Criticism of Mormonism/Books/American Massacre/Chapter 10

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Response to claims made in Chapter 10: "Mountain Meadows, September 7-11, 1857"


A work by author: Sally Denton

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Response to claim: 129 - Will Bagley claimed that Mountain Meadows was known among the Mormons as "a preferred location for the quiet execution of unpleasant tasks"

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

Will Bagley claimed that Mountain Meadows was known among the Mormons as "a preferred location for the quiet execution of unpleasant tasks."

Author's sources: * Will Bagley, Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows (University of Oklahoma Press, 2002), 121.
  • Compare treatment in Blood of the Prophets: p. 121.

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: This claim contains propaganda - The author, or the author's source, is providing information or ideas in a slanted way in order to instill a particular attitude or response in the reader

  •  Quotes another author's opinion as if it were fact
  • Bagley's errors, negative reviews, and bias are discussed on the page dedicated to his book. It becomes obvious that the author of this work simply relies on Bagley's interpretation, and provides no independent evaluation of the evidence.


Response to claim: 131 - The author claims that "numerous apostates" were traveling with the Fancher Train by the time it reached Mountain Meadows

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

The author claims that "numerous apostates" were traveling with the Fancher Train by the time it reached Mountain Meadows.

Author's sources: *No source provided.

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: This claim contains propaganda - The author, or the author's source, is providing information or ideas in a slanted way in order to instill a particular attitude or response in the reader

This claim is repeated frequently until the source is revealed later. See below.


Response to claim: 133- The author claims that William Bateman, who had weeks earlier been "threatened with excommunication for apostasy," was given a chance to redeem himself by "carrying out church orders at Mountain Meadows"

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

The author claims that William Bateman, who had weeks earlier been "threatened with excommunication for apostasy," was given a chance to redeem himself by "carrying out church orders at Mountain Meadows." According to "Prophet Heber Kimball," Bateman was placed "in the front ranks" to be put "to the test."

Author's sources: *Heber C. Kimball, Journal of Discourses 4:375.

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: This claim is false

The author is making a huge assumption here. Heber says,

Some who have been apostates for years past are beginning to come back to us; and, inasmuch as they did not stand and be valiant for the truth, we are now going to place them in the front ranks, and put them to the test.

This has nothing to do with William Bateman, and nothing to do with Mountain Meadows.


Response to claim: 135 -"The recommendation of the many apostates in the camp would never be known, or whether they considered their fellow Mormons capable of such cold-blooded treachery"

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

 Author's quote: The recommendation of the many apostates in the camp would never be known, or whether they considered their fellow Mormons capable of such cold-blooded treachery.

Author's sources: *No source provided.

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: This claim contains propaganda - The author, or the author's source, is providing information or ideas in a slanted way in order to instill a particular attitude or response in the reader

The author again mentions the numerous "apostates" that she believes were part of the Fancher party, yet she provides no evidence of this.


Response to claim: 136a - The author claims that Joseph Smith "had his first vision in 1820" and then three years later reported that he was "surrounded by 'a pillar of light' during a visitation from the angel Moroni"==

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

(Photo caption) The author claims that Joseph Smith "had his first vision in 1820" and then three years later reported that he was "surrounded by 'a pillar of light' during a visitation from the angel Moroni."

Author's sources: *No source provided (unsurprisingly).

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: This claim is false

The author appears to have never even studied any of the sources that she used. Any Latter-day Saint knows that the "pillar of light" is associated with Joseph's First Vision.


Response to claim: 136b - The author claims that Brigham Young called his enemies "Christians" and that the Latter-day Saints left Nauvoo, Illinois because they "had been unable to live in peace with their neighbors"

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

(Photo caption) The author claims that Brigham Young called his enemies "Christians" and that the Latter-day Saints left Nauvoo, Illinois because they "had been unable to live in peace with their neighbors."

Author's sources: * No source provided.

FAIR's Response

Response to claim: 136g - Did Brigham order the rock cairn memorial at the scene of the massacre dismantled?==

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

(Photo caption) Did Brigham order the rock cairn memorial at the scene of the massacre dismantled?

Author's sources: * No source provided

FAIR's Response

Response to claim: 137 - The author claims that the "Mormon apostate refugees" were "blood atoned"==

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

The author claims that the "Mormon apostate refugees" were "blood atoned."

Author's sources: *Anna Jean Backus, Mountain Meadows Witness: The Life and Times of Bishop Philip Klingensmith (Arthur H. Clark Co, 1996), 136.

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: The author has stated erroneous information or misinterpreted their sources

The author finally provides a source for her comments about "Mormon apostates" being part of the Fancher party.
  • Backus' book was noted by at least two reviews to suffer from a key flaw. As one review put it, the
survivor recollections used as source material is a serious flaw in the book. Sarah Baker [one witness] was 3 when the massacre claimed her parents. Trial testimony showed that participants in the crime had been ordered never to speak of it, even among themselves. Surviving children were parceled out to Mormon families. The two Baker girls went to John D. Lee's home. What opportunity was there to learn anything of the massacre?
Baker's own statement that her information came from reading and from discussion with contemporaries only confirms that she had no special knowledge. One would expect a child to be traumatized by the massacre and incapable of adequately understanding what was happening around her. [1]
  • Reports of apostates joining the wagon train did not appear until many years after the Massacre. [2] For the author to be persuasive on this point, more information (e.g., identity of the supposed murdered apostates) is needed.


Response to claim: 141 - "Neither that tally nor any later count would include the Mormon "backouts" murdered that day"==

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

 Author's quote: Neither that tally nor any later count would include the Mormon "backouts" murdered that day.

Author's sources: * No source provided  [ATTENTION!]?

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: This claim is false

Yet another reference to Mormon "apostates" being part of the Fancher party, which is based on dubious evidence. Since no later counts (even those made by those hostile to the Church) mention the supposed apostates, this is probably good evidence that such apostate victims never existed.


Response to claim: 141 - John D. Lee claimed that Brigham Young advised them to claim that the massacre was performed by Indians alone==

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

John D. Lee claimed that Brigham Young advised them to claim that the massacre was performed by Indians alone.

Author's sources: *Lee, 251.

FAIR's Response

{{misinformation|It is unsurprising that Lee, one of the ringleaders, would wish to blame the murders or cover-up on his ecclesiastical superiors.

Response to claim: 142 - The "scheme to blame the atrocity on the Indians" is claimed to have been conceived and crafted "with the characteristic meticulousness for which Brigham Young was famous"==

The author(s) of American Massacre make(s) the following claim:

The "scheme to blame the atrocity on the Indians" is claimed to have been conceived and crafted "with the characteristic meticulousness for which Brigham Young was famous."

Author's sources: *Author's opinion.

FAIR's Response

Fact checking results: The author has stated erroneous information or misinterpreted their sources

Leaders in southern Utah were already planning to blame the Massacre on Indians before Brigham Young had even heard of it. After an initial skirmish with the party, one of the immigrants was killed and another wounded. "A witness of white involvement had now shared the news within the emigrant corral. If the surviving emigrants were freed and continued on to California, word would quickly spread that Mormons had been involved in the attack....Despite plans to pin the massacre on the Paiutes—and persistent subsequent efforts to do so—Nephi Johnson later maintained that his fellow militiamen did most of the killing." [3]
  • Jacob Hamblin testified that he told Brigham the facts soon after the massacre. Hamblin reported that Brigham said that "as soon as we can get a court of justice, we will ferret this thing out, but till then don't say anything about it." Hamblin said that Lee's trial was "the first time I ever felt that any good would come of it [telling the story]. I kept it to myself until it was called for in the proper place." [4]


Notes

  1. Harold Schindler, "'Mountain Meadows' Account Lacks Substantiation (review of Mountain Meadows Witness: The Life and Times of Bishop Philip Klingensmith by Anna Jean Backus)," Salt Lake Tribune (17 March 1996). See similar remarks in Lawrence Coates, "review of Anna Jean Backus "Mountain Meadows Witness: The Life and Times of Bishop Philip Klingensmith," Brigham Young University Studies 36 no. 4 (1996–97), 225–. off-site
  2. Turley, Walker and Leonard, Massacre at Mountain Meadows, 109-110.
  3. Richard E. Turley Jr., "The Mountain Meadows Massacre," Ensign (September 2007): 14.off-site
  4. Jacob Hamblin, (September 1876), "Testimony of Jacob Hamblin" off-site