Gathered in this new work are eyewitness testimonies of the massacre and its aftermath by those who were on the scene. The accounts of Joseph Young, Amanda Smith, Willard Gilbert Smith, Austin Hammer, Artemisia Sidnie Meyers, Nathan Kinsman Knight, Thomas McBride, Isaac Laney, Olive Ames, and others are heart-rending and vivid.
On October 30, 1838, a group of Missouri militia attacked the small Mormon settlement at Haun’s Mill on Shoal Creek, killing seventeen men and boys and wounding eleven men, one woman, and one child. The conflict between the Missourians and the Mormons was in many ways inevitable. The Mormons had their own business and economic system. Clannish people, they voted in a bloc, thus tipping elections in their favor. They had a “different†religion and considered their faith superior to all others. Unlike most of their neighbors, they were friendly to the Indians and were thought to be abolitionists. The Missourians saw them as interlopers to be driven out.
Set in context by the author, these documentary accounts dramatically portray the suffering of the Saints during and after the episode. An important event in Latter-day Saints history that helped mold Mormon attitudes and posturing toward the outside world in following decades, the Haun’s Mill Massacre still resonates today in the hearts and minds of Mormons as a manifestation of religious persecution.
The book has a bibliography and index. It is bound in wine linen cloth and has a foil stamped spine and front cover.
Country | USA |
Brand | University of Oklahoma Press |
Manufacturer | University of Oklahoma Press |
Binding | Paperback |
ItemPartNumber | black & white illustrations |
Model | black & white illustrations |
ReleaseDate | 2012-02-08 |
UnitCount | 1 |
EANs | 9780806142708 |