Difference between revisions of "Template:Critical sources box:Joseph Smith/Legal issues/Trials/1826 glasslooking trial/Con man/CriticalSources"

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{{Critical sources box
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|name=Joseph Smith/Legal issues/Trials/1826 glasslooking trial/Con man/CriticalSources
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|title=Joseph found guilty of being "a con man"?
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'''Early works that label Joseph a "juggler" or "conjurer"'''
 
'''Early works that label Joseph a "juggler" or "conjurer"'''
 
* {{CriticalWork:Reflector:30 June 1830|pages=xxx}} {{nc}}
 
* {{CriticalWork:Reflector:30 June 1830|pages=xxx}} {{nc}}
 
* Rev. John Shearer, letter of 18 November 1830; reproduced in {{Book:Vogel:EMD|vol=4|pages=92-93}}
 
* Rev. John Shearer, letter of 18 November 1830; reproduced in {{Book:Vogel:EMD|vol=4|pages=92-93}}
 
* {{CriticalWork:Reflector:28 February 1831:Gold Bible 5|pages=??}} {{nc}}
 
* {{CriticalWork:Reflector:28 February 1831:Gold Bible 5|pages=??}} {{nc}}
* {{CriticalWork:Evangelical Magazine and Gospel Advocate:9 April 1831:Mormonites|pages=1}}
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* {{CriticalWork:Evangelical Magazine and Gospel Advocate:9 April 1831:Mormonites|pages=1}}{{an|"Although [Joseph] constantly failed in his pretensions, still he had his dupes who put implicit confidence in all his words....It is reported, and probably true, that he commenced his juggling by stealing and hiding property belonging to his neighbors, and when inquiry was made, he would look in his wone (his gift and power) and tell where it was."}}
 
* {{CriticalWork:Howe:Mormonism Unvailed|pages=16}}
 
* {{CriticalWork:Howe:Mormonism Unvailed|pages=16}}
  
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* {{CriticalWork:Criddle:Sidney Rigdon Creating the Book of Mormon|pages=sec 2., part 6}}
 
* {{CriticalWork:Criddle:Sidney Rigdon Creating the Book of Mormon|pages=sec 2., part 6}}
 
* Dale R. Broadhurst, "Joseph Smith: Nineteenth Century Con Man?" ''sidneyrigdon.com'' (web paper, accessed 12 November 2010).
 
* Dale R. Broadhurst, "Joseph Smith: Nineteenth Century Con Man?" ''sidneyrigdon.com'' (web paper, accessed 12 November 2010).
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[[fr:Joseph Smith/Legal trials/1826 glasslooking trial/Con man/CriticalSources]]
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Latest revision as of 16:13, 20 May 2024

Source(s) of the criticism—Joseph found guilty of being "a con man"?
Critical sources
Early works that label Joseph a "juggler" or "conjurer"
  • “A hungry lean-faced villain,” The Reflector (Palmyra, New York) 3d series, no. 7 (30 June 1830): xxx. off-site [citation needed]
  • Rev. John Shearer, letter of 18 November 1830; reproduced in Dan Vogel (editor), Early Mormon Documents (Salt Lake City, Signature Books, 1996–2003), 5 vols, 4:92-93.
  • “Gold Bible, No. 5,” The Reflector (Palmyra, New York) 2, no. 14 (28 February 1831): ??. off-site [citation needed]
  • A.W.B. [Abraham W. Benton], “Mormonites,” Evangelical Magazine and Gospel Advocate 2/15 (Utica, New York) (9 April 1831): 1.
    "Although [Joseph] constantly failed in his pretensions, still he had his dupes who put implicit confidence in all his words....It is reported, and probably true, that he commenced his juggling by stealing and hiding property belonging to his neighbors, and when inquiry was made, he would look in his wone (his gift and power) and tell where it was."
  • Eber D. Howe, Mormonism Unvailed (Painesville, OH, 1834), 16. (Affidavits examined)

Later works that use the modern terms "con man," "confidence man," or "con game"

  • Harry M. Beardsley, Joseph Smith and His Mormon Empire (Boston, New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1931), 43.
  • Wesley P. Walters, "Joseph Smith's Bainbridge, N.Y., Court Trials," Westminster Theological Journal 36/2 (Winter 1974): 141.
  • Wesley P. Walters, "From Occult to Cult With Joseph Smith, Jr.," Journal of Pastoral Practice 1/2 (Summer 1977): 122.
  • Kenneth H. Winn, Exiles in a Land of Liberty : Mormons in America, 1830–1846 (Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, 1989), 82, see also index. ISBN 0807818291
  • David Persuitte, Joseph Smith and the Origins of The Book of Mormon (2nd edition), (McFarland & Company, October 2000), 37 ( Index of claims )
  • Craig Criddle, "Sidney Rigdon:Creating the Book of Mormon," e-paper, sidneyrigdon.com (originally published 8 October 2005; revised 15 Mar 2009), sec 2., part 6.
  • Dale R. Broadhurst, "Joseph Smith: Nineteenth Century Con Man?" sidneyrigdon.com (web paper, accessed 12 November 2010).