Difference between revisions of "Criticism of Mormonism/Books/American Massacre/Chapter 14"

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*No source is provided for any of the lengthy quoted comments on page 233.
 
*No source is provided for any of the lengthy quoted comments on page 233.
 
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==Endnotes==
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#{{note|modern.jack}} The modern usage of "jack mormon" can be seen in the user-edited [http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=jack%20mormon Urban Dictionary] (accessed 17 June 2009).  See also Pat Bagley, "'Jack Mormon' once meant something else" ''Salt Lake Tribune'' (13 January 2008): B4.
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#{{note|sharp.1}} See {{CHC1|vol=2|start=332 note}} Thomas Sharp (hostile editor of the ''Warsaw Signal'') is the first known to have used the term in print (see ''Illinois State Register'' [1 Nov 1844]; reprinted in ''Nauvoo Neighbor'' [13 Nov 1844].)
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#{{note|versus.brigham}} {{FR-16-1-9}} <!--Crockett on Bagley-->

Revision as of 19:29, 19 June 2009


A FAIR Analysis of:
Criticism of Mormonism/Books
A work by author: Sally Denton

Claims made in Chapter 14: "Mountain Meadows, March 23, 1877"

Page Claim Response Author's sources

222

  • The author claims that a "Jack Mormon" is one "who is not devout but not apostate."
  •  History unclear or in error: Denton's sloppy research appears again. In modern usage, a "Jack Mormon" may sometimes refer to a less-active or less-observant Latter-day Saint.[1]
  • In the nineteenth century, however, a "Jack Mormon" was a non-Mormon who was nevertheless sympathetic or friendly to Mormons.[2]
  • No source given.

224

  • The "Mormon euphemism for blood-atoning murders" was to be "put away."
  • Klingensmith testimony, Brooks, Mountain Meadows Witness, 191.
  • Lee, 339
  • Fielding, Tribune Reports, 109.

227

  • John D. Lee denied that Brigham Young ordered the massacre because he believed that Brigham "would protect him from harm."
  •  Mind reading: author has no way of knowing this.
  • Lee had the chance for immunity if he would turn evidence against Brigham: "both Orson F. Whitney and the New York Herald reported that Howard offered Lee a full pardon in exchange for evidence against Brigham Young."[3] That he never did so strongly suggests he had no such evidence.
  • Author's opinion.

228

  •  Author's quote: Young fully realized that the Mountain Meadows Massacre would continue to plague him until someone was held accountable for the crime. In a calculated and mutually beneficial deal, Young and Howard came to terms. Young would make available all witnesses and evidence necessary for a conviction of Lee. In exchange, Howard would limit the testimony implicating Young, George Smith, and other church leaders in the affair, and drop charges against Dame. It was an extraordinary quid pro quo that neither side apparently committed to writing.

230

  • John D. Lee chose to be shot rather than beheaded as "a clear signal to the faithful that he rejected a spiritual need to atone for any sins."
  • No source provided.

233

  • Before he is executed, Lee makes a statement against Brigham Young, saying that "I do not agree with him. I believe he is leading the people astray..."
  •  Internal contradiction: This quotation argues against the posthumous claims made in Lee's "confession," upon which Denton bases her case. If Lee was about to be executed, why would he only claim Brigham was leading the people astray—why would he write an expose of Brigham's complicity in the Massacre, and then not announce at his execution (or before) that Brigham was guilty of ordering the murders?
  • No source is provided for any of the lengthy quoted comments on page 233.

Endnotes

  1. [note]  The modern usage of "jack mormon" can be seen in the user-edited Urban Dictionary (accessed 17 June 2009). See also Pat Bagley, "'Jack Mormon' once meant something else" Salt Lake Tribune (13 January 2008): B4.
  2. [note]  See Brigham H. Roberts, Comprehensive History of the Church (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press, 1965), 2:332 note. GospeLink Thomas Sharp (hostile editor of the Warsaw Signal) is the first known to have used the term in print (see Illinois State Register [1 Nov 1844]; reprinted in Nauvoo Neighbor [13 Nov 1844].)
  3. [note]  Robert D. Crockett, "The Denton Debacle (Review of: American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows, September 1857)," FARMS Review 16/1 (2004): 135–148. off-site