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Factors in the Destruction of the Mormon Press in Missouri, 1833
Utah Historical Quarterly
Vol. 35, 1967, No. 1
Factors in the Destruction of the Mormon Press in Missouri, 1833
BY WARREN A. JENNINGS
0 n July 20, 1833, a throng of western Missourians, acting in premeditated concert, demolished the Mormon printing establishment in Independence, Missouri. Two formally endorsed documents were released to the world in an effort to exonerate those who had participated in this affray. Both statements declared that, among other factors, the Mormon attitude and conduct in relation to the Negro — both bond and free — justified such stringent action. But was this an authentic reason or an adroit rationalization?
On August 2, 1831, Joseph Smith, the Mormon prophet, dedicated and consecrated Jackson County, Missouri, as the Land of Zion and as a gathering place for the Mormons. He then returned to Kirtland, Ohio, where in September a church conference was held. At this time the matter of a church newspaper was discussed. The Mormons were beginning to receive unfavorable coverage in the national press, and they wanted a paper of their own to counteract this invective. A paper would also serve as a means of keeping in contact with the membership which was expanding geographically as well as numerically. It was resolved, therefore, that William Wines Phelps, who had been editor of a partisan political paper in New York and who was a recent convert to Mormonism, should become editor of a church paper to be called the Evening and Morning Star. Phelps was instructed to stop at Cincinnati upon his return to Missouri and purchase a press and type. Soon thereafter this directive was carried out.
To house the printing plant Edward Partridge, the first Mormon bishop, acquired a two-story brick house which was located on South Liberty Street in Independence. In the upper rooms of this structure the press was installed, and the Phelps family moved into the lower part of the house. Oliver Cowdery, the scribe to whom Smith had dictated much of the Book of Mormon, was appointed assistant editor.The prospectus of the new paper informed the potential subscriber:
The monthly, royal quarto in size, had a subscription price of $1.00 per year.
In June 1832 the first number was issued. It contained the following notation: "The Star office is situated within twelve miles of the west line of the state of Missouri; which at present is the western limits of the United States, . . . and about 120 miles west of any press in the state." Portentously, it carried an essay by Phelps on "Persecution." Another article, by the same author, was entitled "To Man" and informed its readers: "The Star comes in these last days as the friend of man, to persuade him to turn to God and live, before the great and terrible day of the Lord sweeps the earth of its wickedness." This issue, like those that followed, had some theological essays.
The Star throughout its brief existence contained little general news that would be of interest to the Gentiles. What there was could usually be found under a heading of "Worldly Matters." There were some articles on self-improvement topics such as "Writing Letters," "On the Government of Thoughts," and "Cultivate the Mind." There were also some reasonably well-written original poems, mostly composed by the editor. Some of these, like "Redeemer of Israel," were set to music and became favorite Mormon hymns. Still others vividly expressed Mormon fears and expectations:
Or:
The news that was reported in the paper tended to be concerned with the catastrophic, natural or man-made, as if to emphasize that the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse were riding hard. Every earthquake, every great storm, every plague, and every fire were recorded with care. At the end of such an item there would often be found an editorial comment to the effect: "It is a day of strange appearances. . . . The end is nigh." One student of Mormon journalism has observed:
This was a doubly dangerous policy because the non-Mormon in Jackson County had only two choices: he could read the Star or he could go without a paper. Many, of course, chose to read it and were unhappy with its contents. Young Alexander Majors, a Gentile, recalled that the Star's material "was very distasteful to members and leaders of other religious denominations."
The press was too valuable a possession, moreover, to limit its use to the printing of a monthly newspaper. The church was in need of new publications if it were going to inform and educate its growing body of adherents. The first, almost imperative, need was to get Smith's revelations into the hands of the membership, especially the priesthood. Since these manifestations contained an important segment of the doctrine of the church, it was urgent that they be made accessible. Some were published from time to time in the Star, but this was, at best, a temporary expedient. At a church conference in Hiram, Ohio, on November 1, 1831, it was determined that the prophet would correct and prepare his revelations for publication in book form under the title of Book of Commandments. The care of the manuscript was entrusted to Oliver Cowdery and John Whitmer, who personally carried it to Missouri since it was felt that the mail was too uncertain.
Smith, Sidney Rigdon, and several other Mormon leaders returned to Independence on April 24, 1832, bringing with them newsprint they had purchased in Wheeling, Virginia. At a conference held in Zion under their supervision, it was voted that 3,000 copies of the Book of Commandments should be printed and that Phelps, Cowdery, and John Whitmer should "review and prepare such revelations as shall be deemed proper for publication." It was also directed that Phelps should correct and print the hymns which had been selected by Emma Smith, the wife of the prophet, in accordance with an earlier revelation. It was further decided that a store should be set up under the direction of Algernon S. Gilbert. This became known among the Mormons as the "storehouse."
Almost from the first it was there, a low, dark cloud rising on the horizon. Hardly visible in the beginning, it became more and more apparent that a storm was coming, threatening to engulf the religious-communitarians in their western paradise. Friction between Gentile and Mormon continually increased. Emily Austin, a young Mormon settler, recalled:
As the Mormons grew in numbers, so did the hostility. The Mormons later asserted in a memorial to the Missouri Legislature that "soon after the settlement began, persecution began, and as the society increased persecution also increased." Josiah Gregg, the famous Santa Fe trader who resided in Independence, stated:
The rapid influx of Mormon disciples (they eventually numbered 1,200) alarmed the Jackson Countians. John Corrill, who was to leave the church in 1838, wrote:
Overt acts against the Mormons began to be committed "and the uneasy, restless spirit of the people would occasionally manifest itself. ,: "
It should be noted that one of the irritants that produced friction originated in a misconception, first on the part of the Mormons themselves, and next on the part of their opponents. The Mormons had a problem : how were they to gain possession of Jackson County? They could not purchase it. They were too poor. But they believed it to be essential that only Saints reside in the New Jerusalem and that no Gentiles be found within its walls. In a revelation given on his first trip to Missouri, Smith had told his followers:
What had the prophet meant by this? Clearly this perturbed some of the Mormons because this theme was elaborated upon further in another revelation given in Kirtland a short time later:
Though it is apparent that Smith at no time contemplated taking Jackson County by force, some of his more fanatical adherents (they were laboring under a millennial excitement) undoubtedly conceived the idea that strength might be employed. At least they taunted their neighbors along this line. Evidence for such an assertion is found in an article in the Star in that fateful issue of July 1833.
Aside from this article, however, the editors of the Star did little to correct the erroneous opinions of their readers. One issue — that of June 1833 — carried the observation that "the time is short for the Gentiles."
In March 1832 the first concerted action by the Missourians was taken to rid Jackson County of what one later termed "this tribe of locusts that... threaten [ed] to scorch and wither the herbage of a fair and goodly portion of Missouri." John Whitmer, church historian by divine decree, recorded that "the enemies held a council in Independence ... [as to] how they might destroy the Saints." It appears that General Marston G. Clark, a subagent for the Indians in the area west of Missouri, on hearing of this council rode in from his agency a day or two before the meeting and let "certain influential mob characters" know that no unlawful action would be tolerated. That same spring some persons, "in the deadly hours of the night, commenced stoning or brick-batting some of the [Mormons'] houses." In the fall "some one, burned a large quantity of hay in the stack; and soon after commenced shooting into some of [the] houses, and at many times insult [ed] with abusive language." Cowdery later commented on this conduct of the Missourians:
Ordinarily one would tend to discount such a statement as the product of a paranoid personality. However, considering the organized manner in which anti-Mormon activity was coordinated and carried out, this charge by Cowdery appears to be true. In this connection John C McCoy, a young Gentile resident, years later asserted:
About this same time a report was spread that the Mormons were persuading the slaves to be disobedient, rebel, or run away from their masters. Samuel D. Lucas, perennial opponent of the Mormons, commented in 1837: "But the Lord waxed wroth with the Mormons [in Jackson County], for they had communed with the men-servants and the maid-servants of the people in whose land they were sojourning, seducing them from the obedience and the duty they owed to those who gave them food andraiment?' A Protestant minister noted that "threats were occasionally made to throw down houses, &c; their printing office, and their store house in Independence were considered most in danger, but the Mormons were not much intimidated." This type of activity ceased with the onset of winter.
On April 6, 1833, the church members met together at the ferry one of them owned on the Big Blue River to celebrate the birthday of the church. Newel Knight observed: "This was the first celebration of thekind and the Saints felt their privilege and enjoyed themselves." It was a day many of the participants were to remember with nostalgia, as occasions for celebration were to be few thereafter. Spring had come to Jackson County with its usual burst of splendor. The woods were aglow with redbud; the prairies were "covered with a profusion of pale pink flowers, rearing their delicate stalks among the rough blades of wild grass." Elias Higbee, who had moved with his family from Cincinnati in March 1833, later sent an address to the Congress of the United States. He stated:
From the festivities the Mormons went back to hauling rails and planting crops — crops they would never harvest.
Before the month ended there were renewed evidences of hostility. A group of over 300 Missourians assembled in Independence "to consult upon a plan, for the removal, or immediate destruction, of the church in Jackson County." 32 They spent "the day in a fruitless endeavor, to unite upon a general scheme for 'moving the Mormons out of their diggins.' " 33 Joseph Smith, and others, later claimed that so much confusion was generated by several "knock-downs" after the participants had partaken of a plentiful supply of whiskey that this meeting "broke up in a regular Missouri 'row.' " 34 In June Phelps took notice of the malevolence. He chided the Missourians that "no coffins filled with arms and ammunition have arrived here since the gathering commenced."
The element that seeded the gathering clouds and unleashed the fury of the storm upon the Mormons was an item in the July 1833 issue of the Star entitled, "Free People of Color." What prompted Phelps to print such an article is something of an enigma. It has been asserted that soon after the Mormons had begun settlement in Missouri they had sent missionaries into the border slave states and that "among their early converts were a number of free Negroes, whom they invited to join them in Zion." These missionaries, purportedly, were embarrassed to find that a Missouri statute forbade these social outcasts to move into the state without a certificate of citizenship from some other state. However, the evidence to support the contention that any free Negroes at this time had joined the church is slight. Parley P. Pratt subsequently claimed: "In fact one dozen free negroes or mulattoes never have belonged to our Society in any part of the world, from its first organization to this day, 1839." Perhaps some free Negroes had indicated an interest in removing to Zion. Certainly there would have been no objections on the part of the majority of the Mormons to their doing so; the Mormons were committed to an acceptance into Zion of all peoples. Their revelations told them:
Phelps stated in the aforementioned article that his desire was "to prevent any misunderstanding among the churches abroad, respecting free people of color, who may think of coming to the western boundaries of Missouri, as members of the church." He proceeded then to quote two sections from the laws of Missouri. The first stipulated that any free Negro or mulatto moving into the state had to have with him a certificate "attested by the seal of some court of record in some one of the United States, evidencing that he is a citizen of such state." Failure to produce this certificate upon demand would lead to his expulsion from the state within 30 days or confinement to a common jail to await trial. The second section provided that any person bringing a free Negro or mulatto into Missouri without such a certificate could be fined $500.00. Phelps then editorialized:
In another part of the same issue Phelps noted:
The reaction of the Missourians to this issue of the Star was prompt and vigorous. Being apprised of their adverse response, Phelps dashed off an Extra on July 16. In the form of a handbill this was distributed as rapidly as possible. The full text read as follows.
Phelps certainly did not have the authority to commit the church to such a position in regard to Negroes. He probably felt, however, that he was forced to extraordinary measures in order to deal with an extraordinary situation. But, the Extra had no discernible effect. The smoldering malignity of the Missourians had been fanned to a white heat. Some explanation of their attitude on the subject of the free Negro, therefore, is necessary.
As early as 1820 the sentiment of the people of Missouri toward the free Negro was decidedly hostile. This is seen in Article III of the first constitution of Missouri which was adopted that year. It was designed to prevent free Negroes and mulattoes from settling in or even coming into the state under any pretext. This animosity was not due to their largenumbers; there were only 347 in the state at that time. It was predicated upon the fear that they would increase rapidly by immigration. Some Missourians felt that their mere presence in a community where slavery existed was apt to make slaves dissatisfied with their condition. Free Negroes, therefore, were held in suspicion and contempt even where few in number.
This clause in the constitution had precipitated the second debate over the admission of Missouri into the Union. After a compromise worked out by Henry Clay was accepted by Congress, Missouri became a state with this clause still a part of her constitution. "Subsequent legislationregarding the free negro showed how she interpreted her rights under it." In the next 10 years Missouri's population more than doubled, but the United States census of 1830 disclosed that there were only 569 free Negroes in the state. In Jackson County there was a total of 5,071 inhabitants in 1832 — 360 of these being slaves, but there were no free people of color. The census of 1830 had revealed that there were 62 slave holders in the county. The largest was William Hudspeth, who had 25 slaves; the next was Roland Flourney with only 8.
Typical, perhaps, of the attitude of the Jackson Countian toward free Negroes is that of James Aull, a trader of considerable prominence in western Missouri, with stores in Independence, Lexington, Liberty, and Richmond. He wrote a letter in 1835 to a Quaker firm in Philadelphia which had refused to trade with any business that owned or dealt in slaves. Aull noted:
Phelps's articles in the Star had precipitated a crisis. The Missourians "arose in their fury." A set of propositions, known as the "Secret Constitution," was covertly circulated in the county for signatures. Whitmer recorded that the citizens signed this document on July 15, the day before the Extra was issued. 48 Among the nearly 80 signatures appended to it were those of most of the county officials including Samuel Owens, county clerk, who also managed for Aull a general merchandise store on the southwest corner of the square opposite the Mormons' "storehouse," and Samuel D. Lucas, a judge of the county court, who was later a general of the Missouri militia which drove the Mormons from the state in 1838-39. The "Secret Constitution" was a lawyer's brief. Russel Hicks, an attorney and deputy county clerk, later admitted that he was the author. It is one of two lengthy documents that the Jackson Countians released to the public in an effort to justify their subsequent conduct. For this reason, one must be careful in accepting as truth all that it contains. But it comes as near as anything available to being a definitive statement of the Missourians' point of view. Among the catalogue of charges was the following.
July 20, 1833, was hot under sunny skies. Out on the prairies "flowers of red, yellow, purple and crimson, were scattered in profusion among the grass, sometimes growing singly, and at others spreading out in beds of several acres in extent." In Independence there was none of the usual Saturday activity in a farming community. A strange quiet prevailed when, unexpectedly -— "to the surprise and terror of the Mormons," there gathered suddenly in the town "between four and five hundred persons." One Protestant minister proudly reported that "they assembled . . . according to appointment without noise or riot, or drunkenness, but with a deliberate purpose." This meeting, one of the participants later recalled, convened at the new, brick courthouse "to devise some means to put a stop to [the Mormons'] seditious boasts as to what they proposed to do." In democratic fashion — this was the Jacksonian era -— the meeting was called to order and a chairman was chosen. A committee composed of Russel Hicks, Thomas Hudspeth, and five others was appointed to draft a set of resolutions. These resolutions were passed by the assembly and constitute the second document which the Missourians released to the general public. In part it read as follows.
The resolutions required the Mormons to cease publication of the Star, to stop immigrating into the county, and to agree that those already residing therein would remove "within a reasonable time."
A committee of 13 was delegated to call upon the Mormon leaders to ascertain their response to these proposals. They approached Phelps, Partridge, Gilbert, John Whitmer, Corrill, and Isaac Morley. The citizens' committee demanded to know, "Will you leave the County or not?" It also required of the Mormons that they "shut up [the] printing office store, mechanical shops &c. immediately." "The message was so terrible, so unexpected, the 'saints' asked time for deliberation, for consultation." The elders, one of them remembered, "asked for three months, for consideration — They would not grant it — We asked for ten days — They would not grant it but said fifteen minutes was the longest, and refused to hear any reasons."
When the Mormons then declined to comply with the proposals, the conversation was broken off immediately. The committee quickly returned to the assembly which had been waiting for almost two hours. The citizens were informed that the Mormon leaders refused "giving any direct answer, to the requisitions made of them, and wished an unreasonable time for consultation, not only with the brethren here, but the prophet in Ohio." When this answer was given to those at the courthouse, they unanimously "voted to raze the printing [office] to the ground."
The printing establishment was assailed by a group of men under the leadership of Gan Johnson and John King, who "knocked the door in." "Mrs. Phelps, with a sick infant child and the rest of her children, together with the furniture in the house, were thrown out doors." "The press was thrown from the upper story, and the apparatus, book work, paper, type, &c, scattered through the streets." The press was broken by the fall and lay in the street until the following February. The type was scattered "there in the street for years," a plaything for little boys. The roof was pulled off and the walls razed. There were approximately 100 men employed at this task and in an hour the project was finished. The destruction of the printing office brought a permanent end to the publication of the Book of Commandments', the last verses which had been set in type read:
The Star was transferred to Kirtland, Ohio, for publication where Oliver Cowdery assumed the editorship. The remaining 10 issues of the second volume were published and then a new paper, the Messenger and Advocate, was launched.
After demolishing the printing establishment, the Jackson Countians turned their attention to the storehouse. It was broken into and some of the goods tossed into the street. Men took the bolts of cloth by the end and ran off with them until they were unwound. "The streets were almost covered with these pieces of cloth that were unrolled in that manner, and other goods scattered around." Gilbert finally persuaded them to cease this destruction and promised that he would pack the goods and close the store by the following Tuesday. Robert Rathbun's blacksmith shop was also raided and his tools strewn in the street.
While this was taking place, some of the Jackson Countians under the leadership of George Simpson took Partridge and Charles Allen to the public square. There, in the presence of a numerous crowd, they were partially stripped and smeared with a quantity of tar from head to foot. This first coat was followed by a second of feathers.
It was now late in the day, and no doubt many were tired from the strenuous activity under a July sun. It was formally proposed that the citizens adjourn until the 23rd, at which time they would reconvene to determine whether or not Gilbert had carried out his promise. The motion passed and the weary citizens departed for their homes.
Where was that traditional western guardian of justice, the sheriff, while these events were taking place? Arrangements had been made in advance to remove him from the scene of action. Whether this was done in concert with the official himself, or whether it came as a complete surprise to him probably will remain unknown. Sheriff Jacob Gregg was to testify 60 years later:
On July 23 the citizens congregated again in Independence and this time extorted a pledge from the Mormon leaders that they and all their followers would be out of the county by April 1, 1834. Before then, however, a new eruption of violence occurred, even more severe than the first, and the Mormons were forcibly expelled from the county in November 1833.
Any student seeking the causes of conflict between Mormon and Missourian in Jackson County in 1833 soon comes to realize that these were manifold. Considering the number of persons involved — each with his own motive — this was inevitable. But clearly a primary cause was the relationship of the Mormons to a group the Missourians held in contempt, the Negro — free and slave. It has already been shown how "free people of color" played a part in this tragic affair. But what role did slavery play? One historian has stated that "the unpardonable sin of the Mormons in Jackson County was opposition to slavery." Samuel D. Lucas alleged in 1837 that the eviction of the Mormons, "although a strong and violent [measure], was fully justified, and indispensable, in consequence of the impertinent and mischievous interference of the Mormons with the slaves in the county." However, the difficulty with a ready acceptance of this as an explanation is that there is no concrete evidence that the Mormons ever incited, conspired, or tampered with the slaves. Thomas Pitcher, who was court-martialed by the state in 1834 for his conduct as commander of the Jackson County militia when the Mormons were expelled from the county, admitted years later that the Mormons "did not interfere with the negroes." Certainly there would have been evidence if they had done so. The "black codes" which regulated the institution of slavery would have been used against them. Alexander Majors remembered :
Certainly none of the surviving documentary material written prior to the troubles in July makes reference to Mormon involvement with the slaves. While this type of material is scarce, the absence of any such references therein is significant. This is not to contend, however, that none of the Jackson Countians believed the accusation. Unquestionably some had been convinced — or had convinced themselves — that it was true.
It should be noted that those who took the leadership in arousing opposition to the Mormons could not have found a more effective dart than antislavery activity to hurl at their opponents, one more calculated to wound fatally. Nat Turner's rebellion, the most sanguinary slave uprising in American history, had occurred in Virginia only two summers previously. An almost irrational fear of slave revolts had swept over the areas of slavery, a fear that had not completely subsided by July 1833. It is true (as Cowdery claimed) that there were only a small number of slaves in Jackson County, but fear has never been predicated solely upon numbers. On no occasion did the Mormon leaders appear to have contemplated using the slaves against the Missourians, though some fanatics may have talked of it. These charges were most likely a shibboleth, used by the instigators of the violence to win the support of the ignorant within the county and to secure favor with public opinion elsewhere.
An evaluation of the testimony and an analysis of the facts, therefore, lead one to the conclusion that the Mormons did not constitute a "clear and present danger" to slavery in Jackson County in 1833. However, they probably did represent a potential threat. The distinction may be a fine one, but it is, nevertheless, an important one. The majority of the Mormons definitely "had some sentiments that were antislavery," and a few were foolish enough to let these sentiments be known. Alexander W. Doniphan, western lawyer and military leader, recalled:
David Whitmer, a Mormon resident of the county, agreed:
Most of the Mormons in the early years of the- church were from the same stock and from those same areas which supplied the abolition movement with its drive and many of its adherents. The Jackson Countians, in turn, "were of the same class, and in some cases the same families, who were to participate in the bloody raids against Kansas." It is probable that the pro-slavery element in Jackson County felt that extensive immigration from the North and East — such as that of the Mormons — might eventually carry the day for abolition in Missouri.
But in a sense, the truth or falsity of the allegations does not matter. "Whether real or alleged, activity relative to slavery on the part of the Mormons was used by the western Missouri people during the thirties as a campaign slogan, and the issue must therefore have been vital and important." In 1836 Missouri Governor Daniel Dunklin, who at first had been sympathetic toward the Mormons, wrote Phelps:
The consequences were certainly the same that July day in Independence when the printing establishment was razed to the ground.
WILLIAM WINES PHELPS
William W. Phelps, editor of the Evening and Morning Star, had a checkered career as a Mormon, being twice excommunicated and twice reinstated. Born February 17, 1792, he was baptized in 1831, after a special revelation to Joseph Smith. In 1838 Phelps was excommunicated from the Mormon Church, but by 1841 the differences were resolved, and Phelps was reinstated.
In Nauvoo Phelps became a member of the city council and Council of Fifty, and following the death of Joseph Smith supported Brigham Young. He came to Utah in 1848 in Brigham Young's company and became very active in public affairs. Phelps accompanied Parley P. Pratt in his explorations of southern Utah. He served as a justice of the peace, a notary public, and.a legislator — for a time he was a senator in the State of Deseret. He died in Salt Lake City, March 7, 1872.
Phelps will be remembered as the writer of many Mormon songs and hymns, 19 of which are still in the Hymns, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Salt Lake City, 1961).
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