It is a well-known fact that the early Mormons suffered a good deal of
persecution at the hands of the Gentiles--i.e., non-Mormons. The prophet
Joseph Smith and his brother were murdered by a cowardly mob that took
the law into their own hands. A number of Mormons lost their lives during
these early years. Unfortunately, however, many Mormon historians have
overlooked the other side of the story.
During the early years of Mormonism it was frequently alleged that the
leaders of the church sanctioned the practice of putting both Gentiles
and Mormon apostates to death. In 1969-70, we made a detailed study of
the charges and published our conclusions in a book entitled, The Mormon
Kingdom, Vol. 2. The evidence that we marshalled convinced us that many
of the claims were genuine.
Since doing this research we found even more evidence to verify that
there was a conspiracy to destroy dissenters and other people that the
Mormon leaders hated.
While many Mormon scholars would like to scoff at those who have seriously
studied this matter, there is incontrovertible proof that Brigham Young,
the second prophet of the Mormon Church, publicly preached a doctrine
called "blood atonement." Although one might think that the
name of this doctrine came from the atonement of Jesus on the cross, the
truth of the matter is that it relates to people being put to death. Brigham
Young explained this in a sermon given on 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....
And further more, I know that 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.... 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 dove, cannot remit, but they must
be atoned for by the blood of the man.
Sermon by Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Vol. 4, pages 53-54;
also published in the Mormon Church's Deseret News, 1856, page 235
On another occasion Brigham Young made this chilling statement regarding
a person's obligation to spill the blood of those who committed serious
sins:
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 his 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? That
is what Jesus Christ meant....
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...
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 have 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....
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.... 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.
Sermon by President Brigham Young, delivered in the Mormon Tabernacle,
February 8, 1857; printed in the Deseret News, February 18, 1857; also
reprinted in the Journal of Discourses, Vol. 4, pages 219-220
These are only two of many "blood atonement" sermons preached
by Mormon leaders. Sandra Tanner, one of the authors of this
newsletter who is also the great-great-granddaughter of Brigham Young,
was greatly shocked when she read Young's sermons. This,
in fact, was an important factor in her decision to leave the Mormon Church.
In 1958, Gustive O. Larson, Professor of Church History at the church's
Brigham Young University, acknowledged that blood atonement was actually
practiced. He related the following:
To whatever extent the preaching on blood atonement may have influenced
action, it would have been in relation to Mormon
disciplinary action among its own members. In point would be a verbally
reported case of a Mr. Johnson in Cedar City who was found guilty of
adultery with his stepdaughter by a bishop's court and sentenced to
death for atonement of his sin. According to the report of reputable
eyewitnesses, judgment was executed with consent of the offender who
went to his unconsecrated grave in full confidence of salvation through
the shedding of his blood. Such a case, however primitive, is understandable
within the meaning of the doctrine and the emotional extremes of the
[Mormon] Reformation.
Utah Historical Quarterly, January, 1958, page 62, note
39
This may be the same case spoken of by John D. Lee, who was sealed to
Brigham Young and was a member of Young's secret
Council of Fifty:
The most deadly sin among the people was adultery, and many men were
killed in Utah for the crime.
Rasmos Anderson was a Danish man who came to Utah... He had married
a widow lady somewhat older than himself... At one of
the meetings during the reformation Anderson and his step-daughter confessed
that they had committed adultery... they were rebaptized and received
into full membership. They were then placed under covenant that if they
again committed adultery, Anderson should suffer death. Soon after this
a charge was laid against Anderson before the Council, accusing him
of adultery with his step-daughter. This Council was composed of Klingensmith
and his two counselors; it was the Bishop's Council. Without giving
Anderson any chance to defend himself or make a statement, the Council
voted that Anderson must die for violating his covenants. Klingensmith
went to Anderson and notified him that the orders were that he must
die by having his throat cut, so that the running of his blood would
atone for his sins. Anderson, being a firm believer in the doctrines
and teachings of the Mormon Church, made no objections... His wife was
ordered to prepare a suit of clean clothing, in which to have her husband
buried... she being directed to tell those who should inquire after
her husband that he had gone to California.
Klingensmith, James Haslem, Daniel McFarland and John M. Higbee dug
a grave in the field near Cedar City, and that night,
about 12 o'clock, went to Anderson's house and ordered him to make ready
to obey Council. Anderson got up... and without a word of remonstrance
accompanied those that he believed were carrying out the will of the
"Almighty God." They went to the place where the grave was
prepared; Anderson knelt upon the side of the grave and prayed. Klingensmith
and his company then cut Anderson's throat from ear to ear and held
him so that his blood ran into the grave.
As soon as he was dead they dressed him in his clean clothes, threw
him into the grave and buried him. They then carried his
bloody clothing back to his family, and gave them to his wife to wash...
She obeyed their orders.... Anderson was killed just before the Mountain
Meadows massacre. The killing of Anderson was then considered a religious
duty and a just act. It was justified by all the people, for they were
bound by the same covenants, and the least word of objection to thus
treating the man who had broken his covenant would have brought the
same fate upon the person who was so foolish as to raise his voce against
any act committed by order of the Church authorities.
Confessions of John D. Lee, Photo-reprint of 1877 edition, pages 282-283
In the same book John D. Lee made this startling statement:
I knew of many men being killed in Nauvoo... and I know of many a
man who was quietly put out of the way by the orders of Joseph and his
Apostles while the Church was there.
I bid., page 284
Lee also revealed another very cruel practice which took place both
in Nauvoo, Illinois, and in early Utah:
In Utah it has been the custom with the Priesthood to make eunuchs
of such men as were obnoxious to the leaders. This was
done for a double purpose: first, it gave a perfect revenge, and next,
it left the poor victim a living example to others of the dangers of
disobeying counsel and not living as ordered by the Priesthood.
In Nauvoo it was the orders from Joseph Smith and his apostles to beat,
wound and castrate all Gentiles that the police
could take in the act of entering or leaving a Mormon household under
circumstances that led to the belief that they had been there for immoral
purposes.... In Utah it was the favorite revenge of old, worn-out members
of the Priesthood, who wanted young women sealed to them, and found
that the girl preferred some handsome young man. The old priests generally
got the girls, and many a young man was unsexed for refusing to give
up his sweetheart at the request of an old and failing, but still sensual
apostle or member of the Priesthood. As an illustration... Warren Snow
was Bishop of the Church at Manti, San Pete County, Utah. He had several
wives, but there was a fair, buxom young woman in the town that Snow
wanted for a wife.... She thanked him for the honor offered, but told
him she was then engaged to a young man, a member of the Church, and
consequently could not marry the old priest.... He told her it
was the will of God that she should marry him, and she must do so; that
the young man could be got rid of, sent on a mission or dealt with in
some way... that, in fact, a promise made to the young man was not binding,
when she was informed that it was contrary to the wishes of the authorities.
The girl continued obstinate.... the authorities called on the young
man and directed him to give up the young woman. This he steadfastly
refused to do.... He remained true to his intended, and said he would
die before he would surrender his intended wife to the embraces of another....
The young man was ordered to go on a mission to some distant locality...
But the mission was refused...
It was then determined that the rebellious young man must be forced
by harsh treatment to respect the advice and orders of
the Priesthood. His fate was left to Bishop Snow for his decision. He
decided that the young man should be castrated; Snow saying, 'When that
is done, he will not be liable to want the girl badly, and she will
listen to reason when she knows that her lover is no longer a man.'
It was then decided to call a meeting of the people who lived true to
counsel, which was held in the school-house in Manti...
The young man was there, and was again requested, ordered and threatened,
to get him to surrender the young woman to Snow, but true to his plighted
troth, he refused to consent to give up the girl. The lights were then
put out. An attack was made on the young man. He was severely beaten,
and then tied with his back down on a bench, when Bishop Snow took a
bowie-knife, and performed the operation in a most brutal manner, and
then took the portion severed from his victim and hung it up in the
school-house on a nail, so that it could be seen by all who visited
the house afterwards.
The party then left the young man weltering in his blood, and in a lifeless
condition. During the night he succeeded in releasing
himself from his confinement, and dragged himself to some hay-stacks,
where he lay until the next day, when he was discovered by his friends.
The young man regained his health, but has been an idiot or quite lunatic
ever since....
After this outrage old Bishop Snow took occasion to getup a meeting...
When all had assembled, the old man talked to the
people about their duty to the Church, and their duty to obey counsel,
and the dangers of refusal, and then publicly called attention to the
mangled parts of the young man, that had been severed from his person,
and stated that the deed had been done to teach the people that the
counsel of the Priesthood must be obeyed. To make a long story short,
I will say, the young woman was soon after forced into being sealed
to Bishop Snow.
Brigham Young... did nothing against Snow. He left him in charge as
Bishop at Manti, and ordered the matter to be hushed up.
Ibid., pages 284-286
Mormons today would be appalled if such a dastardly deed was committed
and would demand that the persons responsible be severely punished. Brigham
Young, however, approved of many violent acts perpetrated by those he
put in authority. Interestingly, D. Michael Quinn found documented evidence
showing that President Young supported Bishop Warren S. Snow's cruel mistreatment
of the young man:
In the midsummer of 1857 Brigham Young also expressed approval for
an LDS bishop who had castrated a man. In May 1857 Bishop Warren S.
Snow's counselor wrote that twenty-four-year-old Thomas Lewis 'has now
gone crazy' after being castrated by Bishop Snow for an undisclosed
sex crime. When informed of Snow's action, Young said: 'I feel to sustain
him...' In July Brigham Young wrote a reassuring letter to the bishop
about this castration: 'Just let the matter drop, and say no more about
it,' the LDS president advised, 'and it will soon die away among the
people.'
The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power, Vol. 2, pages
250-251
On November 30, 1871, T. B. H. Stenhouse received a letter by an individual
who was present at a meeting in Provo, Utah. The letter indicated that
Bishop Blackburn was also strongly pushing for the emasculation of men
who were disobedient to their leaders:
'Dear Stenhouse: I Have read carefully the accompanying statement
about the "Reformation."... If you want to travel wider and
show the effect in the country of the inflammatory speeches delivered
in Salt Lake City at that time, you can mention the Potter and Parrish
murders at Springville, the barbarous castration of a young man in San
Pete, and, to cap the climax, the Mountain-Meadows massacre... Threats
of personal violence or death were common in the settlements against
all who dared to speak against the priesthood, or in any way protest
against this "reign of terror.
'I was at a Sunday meeting in the spring of 1857, in Provo, when the
news of the San Pete castration was referred to by the
presiding bishop--Blackburn. Some men in Provo had rebelled against
authority in some trivial matter, and Blackburn shouted in his Sunday
meeting--a mixed congregation of all ages and both sexes--"I want
the people of Provo to understand that the boys in Provo can use the
knife as well as the boys in San Pete. Boys, get your knives ready,
there is work for you! We must not be behind San Pete in good works."
The result of this was that two citizens, named Hooper and Beauvere,
both having families at Provo, left the following night... Their only
offence was rebellion against the priesthood.
'This man, Blackburn, was continued in office at least a year after
this...
'The qualifications for a bishop were a blind submission and obedience
to Brigham and the authorities, and a firm unrelented
government of his subjects.
The Rocky Mountain Saints, by T. B. H. Stenhouse, 1873, pages 301-302
This is a very important letter because it throws additional light upon
President Brigham Young's knowledge regarding emasculation in early Utah.
According to Wilford Woodruff's journal, not long after Warren S. Snow's
cowardly attack on Thomas Lewis, President Young discussed the matter
of castration being used to save people:
I then went into the president office & spent the evening. Bishop
Blackburn was present. The subject Came up of some persons
leaving Provo who had Apostatized. Some thought that Bishop Blackburn
& President Snow was to blame. Brother Joseph Young
presented the thing to presidet Young. But When the Circumstances were
told Presidet Brigham Young sustained the Brethren who presided at Provo....
The subjects of Eunuchs came up... Brigham Said the day would Come when
thousands would be made Eunochs in order for
them to be saved in the kingdom of God.
Wilford Woodruff's Diary, June 2, 1857, Vol. 5, pages 54-55
In 1861, Apostle Orson Hyde met with Wilford Woodruff and indicated
that he believed Warren Snow was guilty of stealing. Wilford Woodruff
wrote the following in his journal:
He spoke of his mission in sanpete and the unwise Course of Bishop
Warren Snow, & George Pecock his first councillor. They
have squandered a large amount of tithing funds, County taxes &c
& Brother Hyde thinks from Testimony guilty of stealing many
Cattle.
Ibid., Vol. 5, page 554
It is astounding to think that the prophet of the Mormon Church would
allow such a man as Warren Snow to function as a bishop in the church.
Unfortunately, however, President Young went so far as to give him a special
blessing. Wilford Woodruff recorded the following in his journal under
the date of April 1, 1861:
Warren Stone Snow was Blessed By Presidet Young who gave him a very
good Blessing.
Ibid., page 571
Moreover, in 1867, he was given the opportunity to preach in the Mormon
Tabernacle (see Vol. 6, page 319). In a public discourse President Young
acknowledged that the church had use for some very mean devils who resided
in early Utah:
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, page 176
Orrin Porter Rockwell was certainly one of Brigham Young's "meanest
devils." Rockwell, who had served as a bodyguard for Joseph Smith,
did not hesitate to shed blood.... Bill Hickman was another ruthless man
who killed many people. In his book Brigham's Destroying Angel, Hickman
confessed that he had committed murders for the church.
In 1858, an extremely grotesque double murder was committed. Henry Jones
and his mother were both put to death. These murders were obviously the
direct result of Brigham Young's doctrine of "blood atonement."
Two months before Henry Jones was actually murdered, he was viciously
attacked. Hosea Stout, a very dedicated Mormon defender, wrote the following
regarding the first attack on Jones:
Saturday 27 Feb 1858. This evening 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
One would think that this would have ended the vendetta against Jones.
Unfortunately, this was not the case. On April 19, 1859, the newspaper
Valley Tan printed an affidavit by Nathaniel Case which contained a statement
implicating a bishop and other Mormons who lived in Payson:
Nathaniel Case being sworn, says: that he has resided in the Territory
of Utah since the year 1850; lived with Bishop Hancock
(Charles Hancock) in the town of Payson, at the time Henry Jones and
his mother were murdered... The night prior to the murder a secret council
meeting was held in the upper room of Bishop Hancock's house; saw Charles
Hancock, George W. Hancock, Daniel Rawson, James Bracken, George Patten
and Price Nelson go into that meeting that night.... About 8 o'clock
in the evening of the murder the company gathered at Bishop Hancock's...
They said they were going to guard a corral where Henry Jones was going
to come that night and steal horses; they had guns.
I had a good mini rifle and Bishop Hancock wanted to borrow it; I refused
to lend it to him. The above persons all went away
together... Next morning I heard that Henry Jones and his mother had
been killed. I wnet [sic] down to the dug-out where they lived... The
old woman was laying on the ground in the dugout on a little straw,
in the clothes in which she was killed. She had a bullet hole through
her head... In about 15 or 20 minutes Henry Jones was brought there
and laid by her side; they then threw some old bed clothes over them
and an old feather bed and then pulled the dug-out on top of them....
The next Sunday after the murder, in a church meeting in Payson, Charles
Hancock, the bishop, said, as to the killing of
Jones and his mother he cared nothing about it, and it would have been
done in daylight if circumstances would have permitted it.--
This was said from the stand; there were 150 or 200 persons present.
He gave no reason for killing them. And further saith not.
Nathaniel Case.
Sworn to and signed before me this 9th day of April, 1859.
John Cradlebaugh, Judge 2nd Judicial District.
Those who murdered Henry Jones and his mother may have remembered President
Brigham Young's sermon which was delivered just two years prior to these
murders:
Suppose you found your brother in bed with your wife, and put a javelin
through both of them, you would be justified, and they would atone for
their sins, and be received into the kingdom of God. I would at once
do so in such a case; under such circumstances. I have no wife whom
I love so well that I would not put a javelin through her heart, and
I would do it with clean hands.
Journal of Discourses, Vol. 3, page 247
In his book, The Mormon hierarchy: Extensions of Power, Vol. 2, pages
241-261, Dr. Quinn presented compelling evidence showing that "blood
atonement" was endorsed by church leaders and actually practiced
by the Mormon people. Quinn gave the names of a number of violent men
who served as "enforcers" for Brigham Young. In addition Quinn
wrote:
During this period Brigham Young and other Mormon leaders also repeatedly
preached about specific sins for which it was
necessary to shed the blood of men and women. Blood-atonement sins included
adultery, apostasy, 'covenant breaking,'
counterfeiting, 'many men who left this Church,' murder, not being 'heartily
on the Lord's side,' profaning 'the name of the Lord,' sexual intercourse
between a 'white' person and an African-American, stealing, and telling
lies....
Some LDS historians have claimed that blood-atonement sermons were simply
Brigham Young's use of 'rhetorical devices
designed to frighten wayward individuals into conformity with Latter-day
Saint principles' and to bluff anti-Mormons. Writers often describe
these sermons as limited to the religious enthusiasm and frenzy of the
Utah Reformation up to 1857. The first problem with such explanations
is that official LDS sources show that as early as 1843 Joseph Smith
and his counselor Sidney Rigdon advocated decapitation or throat-cutting
as punishment for various crimes and sins.
Moreover, a decade before Utah's reformation, Brigham Young's private
instructions show that he fully expected his trusted
associates to kill various persons for violating religious obligations.
The LDS church's official history still quotes Young's words to 'the
brethren' in February 1846: 'I should be perfectly willing to see thieves
have their throats cut.' The following December he instructed bishops,
'when a man is found to be a thief, he will be a thief no longer, cut
his throat, & thro' him in the River,' and Young did not instruct
them to ask his permission. A week later the church president explained
to a Winter Quarters meeting that cutting off the heads of repeated
sinners 'is the law of God & it shall be executed...' A rephrase
of Young's words later appeared in Hosea Stout's reference to a specific
sinner, 'to cut him off--behind the ears--according to the law of God
in such cases.'...
When informed that a black Mormon in Massachusetts had married a white
woman, Brigham Young told the apostles in December 1847 that he would
have both of them killed 'if they were far away from the Gentiles.'
The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power, Vol. 2, pp. 246-247
While we do not have room for extensively quotations from Quinn's book,
the following are some extracts:
In September 1857 Apostle George A. Smith told a Salt Lake City congregation
that Mormons at Parowan in southern Utah 'wish
that their enemies might come and give them a chance to fight and take
vengeance for the cruelties that had been inflicted upon us in the States.'
Smith had just returned from southern Utah where he had encouraged such
feelings by preaching fiery sermons about resisting the U.S. army and
taking vengeance on anti-Mormons. Just days before his talk in Salt
Lake City, members of Parowan's Mormon militia participated in killing
120 men, women, and children in the Mountain Meadows Massacre....
Although most accounts claimed that the militia killed only the adult
males and let their Indian allies kill the women and children,
perpetrator Nephi Johnson later told an LDS apostle that 'white men
did most of the killing.' Perpetrator George W. Adair also told
another apostle that 'John Higbee gave the order to kill the women and
children,' and Adair 'saw the women's and children's throats cut.'...
As late as 1868 the Deseret News encouraged rank-and-file Mormons to
kill anyone who engaged in sexual relations outside
marriage....
Under such circumstances the Mormon hierarchy bore full responsibility
for the violent acts of zealous Mormon[s] who accepted their instructions
literally and carried out various forms of blood atonement. 'Obviously
there were those who could not easily make a distinction between rhetoric
and reality,' a BYU religion professor has written.... It is unrealistic
to assume that faithful Mormons all declined to act on such repeated
instructions in pioneer Utah.... Neither is it reasonable to assume
that the known cases of blood atonement even approximated the total
number that occurred in the first twenty years after Mormon settlement
in Utah.... LDS leaders publicly and privately encouraged Mormons to
consider it their religious right to kill antagonistic outsiders, common
criminals, LDS apostates, and even faithful Mormons who committed sins
'worthy of death.'
The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power, Vol. 2, pp. 251-53, 56-57,
60
On pages 804-805, of the same book, Quinn reported concerning a murder
committed in 1902:
5 Apr., 'Clyde Felt has confessed to cutting the throat of old man
Collins, at his request. The old man was a moral egenerate. The boy
is a son of David P. Felt.' Grandson of former general authority, Clyde
Felt is fourteen. Despite this blood atonement murder, LDS leaders allow
[the] young man to be endowed and married in temple eight years later.
Although we cannot be certain, this may be the last known case of "blood
atonement" committed by Mormons. It should be noted, however, that
at least two groups (the Lebarons and the Laffertys) broke off from the
Mormon Church and still hold to Brigham Young's teaching of "blood
atonement." Consequently, they committed a significant number of
"blood atonement" murders between 1972 and 1988.
While Dr. Quinn's book, The Mormon Hierarchy: Extention of Power,
presents plenty of evidence to establish the fact that "blood atonement"
murders were committed by the early Mormons, Quinn did not have the space
to deal at length with this important issue. To compliment Quinn's excellent
work we highly recommend our book, The Mormon Kingdom, Vol. 2.
In this book we have actual photographs from the church's Deseret News
confirming that church leaders strongly supported the doctrine of "blood
atonement."
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