About thirty years ago, while browsing through a collection of
rare books, we encountered a dusty old book with this sensational
title, Brigham's Destroying Angel: Being the Life, Confession, and
Startling Disclosures of the Notorious Bill Hickman, The Danite
Chief of Utah. In this book, Bill Hickman alleged that he had committed
murders by the orders of Brigham Young, the 2nd prophet of the Mormon
Church, and Apostle Orson Hyde.
The appearance of the book was not impressive. It was a rather
cheap looking paperback book which was edited by J. H. Beadle. Since
we did not know whether we could trust either Hickman or Beadle,
we dismissed the book as possibly a work of fiction and felt that
it was not anything we could rely on.
We had, of course, heard of the Mormon doctrine of "blood
atonement" i. e., the teaching that certain sins can
only be atoned for by the shedding of the sinner's own blood. This
doctrine was explained by Brigham Young in a discourse given September
21, 1856:
There are sins that men commit for which they cannot receive
forgiveness in this world, or in that which is to come, and if
they had their eyes open to see their true condition, they would
be perfectly willing to have their blood spilt upon the ground,
that the smoke thereof might ascend to heaven as an offering for
their sins; and the smoking incense would atone for their sins,
whereas, if such is not the case, they will stick to them and
remain upon them in the spirit world. I know, when you hear my
brethren telling about cutting people off from the earth, that
you consider it is strong doctrine, but it is to save them, not
to destroy them.... I know there are transgressors, who if they
knew themselves, and the only condition upon which they can obtain
forgiveness, would beg of their brethren to shed their blood,
that the smoke thereof might ascend to God as an offering to appease
the wrath that is kindled against them, and that the law might
have its course. I will say further; I have had men come to me
and offer their lives to atone for their sins. It is true that
the blood of the Son of God was shed for sins through the fall
and those committed by men, yet men can commit sins which it can
never remit. As it was in ancient days, so it is in our day....
There are sins that can be atoned for by an offering upon an altar,
as in ancient days, and there are sins that the blood of a lamb,
or a calf, or of turtle doves, cannot remit, but they must be
atoned for by the blood of the man. That is the reason why men
talk to you as they do from this stand; they understand the doctrine
and throw out a few words about it. You have been taught that
doctrine, but you do not understand it. Sermon by Brigham Young,
Journal of Discourses, vol. 4, pp. 53-54; also published in the
Mormon newspaper Deseret News, October 1, 1856, p. 235
On another occasion President Brigham Young explained:
Now take a person in this congregation who has knowledge with
regard to being saved... and suppose that he is overtaken in a
gross fault, that he has committed a sin that he knows will deprive
him of that exaltation which he desires, and that he cannot attain
to it without the shedding of blood, and also knows that by having
his blood shed he will atone for that sin, and be saved and exalted
with the Gods, is there a man or woman in this house but what
would say 'shed my blood that I may be saved and exalted with
the Gods?' All mankind love themselves, and let these principles
be known by an individual, and he would be glad to have his blood
shed. That would be loving themselves, even unto an eternal exaltation.
Will you love your brothers and sisters likewise, when they have
committed a sin that cannot be atoned for without the shedding
of their blood? Will you love that man or woman well enough to
shed their blood?... I could refer you to plenty of instances
where men have been righteously slain, in order to atone for their
sins. I have seen scores and hundreds of people for whom there
would have been a chance (in the last resurrection there will
be) if their lives had been taken and their blood spilled on the
ground as a smoking incense to the Almighty, but who are now angels
to the devil... I have known a great many men who left this Church
for whom there is no chance whatever for exaltation, but if their
blood had been spilled, it would have been better for them, the
wickedness and ignorance of the nations forbids this principle's
being in full force, but the time will come when the law of God
will be in full force. This is loving our neighbor as ourselves;
if he needs help, help him; and if he wants salvation and it is
necessary to spill his blood on the earth in order that he may
be saved, spill it. Any of you who understand the principles of
eternity, if you have sinned a sin requiring the shedding of blood,
except the sin unto death, would not be satisfied nor rest until
your blood should be spilled, that you might gain that salvation
you desire. That is the way to love mankind. Deseret News,
Feb. 18, 1857; also reprinted in Journal of Discourses,
vol. 4, pp. 219-20
At the time we first saw Hickman's confessions we had also read
some material concerning the "Danites" a secret
organization which existed during Joseph Smith's lifetime which
was committed to vengeance against the church's enemies. This band
not only targeted the gentiles, but even dealt with dissenters from
the church. David Whitmer, one of the three witnesses to the Book
of Mormon, revealed the following concerning the Danites:
In the spring of 1838, the heads of the church and many of the
members had gone deep into error and blindness.... In June, 1838,
at Far West, Mo., a secret organization was formed, Doctor Avard
being put in as the leader of the band; a certain oath was to
be administered to all the brethren to bind them to support the
heads of the church in everything they should teach. All who refused
to take this oath were considered dissenters from the church,
and certain things were to be done concerning these dissenters,
by Dr. Avards secret band... my persecutions, for trying to show
them their errors, became of such a nature that I had to leave
the Latter Day Saints;... An Address To All Believers In Christ,
by David Whitmer, Richmond, Mo., 1887, pp. 27-28
Mormon apologists were somewhat divided concerning the Danite
band. Some denied that it even existed. Others admitted the existence
of the secret organization but denied that Joseph Smith was connected
with it. Mormon writer William E. Berrett took this position. Although
he wanted his readers to believe that Joseph Smith was in the dark
concerning what was going on, Mr. Berrett freely admitted that "Such
a band as the 'Danites' did exist, as historians affirm;... The
organization had been for the purpose of plundering and murdering
the enemies of the Saints." (The Restored Church, 1956, pp.
197-98)
Joseph Smith himself made some very contradictory statements about
this organization. On one occasion he said that it existed but claimed
that he did not have any knowledge of it at the time (see History
of the Church, vol. 3, pp. 178-182). On another occasion, however,
Joseph Smith passed the whole thing off by saying, "The Danite
system alluded to by Norton never had any existence." (Ibid.,
vol. 6, p. 165)
Fortunately for the cause of truth, some new and important evidence
came to light when H. Michael Marquardt was working on a transcript
of Joseph Smith's early diaries a work which we later published.
In 1838, Joseph Smith had his scribe George W. Robinson keep a diary
which was called "The Scriptory Book of Joseph Smith Jr President
of The Church of Jesus Christ, of Latterday Saints in all the world."
This diary contains a very important entry under the date of July
27, 1838, which has been crossed out. Mr. Marquardt worked very
carefully with this portion of the record and was finally able to
decipher most of the words. He discovered that the entry related
to the Danite band. It not only confirmed the existence of the band
but said it was organized for the purpose of making things right
and cleansing the Church.
The Mormon scholar Scott H. Faulring, who later transcribed Joseph
Smith's diaries, verified that the reference related to the Danites
(see An American Prophet's Record: The Diaries and Journals of Joseph
Smith, p. 198). Unfortunately, neither Marquardt nor Faulring were
allowed access to the original diaries and therefore had to depend
on photocopies and microfilms.
Recently, however, two prominent Mormon scholars, Dean C. Jessee
and David J. Whittaker published a transcription of this highly
significant entry. They also confirmed that the entry relates to
the Danites. Moreover, since they had access to the original diary,
they were able to decipher a number of words that neither Marquardt
nor Faulring could make out. Their transcription of these words,
in fact, seems to suggest that the Danites were going to use physical
force to set things "right":
"...the bretheren or Saints... have come up hither Thus
far, according to the order <Rev?> of the Danites, we have
a company of Danites in these times, to put right physically that
which is not right, and to cleanse the Church of verry great evils,
which hath hitherto existed among us inasmuch as they cannot be
put to right by teachings & persuasyons. This company or a
part of them exhibited on the fourth day of July [illegible word]
They came up to consecrate by companies of tens, commanded by
their captain over ten." (Brigham Young University Studies,
Winter 1988, page 14)
While Jessee and Whittaker do not seem to catch the serious implications
of their transcription, they acknowledge that there was an attempt
to suppress the material in this quotation: "Some of the material
in this citation has been crossed out in pencil in the original
by a latter hand." (Ibid., p. 37, n. 24)
Joseph Smith's "Scriptory Book" agrees with other evidence
about the Danites. For instance, Reed Peck records: "I heard
Avard, on one occasion, say that the Danites were to consecrate
their surplus property, and to come in by tens to do so..."
Joseph Smith's "Scriptory Book" confirms this when it
says that the Danites "come up to consecrate, by companies
of tens..."
While it is extremely interesting that Joseph Smith's own "Scriptory
Book" would contain an entry concerning the Danites, the whole
matter is made even more intriguing by the fact that there has been
an attempt to obliterate the entry. Joseph Smith's History of the
Church relies on the "Scriptory Book" for the entries
of July 26 and 28, but the entry for July 27 i. e., the portion
concerning the Danites has been omitted.
In the Comprehensive History of the Church, vol. 1, pages 500-501,
the Mormon historian B. H. Roberts commented about testimony given
after the war in Missouri:
"It is in this testimony and principally
in the statement of Dr. Avard, that the existence of the 'Danites'
in the 'Mormon' Church is affirmed. Avard declared that about
four months before the date of his testimony... 'a band called
the 'Daughter of Zion' (afterwards called the 'Danite Band') was
formed of the members of the Mormon church, the original object
of which was to drive from the county of Caldwell all those who
dissented from the Mormon church; in which they succeeded admirably
and to the satisfaction of all concerned.' "
We were not aware of the devastating evidence concerning the
Danites found in Joseph Smith's "Scriptory Book" at
the time we first saw Bill Hickman's confessions. While we were
convinced that there was such a group and that "blood atonement"
was actually practiced in early Utah, we were still reluctant
to put a great deal of weight in Hickman's tales. Mormon authors,
of course, dismissed Brigham's Destroying Angel as an example
of the type of trash published by early anti-Mormons. Mormon apologist
Hugh Nibley suggested that Hickman's confessions really came from
the fertile imagination of the editor, J. H. Beadle:
"Nobody had been able to pin anything on
the Mormons until 14 years later, when Bill Hickman came to the
rescue with his thrice-welcome 'confessions'... a long and lurid
catalogue of blood in which every major crime committed in Utah
is mechanically and unimaginatively pinned on Brigham Young....
Hickman, as we shall see, never dreamed of such a thing until
Beadle put him up to it... Beadle was a professional purveyor
of scandal... we believe that those tales are Beadle's invention...
The patent absurdity of the 'Confessions' becomes apparent on
the most superficial investigation and grows with every monotonous
episode.... The Hickman stones were not true." (Sounding
Brass, 1963, pp. 254, 256, 263-65)
It was only after we had made a careful study of Mormon history
that we became convinced that Hickman's confessions could not
be easily dismissed. We found, for instance, that John D. Lee,
who had been a member of the church's secret Council of Fifty,
charged that the Mormon police committed murders for the church
and that "Under Brigham Young, Hosea Stout was Chief of Police."
Hosea Stout was a member of the Danite Band and later served
as a body guard for Joseph Smith. Besides serving as Chief of
Police in Nauvoo, he was an officer in the Nauvoo legion. Fortunately,
Hosea Stout's diary has survived and proves to be one of the most
revealing documents that we have had access to. The fact that
it was written by a faithful Mormon makes it even more significant.
In his diary, Stout frankly tells of some of the violent methods
used by the Mormon leaders. For instance, under the date of April
3, 1845, Hosea Stout recorded the following in his diary:
"In the morning I went to the Temple and
was roughly accosted by Brs Cahoon & Cutler about a circumstance
which took place last night at the Temple. They said that the
old Police had beat a man almost to death in the Temple. To which
I replied I was glad of it and that I had given orders to that
effect in case anyone should be found in the Temple after night
and they had only done as they were told, or ordered... we concluded
to lay the matter before President Brigham Young and get his advice...
Brother Brigham came to us and we related the matter to him and
he approved of the proceedings of the Police and said he wanted
us to still guard the Temple to regulate the matters there which
was done to our satisfaction and justification." (On The
Mormon Frontier, The Dairy of Hosea Stout, vol. 1, p. 32)
Under the date of January 9, 1846, Hosea Stout recorded:
"When we came to the Temple some what a
considerable number of the guard were assembled and among them
was William Hibbard... He was evidently come as a spy. When I
saw him I told Scott that we must 'bounce a stone off of his head.'
to which he agreed we prepared accordingly & I got an opportunity
& hit him on the back of his head which came very near taking
his life. But few knew anything about what was the matter he left
the ground out of his senses when he came to himself he could
not tell what had happened to him &c" (Ibid., vol. 1,
p. 103). Other entries in Hosea Stout's diary show that he was
a very brutal man (see The Mormon Kingdom, vol. 2, p. 7).
President Brigham Young seemed to delight in the fact that he
had some ruthless men who could help him out when violence seemed
necessary. In fact, he once boasted:
"And if the Gentiles wish to see a few tricks,
we have 'Mormons' that can perform them. We have the meanest devils
on the earth in our midst, and we intend to keep them, for we
have use for them; and if the Devil does not look sharp, we will
cheat him out of them at the last, for they will reform and go
to heaven with us." (Journal of Discourses, vol. 6, p. 176)
Brigham Young was undoubtedly referring to men like Orrin Porter
Rockwell and Bill Hickman when he made this statement.
As we have already stated, Hickman confessed that he had committed
murders which had been ordered by President Brigham Young and
Apostle Orson Hyde. In MormonismShadow or Reality? pages
444-447, we give evidence that Bill Hickman robbed and murdered
the enemies of the church and that he had the approval and protection
of Mormon leaders in carrying out his crimes. That the Mormon
leaders approved of Hickman's crimes is clear from the journal
of John Bennion.
In 1860 Bennion felt that William Hickman and his brother, George
Hickman, should be punished for their evil deeds, but he soon
learned that Bishop Gardiner "had been bound & could
not act" and that Orson Hyde President of the Twelve
Apostles taught that a man should not be punished for stealing
from the "gentiles." The following is taken from Bennion's
journal:
"Sat 13 went to the city met Bp Gardiner
had a talk with him about W. A. Hickmans wicked course for some
time past he said that up till now he had been bound & could
not act I told him I was not bound neither was I afraid to expose
the wickedness of any man that it was my duty to expose we got
home about sun down in the evening I met with Bp & councillors
& parties concerned [to] try George Hickman for stealing mules
when about to commence trial Elder Hyde come in and by Bp Gardners
solicitation he preached and the trial was postponed after meeting
Bp council & Elder Hyde had a long talk in my house br Hyde
said speaking of stealing that a man may steal & be influenced
by the Spirit of the Lord to do it that Hickman had done it years
past and that he never would institute a trial against a brother
for stealing from the gentiles but stealing from his brethren
he was down on it he laid down much teaching on the subject
"S 14th went to meeting at the mill to hear
br Hyde... he give much good instruction spoke on last nights
intention to try Hickman give it as the word of the Lord to set
him free for the past, bid him go & sin no more." ("John
Bennion Journal," Oct. 13 and 14, 1860, original journal
at Utah State Historical Society)
Since this evidence comes from John Bennion's journal
not from an anti-Mormon or unfriendly source it cannot
be easily dismissed.
In his confessions, Bill Hickman tells that he received orders
from Brigham Young through Apostle Hyde to eliminate Jesse Hartley,
a man whom the church leaders did not trust:
"...I set out with Judge Appleby and Rev.
Orson Hyde... When we had got... into East Cañon, some
three or four miles, one Mr. Hartley came to us from Provo City.
This Hartley... had married a Miss Bullock, of Provo... at the
April Conference, Brigham Young, before the congregation, gave
him a tremendous blowing up, calling him all sorts of bad names,
and saying he ought to have his throat cut...
"I saw [Apostle] Orson Hyde looking very
sour at him, and after he had been in camp an hour or two, Hyde
told me that he had orders from Brigham Young, if he came to Fort
Supply to have him used up. 'Now,' said he, 'I want you and George
Boyd to do it.'... Boyd came to me and said: 'It's all right,
Bill; I will help you to kill that fellow.' One of our teams was
two or three miles behind, and Orson Hyde wished me to go back...
Hartley stepped up and said he would go... Orson Hyde then whispered
to me: 'Now is your time; don't let him come back.' We started,
and about half a mile on had to cross the cañon stream...
While crossing, Hartley got a shot and fell dead in the creek....
"I went on and met Hosea Stout... I then
told him all that had happened, and he said that was good."
(Brigham's Destroying Angel, 1904 reprint, pp. 96-98)
Hickman's claim that Hosea Stout said "that was good"
when he heard of the murder of Hartley reminds us of Stout's own
entry in his diary when he learned that the "police had beat
a man almost to death in the Temple." The reader will remember
that Stout arrogantly recorded that he told those who had complained
about the matter that he was "glad of it and that I had given
orders to that effect..."
In 1872, Bill Hickman made a confession of his crimes to R.
N. Baskin. Mr. Baskin, who later served as mayor of Salt Lake
City and became a member of the supreme court of the State of
Utah, gave this report in his book, Reminiscences of Early Utah,
p. 150:
"The Danites were an organization in the
Mormon church. Its existence was stated by Bill Hickman in his
confession made to me. He gave me the names of more than a score
of its active members, among whom were a number of reputed notorious
Danite assassins. He stated that the members were bound by their
covenants to execute the orders of the priesthood, and that when
a direct order or intimation was given to 'use up' anyone, it
was always executed by one or more of the members, according to
the circumstances of the case. That such an organization existed
is conclusively shown by the numerous mysterious murders which
were never investigated by the executive officers of the Territory,
or any attempt made to prosecute the guilty parties. The Mormon
sermons, the confessions of Hickman and Lee, and numerous other
circumstances made plain its existence. Hickman confessed to me
that he personally knew of thirteen persons having been murdered,
some of them by him, and others by various Danites; that at one
time he murdered a man by the name of Buck at the personal request
of Brigham Young."
In 1979, there was an attempt by former Church Historian Leonard
J. Arrington and Hope A. Hilton, a great-granddaughter of Bill
Hickman, to undermine Bill Hickman's confession which was published
in Brigham's Destroying Angel. Their thesis concerning the book
was similar to that set forth by Dr. Hugh Nibley. They felt that
Hickman had written a manuscript, but that "a skilled anti-Mormon
journalists," J. H. Beadle, had altered it to link Brigham
Young and the Mormon hierarchy to the crimes:
"Unquestionably, Bill wrote an autobiography
that served as the basis for the book. Although it is no longer
extant, family members report having seen the manuscript, and
Brigham's Destroying Angel could not have been prepared writhout
such a personal history. On the other hand, enough manuscript
material in Bill's handwriting survives for us to assert with
confidence that the published draft of Brigham's Destroying Angel
was not written by Hickman. The style is different, and the editorializing
and sensationalizing are alien to Bill's spirit.... unquestionably
the autobiography was subjected to tampering, if not ghost-writing,
and was almost certainly given a market orientation by Beadle.
We are confident that the editorializing, the facile attempts
to connect Brigham Young with nefarious doings, are part of the
editing by John Beadle. Hickman's own statement to William H.
Kimball about Brigham's Destroying Angel after it appeared in
published form was as follows (this statement relayed to Orson
F. Whitney by Kimball on November 15, 1892): 'My book is a lie
from the beginning to the endfrom the boar through.... I
was bribed to write that book. I was told that I could make fifty
thousand dollars out of it, and that is why I did it.' "
(Leonard J. Arrington and Hope A. Hilton, "William A. ('Bill')
Hickman: Setting the Record Straight," Task Papers in LDS
History, No. 28, Historical Department of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1979, Forward, pp. i-ii)
On pages 33-34 of the same paper, we find the following: "Beadle,
who was in the process of writing an anti-Mormon book... did edit
the manuscript to make it count for the maximum in the anti-Mormon
cause, and did introduce phrases that linked Brigham Young and
the 'Mormon Hierarchy' to criminal activities."
The claim by Arrington and Hilton that Bill Hickman denied the
accuracy of the published book is based primarily on the statement
of William H. Kimball. There are at least two reasons why this
statement seems very questionable: First, it was not "relayed
to Orson F. Whitney by Kimball" until "November 15,
1892," which was twenty years after Brigham's Destroying
Angel was published and nine years after Bill Hickman's death.
Hickman, of course, could not reply to a statement made after
his death. Second, the statement does not come from a neutral
party, but rather from a man who had every reason to try to discredit
the book. As we will show later, Bill Hickman claimed that Kimball
was an accessory to a murder he had committed and even helped
him bury the body.
The assertion by Arrington and Hilton that Beadle was the one
who linked the Mormon leaders to Hickman's crimes was certainly
based only on wishful thinking. They did not produce any manuscript
evidence to support such a conclusion. Moreover, their own paper
contains information which makes their position untenable. On
page 53 of their study, they cite the following from a letter
written by Brigham Young on September 27, 1871: "They have,
I am informed, brought before their exclusive, packed grand jury
one Wm. Hickman... and, he evidently to save himself from justice,
has laid at my door some or all of those crimes... "
Now, if Bill Hickman would testify before a grand jury that
Brigham Young was guilty of the crimes and it is very clear
that he did give such testimony why would he hesitate to
put the same claim in his manuscript? The evidence clearly shows
that Hickman planned to openly testify against the Mormon leaders
when they were brought to trial. It also seems naive to assume
that the anti-Mormons would be willing to give Hickman a bribe
of $50,000 to link the Mormon leaders to his crimes, but accept
a manuscript from him which, according to the Arrington-Hilton
thesis, provided absolutely no evidence to that effect until it
was altered by Beadle.
Fortunately, after writing the paper with Church Historian Leonard
Arrington, Hope A. Hilton seems to have done further research
on the matter and in a new book on Bill Hickman she has repudiated
the idea that J. H. Beadle added the material linking Brigham
Young to the crimes. Mrs. Hilton now states:
"I do not question whether Hickman actually
wrote Brigham's Destroying Angel. It is too accurate in its details
to have been written by anyone else...
"I have relied on Hickman's Brigham's Destroying
Angel:... for facts of Hickman's life that can be corroborated
from other sources.... Beadle did not have access to Brigham Young's
daily office journal or to other sources available today which
confirm many of the book's first-hand statements.... one of the
most compelling questions about Hickman is why he implicated Brigham
Young, Hosea Stout, William Kimball, and others both in his book
and in court." ("Wild Bill" Hickman and the Mormon
Frontier, 1988, Preface, pp. x-xi)
On page 127 of her book, Hope Hilton wrote: "To his daughter,
Katharine Hickman Butcher, Hickman told the truth when he wrote
on 7 January 1872 from the Fort Douglas prison: 'I have written
a rough book, but no more rough than true.' " In the preface
to her book, p. xi, Mrs. Hilton stated: "...avowedly anti-Mormon
editor, J. H. Beadle, wrote the preface to the autobiography and
the first chapter. He also wrote the bitter diatribe against Young
and the Mormons on pages 137-139, probably the first paragraph
on page 192, and several other brief inserts, sometimes adding
only a single word. Except for these additions, Hickman's mind
and hand are the book's undisputed source."
Although there is no reason to believe that Mrs. Hilton is trying
to deceive her readers, those who do not have a copy of Brigham's
Destroying Angel to refer to may be inclined to believe that Beadle
played a larger role in editing the text than he actually did.
At the end of the preface the name "J. H. Beadle" appears.
The first chapter, likewise, contains a statement that makes it
clear that Beadle is the author: "CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTORY
HISTORY. BY THE EDITOR." Pages 137-139 are also separated
from Hickman's writings with the words: "BY THE EDITOR."
It would appear, then, that Mrs. Hilton now believes that only
"the first paragraph on page 192, and several other brief
inserts," were added to the text. It is also clear that she
is not even certain that Beadle added the paragraph on page 192
because she begins her statement with the word "probably."
Furthermore, she says that "only a single word" is added
in some of the "other" places.
It is interesting to note that J. H. Beadle made these comments
concerning his role in editing the manuscript: "I then agreed
to take charge of his [Hickman's] manuscript, and, to use his
own language, 'Fix it up in shape, so people would understand
it.' My first intention was to re-write it entirely, speaking
of Hickman in the third person; but one perusal satisfied me that
it would be far better as he had written it. I have thought it
best, also, to preserve his own phraseology nearly exactly, only
inserting a word occasionally where absolutely necessary to prevent
mistake.... I think every critic must admit that our sentimental
and religious murderer has a singularly pleasing style."
A perusal of some of the letters of Bill Hickman, which Hope Hilton
has included in her book, shows that Hickman was qualified to
write such a book.
Hickman's Work Found?
The significant change in Mrs. Hilton's position concerning
Beadle's role in editing Hickman's book and her comments concerning
the matter raise some interesting questions: Why did she make
such a major change in her thesis? Is it possible that she has
located the original manuscript of Brigham's Destroying Angel?
(A Mormon researcher once told us that he was on the track of
this manuscript and had traced it to a vault. He did not, however,
reveal where this vault was located.)
Mrs. Hilton's statements concerning the matter are rather strange.
She gives no reason as to why she has singled out the paragraph
on page 192 as "probably" an interpolation by Beadle.
(This paragraph seems to contain no significant information.)
If she had compared the original manuscript, however, and noted
that the paragraph did not appear there, she would be suspicious
that it was added by Beadle. She, of course, would not know for
certain that Beadle was the author. Anyone who had access to the
manuscript could have added the words. Furthermore, those who
prepare manuscripts for publication know that sometimes writers
send additional material or corrections in letters to their publishers.
This uncertainty might force a scholar like Hope Hilton to qualify
her comment to say that the paragraph was "probably"
added by Beadle.
While this is only a matter of speculation, there is a very
strange reference to an important Hickman document in the earlier
Arrington-Hilton paper, page 39: "As for manuscript materials,
the LDS Church Archives in Salt Lake City has a short holograph
autobiography, which we have used without attribution;..."
While one would think that this would be an extremely significant
document for a historian writing about Hickman, in her published
book Mrs. Hilton never even refers to this document. It is obvious
that something is wrong here. Why do Arrington and Hilton say
they are using it "without attribution" in their original
paper? Is this document something the church is trying to suppress?
Although Arrington and Hilton claimed that they used the handwritten
Hickman autobiography "without attribution," there is
one actual quotation from it on the first page of their paper:
"...his grandfather told Bill that he had twenty-one blood
relations in the War of the Revolution 'and not one Tory
among them!' " The footnote for this citation reads as follows:
"From the William A. Hickman Autobiography, holograph manuscript,
Hickman Collection, Church Archives, p. 1." It is very interesting
to note that the words cited are similar to the opening page of
Hickman's narrative published in Brigham's Destroying Angel, p.
25: "I had, according to my grandfather's story, twenty-one
blood relatives in the Revolutionary War, 'and not a Tory among
them...' "
We wonder if it is possible that Arrington and Hilton had access
to just a portion of the original manuscript of Brigham's Destroying
Angel at the time they wrote their paper and did not recognize
it as such. It could also be possible that someone later compared
the original manuscript with the published book but was forbidden
to release any information concerning the manuscript's existence.
Unless the church releases the handwritten "Hickman Autobiography"
we may never know the truth about this matter.
In any case, in 1979, Arrington and Hilton felt they could "assert
with confidence that the published draft of Brigham's Destroying
Angel was not written by Hickman." Today, however, Hope Hilton
feels that "Hickman's mind and hand are the book's undisputed
source."
Although we would like to know just what evidence brought her
to this conclusion, we are very happy that Mrs. Hilton has been
honest enough to repudiate the old theory. We feel that her book
is a valuable contribution to the study of Bill Hickman. It includes
some very important material from the LDS Church Archives which
we did not have access to before. Although the research we had
done prior to the publication of Hope Hilton's book had already
led us to conclude that Bill Hickman was receiving his orders
from Brigham Young and other Mormon leaders, "Wild Bill"
Hickman and the Mormon Frontier furnishes a great deal of new
information showing that Hickman was deeply involved with church
leaders.
On pages 9, 10, 12 and 13 of her book, Mrs. Hilton revealed:
"On 6 May [1839], Hickman met Joseph Smith, Jr., who ordered
Bill ordained to the Council of Seventy the same day.... Hickman
seemed a natural choice to be one of the bodyguards of the prophet
Joseph. A similar call was extended to Hosea Stout, Orrin Porter
Rockwell, and Lot Smith... Dressed in white, surrounding their
beloved prophet, these four men would have made an impressive
sight.... [Brigham] Young assigned Hickman to oversee covert spying
activities, to 'subdue' the enemies of the church, and to serve
as his chief bodyguard. Hickman and others in a tightly knit group
served Smith in Nauvoo and Young in Winter Quarters... From 1850
to 1853, they shared the duties of government with Young's secret
political organization, the Council of Fifty.... Hickman was not
a Mormon during the Danite heyday in Missouri, and there is no
reliable evidence that the Danites, as such, survived after 1838
as an organization. However, that some vigilante Mormons, notably
Hickman, continued to espouse the Danite philosophy they had been
taught by church leaders of 'attacking the Gentiles to preserve
the Saints' seems apparent."
Some Mormon apologists have tried to make an issue over the
fact that Bill Hickman was called a "Danite" on the
title page of Brigham's Destroying Angel. Mrs. Hilton, however,
put the matter in perspective when she said that he "continued
to espouse the Danite philosophy." While it is true that
the original organization ceased to exist in the late 1830's,
it is also clear that the church had men in early Utah who performed
exactly the same function. Mormon writer Klaus J. Hansen says
that "several important Danites were among those initiated
into the Council of Fifty in 1844." (Quest for Empire, p.
58) He also admits that the Council of Fifty may have been involved
in the practice of "blood atonement": "If, according
to this doctrine, a member of the kingdom committed the crimes
of murder and adultery, or if he betrayed one of his fellow Mormons
to the enemies of the church, or revealed the secrets of the kingdom,
he could save his soul only if he expiated for the crime by the
shedding of his blood. Blood atonement was, of course, a form
of capital punishment, Yet because of its theological implications,
and because the Council of Fifty was to administer it, the doctrine
was surrounded with an aura of mystery, terror, and holy murder.
The Council of Fifty heightened the atmosphere of fear and secrecy
associated with this practice by conducting cases involving the
possibility of blood atonement in utmost secrecy for fear of public
repercussions." (Ibid., p. 69)
It seems rather ridiculous to quibble over the word "Danite"
when the evidence shows that Bill Hickman functioned in the same
way that the Danite band did in Missouri. As a matter of fact,
on July 5, 1857, Brigham Young himself used the word "Danite"
when referring to "the boys" who took care of unruly
people who came to Utah: "If men come here and do not behave
themselves, they will not only find the Danites, whom they talk
so much about, biting the horses's heels, but the scoundrels will
find something biting their heels. In my plain remarks, I merely
call things by their right names." (Journal of Discourses,
vol. 5, p. 6) Because of the circumstances surrounding Hickman's
work for the Mormon leaders and in view of Brigham Young's own
statement, we see no reason why a person should be disturbed if
he is called a "Danite." Those who are concerned with
this term, however, might refer to Hickman as a Mormon "spy"
or one of the first members of "Church Security."
In the Forward to the 1979 paper by Arrington and Hilton (p.
iii), Leonard Arrington indicated that Philip Jordan had "apparently
confused Hickman's Church security assignments with the work of
the earlier Danites. These two groups were as much unlike as the
Mafia and the FBI.... the actions once attributed to the Danites
were probably those of individuals or of Mormon security forces
deputy sheriffs, territorial militia, and/or minutemen."
This statement seems rather naive in light of the evidence which
was available in 1979. In any case, on page 2 of the same manuscript,
we read that Hickman "was chosen as one of a group of twelve
men who served as body-guards and 'protectors' of Joseph Smith.
He was apparently a 'regular' with the Mormon security forces
during the period (1843-1844)..." Later in Utah, "Bill
Hickman was assigned to lead one of the parties of scouts delegated
to 'spy' on the [U.S.] Army... Hickman's intelligence reports
to Governor Young show him to have been effective in the tasks
assigned to him. Some of his spies disguised themselves as California
emigrants and went in among the troops.... Bill's personal assignment,
under an official appointment from Brigham Young as Governor,
was to 'keep watch on the Army.' And apparently Bill did this,
and perhaps magnified his calling by keeping watch on its horses
as well. At least later stories began to drift in of a group of
men, allegedly connected with Hickman, who rustled some of the
Army's livestock." (Ibid., pp. 14, 17, 18) On page 27 of
the same manuscript, we learn that in 1863, Hickman "reported
[Colonel Patrick] Connor's movements and intentions to Brigham
Young... once more carrying out an important intelligence assignment
for the pioneer leader."
In her published book, Hope Hilton says that "Hickman's
primary assignment was to spy on the church's enemies in Nauvoo
(such as Colonel Williams), although he was also occasionally
given orders to execute punishments. Bill Hickman rarely shirked
an assignment from Young..." ("Wild Bill" Hickman
and the Mormon Frontier, p. 15) On pages 43 and 45, Mrs. Hilton
says that in Green River County, Utah, where Hickman served as
"county assessor, tax collector, prosecuting attorney, and
Utah territorial legislative representative" he "was
also Brigham Young's eyes and ears." In his published confession,
Bill Hickman tells of his meetings with Brigham Young. Mrs. Hilton
confirms that Hickman had many contacts with Young, both by mail
and in person. Concerning one meeting Bill Hickman had with Brigham
Young, Hilton notes: "Young's own journal recorded simply,
'Friday, June 26th, 1857: Spent the forenoon with Brother Hickman
who arrived yesterday from the States.' " (Ibid., p. 65)
On page 84, she gives this information: "During 1858-59,
at least two local gangs of horse thieves were operating in Utah:
Bill Hickman's and that of Joachim 'Cub' Johnson....
"During this time Hickman was serving Brigham Young as
one of his spies. Young needed informers to watch the army and
to contact prominent Gentiles about their views of the church
and chose Hickman."
On page 85, Mrs. Hilton quotes the following from Brigham Young's
journal: "It is rumored that five marshals left Camp Floyd
yesterday sworn to arrest or kill Bill Hickman on the spot. Bill
was warned and left home in time."
In the earlier paper, pages 43-44, Arrington and Hilton had
questioned the authorship of a story in Brigham's Destroying Angel
concerning the murder of a "half-breed Indian." They
even suggested that "Beadle transposes the event to 1848
[instead of 1849] in order to involve Brigham Young." In
her new book, Mrs. Hilton no longer seems to question the date
of the murder or the authorship of the statement: "Most surviving
evidence reveals that Bill Hickman, Brigham Young, and Orson Hyde
were close friends. Perhaps the events recounted in Hickman's
autobiography account for these bonds. According to his memoir,
Hickman killed a half-breed Indian who had joined the Mormon church
but subsequently threatened Young's life. Later, he killed a notorious
horse-thief who was seeking revenge against Hyde. Hickman admits
to both killings and claims they were the first acts of violence
performed at Young's request. Young gratefully promised to make
him 'a great man in the Kingdom' some day.... Hyde would later
go to great lengths to defend Hickman... In the spring of 1848,
Brigham Young left Nebraska... he requested that Bill stay behind
to protect Hyde..." (pages 19-20)
After Brigham Young left, Bill Hickman murdered two more Indians.
In their 1979 paper, page 43, Arrington and Hilton revealed that
Joseph Young, Brigham Young's brother, wrote him a letter on June
26, 1849, stating that "this 'bloody fray' reminded him of
the tragic scene at Haun's Mill'an outrage on the principles
of humanity.' The outrage was 'unprovoked on the part of the Indians
and without council or pretext for such cruelty. William Hickman
is a cold blooded murderer, and as such he stands before every
tribunal of justice in Heaven and on Earth and when the Judge
of all the Earth makes inquisition for innocent blood it will
be found dripping from the hands of William Hickman.' " On
June 1, 1849, Apostle Orson Hyde wrote a letter to Brigham Young
in which he defended Bill Hickman: " 'Brother Hickman has
gone to the valley. You may hear some bad accounts of him, but
don't kill him till I come! It may be that my testimony may have
a little bearing in his case! He is sometimes a little rash and
may shoot an innocent Indian, mistaking him for an Omaha horse
thief!' " ("Wild Bill" Hickman and the Mormon Frontier,
p. 24)
Notwithstanding the fact that Brigham Young was warned by his
own brother that Bill Hickman was "a cold blooded murderer,"
he continued to use him in early Utah to rob and assassinate enemies
of the church. Mrs. Hilton informs us on page 62 of her book,
that in 1857, "hands were laid on Hickman's head and he was
given a blessing by church patriarch, John Young: '...You shall
have power over all your enemies, even to set your feet upon their
necks, and no weapon that is formed against you shall prosper...
If you are faithful you shall assist in avenging the blood of
the prophets of God, and assist in accomplishing the great work
of the last days...' "
On April 25, 1865, Bill Hickman wrote a letter to Brigham Young
in which he confided: "If you want me to do anything, just
let me know it.... If you want this or that, or whatever you may
think, I will try. Or if you want my life you can have it without
a murmer or a groan, just let me know late or early. I will be
there, and there will be no tale left behind... I am on hand."
(Ibid., p. 113)
Bill Hickman was known to have killed many people in early Utah,
yet he seemed to have been shielded from prosecution by the Mormon
Church. Orrin Porter Rockwell was another murderer who received
protection from the church. Rockwell was one of the first to become
a member of the church and soon became one of Joseph Smith's intimate
friends. In Missouri, he joined the dreaded Danite band, served
as a bodyguard for Joseph Smith, and was initiated into the secret
Council of Fifty.
Both Hickman and Rockwell participated in the Aiken massacre.
Although this slaughter did not involve as many people as the
Mountain Meadows Massacre, it was certainly one of the cruelest
deeds the early Mormons ever perpetrated. J. H. Beadle gave the
following information concerning this cold-blooded transaction:
"The party consisted of six men... on reaching Kaysville,
twenty-five miles north of Salt Lake City, they were all arrested
on the charge of being spies for the Government!... The Aikin
party had stock, property, and money estimated at $25,000. Nothing
being proved against them they were told they should be 'sent
out of the Territory by the Southern route.' Four of them started,
leaving Buck and one of the unknown men in the city. The party
had for an escort, O. P. Rockwell, John Lot, ____ Miles, and one
other. When they reached Nephi, one hundred miles south, Rockwell
informed the Bishop, Bryant, that his orders were to 'have the
men used up there.' Bishop Bryant called a council at once, and
the following men were selected to assist: J. Bigler (now a Bishop,)
P. Pitchforth, his 'first councillor,' John Kink, and ____ Pickton....
The selected murderers, at 11 p.m., started from the Tithing House
and got ahead of the Aikins', who did not start till daylight.
The latter reached the Sevier River, when Rockwell informed them
they could find no other camp that day; they halted, when the
other party approached and asked to camp with them, for which
permission was granted. The weary men removed their arms and heavy
clothing, and were soon lost in sleep... the escort and the party
from Nephi attacked the sleeping men with clubs and the kingbolts
of the wagons. Two died without a struggle. But John Aiken bounded
to his feet, but slightly wounded, and sprang into the brush.
A shot from the pistol of John Kink laid him senseless. 'Colonel'
also reached the brush, receiving a shot in the shoulder from
Port Rockwell, and believing the whole party had been attacked
by banditti, he made his way back to Nephi. With almost superhuman
strength he held out during the twenty-five miles... ghastly pale
and drenched with his own blood, staggering feebly along the streets
of Nephi.... his story elicited a well-feigned horror.
"Meanwhile the murderers 'had gathered up the other three
and thrown them into the river, supposing all to be dead. But
John Aiken revived and crawled out on the same side, and hiding
in the brush, heard these terrible words:
" 'Are the damned Gentiles all dead, Port?'
" 'All but one the son of a b___ ran.'
"Supposing himself to be meant, Aikin lay still till the
Danites left, then... set out for Nephi.... To return to Nephi
offered but slight hope, but it was his only hope... He sank helpless
at the door of the first house he reached, but the words he heard
infused new life into him. The woman, afterwards a witness, said
to him, 'Why, another of you ones got away from the robbers, and
is at Brother Foote's.'
" 'Thank God, it is my brother,' he said, and started on.
The citizens tell with wonder that he ran the whole distance,
his hair clotted with blood, reeling like a drunken man all the
way. It was not his brother, but 'Colonel.'...
"Bishop Bryant came, extracted the balls, dressed the wounds,
and advised the men to return, as soon as they were able, to Salt
Lake City....
"According to the main witness, a woman of Nephi, all regarded
them as doomed. They had got four miles on the road, when their
driver, a Mormon named Wolf, stopped the wagon near an old cabin:
informed them he must water the horses; unhitched them, and moved
away. Two men then stepped from the cabin, and fired with double-barreled
guns; Aikin and 'Colonel' were both shot through the head, and
fell dead from the wagon. Their bodies were then loaded with stone
and put in one of those 'bottomless springs' so called
common in that part of Utah....
"Meanwhile Rockwell and party had reached the city [Salt
Lake City], taken Buck and the other man, and started southward,
plying them with liquor.... they reached the Point of the Mountain.
There it was decided to 'use them up,' and they were attacked
with slung-shots and billies. The other man was instantly killed.
Buck leaped from the wagon, outran his pursuers, their shots missing
him, swam the Jordan, and came down it on the west side. He reached
the city and related all that occurred, which created quite a
stir. Hickman was then sent for to 'finish the job,' which he
did as related in the text." (Brigham's Destroying Angel,
pp. 206-210)
Bill Hickman claimed that he was summoned to Brigham Young's
office. When he arrived, he asked President Young what he wanted.
Young answered: " 'The boys have made a bad job of trying
to put a man out of the way. They all got drunk, bruised up a
fellow, and he got away from them at the Point of the Mountain,
came back to this city, and is telling all that happened, which
is making a big stink.' He said I must get him out of the way
and use him up." (Ibid., p. 128) Hickman goes on to say that
the last surviving member of the Aiken party trusted a man by
the name of George Dalton. Dalton was able to lure the man out
to a secluded spot beyond "the Hot Springs three miles north
of the city" where Hickman was waiting in ambush and shot
him "through the head." (Ibid., p. 129) The next day
Bill Hickman "went to Brigham Young's, told him that Buck
was taken care of, and there would be no more stink about his
stories. He said he was glad of it. Buck was the last one of the
Aiken's party..." (pp. 129-130)
There can be no doubt that the Mormons did take the Aiken party
as prisoners and murdered them as related by J. H. Beadle and
Bill Hickman. Under the date of Nov. 3, 1857, Hosea Stout recorded
the following in his diary: "Cal mail came and six cal prisoners
taken at Box Elder supposed spies" (On The Mormon Frontier,
The Diary of Hosea Stout, vol. 2, p. 644). On Nov. 9, 1857, Hosea
Stout recorded that he himself was "guarding the prisoners
from Cal." Finally, on Nov. 20, 1857, Stout made this very
revealing entry in his diary:
"O. P. Rockwell with 3 or four others started with 4 of
the prisoners, which we had been guarding for some days, South
to escort them through the settlements to Cal via South route
The other two are going to be permitted to go at large and remain
till spring and the guard dismissed." (Ibid., p. 645).
Mormon writer Harold Schindler has done an excellent job of
compiling the evidence concerning the Aiken massacre. His research
leads to the unmistakable conclusion that Rockwell was involved
in the bloody deed (see Orrin Porter Rockwell: Man of God, Son
of Thunder, 1966, pp. 268-279).
Less than two years after the Aiken massacre, U. S. Marshall
P. K. Dotson held a warrant for Orrin Porter Rockwell's arrest.
Dotson found it impossible to make the arrest, and Rockwell retained
his freedom for twenty years. He was in full fellowship with the
Mormon Church during this period, and on June 1, 1873, he was
called on a mission to Grass Valley (Ibid., p. 356). Finally,
on Sept. 29, 1877, Rockwell was arrested for his part in the Aiken
massacre. He was 64 years old at the time. On June 9, 1878, Orrin
Porter Rockwell died, and therefore he did not have to face a
trial which could have been very embarrassing for the Mormon Church.
Mormon Apostle Orson Hyde, the man who ordered Bill Hickman
to kill Hartley and protected him in his crimes, apparently felt
that Hickman and Rockwell were like shepherd dogs who protected
the Mormon Church. In an address delivered in the Tabernacle on
April 9,1853, Apostle Hyde made these chilling hints concerning
the matter:
"Suppose the shepherd should discover a wolf approaching
the flock, what would he be likely to do? Why, we should suppose,
if the wolf was within proper distance, that he would kill him
at once... in short, that he would shoot him down, kill him on
the spot. If the wolf was not within shot, we would naturally
suppose he would set the dogs on him; and you are aware, I have
no doubt, that these shepherd dogs have very pointed teeth...
"Now don't say that brother Hyde has taught strong things,
for I have only told you what takes place between the shepherd
and the flock, when the sheep have to be protected.
"If you say that the Priesthood or authorities of the Church
here are the shepherd, and the Church is the flock, you can make
your own application of this figure. It is not at all necessary
for me to do it.
"It is all the same to me whether they want to destroy
the flock, or destroy, steal, and carry off the property of the
flock... the best way to sanctify ourselves, and please God our
heavenly Father in these days, is to rid ourselves of every thief...
It would have a tendency to place a terror on those who leave
these parts, that may prove their salvation when they see the
heads of thieves taken off, or shot down before the public."
(Journal of Discourses, vol. 1, pp. 72-73)
As Bill Hickman became older, it became obvious that he was
becoming increasingly difficult to control. His gun fights and
public intoxication were becoming very embarrassing to the church.
It was evident that he presented a danger to the flock itself.
Richard S. Van Wagoner and Steven C. Walker give this interesting
information in their book concerning an incident which occurred
in 1860: "According to Brigham Young's office journal, 'Mayor
Smoot had a conversation with the President about Wm. A. Hickman,
observing people see him come in and out the office, and that
leads them to suppose he is sanctioned in all he does by the President.
He also observed that dogs were necessary to take care of the
flock, but if the Shepherd's dogs hurt the sheep it would be time
to remove them.' " (A Book of Mormons, p. 122)
Brigham Young continued to support Bill Hickman for eight more
years. He was, however, very upset, when Hickman went to work
for General Patrick Connor in 1863. Hope Hilton says that "Brigham
Young distrusted men who accepted government employment and advised
Hickman twice during the summer of 1863 to leave Connor's employ
and, as Hickman puts it, to 'kidnap Connor, the Irish Ditcher,
and send him over into California.' " Young, according to
Hickman, offered $1,000, plus all expenses. 'I stood up to Brigham
for the first time ever, and said I would not do it,' Hickman
wrote..." ("Wild Bill" Hickman and the Mormon Frontier,
p. 110) Mrs. Hilton says that Young and Hickman eventually became
"irreconcilably hardened towards each other." (Ibid.,
p. 120) On page 119 of the same book, Hilton stated that Hickman
wrote a letter to Young in which "he must have threatened
to 'disclose all.' " Finally, "Without a bishop's court,
trial, or stated complaint, he was denied his church membership
on 12 June 1868."
In 1871, Bill Hickman met will U.S. Marshal H. Gilson and confessed
he had committed murder for the church. He then appeared before
a Grand Jury and "made a full statement of all the crimes
committed in this Territory that I knew of..." (Brigham's
Destroying Angel, page 192)
BRIGHAM YOUNG INDICTED FOR MURDER
The Mormon historian B. H. Roberts referred to the massacre
of the Fancher train which Mormons and Indians committed at Mountain
Meadows in 1857 as "the most lamentable episode in Utah history,
and in the history of the church." (Comprehensive History
of the Church, vol. 4, p. 139) Although we do not have the room
to discuss that massacre here, the reader will find a good account
of it in our book, Major Problems of Mormonism, pp. 193-202. We
have already spoken of the massacre of the Aiken party and the
slaying of Jesse Hartley for opposing the church. These were certainly
not the only cases of blood atonement in early Utah. In Major
Problems of Mormonism, p. 181, we reported concerning the murders
of Ramos Anderson and Dr. Vaun for adultery. John D. Lee tells
of other people who were "blood atoned." In addition,
Hosea Stout related that on Feb. 27, 1858, "several persons
disguised as Indians entered Henry Jones' house and dragged him
out of bed with a whore and castrated him by a square & close
amputation." (On The Mormon Frontier; The Diary of Hosea
Stout, vol. 2, p. 653) Two months later both Henry Jones and his
mother were "blood atoned" in Payson allegedly
for incest. James Monroe was murdered for adultery. Three "apostates
named Potter, Wilson and Walker," were arrested by the Mormons
for stealing and were shot. Only Walker survived and later he
seems to have disappeared. In Springville, Garder G. Potter, William
R. Parrish and his son, William B. Parrish were assassinated for
apostacy. All of these murders seem to have been committed by
people who believed in the "doctrine" of blood atonement
(see MormonismShadow or Reality? p. 545-559).
Due to the secrecy surrounding blood atonement, the reported
cases may represent only a portion of those who were actually
put to death. R. N. Baskin, who served as a Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of Utah, was not sure how many people were blood
atoned in early Utah, but he noted: "In the excavations made
within the limits of Salt Lake City during the time I have resided
there, many human skeletons have been exhumed in various parts
of the city. The present City cemetery was established by the
first settlers. I have never heard that it was ever the custom
to bury the dead promiscuously throughout the city; and as no
coffins were ever found in connection with any of these skeletons,
it is evident that the death of the persons to whom they once
belonged did not result from natural causes, but from the use
of criminal means... That the Danites were bound by their covenants
to execute the criminal orders of the high priesthood against
apostates and alleged enemies of the church is beyond question....
How many murders were secretly committed by that band of assassins
will never be known, but an estimate may be made from the number
mentioned in the confessions of Hickman and Lee, and the number
of human skeletons which have been exhumed in Salt Lake City,
the possessors of which were evidently murdered and buried without
a knell, coffin, or Christian ceremony." (Reminiscences of
Early Utah, pages 154-155)
However this may be, an historian who takes an honest look at
conditions in early Utah is forced to the conclusion that there
is no way all these murders could have been committed and the
killers allowed to remain free unless the church itself was involved
in a conspiracy. The following statements are taken from "the
remarks of Judge Cradlebaugh upon the occasion of his releasing
the Grand Jury" from further service in 1859:
"This day makes two weeks from the time you were impanelled....
the court took the unusual course of calling your attention to
particular crimes the horrible massacre at the Mountain
meadows. It told you of the murder of young Jones and his mother,
and of pulling their house down over them and making that their
tomb, it told you of the murder of the Parrishes and Potter, and
Forbes, almost within sight of this court house....
"The court has had occasion to issue bench warrants to
arrest persons connected with the Parrish murder; had them brought
before it and examined; the testimony presents an unparalleled
condition of affairs. It seems that the whole community were engaged
in committing that crime. There seems to be a combined effort
on the part of the community to screen the murderers from the
punishment due for the murder they have committed.
"I might call your attention to the fact that when officers
seek to arrest persons accused of crimes they are not able to
do so; the parties are screened and secreted by the community.
Scarcely had the officers arrived in sight of the town of Springville
before a trumpet was sounded from the walls of the town. This,
no doubt, was for the purpose of giving the alarm. The officers
were there to make arrests. The officers leave the town, and in
a short time a trumpet sounds again from the wall for the purpose
of announcing that the danger was over. Witnesses are screened;
others are intimidated by persons in that community....
"Such acts and conduct go to show that the community there
do not desire to have criminals punished, it shows that the Parishes
and Potter were murdered by counsel, that it was done by authority;...
" (The Valley Tan, March 29, 1859, p. 3)
U. S. Marshal P. K. Dotson became very frustrated when he tried
to serve warrants on about 40 men involved in the Mountain Meadows
massacre, the Aiken massacre and other crimes. He wrote the following
in a letter to Judge Cradlebaugh:
"I have received from you certain warrants of arrest against
many persons, in your Judicial district, charged with murder...
"I regret to inform you that it is not in my power to execute
any of these processes, I have made repeated efforts by the aid
as well of the military, as of the civil posse, to execute the
warrants last alluded to, but without success. So great is the
number of persons engaged in the commission of these crimes, and
such the feeling of the Mormon Church, and the community in their
favor, that I cannot rely on a civil posse to aid me in arresting
them...." ("Journal History," June 3, 1859, as
cited in Orrin Porter Rockwell; Man of God, Son of Thunder, pp.
292-293)
It was obvious to many people in early Utah that Brigham Young
was responsible for the death of many people, but with the power
he had it would be almost impossible to convict him. After Bill
Hickman confessed to committing murders for the church, some felt
that there might be a chance of successfully prosecuting President
Young for ordering the murder of Richard Yates. Hickman gave this
information about the death of Yates:
"One Yates, a trader... came to Bridger twice, buying beef
cattle for the Government.... We kept watch of the United States
camps every day... One day they moved up the creek about four
miles, and we saw a vacancy between them and their cattle. We
made a rush and drove off seven hundred and fifty head...
"About this time it was noised about that Yates had let
the soldiers have his ammunition, and that he was acting the spy
for them.... One of the Conover boys... saw a lone man traveling...
after learning his name, Yates, he marched him to Bridger, where
he was placed in the big stone corral and a guard placed over
him....
"I will here state that the office I held was that of independent
captain, amenable to none but the head commanding general or governor,
Brigham Young... I was asked to take the prisoner, Yates, to the
city with me... He had a fine gold watch and nine hundred dollars
in gold... we traveled about halfway down Echo Canon to where
the general's headquarters were located... I delivered General
Wells [a member of the First Presidency under Brigham Young] some
letters... and asked him what I should do with my prisoner. He
said: 'He ought to be killed; but take him on; you will probably
get an order when you get to Col. Jones' camp'... within three
or four miles of the camp, we met Joseph S. Young, a son of Brigham's...
He hailed me (I being behind) and said his father wanted that
man Yates killed, and that I would know all about it when I got
to Jones' camp.
"We got there about sundown, and were met outside by Col.
Jones... He took me aside and told me he had orders when Yates
came along to have him used up... Supper was brought to us, and
Yates soon went to sleep on his blankets. Flack and Meacham spread
their blankets and soon went to sleep also.... No person was to
be seen, when Col. Jones and two others, Hosea Stout and another
man whose name I do not recollect, came to my camp-fire and asked
if Yates was asleep. I told them he was, upon which his brains
were knocked out with an ax. He was covered up with his blankets...
and a grave dug some three feet deep near the camp by the fire-light,
all hands assisting. Flack and Meacham were asleep when the man
was killed, but woke up and saw the grave digging. The body was
put in and the dirt well packed on it...
"The next day I took the nine hundred dollars, and we all
went to headquarters.... Flack and I went to Brigham's office....
He asked what had become of Yates? I told him. He then asked if
I had got word from him? I told him that I had got his instructions
at Jones' camp, and also of the word I had got from his son Jo
[Joseph Young]. He said that was right, and a good thing. I then
told him I had nine hundred dollars given me to bring in, that
Yates had at the time he was captured. I told him of the expense
I had been to during the war, and asked him if I might have part
of the money? He gave me a reprimand for asking such a thing,
and said it must go towards defraying the expenses of the war.
I pulled out the sack containing the money, and he told me to
give it to his clerk... The money was counted, and we left."
(Brigham's Destroying Angel, pp. 122-126)
Brigham Young's son admitted meeting with Hickman about Yates
but claimed it was to save him. Stanley P. Hirshon wrote: "In
1871, Joseph A. Young, the prophet's son, described to the New
York Tribune how he met Hickman at the outskirts of the city and
urged him to bring Yates in alive. Hickman, however, told the
New York World a different story. Joseph said Young wanted the
prisoner 'taken care of,'... Significantly, neither Joseph nor
Hickman denied that Mormons had murdered Yates." (The Lion
of the Lord, pages 176-177) Joseph Young's statement certainly
raises some interesting questions: If an order had not been given
that Yates was to die, why would he be urging Hickman to bring
him in alive? Moreover, if Joseph Young was really concerned about
Hickman bringing in Yates alive, why didn't the Mormons punish
Hickman when he came in without him? The fact that the Mormon
leaders did not punish Hickman for this murder seems to show that
they were responsible for the crime. That Hickman did not seem
concerned about keeping Yates' death a secret is made plain by
a statement written by Dan Jones: " 'This Yates was a personal
friend of mine, a kind-hearted, liberal man... One very cold morning
about sunrise, Hickman and two others came to my camp.... he took
me outside and asked me if I knew Yates. I told him I did. 'Well,
we have just buried him,' he said.' " (Forty Years Among
the Indians, as cited by Juanita Brooks in On The Mormon Frontier,
vol. 2, p. 643, n. 13) In the same footnote, Mrs. Brooks commented:
"That some Mormons did confiscate Yates' property is shown
in the diary of Newton Tuttle... 'Sat 24... Lewis Robinson got
back from Green river he took 48 Horse & colts 36 pair of
blankets &c that belonged to Yates...' "
J. H. Beadle said that Yates' "remains have been disinterred
from the spot named by Hickman, and the chain of evidence is complete.
Hosea Stout, a Mormon lawyer of considerable prominence, who was
arrested for complicity in this murder, and on Hickman's testimony,
admits that Yates was killed as a spy; but insists that he was
not present and had no knowledge of the transaction; that Yates
was delivered to Hickman to be taken to the city, and neither
he nor any other officer saw him again." (Brigham's Destroying
Angel, pp. 205-206) That Hosea Stout was on the scene at the time
of the murder is verified by his own diary: "Sunday 18 Oct
1857.... Some 700 head of the captured cattle passed to day being
driven by teamsters who left the enemy. At dark W. A. Hickman
came in with Mr Yates a prisoner." (On The Mormon Frontier,
The Diary of Hosea Stout, vol. 2, p. 643) There is little doubt
that Stout would resort to violence against a man suspected of
being a spy. We have previously quoted from Stout's own diary
for Jan. 9, 1846. In that entry Hosea Stout said that he thought
"William Hibbard" was "a spy" and that "I
told Scott that we must 'bounce a stone off his head.'... I got
an opportunity & hit him on the back of his head which came
very near taking his life." (Ibid., vol. 1, p. 103)
R. N. Baskin, who was responsible for the indictment of Brigham
Young, gave this information:
"I knew that the indictment of Brigham and others would
cause great excitement, especially among the polygamic element
of the Mormon church, and if a collision occurred it it [sic]
would be at the time Brigham was arrested on the charge of murder.
To meet such a contingency the United States marshal had appointed
about one hundred deputies... I knew that the arrest of anyone
except Brigham would not be resisted. I therefore had Hawkins
arrested and tried before taking any steps in the other cases.
During that trial the street in front of the courtroom was daily
crowded by hundreds of men, many of whom were armed and whose
demeanor was most threatening towards the court.... Brigham was
then arrested on the charge of lewd and lascivious cohabitation,
and brought into court. He gave bonds, just as the others were
required to do.... a few days later I had a warrant issued for
his arrest on the murder charge.... Evidently some of the marshal's
deputies betrayed him, as Brigham learned of his intended arrest....
Brigham finally decided that instead of resisting he would make
a journey to 'the south' for his health.... In the height of the
excitement, and when the armed mob was menacing the court, a number
of prominent Gentiles called upon me and stated that they had
reliable information that, unless the prosecutions were stopped,
the prominent Gentiles who had taken an active part in opposing
the Mormon 'system' would be assassinated; that they had been
appointed a committee to advise me of the fact and request me
to dismiss the cases. I told the spokesman he would make a splendid
angel, and as I did not intend to grant the request, he had better
prepare to go to Abraham's bosom. He replied that the matter was
'too serious to treat facetiously.'... This was not the only time
I had been subjected to a fire from the rear by men who should
have encouraged instead of opposed me." (Reminiscences of
Early Utah, pages 54-56)
Under the date of December 13, 1871, Wilford Woodruff recorded
the following in his journal: "...spent the Evening at the
Presidets office with the Twelve... & many others & Expressed
our views concerning Presidt Brigham Young coming home to stand
his trial... all thought it wisdom & good policy for him to
Come to the City & stand his trial... Yet all agreed to leave
it with him to decide as the spirit might dictate." (Wilford
Woodruff's Journal, vol. 7, page 45) Brigham Young finally returned,
and on January 2, 1872, Woodruff noted: "...the United States
Marshall Came to Presidents Youngs office & Served an Inditement
upon him for Murders.... MCkean the Judge Refused Bail But put
Presidet Young into the Hands of the Marshall to be Confined in
one of Presidet Youngs own Homes." (Ibid., p. 52)
Unfortunately, the case against Brigham Young for murder never
came to trial. Harold Schindler says that "the United States
Supreme Court handed down a decision in the Englebrecht case which
set aside all legal proceedings in Utah during the previous eighteen
months and declared null and void indictments found against nearly
one hundred and forty persons. The landmark opinion resulted in
all charges being dropped against Young, Wells, Stout, Kimball
and ironically, Hickman himself." (Orrin Porter Rockwell;
Man of God, Son of Thunder, p. 355)
Almost everyone agreed that Bill Hickman had committed many
murders. After Hickman became disillusioned with Mormonism, even
Apostle Woodruff spoke of his "damnable murders." (Wilford
Woodruff's Journal, vol. 7, p. 36) That Hickman could commit the
atrocious crimes he did while the Mormons were in power without
being punished seems to show that he was being protected by church
leaders. These leaders did everything they could to make it difficult
to enforce the law. By the time Hickman confessed to his crimes,
the legal system in Utah was in such disarray that neither Young
nor Hickman had to stand trial.
Writing in Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Autumn 1966,
p. 86-87, Thomas G. Alexander commented:
"The federal decision in Clinton V. Englebrecht
provided the legal basis for throwing out 130 indictments found
by grand juries drawn in accordance with the practice in United
States courts rather than the territorial statutes. This solved
nothing, however, because the disputes over the appointment of
the territorial marshall tied the hands of the court; the courts
became little more than boards of arbitration, and by June, 1874,
a backlog of ninety-five cases had built up in Third District
Court.
"McKean and other Gentiles believed that
the Mormons were afraid to allow trials of their brethren accused
of murder and other crimes before impartial juries. The judge
wrote to U. S. Attorney General George H. Williams in the fall
of 1873 complaining that he could neither convict the guilty nor
protect the innocent and that Utah had become a 'theocratic state,
under the vice regency of Brigham Young.' "
While all the evidence seems to show that everyone who opposed
the Mormon Church in early Utah risked the possibility of losing
their property or even their lives, things are different today.
The police in Salt Lake City give full protection to both Mormons
and Gentiles. Wallace Turner observed: "A modern apostasy
can be understood through the story of the Tanner couple. The
fact that today they can live comfortably in Salt Lake City, relatively
unmolested by the LDS church (beyond a letter or so from anguished
apostles) demonstrates as much as anything could the way the church
has changed. In the old days, those who disagreed had better be
able to defend themselves." (The Mormon Establishment, 1966,
p. 163)
The reader will notice that the books Brigham's Destroying Angel
and "Wild Bill" Hickman and the Mormon Frontier make
a devastating case against the claim by Mormon apologists that
the church had no connection with William Hickman's crimes. The
evidence clearly shows that although President Brigham Young and
Apostle Orson Hyde knew that Hickman was a thief and a cold-blooded
murderer, he was used to further the interests of the church.
|