any indictments. Nevertheless, Cradlebaugh conducted a tour of the Mountain Meadows area with a military escort. He attempted to arrest John D. Lee, Isaac Haight, and John Higbee, who fled before they could be found. Cradlebaugh publicly charged Brigham Young as an instigator to the massacre and therefore an "accessory before the fact". Possibly as a protective measure against the mistrusted federal court system, Mormon territorial probate court judge Elias Smith arrested Young under a territorial warrant, perhaps hoping to divert any trial of Young into a friendly Mormon territorial court. Apparently because no federal charges ensued, Young was released.
Further investigations were cut short by the American Civil War in 1861, but proceeded in 1871 when prosecutors obtained the affidavit of militia member Philip Klingensmith. Klingensmith had been a bishop and blacksmith from Cedar City; by the 1870s, however, he had left the church and moved to Nevada.
Lee was arrested on November 7, 1874. Dame, Philip Klingensmith, Ellott Willden, and George Adair Jr. were indicted and arrested while warrants to pursue the arrests of four others who had gone into hiding (Haight, Higbee, William C. Stewart, and Samuel Jukes) were being obtained. Klingensmith escaped prosecution by agreeing to testify. Brigham Young removed some participants including Haight and Lee from the LDS Church in 1870. The U.S. posted bounties of $5000 USD (equivalent to $120,500 in 2023) each for the capture of Haight, Higbee, Stewart, and Klingensmith.
Lee's first trial began on July 23, 1875, in Beaver, before a jury of eight Mormons and four non-Mormons. One of Lee's defense attorneys was Enos D. Hoge, a former territorial supreme court justice. The trial led to a hung jury on August 5, 1875. Lee's second trial began September 13, 1876, before an all-Mormon jury. The prosecution called Daniel Wells, Laban Morrill, Joel White, Samuel Knight, Samuel McMurdy, Nephi Johnson, and Jacob Hamblin. Lee also stipulated, against advice of counsel, that the prosecution be allowed to re-use the depositions of Young and Smith from the previous trial. Lee called no witnesses in his defense, and was convicted.
Lee was entitled under Utah Territorial statute to choose the method of his execution from three possible options: hanging, firing squad, or decapitation. At sentencing, Lee chose to be executed by firing squad. In his final words before his sentence was carried out at Mountain Meadows on March 23, 1877, Lee said that he was a scapegoat for others involved. Brigham Young stated that Lee's fate was just, but it was not a sufficient blood atonement, given the enormity of the crime.
Criticism and analysis of the massacre
Media coverage about the event
Main articles: Media coverage of the Mountain Meadows Massacre and Mountain Meadows Massacre and Mormon public relationsInitial published reports of the incident date back at least to October 1857 in the Los Angeles Star. A notable report on the incident was made in 1859 by Carleton, who had been tasked by the U.S. Army to investigate the incident and bury the still exposed corpses at Mountain Meadows. The first period of intense nationwide publicity about the massacre began around 1872 after investigators obtained Klingensmith's confession. In 1868 C. V. Waite published "An Authentic History Of Brigham Young" which described the events. In 1872, Mark Twain commented on the massacre through the lens of contemporary American public opinion in an appendix to his semi-autobiographical travel book Roughing It. In 1873, the massacre was given a full chapter in T. B. H. Stenhouse's Mormon history The Rocky Mountain Saints. The massacre itself also received international attention, with various international and national newspapers also covering John D. Lee's 1874 and 1877 trials as well as his execution in 1877.
The massacre has been treated extensively by several historical works, beginning with Lee's own Confession in 1877, expressing his opinion that George A. Smith was sent to southern Utah by Brigham Young to direct the massacre.
In 1910, the massacre was the subject of a short book by Josiah F. Gibbs, who also attributed responsibility for the massacre to Young and Smith. The first detailed and comprehensive work using modern historical methods was The Mountain Meadows Massacre in 1950 by Juanita Brooks, a Mormon scholar who lived near the area in southern Utah. Brooks found no evidence of direct involvement by Brigham Young, but charged him with obstructing the investigation and provoking the attack through his rhetoric.
Initially, the LDS Church denied any involvement by Mormons, and into the 21st century was relatively silent on the issue. In 1872, it excommunicated some of the participants for their role in the massacre. Even after irrefutable evidence surfaced in 1999, the LDS Church didn't officially recognize its members' responsibility for the attack through at least 2002. 150 years after the tragedy in September 2007, the LDS Church published its first official statement of regret on the topic, and told the Associated Press via a church spokesperson that the statement should not be seen as an apology.
In modern times, the murders have been called an act of domestic terrorism in many works of literature. and is considered the largest act of domestic terrorism in United States history prior to the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Other descriptors include "the darkest deed of the nineteenth century" and "a crime that has no parallel in American history for atrocity". LDS historian Richard Turley called it "the worst event in Latter-day Saint history", and historian of the American West Will Bagley stated it was "the most brutal act of religious terrorism in America history" before the 2001 September 11 attacks.
Varying perspectives of the massacre
As described by Richard E. Turley Jr., Ronald W. Walker, and Glen M. Leonard, historians from different backgrounds have taken different approaches to describe the massacre and those involved:
- Portraying the perpetrators (white Mormon settlers) as fundamentally good and the Baker-Fancher party as evil people who committed outrageous acts of anti-Mormon instigation prior to the massacre;
- Describing the opposite view that the perpetrators were evil and the emigrants were innocent;
- Portraying both the perpetrators and victims as complicated, and that many different coinciding circumstances contributed to the Mormon settlers committing an atrocity against travelers who, regardless of the authenticity of any accusations of anti-Mormon behavior, did not deserve the punishment of death.
Prior to 1985, many textbooks available in Utah Public Schools blamed the Paiute people as primarily responsible for the massacre, or placed equal blame on the Paiute and Mormon settlers (if they mentioned the massacre at all).
Theories explaining the massacre
Historians have ascribed the massacre to a number of factors, including strident Mormon teachings in the years prior to the massacre, war hysteria, and alleged involvement of Brigham Young.
Strident Mormon teachings
Main article: Mountain Meadows Massacre and Mormon theologyFor the decade prior to the Baker–Fancher party's arrival there, Utah Territory existed as a theodemocracy led by Brigham Young. During the mid-1850s, Young instituted a Mormon Reformation, intending to "lay the axe at the root of the tree of sin and iniquity". In January 1856, Young said "the government of God, as administered here" may to some seem "despotic" because "...judgment is dealt out against the transgression of the law of God."
In addition, during the preceding decades, the religion had undergone a period of intense persecution in the American Midwest. In particular, they were officially expelled from, and an Extermination Order was issued by Governor Boggs, the state of Missouri during the 1838 Mormon War, during which prominent Mormon apostle David W. Patten was killed in battle. After Mormons moved to Nauvoo, Illinois, the religion's founder Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum Smith were killed in 1844. Following these events, faithful Mormons migrated west hoping to escape persecution. However, in May 1857, just months before the Mountain Meadows massacre, apostle Parley P. Pratt was shot dead in Arkansas by Hector McLean, the estranged husband of Eleanor McLean Pratt, one of Pratt's plural wives. Parley Pratt and Eleanor entered a Celestial marriage (under the theocratic law of the Utah Territory), but Hector had refused Eleanor a divorce. "When she left San Francisco she left Hector, and later she was to state in a court of law that she had left him as a wife the night he drove her from their home. Whatever the legal situation, she thought of herself as an unmarried woman."
Mormon leaders immediately proclaimed Pratt as another martyr, with Brigham Young stating, "Nothing has happened so hard to reconcile my mind to since the death of Joseph." Many Mormons held the people of Arkansas collectively responsible. "It was in accordance with Mormon policy to hold every Arkansan accountable for Pratt's death, just as every Missourian was hated because of the expulsion of the church from that state."
Mormon leaders were teaching that the Second Coming of Jesus was imminent – "...there are those now living upon the earth who will live to see the consummation" and "...we now bear witness that his coming is near at hand". Based on a somewhat ambiguous statement by Joseph Smith, some Mormons believed that Jesus would return in 1891 and that God would soon exact punishment against the United States for persecuting Mormons and martyring Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith, Patten and Pratt. In their Endowment ceremony, faithful early Latter-day Saints took an oath to pray that God would take vengeance against the murderers. As a result of this oath, several Mormon apostles and other leaders considered it their religious duty to kill the prophets' murderers if they ever came across them. The sermons, blessings, and private counsel by Mormon leaders just before the Mountain Meadows massacre can be understood as encouraging private individuals to execute God's judgment against the wicked.
In Cedar City, the teachings of church leaders were particularly strident. Mormons in Cedar City were taught that members should ignore dead bodies and go about their business. Col. William H. Dame, the ranking officer in southern Utah who ordered the Mountain Meadows massacre, received a patriarchal blessing in 1854 that he would "be called to act at the head of a portion of thy Brethren and of the Lamanites (Native Americans) in the redemption of Zion and the avenging of the blood of the prophets upon them that dwell on the earth". In June 1857, Philip Klingensmith, another participant, was similarly blessed that he would participate in "avenging the blood of Brother Joseph".
Thus, historians argue that southern Utah Mormons would have been particularly affected by an unsubstantiated rumor that the Baker–Fancher wagon train had been joined by a group of eleven miners and plainsmen who called themselves "Missouri Wildcats", some of whom reportedly taunted, vandalized and "caused trouble" for Mormons and Native Americans along the route (by some accounts claiming that they had the gun that "shot the guts out of Old Joe Smith"). They were also affected by the report to Brigham Young that the Baker–Fancher party was from Arkansas where Pratt was murdered. It was rumored that Pratt's wife recognized some of the Mountain Meadows party as being in the gang that shot and stabbed Pratt.
War hysteria
Main article: War hysteria preceding the Mountain Meadows MassacreThe Mountain Meadows massacre was caused in part by events relating to the Utah War, an 1857 deployment toward the Utah Territory of the United States Army, whose arrival was peaceful. In the summer of 1857, however, the Mormons expected an all-out invasion of apocalyptic significance. From July to September 1857, Mormon leaders and their followers prepared for a siege that could have ended up similar to the seven-year Bleeding Kansas problem occurring at the time. Mormons were required to stockpile grain, and were enjoined against selling grain to emigrants for use as cattle feed. As far-off Mormon colonies retreated, Parowan and Cedar City became isolated and vulnerable outposts. Brigham Young sought to enlist the help of Native American tribes in fighting the "Americans", encouraging them to steal cattle from emigrant trains, and to join Mormons in fighting the approaching army.
Scholars have asserted that George A. Smith's tour of southern Utah influenced the decision to attack and destroy the Fancher–Baker emigrant train near Mountain Meadows, Utah. He met with many of the eventual participants in the massacre, including W. H. Dame, Isaac Haight, John D. Lee and Chief Jackson, leader of a band of Paiutes. He noted that the militia was organized and ready to fight and that some of them were eager to "fight and take vengeance for the cruelties that had been inflicted upon us in the States." Among Smith's party were a number of Paiute Native American chiefs from the Mountain Meadows area. When Smith returned to Salt Lake, Brigham Young met with these leaders on September 1, 1857, and encouraged them to fight against the Americans in the anticipated clash with the U.S. Army. They were also offered all of the livestock then on the road to California, which included that belonging to the Baker–Fancher party. The Native American chiefs were reluctant, and at least one objected they had previously been told not to steal, and declined the offer.
Brigham Young
Main article: Brigham Young and the Mountain Meadows MassacreThere is a consensus among historians that Brigham Young played a role in provoking the massacre, at least unwittingly, and in concealing its evidence after the fact. However, they debate whether Young knew about the planned massacre ahead of time and whether he initially condoned it before later taking a strong public stand against it. Young's use of inflammatory and violent language in response to the Federal expedition added to the tense atmosphere at the time of the attack. Following the massacre, Young stated in public forums that God had taken vengeance on the Baker–Fancher party. It is unclear whether Young held this view because he believed that this specific group posed an actual threat to colonists or because he believed that the group was directly responsible for past crimes against Mormons. However, in Young's only known correspondence prior to the massacre, he told the Church leaders in Cedar City:
In regard to emigration trains passing through our settlements, we must not interfere with them until they are first notified to keep away. You must not meddle with them. The Indians we expect will do as they please but you should try and preserve good feelings with them. There are no other trains going south that I know of f those who are there will leave let them go in peace.
According to historian MacKinnon, "After the war, U.S. President James Buchanan implied that face-to-face communications with Brigham Young might have averted the conflict, and Young argued that a north-south telegraph line in Utah could have prevented the Mountain Meadows massacre." MacKinnon suggests that hostilities could have been avoided if Young had traveled east to Washington D.C. to resolve governmental problems instead of taking a five-week trip north on the eve of the Utah War for church-related reasons.
A modern forensic assessment of a key affidavit, purportedly given by William Edwards in 1924, has complicated the debate on complicity of senior Mormon leadership in the Mountain Meadows massacre. Analysis indicates that Edwards's signature may have been traced and that the typeset belonged to a typewriter manufactured in the 1950s. The Utah State Historical Society, which maintains the document in its archives, acknowledges a possible connection to Mark Hofmann, a convicted forger and extortionist, via go-between Lyn Jacobs who provided the society with the document.
Remembrances
Main article: Remembrances of the Mountain Meadows MassacreThe first monument for the victims was built two years after the massacre, by Major Carleton and the U.S. Army. This monument was a simple cairn built over the gravesite of 34 victims, and was topped by a large cedar cross. The monument was found destroyed and the structure was replaced by the U.S. Army in 1864. By some reports, the monument was destroyed in 1861, when Young brought an entourage to Mountain Meadows. Wilford Woodruff, who later became President of the Church, said that upon reading the inscription on the cross, which read, "Vengeance is mine, thus saith the Lord. I shall repay", Young responded, "it should be vengeance is mine and I have taken a little." In 1932, residents of the surrounding area constructed a memorial wall around the remnants of the monument.
Starting in 1988, the Mountain Meadows Association, composed of descendants of both the Baker–Fancher party victims and the Mormon participants, designed a new monument in the meadows; this monument was completed in 1990 and is maintained by the Utah State Division of Parks and Recreation. In 1999, the LDS Church replaced the U.S. Army's cairn and the 1932 memorial wall with a second monument, which it now maintains. In August 1999, when the LDS Church's construction of the 1999 monument had started, the remains of at least 28 massacre victims were dug up by a backhoe. The forensic evidence showed that the remains of the males had been shot by firearms at close range and that the remains of the women and children showed evidence of blunt force trauma.
In 1955, to memorialize the victims of the massacre, a monument was installed in the town square of Harrison, Arkansas. On one side of this monument is a map and short summary of the massacre, while the opposite side contains a list of the victims. In 2005, a replica of the U.S. Army's original 1859 cairn was built in the community of Carrollton, Arkansas, the former county seat of Carroll County, Arkansas. it is maintained by the Mountain Meadows Monument Foundation.
In 2007, the 150th anniversary of the massacre was remembered by a ceremony held in the meadows. Approximately 400 people, including many descendants of those slain at Mountain Meadows and Elder Henry B. Eyring of the LDS Church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles attended this ceremony.
In 2011, the site was designated as a National Historic Landmark after joint efforts by descendants of those killed and the LDS Church.
In 2014, archaeologist Everett Bassett discovered two rock piles he believes mark additional graves. The locations of the possible graves are on private land and not at any of the monument sites owned by the LDS Church. The Mountain Meadows Monument Foundation has expressed their desire that the sites be conserved and given national monument status. Other descendant groups have been more hesitant in accepting the sites as legitimate grave markers.
In Media
See also: Media coverage of the Mountain Meadows MassacreWorks of non-fiction
- Vengeance Is Mine: The Mountain Meadows Massacre and Its Aftermath, by Richard E. Turley, Barbara Jones Brown, (2023)
- Massacre at Mountain Meadows, by Ronald W. Walker, Richard E. Turley, Glen M. Leonard (2008)
- House of Mourning: A Biocultural History of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, by Shannon A. Novak (2008)
- Burying The Past, a documentary film by Brian Patrick (2004)
- American Massacre, by Sally Denton (2003)
- Blood of the Prophets, by Will Bagley (2002)
- The Mountain Meadows Massacre, by Juanita Brooks (1950)
Works of historical fiction
- None Left to Tell, novel by Noelle West Ihli (2024) – Tells the story of the Mountain Meadows massacre from the perspectives of three women and one child who were involved.
- American Primeval by Mark L. Smith (2024) – The miniseries examines the fight to gain control of the American West and the violent clash between religion and culture. The main plot has the Massacre as a backdrop.
- Variation West by Ardyth Kennelly (2014) – A novel of 4 generations of a family in Utah, beginning with 2 fictional daughters of John D. Lee, with the Mountain Meadows massacre as backdrop.
- September Dawn by Christopher Cain (2007) – The film is a fictional love story between real characters who were involved in the massacre
- Red Water by Judith Freeman (2002) – A novel about how the wives of John D. Lee have to come to terms with their husband's actions
- Redeye by Clyde Edgerton (1995) – A novel about a fictional bounty hunter, Cobb Pittman, who with his catch dog, Redeye, tracks down Mormons responsible for the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
- The Star Rover by Jack London (1915) – Protagonist Darrell Standing is reincarnated as Jesse Fancher
See also
- Aiken massacre, a lynching reportedly ordered by Mormon leaders two months later
- Anti-Mormonism
- Christian terrorism
- Christianity and violence
- Haun's Mill massacre, an attack on Mormons
- History of the Latter Day Saint movement
- Missouri Executive Order 44, an 1838 governor's order that Mormons be "exterminated" or driven from Missouri
- Mormonism and violence
- Native American people and Mormonism
- Terrorism in the United States
Notes
- ^ The exact number of people who were in the wagon party is estimated by authors and historians to range from 120 to around 140. Bagley states that 70 people in the group were women and children known by name and that at least two-thirds of the wagon train consisted of women and children. The size of the party ebbed and flowed depending on where it was in its journey west so the exact number of people in the wagon train at any given time and the exact number of people who were killed remains unknown (though Briggs states that 120 people were killed). The number of children who survived is seventeen according to several sources. Those children (all ages six and under) were deemed too young by the attackers to remember the circumstances of their families' deaths.
- In 1904, several witnesses said that the oath as it then existed was that participants would never cease to pray that God would avenge the blood of the prophets on this nation", and that they would teach this practice to their posterity "unto the 3rd and 4th generation". The oath was deleted from the ceremony in the early 20th century.
- Examples of these teachings include:
- Quinn (1997), p. 247: The "Diary of Daniel Davis, July 8, 1849", held in the LDS archives states that Young said "if any one was catched stealing to shoot them dead on the spot and they should not be hurt for it". harvp error: no target: CITEREFQuinn1997 (help)
- Young (1856b), p. 247: Young states that a man would be justified in putting a javelin through his plural wife caught in the act of adultery, but anyone intending to "execute judgment...has got to have clean hands and a pure heart...else they had better let the matter alone".
- Young (1857b), p. 219: Young states, "f needs help, help him; and if he wants salvation and it is necessary to spill his blood on the earth in order that he may be saved, spill it".
- Young (1855), p. 311: "n regard to those who have persecuted this people and driven them to the mountains, I intend to meet them on their own grounds...I will tell you how it could be done, we could take the same law they have taken, viz., mobocracy, and if any miserable scoundrels come here, cut their throats. (All the people said, Amen)."
- Quinn (1997), p. 260: "LDS leaders publicly and privately encouraged Mormons to consider it their right to kill antagonistic outsiders, common criminals, LDS apostates, and even faithful Mormons who committed sins 'worthy of death'." harvp error: no target: CITEREFQuinn1997 (help)
- It is uncertain whether the Missouri Wildcat group stayed with the slow-moving Baker–Fancher party after leaving Salt Lake City.
References
Citations
- ^ King, Gilbert (February 29, 2012). "The Aftermath of Mountain Meadows". Smithsonian. US Government. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
- "Mountain Meadows Massacre". Archived from the original on September 26, 2022. Retrieved December 31, 2022.
- Shirts (1994), Paragraphs 3, 4, 5, 6: "War hysteria permeated the area. ... Governor Brigham Young subsequently issued a proclamation of martial law"
- Lee (1877), p. 308, : "Citizens of Utah: We are invaded by a hostile force, who are evidently assailing us to accomplish our overthrow and destruction."
- Miller, David H. (1972). "The Ives Expedition Revisited: A Prussian's Impressions" (PDF). The Journal of Arizona History. 13 (1). Arizona Historical Society: 7, 18, 19. JSTOR 41695038.
– outbreak of the Mormon War ... Mormons were already engaged in hostilities with the United States Army forces, – were inciting unrest by intimating that the real purpose of the river expedition was to steal Indian lands ... – Mormon rebels were among the Mohaves inciting them to murder and plunder ... Haskell's impressions of his hosts as treacherous Yankees bent on plundering helpless Mormons.
- Bagley 2002, pp. 56, 62–66, 388–389; Briggs 2006, p. 313; King 2012; Brooks 1991, pp. 10, 14, 101–105, 266: The figure of 120 to 140 dead that appears on Page 266, in Appendix XI of Brooks, is taken verbatim from Deputy U.S. Marshal William H. Rogers' Statement, as printed in the February 29, 1860 edition of the The Valley Tan newspaper
- Finck, James (August 9, 2024). "Mountain Meadows Massacre". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Little Rock, Arkansas: Central Arkansas Library System.
- Bancroft (1889), p. 545; Linn (1902), Chap. XVI, 4th full paragraph.
- Bancroft (1889), p. 544; Gibbs (1910), p. 12.
- Shirts (1994), Paragraph 3.
- Shirts (1994), Paragraph 2.
- ^ Young, Brigham (August 4, 1875). "Deposition, People v. Lee". Deseret News. Vol. 24, no. 27. Salt Lake City. p. 8 – via University of Utah.
- Little, James A. (1909) . Jacob Hamblin: A Narrative of His Personal Experience. The Faith-Promoting Series (2nd ed.). Deseret News. p. 48 – via Google Books.
- Young, Brigham (May 23, 1877). "Interview with Brigham Young". Deseret News. Vol. 26, no. 16 – via University of Utah.
If you were to inquire of the people who lived hereabouts, and lived in the country at that time, you would find, ... that some of this Arkansas company ...boasted of having to helped to kill Hyrum and Joseph Smith and the Mormons in Missouri, and that they never meant to leave the Territory until similar scenes were enacted here.
- ^ Carleton (1902).
- ^ Walker, Ronald W. (2008). Massacre at Mountain Meadows : an American tragedy. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199747566.
- ^ Shirts, Morris A. (1994b). "The Iron Mission". Utah History Encyclopedia. University of Utah Press. ISBN 9780874804256.
- ^ Shirts (1994), Paragraph 6.
- ^ Morrill (1876). sfnp error: no target: CITEREFMorrill1876 (help)
- ^ Turley, Richard E.; Johnson, Janiece L.; Carruth, LaJean Purcell, eds. (2017). "Preliminary Material and Daniel H. Wells, Laban Morrill, and James Haslam Testimonies" (PDF). Mountain Meadows Massacre: Collected Legal Papers, Selected Trial Records and Aftermath. Vol. 2. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-5573-9.
- ^ Walker, Ronald W.; Turley, Richard E.; Leonard, Glen M. (2008). Massacre at Mountain Meadows. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516034-5.
- ^ Shirts (1994), Paragraph 8.
- Penrose & Haslam (1885). sfnp error: no target: CITEREFPenroseHaslam1885 (help)
- ^ Arrington, Leonard J. (1986). Brigham Young: American Moses. University of Illinois Press. p. 257 – via Google Books.
- Walker, Ronald W. (2003). "'Save the emigrants', Joseph Clewes on the Mountain Meadows Massacre". BYU Studies. 42 (1): 150.
...it was made known by Higbee that the emigrants were to be wiped out.
- "Mountain Meadows Massacre Site in Utah by Phil Konstantin". americanindian.net.
- ^ Lee (1877), p. 236.
- Bagley (2002), pp. 326–329.
- Shirts (1994), Paragraph 9.
- ^ Jones Brown, Barbara; Turley, Richard E. (2023). Vengeance Is Mine: The Mountain Meadows Massacre and Its Aftermath. New York City: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-767573-1 – via Google Books.
- Huff Cates, Nancy S. (September 1, 1875). "The Mountain Meadow Massacre. Statement of one of the Few Survivors". Daily Arkansas Gazette. Retrieved September 13, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- Bagley (2002), p. 56:"Without a Name of a Home –John M. Higbee"
- Brooks (1991), pp. 101–105.
- ^ Turley, Richard E.; Johnson, Janiece L.; Carruth, LaJean Purcell, eds. (2017). Mountain Meadows Massacre: Collected Legal Papers, Initial Investigations and Indictments. Vol. 1. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806158952. Retrieved September 13, 2021.
- "Mountain Meadows:An Official Accounting of the Atrocity Written in 1859". St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Vol. 1, no. 68. July 26, 1875. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Young, Brigham. Brigham Young Office Files, ID: CR 1234 1, p. 827. Salt Lake City: Letterbook, Vol. 3, 1856 August 20-1858 January, Church History Library.
- Klingensmith, Philip (September 24, 1872). Toohy, Dennis J. (ed.). "Mountain Meadows Massacre, Affidavit of Philip Klingensmith". Corinne Journal Reporter. Vol. 5, no. 252. Corinne, Utah. p. 1. Retrieved February 11, 2019 – via University of Utah.
- Bagley (2002), pp. 174–175.
- ^ Forney, J. (May 10, 1859). "Kirk Anderson Esq". The Valley Tan. Vol. 1, no. 28. p. 2 – via University of Utah.
- Forney, J. (May 11, 1859). "Visit of the Superintendent of Indian Affairs to Southern Utah". Deseret News. Vol. 9, no. 10. p. 1 – via University of Utah.
- ^ Fisher, Alyssa (September 16, 2003). "The Mountain Meadows Massacre". Archaeology. Archaeological Institute of America. Retrieved February 4, 2019.
- Cradlebaugh, John (March 15, 1859). Anderson, Kirk (ed.). "Charge (Orally delivered by Hon. John Cradlebaugh to the Grand Jury, Provo, Tuesday, March 8, 1859)". The Valley Tan. Vol. 1, no. 20. p. 3 – via University of Utah.
- Cradlebaugh, John (March 29, 1859). Anderson, Kirk (ed.). "Discharge of the Grand Jury". The Valley Tan. Vol. 1, no. 22. p. 3 – via University of Utah.
- Carrington, Albert, ed. (April 6, 1859). "The Court & the Army". Deseret News. Vol. 9, no. 5. p. 2 – via University of Utah.
- ^ Bagley (2002), p. 225.
- Bagley (2002), p. 226.
- Bagley (2002), p. 234.
- "Justice at Last! Execution of John D. Lee for Complicity in the Mountain Meadows Massacre". Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. Vol. 44, no. 1124. April 14, 1877. p. 107 – via Internet Archive.
- Brooks (1991), p. 133.
- Briggs (2006), p. 315.
- "John D. Lee Arrested". Deseret News. Vol. 23, no. 42. November 18, 1874. p. 16 – via University of Utah.
- "Tragedy at Mountain Meadows Massacre: Toward a Consensus Account and Time Line". Utah Tech University.
- 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
- Bagley (2002), p. 242.
- "The Lee Trial". Deseret News. July 28, 1875. p. 5.
- Whitney, Orson F. (1916). Popular History of Utah. Deseret News. p. 305 – via Google Books.
- Lee (1877), pp. 317–378.
- Lee (1877), pp. 302–303.
- Lee (1877), p. 378.
- "Territorial Dispatches: The Sentence of Lee". Deseret News. October 18, 1876. p. 4.
- Lee (1877), pp. 225–226.
- Young, Brigham (April 30, 1877). "Interview with Brigham Young". The Deseret News. Retrieved February 4, 2019 – via Utah Digital Newspapers, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah.
"I do, and I believe that Lee has not half atoned for his great crime"
- "The Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Utah Territory". Harper's Weekly. Vol. 3, no. 137. New York City. August 13, 1859. p. 513 – via Internet Archive.
- Staff (1857). sfnp error: no target: CITEREFStaff1857 (help)
- Christian (1857).
- Waite (1868).
- Twain (1872).
- Stenhouse (1873), pp. 424–458.
- "The Massacre of the Hundred Emigrants by the Mormons". The Morning Chronicle. London, England. December 4, 1857. Retrieved August 30, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Treacherous Massacre by Mormons". Liverpool Mercury. Liverpool, England. April 27, 1860. Retrieved August 30, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Mountain Meadow". Winfield Courier. Winfield, Kansas. December 3, 1874. Retrieved August 30, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- "John D. Lee's Execution". Cincinnati Daily Star. March 24, 1877. Retrieved August 30, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- "John D. Lee". Green-Mountain Freeman. March 28, 1877. Retrieved August 30, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- Lee (1877), p. 225.
- Gibbs (1910), pp. 7–9, 42.
- Bagley (2002), p. 273.
- Rifkind, Donna (March 6, 2002). "Flirting With Disaster". The Washington Post. Washington D.C.
To this day, the Mormon Church has not officially admitted the extent of its members' responsibility for the massacre, even after construction workers at the site in 1999 unearthed evidence that more or less proved the case.
- Foy, Paul (September 12, 2007). "Mormon Church Regrets 1857 Massacre". Associated Press – via The Oklahoman.
Church leaders were adamant that the statement should not be construed as an apology. 'We don't use the word "apology". We used "profound regret"', church spokesman Mark Tuttle told The Associated Press.
- ^ Ravitz, Jessica. "LDS Church apologizes for Mountain Meadows Massacre". The Salt Lake Tribune.
- "LDS Church Expresses 'Regret' for Mountain Meadows Massacre" (PDF). Sunstone. October 2007. p. 74.
- Bigler, David L.; Bagley, Will (October 22, 2014). The Mormon Rebellion: America's First Civil War, 1857–1858. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. xi, 179, 299. ISBN 978-0-8061-8396-1 – via Google Books.
'Terrorism' is not a word to be taken lightly. But the evidence, coupled with long-forgotten Mormon doctrines, demonstrate that the purpose of the Mountain Meadows atrocity was to strike fear into the hearts of intruders ....
- Hopper, Shay E.; Baker, T. Harri; Browning, Jane (September 1, 2007). An Arkansas History for Young People (Fourth ed.). University of Arkansas Press. p. 200. ISBN 978-1-55728-845-5 – via Google Books.
Prior to the Oklahoma City bombing, the Mountain Meadows massacre was the largest act of domestic terrorism to ever occur on American soil.
- Kennon, Caroline (July 15, 2017). Battling Terrorism in the United States. Greenhaven Publishing. pp. 6, 12. ISBN 978-1-5345-6141-0 – via Google Books.
- Bigler, David L. (2015). Confessions of a Revisionist Historian: David L. Bigler on the Mormons and the West. Salt Lake City: University of Utah. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-692-37120-6 – via Google Books.
September 11 will mark the anniversary of the most horrific terrorist attack in U.S. history. ... I refer to September 11, 1857. ... It was the most horrific terrorist attack in our nation's history, not as figured by body count, but in the way its victims were slain.
- Esmail, Ashraf; Eargle, Lisa A.; Hamann, Brandon (May 3, 2021). "Significant Historical Accounts of Domestic Terrorism: The Mountain Meadows Massacre (1857)". Terrorism Inside America's Borders. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-7618-7074-6 – via Google Books.
- Hopper, Shay E.; Baker, T. Harri; Browning, Jane (September 1, 2007). An Arkansas History for Young People (Fourth ed.). University of Arkansas Press. p. 200. ISBN 978-1-55728-845-5 – via Google Books.
Prior to the Oklahoma City bombing, the Mountain Meadows massacre was the largest act of domestic terrorism to ever occur on American soil.
- Rifkind, Donna (March 6, 2002). "Flirting With Disaster". The Washington Post. Washington D.C.
Apart from the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, no single incident of civil terrorism—Americans killing Americans—has resulted in more deaths than the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
- Bagley (2002), p. xiii.
- Berkes, Howard (September 11, 2008). "Mormon Historians Shed Light On Sept. 11, 1857". NPR.
- "Wild West: Rescue of the Mountain Meadows Orphans". Wild West. World History Group. August 3, 2007.
- ^ Anderson, Nels (1969). Desert saints : the Mormon frontier in Utah. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226017826.
- Buttle, Faye Jensen (1970). Utah grows, past and present. Salt Lake City: BYU Press. OCLC 137245. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Olson, Casey W. The Evolution of History: Changing Narratives of the Mountain Meadows Massacre in Utah's Public School Curricula (PhD thesis). Utah State University. p. 109.
- Roberts, B.H. (1965). "The Mountain Meadows Massacre". Comprehensive History of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints. Vol. 4. Salt Lake City: Brigham Young University Press. pp. 139–145. ISBN 9780842504829 – via Internet Archives.
- Ronald, Walker (1992). The New Mormon History: Revisionist Essays on the Past. Salt Lake City: Signature Books. pp. 267–301. ISBN 1560850116 – via Google Books.
- Young, Brigham (January 27, 1856). "The Powers of the Priesthood Not Generally Understood – The Necessity of Living by Revelation – The Abuse of Blessing". Book of Abraham Project. Brigham Young University. Archived from the original on February 7, 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2019.
Is the spirit of the government and rule here despotic? In their use of the word, some may deem it so. It lays the ax at the root of the tree of sin and iniquity; judgment is dealt out against the transgression of the law of God. If that is despotism, then the policy of this people may be deemed despotic. But does not the government of God, as administered here, give to every person his rights?
- Eleanor McLean Pratt (May 12, 1857). "To the Honorable Judge of the Court, in the town of Van Buren, State of Arkansas, May 12, 1957 (Mrs. Pratt's Letter to the Judge)". The Latter-Day Saints' Millennial Star. Vol. 19. pp. 425–426. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
- "Further Particulars of the Murder – To Brother Orson (A letter from Eleanor McLean Pratt)". The Latter-Day Saints' Millennial Star. Vol. 19. May 12, 1857. pp. 426–427. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
- Pratt (1975), p. 233 harvp error: no target: CITEREFPratt1975 (help) "When she left San Francisco she left Hector, and later she was to state in a court of law that she had left him as a wife the night he drove her from their home. Whatever the legal situation, she thought of herself as an unmarried woman."
- "Murder of Parley P. Pratt, One of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints". The Latter-Day Saints' Millennial Star. Vol. 19. Retrieved February 11, 2019.
- Pratt (1975), p. harvp error: no target: CITEREFPratt1975 (help) "I die a firm believer in the Gospel of Jesus Christ as revealed through the Prophet Joseph Smith ... I am dying a martyr to the faith."
- Brooks (1991), pp. 36–37.
- Linn (1902), pp. 519–520.
- Young et al. (1845), pp. 2 & 5.
- Erickson (1996), p. 9.
- Grant, Jedediah M. (April 2, 1854). "Fulfilment of Prophecy—Wars and Commotions". In Watt, George D. (ed.). Journal of Discourses. Vol. 2. Liverpool: Samuel W. Richards & Franklin D. Richards. pp. 148–49.
It is a stern fact that the people of the United States have shed the blood of the Prophets, driven out the Saints of God,...consequently I look for the Lord to use His whip on the refractory son called 'Uncle Sam';...
- ^ Kimball, Heber C. Heber C. Kimball journal, 1845 November-1846 January, ID: MS 3469. Salt Lake City: Church History Library.
- Beadle (1870), pp. 496–497 (describing the oath prior to 1970 as requiring a "private, immediate duty to avenge the death of the Prophet and Martyr, Joseph Smith").
- ^ Cannon, Abraham H. Abraham H. Cannon Diaries, Box: 2, Folder 1, ID: Vault MSS 62, Vol. 11, p. 205. Provo, Utah: L. Tom Perry Special Collections Library, Brigham Young University.
- Buerger (2002), p. 134
- Buerger (2002), pp. 139–40
- Buerger (2002), p. 135: George Q. Cannon's endowment in Nauvoo included, "an oath against the murders of the Prophet Joseph as well as other prophets, and if he had ever met any of those who had taken a hand in that massacre he would undoubtedly have attempted to avenge the blood of the Martyrs." Heber C. Kimball said in the temple he, "covenanted, and will never rest...until those men who killed Joseph & Hyrum have been wiped out of the earth."
- Moorman, Donald R.; Allred Sessions, Gene (2005). Camp Floyd and the Mormons. University of Utah Press. p. 142 – via Google Books.
- "Selections from the Andrew Jenson Collection". BYU Studies. 47 (3). Brigham Young University: 51.
- Bates, Irene M. (October 1, 1993). "Patriarchal Blessings and the Routinization of Charisma" (PDF). Dialogue. 26 (3): 12. doi:10.2307/45228651. ISSN 0012-2157.
- Brooks, Juanita. "Patriarchal blessing of William H. Dame, February 20, 1854". Patriarchal Blessings: Transcriptions and Copies. p. 62 – via University of Utah.
- Pease, Harold W. (1971). The Life and Works of William Horne Dame (Masters of Arts thesis). Brigham Young University. pp. 64–66.
- Backus, Anna Jean (1995). Mountain Meadows Witness: The Life and Times of Bishop Philip Klingensmith. Spokane: Arthur H. Clark Co. pp. 118, 124 – via Google Books.
- Wicks, Robert S.; Foister, Fred R. (September 26, 2008). "'To avenge the blood that stains the walls of Carthage jail'". Junius And Joseph: Presidential Politics and the Assassination of the First Mormon Prophet. Utah State University Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt4cgn0s. ISBN 978-0-87421-526-7 – via Project Muse.
- Brooks (1991), p. xxi
- Bagley (2002), p. 280: Bagley refers to the "Missouri Wildcats" story as "Utah mythology".
- "An Historical Epilogue". Utah Historical Quarterly. 24 (4). 1956 – via Issuu.
- Burns, Ken (1996). The West: Death Runs Riot (film). PBS.
- Williams, Chris (1993). "The Mountain Meadows Massacre: An Aberration of Mormon Practice". Archived from the original on October 14, 2007.
- Stenhouse (1873), p. 431 (citing "Argus", an anonymous contributor to the Corinne Daily Reporter in Corinne, Utah whom the author met and vouched for).
- ^ Lyman, Edward Leo (2004). The Overland Journey from Utah to California: Wagon Travel from the City of Saints to the City of Angels (Hardcover ed.). University of Nevada Press. ISBN 978-0874175011.
- Martineau, James H. (September 23, 1857). "Correspondence: Trip to the Santa Clara". Deseret News. Vol. 9, no. 5. p. 3 – via University of Utah.
- Huntington (1857).
- MacKinnon (2007), p. 57. sfnp error: no target: CITEREFMacKinnon2007 (help)
- Bagley (2002), p. 247.
- MacKinnon (2007), endnote p. 50. sfnp error: no target: CITEREFMacKinnon2007 (help)
- MacKinnon (2007), p. 59. sfnp error: no target: CITEREFMacKinnon2007 (help)
- De Groote, Michael (September 7, 2010). "Mountain Meadows Massacre affidavit linked to Mark Hofmann". Deseret News. LDS Church. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
- Jeffreys, Keith B. (2010). "Mountain Meadows Massacre Artifact Now Believed To Be A Fake" (PDF). Free Inquiry. 22 (4). Council for Secular Humanism: 26 – via Center for Inquiry.
- Smart, Christopher (September 10, 2010). "Mountain Meadows affidavit Hofmann forgery?". Salt Lake Tribune.
- "Probable Hofmann Forgery Uncovered" (Press release). Utah State Historical Society. 2010. Archived from the original on September 5, 2010. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
- Carleton (1902), p. 15.
- Price, George F. (June 8, 1864). "Salt Lake and Fort Mojave W R Expedition, Camp No. 18, Mountain Meadow, Utah, May 25, 1864". Union Vedette. Salt Lake City. Retrieved May 8, 2021 – via University of Utah.
- Denton (2003), p. 210.
- Kenney, Scott G., ed. (1984). Wilford Woodruff's Journal. Vol. 5. Salt Lake City: Signature Books. p. 577 – via Google Books.
- Shirts (1994), Paragraph 13: "The most enduring was a wall which still stands at the siege site. It was erected in 1932 and surrounds the 1859 cairn."
- Shirts (1994), Paragraph 13
- "1990 Monument". Mountain Meadows Association.
- "1999 Mountain Meadows Monument". Mountain Meadows Association. Retrieved March 9, 2009.
- "The Mountain Meadows Massacre". Archaeology. Archaeological Institute of America. September 16, 2003.
- Keckhaver, Mike (2008). "Mountain Meadows Massacre Monument". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Little Rock, Arkansas: Central Arkansas Library System.
- ^ Fletcher Stack, Peggy; Ravitz, Jessica (September 14, 2007). "Families of Mountain Meadows Massacre victims want crosses at site". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
- Polston, Mike (November 27, 2024). "Carrollton (Carroll County)". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Little Rock, Arkansas: Central Arkansas Library System.
- Somashekhar, Sandhya (May 20, 2012). "Mitt Romney's Mormon faith tangles with a quirk of Arkansas history". The Washington Post. Washington D.C. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
- "Eyring expresses regret for pioneer massacre". Daily Herald. Provo, Utah.
- Stack, Peggy Fletcher (June 30, 2011). "Mountain Meadows now a national historic landmark". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved July 4, 2011.
- Osinski, Nichole (September 20, 2015). "Archaeologist: Mountain Meadows Massacre graves found". The Spectrum. St. George, Utah.
- Osinski, Nichole (November 14, 2015). "Voices of the Mountain Meadows descendants". The Spectrum. St. George, Utah. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
References
- Bagley, Will (2002). Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3426-0.
- Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1889). History of Utah, 1540–1886. The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft. Vol. 26. History Company.
- Beadle, John Hanson (1870). "Chapter VI. The Bloody Period.". Life in Utah. Philadelphia: National Publishing. pp. 177–195. LCCN 30005377. LCC BX8645 .B4 1870.
- Briggs, Robert H. (2006). "The Mountain Meadows Massacre: An Analytical Narrative Based on Participant Confessions". Utah Historical Quarterly. 74 (4). Utah State Historical Society: 313–333.
- Brooks, Juanita (1991) . The Mountain Meadows Massacre (1st paperback ed.). Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806123189.
- Buerger, David John (2002). The Mysteries of Godliness: A History of Mormon Temple Worship (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City: Signature Books. ISBN 978-1-56085-176-9.
- Carleton, James Henry (1902) . Special Report of the Mountain Meadow Massacre. Washington: US Government Printing Office.
- Christian, J. Ward (October 10, 1857). Hamilton, Henry (ed.). "Horrible Massacre of Arkansas and Missouri Emigrants (Letter to G.N. Whitman)". Los Angeles Star. Vol. 7, no. 22. San Bernardino. p. 2 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
- Denton, Sally (2003). American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-41208-0.
- Erickson, Dan (1996). "Joseph Smith's 1891 Millennial Prophecy: The Quest for Apocalyptic Deliverance" (PDF). Journal of Mormon History. 22 (2): 1–34.
- Gibbs, Josiah F. (1910). The Mountain Meadows Massacre. Salt Lake City: Salt Lake Tribune. ISBN 978-0-548-30943-8. LCCN 37010372. LCC F826 .G532.
- Huntington, Dimick B. (1857). Journal of Dimick B. Huntington. LDS Church. Also available here at the Church History Library.
- Lee, John D. (1877). Mormonism Unveiled: or, the Life and Confessions of John D. Lee. St. Louis: Bryan, Brand & Co.
- Linn, William A. (1902). The Story of the Mormons. New York City: Macmillan Publishers – via Google Books.
- Shirts, Morris A. (1994). "Mountain Meadows Massacre". In Powell, Allan Kent (ed.). Utah History Encyclopedia. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah Press. ISBN 0874804256. OCLC 30473917. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
- Hamilton, Henry, ed. (October 3, 1857). "Rumored Massacre on the Plains". Los Angeles Star. Vol. 6, no. 21. p. 2 – via Newspapers.com.
- Stenhouse, T.B.H. (1873). The Rocky Mountain Saints. New York: D. Appleton & Company.
- Twain, Mark (1872). "Appendix B: The Mountain Meadows Massacre". Roughing It. Hartford, Connecticut: American Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0-19-515979-0.
- Waite, C.V. (Catharine Van Valkenburg) (1868). The Mormon Prophet and His Harem: Or, an Authentic History of Brigham Young, His Numerous Wives and Children. Chicago: J.S. Goodman & Co. ISBN 978-0-665-37321-3.
- Young, Brigham; Kimball, Heber C.; Hyde, Orson; Pratt, Parley P.; Smith, William; Pratt, Orson; Page, John E.; Taylor, John; et al. (April 6, 1845). "Proclamation of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints". New York: LDS Church.
- Young, Brigham (July 8, 1855). "The Kingdom of God". In Watt, George D. (ed.). Journal of Discourses. Vol. 2. Liverpool: Samuel W. Richards & Franklin D. Richards. pp. 309–17.
- Young, Brigham (March 16, 1856b). "Instructions to the Bishops, etc.". In Watt, George D. (ed.). Journal of Discourses. Vol. 3. Liverpool: Orson Pratt. pp. 243–49.
- Young, Brigham (February 8, 1857b). "To Know God is Eternal Life—God the Father of Our Spirits and Bodies—Things Created Spiritually First—Atonement by the Shedding of Blood". In Watt, George D. (ed.). Journal of Discourses. Vol. 4. Liverpool: Samuel W. Richards. pp. 215–21.
Further reading
- Bringhurst, Newell G. The Mountain Meadows Massacre: A Bibliographic Perspective. Signature Books.
- Burns, Kathleen T. United States Office of Indian Affairs papers relating to charges against Jacob Forney, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Utah Territory, ID: WA MSS S-2561. New Haven, Connecticut: Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale University.
External links
- Mountain Meadows Association
- Mountain Meadows Monument Foundation
- PBS Frontline documentary: The Mormons, Part One, episodes 8 & 9: Mountain Meadows.
Mountain Meadows Massacre | |
---|---|
Precursors | |
Articles about the Mountain Meadows massacre | |
Other related articles | |
Books | |
Films |
Properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Utah by county | |||
---|---|---|---|
U.S. National Register of Historic Places | |
---|---|
Topics | |
Lists by state |
|
Lists by insular areas | |
Lists by associated state | |
Other areas | |
Related | |
- Mountain Meadows Massacre
- 1857 murders in the United States
- 1857 in Utah Territory
- Massacres in 1857
- Battles involving Native Americans
- Crimes in Utah
- Criticism of Mormonism
- Deaths by firearm in Utah
- Mormonism and Native Americans
- Mormon pioneers
- Child murder in the United States
- Nauvoo Legion
- Utah War
- Massacres committed by Latter Day Saints
- Christian terrorist incidents in the United States
- Terrorist incidents in the United States in 1857