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− | ===Claims made in Chapter 13: "Mountain Meadows, May 25, 1861"=== | + | ===Claims made in Chapter 14: "Mountain Meadows, May 25, 1861"=== |
| {{BeginClaimsTable}} | | {{BeginClaimsTable}} |
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Page
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Claim
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Response
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Author's sources
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209
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- Brigham's trip south in May 1861 was "to insure the southern Utahns understood the need for silence on the subject of Mountain Meadows."
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|
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210
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- Brigham is said to have ordered the cross and cairn at Mountain Meadows torn down.
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- Wilford Woodruff journal, May 25, 1861.
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213
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- The "Godbeites" were "demanding disclosure" about the massacre.
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- The author references a series of anonymous letters written under the pseudonym "Argus" that were published in the Utah Reporter between 1870 and 1871.
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215
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- The "entire blame of the massacre was shifted to [John D. Lee's] shoulders."
|
- The author's claim is false: This is clearly false. Contemporary government documents show that federal officials continued to "show...efforts by the federal machinery to prosecute others for at least eight years after Lee's trial."[1] If blame rested on Lee alone, this would make no sense.
- Deal with Brigham to blame only Lee?
- Prosecution for Mountain Meadows
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- Brooks, John Doyle Lee, 296.
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215
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- The author claims that Lee was "regaling" his family with "the divinity of [Joseph] Smith and their one true religion."
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|
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216
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- Former bishop Klingensmith is said to have claimed that the militia was "called out for the purpose of committing acts of hostility" against the emigrants, and that they were ordered to "kill all of said company of emigrants except the little children."
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- Bishop Philip Klingensmith
- Denton fails to tell us that the "former bishop" had admitted to participation in the murder, that his testimony was uncorroborated, and that he was deemed to be so unreliable that he was not called during the successful second trial of John D. Lee.
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- "A MORMON MONSTROSITY": New York Herald, September 14, 1872. Philip Klingensmith affidavit, April 10, 1871, printed in T.B.H. Stenhouse, Rocky Mountain Saints: a full and complete history of the Mormons, from the first vision of Joseph Smith to the last courtship of Brigham Young (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1873), 439-442.
- Brooks, Mountain Meadows Massacre, 238-242.
- Backus, Mountain Meadows Witness, 274-277.
- New York Herald, September 14, 1872.
- Compare treatment in Blood of the Prophets: p. 178.
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