Archive for the ‘Church History’ Category

Joseph Smith’s letter of appeal to the Green Mountain Boys of Vermont

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

From Examiner.com

Old letters and articles from historic newspapers can help build depth when writing a family history. By including timely, historical events in your records the reader can wonder how those events impacted the lives of their ancestral families.

After the Mormons [members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints] left New York State in the mid 1800s, they continued west into Ohio and Missouri.  !– /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:”"; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:none; mso-layout-grid-align:none; text-autospace:none; font-size:12.0pt; mso-ansi-font-size:10.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-fareast-font-family:”Times New Roman”;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –>

Here, they were heavily persecuted. Missourians were especially brutal to the members—beating, terrorizing and driving the Saints from their homes. In 1838 an extermination order was issued by Missouri Governor, Lilburn Boggs. Part of the order read, „the Mormons must be treated as enemies, and must be exterminated or driven from the State if necessary for the public peace—their outrages are beyond all description.” The small, fledgling church continued westward into Illinois. It was in Nauvoo, a city built by the Saints along the Mississippi River that Joseph Smith sent a letter to the Green Mountain Boys of Vermont asking them to come to the Church’s aid. He hoped the results of the letter would be to help bring justice against the State of Missouri for the wrongs Missourians had committed against the Saints.

The letter was printed in the Warsaw Message, an Illinois newspaper:

Volume I- Number 44  January 17, 1844.

General Joseph Smith’s Appeal to the Green Mountain Boys.

I was born in Sharon, Vermont, in 1805, — where the first quarter of my life grew with the growth & strengthened with the strength of that “first-born” State of the “United Thirteen.” From the old “French War” to the final consummation of American Independence, my fathers, heart to heart, and shoulder to shoulder, with the noble fathers of our liberty, fought and bled; and with the most of that venerable band of patriots, they have gone to rest, — bequeathing a glorious country, with all her inherent rights, to millions of posterity. Like other honest citizens, I not only (when manhood came,) sought my own peace, prosperity, and happiness, but also the peace, prosperity, and happiness of my friends; and, with all the rights and realm before me, and the revelations of Jesus Christ to guide me into all truth, I had good reasons to enter into the blessings and privileges of an American citizen; — the rights of a Green Mountain Boy, unmolested, and enjoy life and religion according to the most virtuous and enlightened customs, rules, and etiquette of the nineteenth century. But, to the disgrace of the United States, it is not so. These rights and privileges, together with a large amount of property, have been wrested from me, and thousands of my friends, by lawless mobs in Missouri, supported by Executive authority; and the crime of plundering our property; and the unconstitutional and barbarous act of our expulsion; and even the inhumanity of murdering men, women, and children, have received the pass word of “justifiable” by legislative enactments, and the horrid deeds, doleful and disgraceful as they are, have been paid for by government.

In vain have we sought for redress of grievances and a restoration to our rights in the Courts and Legislature of Missouri. In vain have we sought for our rights and the remuneration for our property in the Halls of Congress, and at the hands of the President. The only consolation yet experienced from these highest tribunals and mercy seats of our bleeding country is, that our cause is just, but the government has no power to redress us.

Our arms were forcibly taken from us by those Missouri marauders; and, in spite of every effort to have them returned, the State of Missouri still retains them; and the United States militia law, with this fact before the government, still compels us to military duty; and, for a lack of said arms, the law forces us to pay fines. As Shakespeare would say; “thereby hangs a tale.”

Several hundred thousand dollars worth of land in Missouri was purchased at the U.S. Land Offices in that district of country: and the money without doubt, has been appropriated to strengthen the army and navy, or increase the power and glory of the nation in some other way; and notwithstanding Missouri has robbed and mobbed me and twelve or fifteen thousand innocent inhabitants murdered, and hundreds expelled, the residue, at the point of the bayonet, without law, contrary to the express language of the Constitution of the United States, and every State in the Union; and contrary to the custom and usage of civilized nations; and especially one holding up the motto: “The asylum of the oppressed;” yet the comfort we receive to raise our wounded bodies, and invigorate our troubled spirits, on account of such immense sacrifices of life, property, patience, and right; and as an equivalent for the enormous taxes we are compelled to pay to support the functionaries in a dignified manner, after we have petitioned and pleaded with tears and been showed like a caravan of foreign animals for the peculiar gratification of connoisseurs in humanity, that flare along in public life, like lamps upon lamp-posts, because they are better calculated for the schemes of the night than for the scenes of the day, is as President Van Buren said, your cause is just, but the government has no power to redress you!

No wonder, after the Pharisee’s prayer, the Publican smote his breast and said, Lord be merciful to me a sinner! What must the manacled nations think of freemen’s rights in the land of liberty?

Were I a Chaldean I would exclaim: Keed’ nauh to-maroon lehoam elauhayaugh deyshemayaugh veh aur kau lau gnaubadoo, yabadoo ma-ar’guauoomen tehoat shemayaugh alah. (Thus shall we say unto them: The gods that have not made the heavens and the earth, they shall perish from the earth, and from under these heavens.)

An Egyptian: Sa e eh-ni: (What other persons are these?) A Grecian: Diabolas basseleuei: (The Devil reigns.) A Frenchman: Messieurs sans Dieu, (Gentkemen without Go.) A Turk: Ain shems: (The fountain of light.) A german: sie sind unferstandig. (What consumate ignorance!) A Syrian: Zaubok. (Sacrifice!) A Spaniard: Il sabio muda conscio, il nescio ne. (A wise man reflects, a fool does not.) A Samaritian: Saunau! (O Stranger!) An Italian: O tempa! oh diffidanza! (O the times! O the diffidence!) A Hebrew: Ajtaij aol raicu (Thou God seest me.) A Dane: Hvnd tidende! (What tidings!) A Saxon: Hwaet riht! (What right!) A Swede: Hvad skilla: (What skill!) A Polander: Nav-yen-wheo bah poa na Jesus Christus: (Blessed be the name of Jesus Christ.) A Western Indian: She-mo-kah She-mo keh ough-nepgab. (The white man, O the white man, he very uncertain.) A Roman: Procul, o procul este profani! (Be off, be off ye profane!) But as I am I will only add: when the wicked rule the people mourn.

Now, therefore, having failed in every attempt to obtain satisfaction at the tribunals where all men seek for it, according to the rules of right: — I am compelled to appeal to the honor and patriotism of my native State: to the clemency and valor of “Green Mountain Boys;” for, throughout the various periods of the world, whenever a nation, kingdom, state, family, or individual has received an insult or an injury from a superior force, (unless satisfaction was made,) it has been the custom to call in the aid of friends to assist in obtaining redress. For proof we have only to refer to the recovery of Lot and his effects by Abraham, in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah; or to turn to the relief afforded by France and Holland for the achievement of the independence of these United States. Without bringing up the great bulk of historical facts, rules, laws, decrees, and treaties, and bible records, by which nations have been governed, to show that mutual alliance for the general benefit of mankind, to retaliate and repel foreign aggressions; to punish and prevent home wrongs, when the conservators of justice and the laws have failed to afford a remedy, are not only common and in the highest sense justifiable and wise, but they are also poorer expedients to promote the enjoyment of equal rights, the pursuit of happiness, the preservation of life, and the benefit of posterity.

With all these facts before me, and a pure desire to ameliorate the condition of the poor and unfortunate among men, and, if possible, to entice all men from evil to good, and with firm reliance that God will reward the just, I have been stimulated to call upon my native State, for a “union of all honest men;” and to appeal to the valor of the “Green Mountain Boys” by all honorable methods & means to assist me in obtaining justice from Missouri: not only for the property she has stolen and confiscated, the murders she has committed among my friends, and for our expulsion from the State, but also to humble and chastise, or abase her for the disgrace she has brought upon constitutional liberty, until she atones for her sins.

I appeal also to the fraternity of brethren, who are bound by kindred ties, to assist a brother in distress, in all cases where it can be done according to the rules of order, to extend the boon of benevolence and protection, in avenging the Lord of his enemies, as if a Solomon, a Hiram, a St. John, or a Washington raised his hands before a wondering world, and exclaimed: — “My life for his!” Light, liberty, and virtue forever!

I bring this appeal before my native State, for the solemn reason that an injury has been done, and crimes have been committed, which a sovereign State, of the Federal compact, one of the great family of “E pluribus unum,” refuses to compensate, by consent of parties, rules of law, customs of nations, or in any other way. I bring it also, because the national Government has fallen short of affording the necessary relief as before stated, for want of power, leaving a large body of her own free citizens, whose wealth went freely into her treasury for lands, and whose gold and silver for taxes, still fills the pockets of her dignitaries “in ermine and lace,” defrauded, robbed, moved, plundered, ravished, driven, exiled, and banished from the “Independent Republic of Missouri!”

And in the appeal let me say; raise your towers, pile your monuments to the skies; build your steam frigates; spread yourselves far and wide, and open the iron eyes of your bulwarks by sea and land; and let the towering church steeples marshal the country like the “dreadful splendor” of an army with bayonets: but remember the destruction of Pharaoh and his hosts; remember the handwriting upon the wall, mene, mene, teke, upharsin; remember the angels visit to Sennacherib and the 185,000 Assyrians; remember the end of the Jews and Jerusalem, and remember the Lord Almighty will avenge the blood of his Saints that now crimsons the skirts of Missouri! Shall wisdom cry aloud, and her speech not be heard?

Has the majesty of American liberty sunk into such vile servitude and oppression, that justice has fled? Have the glory and influence of a Washington, an Adams, a Jefferson, a Lafayette, and a host of others, forever departed, — and the wrath of a Cain, a Judas, and a Nero whirled forth in the heraldry of hell, to sprinkle our garments with blood; and lighten the darkness of midnight with the blaze of our dwellings? Where is the patriotism of ‘76? Where is the virtue of our forefathers? and where is the sacred honor of freemen?

Must we, because we believe in the fulness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ; the administration of angels, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, like the prophets and apostles of old, — must we be mobbed with impunity — be exiled from our habitations and property without remedy; murdered without mercy, — and government find the weapons, and pay the vagabonds for doing the jobs, and give them the plunder into the bargain? Must we, because we believe in enjoying the constitutional privilege and right of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own consciences; and because we believe in repentance, and baptism for the remission of sins; the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands; the resurrection of the dead; the millennium; the day of judgment; and the Book of Mormon as the history of the aborigines of this continent, — must we be expelled from the institutions of our country, the rights of citizenship, and the graves of our friends and brethren, and the government lock the gate of humanity, and shut the door of redress against us? — If so, farewell freedom; adieu to personal safety, and let the red hot wrath of an offended God purify the nation of such sinks of corruption! For that realm is hurrying to ruin where vice has the power to expel virtue.

My Father, who stood several times in the battles of the American Revolution, till his companions in arms, had been shot dead, at his feet, was forced from his home in Far West, Missouri, by those civilized, or satanized savages, in the dreary season of winter, to seek a shelter in another State; and the vicissitudes and sufferings consequent to his flight brought his honored grey head to the grave, a few months after. And my youngest brother also, in the vigor and bloom of youth, from his great exposure and fatigue in endeavoring to assist his parents on their journey, (I and my brother Hyrum being in chains, in dungeons — where they tried to feed us on human flesh — in Missouri,) was likewise so debilitated that he found a premature grave shortly after my father. And my mother, too, though she yet lingers among us, from her extreme exposure in that dreadful tragedy, was filled with rheumatic affections and other diseases, which leave her no enjoyment of health. She is sinking in grief and pain, broken-hearted, from Missouri persecution.

O death! wilt thou not give to every honest man, a heated dart to sting those wretches while they pollute the land? and O grave! wilt thou not open the trap door to the pit of ungodly men, that they may stumble in?

I appeal to the Green Mountain Boys of my native State, to rise in the majesty of virtuous freemen, and by all honorable means help bring Missouri to the bar of justice. If there is one whisper from the spirit of an Ethen Allen, or a gleam from the shade of a Gen. Stark, let it mingle with our sense of honor and fire our bosoms for the cause of suffering innocence, — for the reputation of our disgraced country, and for the glory of God; and may all the earth bear me witness, if Missouri, blood-stained Missouri, — escapes the due merit of her crimes, the vengeance she so justly deserves — that Vermont is a hypocrite — a coward — and this nation the hot bed of political demagogues!

I make this appeal to the sons of liberty of my native State for help to frustrate the wicked design of sinful men; I make it to hush the violence of mobs; I make it to cope with the unhallowed influence of wicked men in high places; I make it to resent the insult and injury made to an innocent, unoffending people, by a lawless ruffian State; I make it to show our nation’s escutcheon; I make it to show presidents, governors, and rulers, prudence; I make it to fill honorable men with discretion; I make it to teach senators wisdom; I make it to learn judges justice; I make it to point clergymen to the path of virtue; and I make it to turn the hearts of this nation to the truth and realities of pure and undefiled religion, that they may escape the perdition of ungodly men; and Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is my Great Counsellor.

Wherefore let the rich and the learned, the wise and the noble, the poor and the needy; the bond and the free, both black and white, take heed to their ways, and cleave to the knowledge of God; and execute justice and judgment upon the earth in righteousness; and prepare to meet the judge of the quick and the dead, for the hour of his coming is nigh.

And I must go on as the herald of grace,
Till the wide-spreading conflict is over.
And burst thro’ the curtains of tyrannic night.
Yes, I must go on to gather our race,
Till the high blazing flames of Jehovah
Illumines the globe as a triumph of right.

As a friend of equal rights to all men, and a messenger of the everlasting gospel of Jesus Christ,

I have the honor to be,
Your devoted servant,
JOSEPH SMITH.

Nauvoo, Ill., Dec., 1843.

The letter was not received well and the Extermination Order stood until it was officially rescinded in 1976.

Trail of honor–The Mormon Exodus

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

From The Hawkeye.com:

Photo by John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye

Walkers, from left, Leilani Thomas of Midway Utah, Peggy Moffit of West Point, Utah, and Dorcas Anderson of Burley, Idaho, make their way to the Mississippi River on Monday to commemorate the Mormon exodus from Nauvoo to Utah.

NAUVOO, Ill. — Wrapped in doubled-layered sweaters, heavy coats and scarves, about 400 devoted Mormons marched down Parley Street to the frozen Mississippi River with remembrance on their minds.

They were remembering the sacrifice of their ancestors, who began their harsh trip west to Utah 163 years ago on Feb. 4. After arriving at the river, they remembered those who fell along the way by reading their names out loud at the Pioneer Memorial.

“It was a great ordeal. We look back on it now as the beginning. We call it our Trail of Hope,” said Dean Hughes, public affairs representative for Historic Nauvoo. “We see those early pioneers as a tough people. We’ve inherited some of that strength from them.”

Every year on Feb. 4, local Mormon residents and missionaries from as far away as Canada and California take the one mile exodus walk down Parley Street to commemorate the Mormon pioneers who traveled west to the Great Salt Lake Valley.

During the winter of 1846 to 1847, Latter-Day Saint leaders laid plans for the migration of the Saints from Nauvoo. Since Joseph Smith founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in the 1830s, the Mormons were often harshly treated and persecuted by their neighbors due to their religious beliefs.

“They planned to leave in the spring, but for some of the older settlers, that wasn’t good enough, and they started to pressure them to leave in the winter,” Hughes said.

While some of the Mormons crossed the Mississippi River in flat boats, most of the original pioneers crossed by covered wagon after the river froze over. From 1846 to 1849, more than 70,000 Mormons traveled along the Mormon Pioneer Trail that went across Iowa, connected with the Great Platte River Road at the Missouri River and ended in Utah.

“Nauvoo was a large city,” Hughes said. “It was a city of 15,000 people. It was as big as Chicago.”

Wednesday, three covered, horse-drawn wagons trailed behind the walkers to represent the wagons that made the trip in 1846. Many of the participants pinned paper name tags to their jackets — the names usually belonged to their specific ancestors, though some just wore the tags in remembrance.

“It (the walk) gives you a feeling of what our ancestors went through in order to find peace to practice their religion,” walker Jean McKissick said.

McKissick, who is originally from Rivertown, Utah, was wearing the name of her ancestor Hattie Ann Pope. Like most of those around her, she was dressed for single-digit temperatures.

“I’m dressed in layers. My layers have layers,” she said with a laugh.

This year’s walk was delayed by an hour because of the cold weather, which never climbed above 18 degrees.

“We can’t imagine what it was like for the pioneers. I’m sure they didn’t have the clothes we have,” Sister Bernice Nalder said.

This was the second exodus walk for Floyd Hohl, who traveled the entire trail to Utah by covered wagon during the 150th anniversary of the Mormon trek in 1996. He made the trip again in 1997.

“It took us 79 days. The weather was pretty windy at times, but other than that, it wasn’t too bad,” he said. “When we got into Salt Lake City, there were thousands of people there.”

Many of those walking down Parley Street joined arms with their spouses while enduring the cold, while a few others briefly broke into song.

This was the second walk in a row for Clark Hardy, who traveled from Alberta, Canada, 15 months ago to fulfill his missionary duty in Nauvoo. The small Canadian flag in his hand was a sure giveaway to his origin.

“It’s colder this year,” Clark said. “Last year it was foggy, and it was a different atmosphere, because the horses and the people were walking out of the fog.”

Hardy and his wife have been able to identify 16 different great-great-grandparents who lived in Nauvoo during the migration. Hardy’s wife read three of those names during the memorial at the end of the trip.  (cont.)

Link to article

Early LDS Church apostle’s journal bought by Provo collector

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

From The Provo Herald:

William E. McLellin was one of the first men called to serve in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and later became one of the faith’s most strident detractors. Provo resident Brent Ashworth, 60, acquired a notebook last summer that could soften the image of a hardened apostate, which image has followed McLellin through the pages of history.

Ashworth, an attorney and collector of rare LDS texts and other historically significant items, announced his acquisition of the notebook, which bears McLellin’s signature and the date Jan. 4, 1871 on its title page, at a media event in Salt Lake City on Thursday. At a meeting with the Daily Herald in Provo, he said the notebook is a long-lost McLellin text that was photographed in 1929, but hasn’t been seen since — until now.Ashworth said that the notebook, which he has carefully studied since purchasing it from a family in the eastern United States, may originally have been intended by McLellin as the manuscript for a book about his experiences in the LDS Church. And not everything that McLellin has to say about his former religion is negative.

Despite McLellin’s reputation, Ashworth said, “he had one of the most powerful witnesses of the Book of Mormon you could ever read.”

Acquiring the notebook is not the first time that McLellin and Ashworth have been linked. Ashworth spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in the early 1980s purchasing supposed rare LDS documents from forger Mark Hofmann. A prominent factor in Hofmann’s downfall was his claim of possessing a collection of texts by McLellin that would reveal damaging secrets about early LDS history.

Spurred by pressure to deliver on his McLellin claims, Hofmann used homemade bombs to kill Steven F. Christensen and Kathleen B. Sheets in an elaborate attempt to hide his crimes. But his schemes literally blew up in his face when he accidentally set off a third bomb — one that many people associated with the case believe was intended for Ashworth.

“I haven’t been able to rule myself out,” said Ashworth, who remembers that he had planned, following a long-established pattern, to meet Hofmann at the now-vanished Crossroads Mall in Salt Lake City on the day that Hofmann inadvertently bombed himself. He skipped the rendezvous at the urging of his wife, who’d been spooked by the just-reported deaths, not yet attributed to Hofmann at the time, of Sheets and Christensen.

“I listened to her and we stayed home and ate pizza,” Ashworth said.

Author and former Deseret News reporter Linda Sillitoe, who wrote the book “Salamander” with Allen Roberts about the Hofmann case, said that nobody knows for sure whether Ashworth was a target. The explosion happened in the right place and at the right time for Ashworth to have been involved, however, she said, and “obviously [Hofmann] didn’t intend to blow himself up.”

Sillitoe also said she thinks there’s a measure of “poetic justice” in Ashworth’s having discovered a verifiable McLellin document.

LDS Church spokesman Scott Trotter said that the church has no plans regarding Ashworth’s manuscript. “In recent years, a number of historical documents have been found that have added to our understanding of Joseph Smith, the time in which he lived, and the challenges he faced,” Trotter said. “The church has welcomed and encouraged this process. While the church is not pursuing the acquisition of the McLellin manuscript, we are pleased the long-lost document has been found.”

The notebook isn’t the first actual McLellin document to come to light. The LDS Church discovered a collection of McLellin’s journals covering the years 1831-1836 in its archives not long after Hofmann’s arrest and subsequent conviction and imprisonment. The McLellin journals, edited by noted historian Jan Shipps (who is not LDS) and BYU law professor John W. Welch, were published in 1994.

In 2007, University of Utah librarians Stan Larson and Samuel J. Passey published a collection of McLellin’s writings spanning the final decades of his life. “The William E. McLellin Papers: 1854-1880″ does not include the contents of the notebook, although it was known to exist at the time from photos included in a document of The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (now the Community of Christ) reportedly written by Paul M. Hanson.

As Ashworth put it, “Stan Larson said that it wasn’t extant. That was just two years ago. Well, it’s extant now.”

Ashworth said the notebook is inscribed by Hanson, an RLDS apostle, and was handed down to his descendants. Following the death of its most recent owner, the family wanted to sell it. “It kind of walked in the door” at his Provo store, B. Ashworth’s, Ashworth said. A friend who’d helped him locate rare items in the past tipped him off, and Ashworth paid what he said was a substantial sum to acquire it.

Ashworth, a former LDS bishop who recently completed a church service mission, said the handwriting in the notebook matches other samples of McLellin’s writing. And the family who sold the notebook can trace it back to Hanson. The real smoking gun, however, Ashworth said, is the two pages photographed in 1929. Those pages are in the notebook.

For Ashworth, the most fascinating section of the notebook describes a conversation McLellin had with fellow Latter-day Saints Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer at a time that all three were endangered by mobbers in Missouri. McLellin writes that he asked the other two men about their deeply personal witness of the Book of Mormon, famously included in its introductory material. Both men told him their words were true.

McLellin then writes that, “I said, ‘Boys, I believe you. I can see no object for you to tell me falsehood now when our lives are in danger.’ ”

Link to article

Who are you? Mormons have the answer

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

From Inquirer.net (Philippines):

MANILA, Philippines—Who am I? Where did I come from?

People plagued by these questions can find the answers at the Family Search archives of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints, which has copies of all civil registries in the Philippines dating to the 16th century.

The records, which are free and open to the public, have helped orphans wanting to trace their birth parents, people looking for blood kin for medical reasons, and historians researching their books.

It has helped people to know and understand their roots, according to the Family Search archivists.

Knowing that one’s ancestor was a hero could be a source of inspiration, they said. Or if he was a cad or a criminal, then one could learn from his mistakes and strive to do better, they added.

“You cannot change history. You can hide it, but the fact is, it’s there,” said Manny Baul, country manager of the Family Search archives.

The Family Search database is also useful for people who want to know their family’s medical history, particularly those at risk for diseases that are passed down through the generations, he said.

If one of your ancestors died of diabetes, then you know that you belong to a high-risk group and therefore, must be careful with your diet, he said.

Baul also he believes that conflicts would be reduced if people only took the time to check out their family histories.

They would realize that they and the people they are in conflict with have more affinities than differences, he said.

“You realize that your enemy is just like you. You become open-hearted,” he said.

Pete Adduru, the Quezon City chapter president of the church, said he has always wondered about his surname. He said his family is from the north and yet his last name sounds Arabic, which would make one suppose that he is from Mindanao.

When Adduru searched the records, he discovered that his ancestors originally came from Syria, traveled to India and settled in the Ilocos region, while still keeping their Arabic name.

That is why, Adduru said, when he first went to Davao he felt an affinity for the Muslims because he believes them to be descended from the Arabs.

(Editor’s Note: Islam was brought to Sulu and Mindanao through Muslim missionaries who came from Arabia between the 14th and 16th centuries and converted the people of Southeast Asia. The Muslims of Mindanao are not descended from the Arabs. They are ethnically the same as their brother Filipinos everywhere.)

Family is central

The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints, also known as the Mormons, is the fourth largest Christian denomination in the United States, headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is the largest denomination originating from the Latter Day Saint movement founded by Joseph Smith on April 6, 1840.

Family life is central to Mormon belief because it is thought that the family unit will continue to exist beyond mortal life. To the Mormons, the lives of their dead relatives are part of their own lives and futures, hence the intense interest in genealogy.

Janryll Fernandez, assistant director for public affairs, said finding one’s roots and respect for the departed is a fundamental tenet of the church, one that even non-church members are familiar with.

“Families can be together forever. Family relations can last forever. We perform sacraments—ordinances—for them to be able to be with them in the next life,” he said.

“The church is a family-centered church. Everything we do boils down to that,” he said.

Surprise lurks

Baul said a surprise, pleasant or otherwise, almost always lurks in one’s family tree and records.

Take Quezon City Mayor Feliciano “Sonny” Belmonte who, according to Fernandez, has been unwittingly celebrating his birthday on the wrong date.

Instead of Oct. 2, Belmonte’s birth date is actually Oct. 1, said Baul. Church researchers discovered it in his birth records.

Belmonte also learned that his family was originally from the Ilocos region and not Nueva Ecija province, where he was born, and that his surname was not originally spelled with a “B.”

“They probably migrated to Nueva Ecija,” said Baul.

Belmonte took the news of his supposedly real birth date in stride.

“He was really surprised. But it was there on the records,” Baul said.

The mayor said, “if I know who my ancestors are, then I know more about myself.”

FVR, FM distant cousins

The Family Search archivists also determined the exact relationship between former President Fidel V. Ramos and the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

According to Baul, the two men had the same great-great grandfather and therefore, are distant cousins.

The archivists also tried tracing former President Corazon Aquino’s family tree.

Baul said their search showed that Cojuangco—Aquino’s maiden name—was the name of the family patriarch who came from China to the Philippines.

“His name was Co Juan Co. It was combined into one name,” Baul said.

They tried mapping the Aquino branch of the family, but it was too dense, said Baul.

“It has too many branches. It’s like the name De la Cruz,” he said.

The Mormon archivists offered to map the family tree of Presidents Joseph Estrada and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, but they both declined the offer, Baul said.

Since 1500s

So far, Mormon archivists have copied 90 percent of the country’s civil registries and 80 percent of the Catholic Church records—containing baptismal certificates, among others—since the archival work started in 1972.

Fernandez said the group has volunteers, armed with cameras, who scour dusty record rooms of all municipalities in the country and photograph the documents. The volunteers who do the dirty work are trained to read Spanish and the anachronistic handwriting.

Oldest document

The microfilms are stored in The Church of Latter-Day Saints’ main temple in Greenmeadows subdivision, Quezon City. Baul said there are 80,000 microfilms stored in their temple.

The oldest document was a baptismal record signed in 1542, just two decades after Ferdinand Magellan landed in the Philippines, which was found in a municipality of Batangas.

Link to article

Retracing history: Mormon Battalion’s journey revisited

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

From The BensonNewsSun.com (AZ):

Walking in the past: Denise Denny, left, and Kevin Henson explain the history of the Mormon Battalion after their re-enactment trek came through St. David last weekend. (Adam Bernal/photo.) 

Over the last half year, a group of re-enactors have been retracing the steps of the Mormon Battalion, which marched from Iowa to California in the 1800s and recently came through St. David on their long journey west.

The trek is a memorial to battalion members who came from Council Bluffs, Iowa, to southern California as a part of Gen. Kearny’s troop movements in support of the Mexican-American War.

To help aid the war campaign, U.S. President James Polk requested the Mormons raise a battalion of 500 men to trek to California and aid in the occupation of upper Mexico.

Brigham Young and other leaders of the Mormon Church were able to convince their people this was something that needed to be done, even if it required nearly a one-fourth of their able-bodied men.

The battalion came together at Council Bluffs, Iowa, on July 16, 1846 and took 194 days to march 2,000 miles to San Diego, Calif. It was the longest infantry march in U.S. military history.

One major incident involving the battalion in the San Pedro Valley happened near the old town of Charleston, where the Battle of the Bulls is believed to have taken place.

While moving up the San Pedro River, the group was suddenly attacked by wild cattle. A large number of bulls were killed and only two men were wounded in the battle.

This unique era of American history is being re-enacted with a journey that started in Iowa in July and is expected to conclude in San Diego this upcoming February.

The organizer, Kevin Henson of Midland, Mich., and his wife, Denise Denny, have been trekking westward through several states and have been attempting to follow the steps of Mormon Battalion members the whole way.

“The opportunity to do this comes once in a lifetime, and no one has done this for 162 years,” Henson said.

During their journey, others have joined Henson and his group to walk in the footsteps of the Battalion members and experience the same sights as many of their ancestors. Scout groups and residents who want to get in touch with their history are some of people who have joined Henson on his journey.

“We have worked really hard to give a reasonably authentic experience of what the trek was like,” Henson said.

Henson said they have tried to stay as close to the original trail as possible and have been able to find the more accurate sites of different locations, such as the gravesite of battalion member Ellisha Smith. Henson says he wanted to start the trek for research and as a way to help others understand what the battalion went through.

Last weekend, the trek came through St. David and Henson recognized several important landmarks of the soldiers’ journey westward.

After their journey had ended, several battalion members returned to Arizona, including Philemon C. Merrill, one of the founding members of what is now St. David.

St. David resident Ron Higginbotham was one of several participants who joined the trek and marched 12 miles with his son, Ronnie, from Fairbank to St. David last weekend.

Higginbotham said he has always had an interest in historical events, especially if it pertains to his community or his family. Since St. David was established as a result of the battalion’s passing through the area, retracing the steps made it that much more significant, he said.  (cont.)

Link to article

Church Historian’s Press releasing Joseph Smith journals

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

From AP:

Richard Turley Jr. a Mormon church historian, holds a copy of the newly released “Joseph Smith Papers” book in Salt Lake City Monday, Dec. 1, 2008. The 500-page book chronicles the church founder’s journals between 1832 and 1839. It’s the first in a series expected to run 30 volumes and the inaugural work of The Church Historian’s Press. (AP Photo/Scott G. Winterton/Deseret News)

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — It’s written by a man many consider a confident and charismatic religious prophet, but Joseph Smith’s journal immediately betrays an inkling of self-doubt: His first sentence is scratched out.

“He’s making this very deliberate effort to keep a record. At the same time, he has this self-consciousness,” said Richard Turley Jr., assistant historian for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “So he writes it out, scratches it out, takes a deep breath, writes it again.”

By the next line, Smith is on his knees in prayer as he asks for God’s help.

For Turley, the picture of Smith — unvarnished and somehow more human than a prophet should be — represents the beauty of the “The Joseph Smith Papers,” the first book published by a new Mormon church-owned press.

“What I get from this — besides the information, most of which has been accessible in the past — what I get from this is a feeling for the man,” Turley said Monday, when the book was released to the public.

Smith founded the Mormon church in 1830 with just six adherents, most of them members of his own family. By the time he was shot and killed in 1844, hundreds had joined the church, which was maligned and persecuted for its practice of polygamy and the exhortations of its colorful leader.

Painstakingly transcribed from hundreds of fragile, handwritten pages, the 500-page volume builds on decades of historical scholarship to provide a more accurate and complete look at the early church and Smith’s life, Turley said.

The inaugural work of The Church Historian’s Press covers Smith’s writings from 1832 to 1839 and includes his account of the “First Vision,” in which God and Jesus Christ tell Smith he must restore the original church on Earth.

The series is expected to run more than 30 volumes, Turley said.

Dozens of scholars collaborated on the project, looking for new sources of information, fact-checking historical records and crafting explanatory passages, maps and organizational charts to provide a fuller record, he said.

Historians have long criticized the Mormon church for glossing over the unflattering parts of its history and censoring materials of interest to scholars.

Publishing Smith’s papers marks a brave departure from that past, said Jan Shipps, a professor of religious history and a Mormon expert at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

“It’s saying our story is there for anybody to see,” she said. “They are becoming a full-fledged religious tradition and they are not trying to hide the details.”

Shipps calls the book “very, very valuable,” not just because of the improved scholarship but also for its accessibility.

“It puts the sources of history into the hands of historians as well as putting the papers into the hands of believers,” said Shipps, who read an early copy of the book.

Turley thinks church members, which exceed 13 million worldwide, will appreciate the chance to see Smith without the filter of a biographer. He doesn’t think Smith’s average-Joe struggle to make ends meet, to maintain family harmony or to overcome health problems will alter his revered status as the church’s original prophet, seer and revelator.

“For those who see Joseph as a prophet, it doesn’t diminish that viewpoint by making him more human,” he said. “Instead, it creates a greater sympathy for him as a person.”

Link to article

Book Review: A President, a Church, and Trails West details Independence and the historical preservation debate

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

From www.kansascity.com:

Just what is too much Harry?

It’s a question that surfaces in Independence. One example occurred in 1993, when city officials approved the demolition of a vacant gas station that Harry Truman, the 33rd president, sometimes frequented after returning from Washington in the early 1950s.

After hearing the testimony of residents who believed Truman’s connection with the structure deemed it worth preserving as part of the built environment he once knew, the Independence City Council reversed its decision.

The gas station still stands.

The context for what may strike some as a trivial controversy occurred about 10 years before. That’s when the Independence City Council in 1984 voted to reduce the size of the city’s heritage district, following debate over the plans of the First Baptist Church of Independence to remove several residences near the Truman home so it could expand its building. In this instance, writes author Jon E. Taylor, those wishing to preserve Truman’s old neighborhood came into open conflict with church officials seeking to grow their own faith community.

And yet the First Baptist Church wasn’t the only Independence church wanting to tear down old structures near the Truman home.

If it sounds complicated, it is. The sheer amount of historic event per square foot in Independence may not rival colonial Philadelphia, but it’s plenty rich enough. The Truman preservation drama is only one piece of it.

That’s why Jon E. Taylor’s book, A President, a Church, and Trails West, represents a public service. Anyone who may casually decide to drop in on historic preservation topics in Independence can feel like a tag-along guest at a family holiday dinner who innocently wanders into the middle of a dialogue that has been going on since sometime after the pumpkin pie. Consider Taylor the peacemaking uncle who declares a ceasefire and then summarizes the story so far.

Truman’s story is familiar. After returning to Independence in 1953, the former president built his library, dedicated in 1957.

But there’s also the 19th-century wagon-wheel legacy of those who traveled west on overland trails — Santa Fe, California and Oregon — many of whom outfitted themselves in Independence. Eastern Jackson County is studded with inscribed markers denoting the trails’ various paths.

Then there’s Joseph Smith Jr., the Mormon prophet who is believed in 1831 to have dedicated a location in Independence as the site of a future temple. Today the spiral-topped temple of the Community of Christ Church (formerly the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints) dominates the Independence skyline. The Mormon Church (or Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), based in Salt Lake City, maintains a visitors center just to its south.

All are reasons why Independence may lead the Kansas City area in the number of granite markers planted by highways and bronze plaques embedded in sidewalks.

And yet this enlightened regard for events long passed was a hard time in coming.  (cont.)

Link to article

Following in their ancestors’ footsteps

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

From The Scranton Times Tribune (PA):

Link to picture

Pulling a handcart 25 miles isn’t a typical “How I spent my summer vacation” story for most teenagers, but it became one this summer for members of local congregations of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The students spent four days on a trek that began with assembling handcarts to hold food and other travel supplies and included a walk over a variety of terrain including mud, rocks and hills, designed to recreate, on a small scale, the experiences of Mormon handcart pioneers who traveled 1,300 miles west to the Great Salt Lake Valley from 1846-1860.

Assigned to family groups consisting of adult couples who served as a Ma and Pa, each group worked together to pull their handcart and share in the work required along the way. Some “families,” including that of Adrianna Samudio, from Moscow, carried dolls stuffed with sand to approximate the weight of a real infant, which Adrianna said was no small task.

For Jessica Jones of Taylor, one of the best parts of the trip was when she got to wash her hair with soap in a bucket of water. Xavier Carrera of Dickson City said he appreciated the apples youths were given in the afternoon of the first day and the bread and broth they ate after a long day of pulling.

When asked what they appreciated most as a result of the trek, the students mentioned electricity, plumbing, food, showers, not having to work as hard as the pioneers, their religion and technology.

Xavier summed up the feelings of the youth as they gathered on the last night when he said: “It was a good experience.”

Students from the Scranton congregation who participated along with Adrianna, Jessica and Xavier were: Nicole Underwood of Taylor, Josh Rieder of West Pittston and Carolyn Armstrong of Clarks Summit. Also on the trek were Macy and Mead Hansen from Susquehanna; Marcus and Nathaniel Moyer, Hayden Underwood, Amanda Donnelly from Tunkhannock; Mariah and Zachery Geisler, Rebecca Montonya, Matthew Rucker, Abigail Burt, Josh Burt and Deanna Hansen from Montrose.

Link to article

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Muskegon library selling rare and valuable book

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

From WZZM13.com (MI):

The Hackley Library in Muskegon is selling its’ most valuable book - a rare first edition “Book of Mormon.”

5,000 books were printed in 1830 by Joseph Smith, the Founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Book collectors think only 1,000 first editions still exist.

The library’s board is selling the book through a rare book dealer in Salt Lake City, Utah. The book could demand a price of around $72,000 dollars. Any procedes from the sale will go to the library.

Martha Ferriby, the Director of Hackley Public Library said, “The library board has not decided what to do with the money. I am sure it will be used for some good project. There has been talk about new books, and there are things the building needs too.”

Since learning of the book’s high value, it has been moved off-site and placed in temperature and humidity-controlled storage.  (cont.)

Link to article

President Eyring at Mountain Meadows Memorial

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

From Youtube:

New book on Mormon-led massacre opens old wounds

Monday, August 18th, 2008

From USAToday.com:

Karen Maxwell poses in Salt Lake City with a copy of the book Massacre at Mountain Meadows and a family history booklet on one of her ancestors who played a major role in the event.

The date is etched in blood in Utah and Mormon church history and, on a more intimate level, the family trees of people like Karen Maxwell, a mother of eight and choir teacher from Salt Lake City.

On Sept. 11, 1857, Mormon militiamen led the slaughter of 120 men, women and children on a wagon train bound for California in an incident known as the Mountain Meadows Massacre.

Chief among the instigators was Isaac Haight, a local militia and church leader. Several generations later, Karen Maxwell would come to know of him as her grandfather’s grandfather.

For years, Mormon church officials downplayed the role Mormons played in the mass killing, first blaming Indians and then finding a scapegoat in church member John D. Lee, the only man executed for his role.

Now, a new book drawing on existing material and documents previously unavailable to scholars lays the blame largely on southern Utah church and militia leaders. They were otherwise good people, the authors say, who were caught up in the frenzy of the times and took up guns to try to cover up terrible mistakes.  (cont.)

Link to article

Man retraces trek of Mormon Battalion

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

From The Ft. Leavenworth Lamp:

In 1846, about 500 Soldiers in the U.S. Army’s Mormon Battalion marched through Fort Leavenworth on their way to California. On Aug. 9, 2008, a handful of men and boys hiked from Weston, Mo., to Fort Leavenworth to commemorate that march.

Kevin Henson of Midland, Mich., is hiking the entire 2,500-mile route from Council Bluffs, Iowa, to Los Angeles, Calif.

Henson said that although books and maps show some of the history, details are scarce about exact locations.

“Nobody’s ever searched this section in detail,” he said. “We’ve found towns that no longer exist, we see wagon trails and areas where no wagon trails ever existed.”

The battalion was activated to assist the U.S. Army during the Mexican War. According to the Mormon Battalion’s Web site, President James K. Polk instructed Secretary of War William L. March to authorize then-Col. Stephen W. Kearney to enlist a battalion of 500 Mormons for that purpose.

Mormon Battalion Trek participant Kevin Henson, left, arrives on Fort Leavenworth near Chief Joseph Loop with members of Boy Scout Troop 784 from Olathe, Kan., and a few of their fathers Aug. 9. The Scouts marched with Henson from Bee Creek Shelter in Weston, Mo. Lamp photo by Prudence Siebert.

Henson said 23 lives were lost during the battalion’s trek, only a 5 percent loss, which was unheard of at the time. A 10-12 percent loss of life was typical, Henson said, and 15 percent was not unusual. The average age of the Soldiers was 24. The battalion included about 32 women, some hired as laundresses.  (cont.)

Entire article here

Hikers follow Mormon Battalion trek

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

From The St.JoeNews (MO):

WESTON, Mo. — Except for his sneakers, Kevin Henson wears only 1846 period clothing: a light, dusty-colored cotton shirt and pants, suspenders and a haversack.

His period-appropriate boots work well at his campsite and during demonstrations, but hiking as many as 18 miles in one day requires more arch support.

Mr. Henson, accompanied by his wife, Denny, and anyone else who cares to join him, intends to hike and camp along the entire 2,000-mile Mormon Battalion route in an effort to research and commemorate the battalion’s 1846 march.

After an eight-mile Friday morning trek, Mr. Henson and Bob Tingey, president of Battalion Trek Inc., stopped at the Weston Historical Museum and tried to imagine the town as it was on July 31, 1846, when the 500 men of the Mormon Battalion marched its streets.

“They made three turns as they came right through downtown,” Mr. Henson said, referencing the battalion journals he’s read. “They said people were hanging out of their doorways and looking at them.”

Mr. Henson’s journey will be the first complete re-hike of the Mormon Battalion’s cross-country trek, which began in Council Bluffs, Iowa, on July 16, 1864, and ended 194 days later in San Diego, Calif. The battalion had been enlisted in a government effort to settle the West during the Mexican-American War, Mr. Henson said.

“The original battalion would do anything from four to 35 miles in a 24-hour period,” he said. “We’re not trying to match them day for day.”

Instead, he and participants such as Mr. Tingey focus on researching the battalion trek and commemorating the historical feat, he said.

“And part of the route is the Santa Fe Trail,” Mr. Tingey said. “But the part from Council Bluffs to Fort Leavenworth is really not known very well.”

To piece together the route, Mr. Tingey and Mr. Henson visit historical areas of towns they pass through and also examine old city records and maps.

“To hold those old documents, … you know, you get goose bumps,” Mr. Tingey said.

But the vast majority of the Mormon community doesn’t share such enthusiasm for the Mormon Battalion’s trek, Mr. Henson said.

“I would say it’s looked upon as a curiosity, more than anything,” he said. “To the descendents, it’s a matter of great pride.”

Once in California, battalion members made significant contributions to settling the West, Mr. Henson said. They took part in the gold discovery that sparked the California gold rush and established at least 100 Mormon communities.  (cont.)

Entire article here

More than 2,000 attend Mormon pioneers picnic

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

From The Reno Gazette-Journal:

More than 2,000 members and friends of the Church of

Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gathered on Saturday at

Rancho San Rafael Regional Park to commemorate the 1847 arrival of Mormon pioneers in the Great Basin region of the United States.

After celebrating America with the Pledge of Allegiance, led by Cub Scout Pack 8, and the National Anthem, sung by Brad Bergam, the crowd participated in pioneer games including a traditional tug-of-war. A musical program arranged by Mildred Earl featured favorite pioneer songs including “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” and “Come, Come, Ye Saints.”

“These celebrations have taken place since 1847, when Brigham Young led the early church pioneers from Illinois and Missouri to Utah, Nevada, Arizona and Idaho,” said Clair F. Earl, Northern Nevada church spokesman and Reno stake president. “Many of us in attendance are descendents of those who trekked across the country to find religious freedom.”

The first settlers and non-native citizens in Nevada arrived at Mormon Station, which is now Genoa, in 1851. Shortly after, the pioneers settled in the Las Vegas valley and by 1865, had built communities in the Moapa Valley in Southern Nevada.

Many of the attendees shared stories of family members crossing the plains and mountains on their westward journey. A computer was available at the event to search family histories and learn more about finding ancestors and their stories.

There were also booths with watermelon, soda, cookies and cupcakes, slush and arrowhead carvings.

Bruce Brinkerhoff is the director of public affairs for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Northern Nevada.

Link to article here