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ANDOVER-HARVARD THEOLOGICAL LIBRARY 
M D C C C C X 

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 





JOSEPH SMITH. Jr., THE "PROPHET.' 



I 



* 



The True Origin 

of 

The Book of Mormon 



CHARLES A. SHOOK 



CUMORAH REVDITED, 
THE TRUE ORIGIN OF MORMON POLYGAMY 



Tbe nature of tlie meflsaffe in ^ Book of 
Mormon 10 suqIi diat, if true, no one can poe- 
eikly l>e saved and reject it; if fake^ no one 
can pO00il>ly be saved and receive it. Tkerefore 
every soul in all tlie ixrorld is equally interested 
in ascertaining its trudi or falsity. 



Cindnnali, O. 
The Standard PublUhing Co. 

C 



Copyri^t, 1914 
THE STANDARD PUBLISHING Ca 




THlsooAilUU. liBfiART 
NOV 2 21016 
ANDOVER 



aw^Ds 



\& 



Illustrations 



PAGE 

Joseph Smith, Jr., the Prophet Frontispiece 

Title-page of Palmyra Edition of the Book of Mormon.. 8 

Hyrum Smith 22 

Title-page of G)wdery's Tract 50 

Sidney Rigdon 119 

Parley Parker Pratt 127 

"Hill Cumorah" 135 



Contents 



CHAPTER I. PAGE 

The Rise of Mortnonism — The Historical Outline of the 
Book of Mormon — ^The Proposition Stated i 

CHAPTER n. 

The Character of Joseph Smith— The Affidavit of Peter In- 
gersoll— The Affidavit of Willard Chase— The Affidavit 
of William Stafford— The Affidavit of Isaac Hale— The 
Signed Statements of the Citizens of Palmyra and Man- 
chester, New York — The Mormon Attempt to Exonerate 
Smith i6 

CHAPTER HI. 

The Three Witnesses to the Book of Mormon — David Whit- 
mer — Martin Harris — Oliver Cowdery 39 

CHAPTER IV. 

The Life of Solomon Spaulding — Spaulding's Roman Story 
— ^The Fairchild-Rice-Smith Correspondence — A Mormon 
Lie Nailed 62 

CHAPTER V. 

Mrs. Davison's Boston Recorder Letter— The Quincy Whig 
Reply^Mrs. McKinstry's Affidavit 78 

CHAPTER VI. 

The "Manuscript Found"— Its Identity with the Book of 
Mormon Established— The Testimony of John Spaulding, 
Martha Spaulding, Henry Lake, John N. Miller, Aaron 
Wright, Oliver Smith, Nahum Howard and Artemus 
Cunningham 94 



viii CONTENTS 

CHAPTER VII. PAGi 

The Testimony of Other Witnesses— Joseph Miller— Ruddick 
McKee — ^Abner Jackson — The Mormon Admissions of 
Genuineness— The Disclosures of J. C. Bennett 103 

CHAPTER Vni. 

Rigdon's Connection with the Spaulding Romance — His Re- 
lations with J. Harrison Lambdin — Suspected of Stealing 
the Manuscript — Exhibits the Manuscript — Foretells the 
Coming Out of the Book of Mormon 116 

CHAPTER IX. 

Rigdon's Connection with Smith — ^The Pretended Conversion 
of Rigdon — Rigdon's Previous Visits to Smith — The 
Mormon Alibi — Katherine Salisbury's Affidavit 126 

CHAPTER X. 

Internal Proofs from Spaulding's First Manuscript that He 
Was the Author of the Book of Mormon — Both Found 
under a Stone — ^A Great Storm at Sea — The Great Spirit 
—The Revolution of the Earth— The Use of the Horse— 
The Manufacture of Iron — High Priests— The Seer- 
stone ISS 

CHAPTER XI. 

Mormon Objections Answered— Size of the Book of Mormon 
— Style of the Book of Mormon— Character of the Book 
of Mormon— Smith's Inability to Produce the Book of 
Mormon— The Challenge to Produce the Original Man- 
uscript — ^The Character of Hurlburt and Howe — Sup- 
posed Contradictions in the "Manuscript Found" to the 
Book of Mormon — Conclusion 163^ 



rorcTvord 

From the year 1834 to the present, the majority of 
anti-Mormon polemics and writers have held to the view 
presented in these pages that the Book of Mormon is 
nothing more than Solomon Spaulding's "Manuscript 
Foimd," revamped. Now and then one has been found 
who has doubted or denied this theory, but, generally 
speaking, it is the impregnable rock upon which the anti- 
Mormon forces have taken their stand. 

Having been raised in the Reorganized Mormon 
Church, I was, from boyhood, taught that this claim is 
a myth ; that the "Manuscript Found" had come to light 
in Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, in 1884, and that it bears 
no resemblance, whatever, to the Book of Mormon. The 
influence of this training followed me even after I had 
apostatized, and for some years, in papers read before 
ministerial associations and elsewhere, I denied the 
Spaulding theory and attributed the Book of Mormon 
to the joint work of Joseph Smith and Oliver Cow- 
dery. In this position I was, later, confirmed by read- 
ing the book, "Doctrines and Dogmas of Mormonism," 
by D. H. Bays (1897), whose views, I found, coincided 
exactly with my own. It was not until a copy of A. T. 
Schroeder's little booklet, "The Origin of the Book of 
Mormon, Re-examined in Its Relation to Spaulding's 
'Manuscript Found,' " fell into my hands that I began 
to see the strong points in the Spaulding theory which I 
had overlooked. Becoming convinced from the reading 
of Schroeder's arguments that there was more to the 
Spaulding theory than I had supposed, I set myself to 
the task of collecting and analyzing the evidences with 



X FOREWORD 

the result that I am as satisfied to-day that the Book of 
Monnon originated in the brain of Solomon Spaulding, 
the dreamer of Conneaut, as I am that "Thanatopsis" 
originated in the brain of Bryant or "Evangeline" in the 
brain of Longfellow. 

The Mormons have not treated the position of their 
opponents fairly in this controversy. They have started 
out by assuming that the Honolulu manuscript is the 
"Manuscript Foimd," and then have asserted that those 
who oppose them claim that the Book of Mormon came 
from it. But this is not true. From 1834, every op- 
ponent of Mormonism, who has given due consideration 
to the evidences in the case, has differentiated between 
the manuscript discovered in Honolulu and the "Manu- 
script Found/' denying that the Book of Mormon came 
from the former and claiming that it came from the 
latter. The effort of the Mormons to confuse the public 
mind on this point is strongly suggestive of the tactics 
of the ink-fish, which, finding itself pursued by the enemy 
and in sore straits, emits an inky fiuid in order that it 
may escape under its cover. 

Already the claim has been made that my books have 
been written with the view to lining my pockets. In 
closing, I wish to brand this accusation as absolutely 
false. Not one cent of profit or royalty from the sale of 
this book will find its way into my wallet. The money 
and labor expended upon it have been expended wholly 
in the interests of truth and not with the thought of re- 
muneration. Having become convinced myself that the 
Book of Mormon is a monstrous fraud, I have felt it my 
duty to present to the world the evidences which con- 
vinced me of this fact. Hence this book. 

Charles A. Shook. 

Eddyville, Neb., Jan. i, 1914, 



The True Origin of the 
Book of Mormon 



CHAPTER I. 



The Rise of Mormonism— The Historical Outline of the Book 
of Mormon— The Proposition Stated. 

Joseph Smith, the Mormon prophet, was bom in the 
village of Sharon, Windsor County, Vermont, December 
23, 1805. He was the fourth of ten children and was 
reared in poverty, ignorance, bigotry and superstition. 
When he was ten years of age, his father took tiie family 
to western New York, where they settled at Palmyra, 
in Ontario (now Wayne) County, four years afterward 
removing to the village of Manchester, a few miles dis- 
tant. 

In the year 1820, Joseph became very much interested 
in religion through the revivals that were conducted in 
Manchester by the Methodists, Presbyterians and Bap- 
tists, and, being somewhat perplexed to know just which 
sect to join, he decided to petition the Lord for enlight- 
enment. So, retiring to the forest, he made the matter 
the subject of prayer. While he was praying, the Father 
and the Son appeared to him in vision, told him that he 
must join none of the existing sects, that their creeds 
were an abomination, and that their professors were all 
corrupt. When Joseph related this vision to one of the 
Methodist preachers in his neighborhood, the preacher 

told him that it was all of the devil and that there are 

t 



2 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

no such things nowadays, they having ceased with the 
apostles. 

Joseph received his second vision on the evening of 
September 21, 1823. According to his account, he had 
retired to bed and had betaken himself to prayer, when 
his room was lighted with a heavenly light and a person- 
age stood before him who gave his name as Moroni.* 
Moroni told Joseph that he had come from the presence 
of the Almighty; that there was a work for him to do; 
that his name should go out among the people for both 
good and evil, and that there was a set of gold plates 
deposited which contained an account of the former in- 
habitants of this continent, and with them two stones, 
called the Urim and Thummim, by means of which they 
were to be translated. The following day, Joseph re- 
paired to the spot, which he had seen in vision and which 
was on a hill near Manchester, where he found the plates 
as represented. His description of their depository, the 
manner of their burial and the events that occurred, is 
as follows: 

Convenient to the village of Manchester, Ontario County, 
New York, stands a hill of considerable size, and the most 
elevated of any in the neighborood. On the v/ect side of this 
hill, not far from the top, under a stone of considerable size, 
lay the plates deposited in a stone box. This stone was thick 
and rounding in the middle on the upper side, and thinner toward 
the edges, so that the middle part of it was visible above the 
ground, but the edge all around was covered with earth. 
Having removed the earth and obtained a lever which I got 
fixed under the edge of the stone and with a little exertion 
raised it up, I looked in and there indeed did I behold the 
plates, the Urim and Thummim, and the Breast-plate, as stated 
by the messenger. The box in which they lay was formed 
by la3ring stones together in some kind of cement; in the bottom 



"In the first account of this angel visit, the angel's name was given 
as NephL 



THE BOOK OF MORMON I 

of the box were laid two stones crossways of the box, and on 
these stones lay the plates and other things with them. 

I made an attempt to take them out, but was forbidden by 
the messenger and was again informed that the time for bring- 
ing them forth had not yet arrived, neither would until four 
years from that time; but he told me that I should come to that 
place precisely in one year from that time, and that he would 
there meet with me, and that I should continue to do so until 
the time should come for obtaining the plates. Accordingly as I 
had been commanded, I went at the end of each year, and at 
each time I found the same messenger there, and received in- 
struction and intelligence from him at each of our interviews 
respecting what the Lord was going to do and how and in what 
manner his kingdom was to be conducted in the last days.— 
Church History (Josephite), Vol. I., p. i6. 

In the month of October, 1825, Smith hired out to a 
Mr. Josiah Stoal, or Stowell, of Chenango Coimty, New 
York, who took him to Harmony, Susquehanna County, 
Pennsylvania, and set him to work digging for a lost 
silver mine. During this time, he boarded with a man 
by the name of Isaac Hale, and became deeply in love 
with his daughter, Emma. The Hales were very much 
opposed to his suit on account of his habits, and so he 
finally eloped with Emma and was married to her at the 
house of Squire Tarbill, in South Bainbridge, Chenango 
County, New York, January 18, 1827. 

On September 22, following, Smith received the 
plates from the hands of the angel, being told that he 
would be held responsible for their safe-keeping, and 
that if he let them go through carelessness or neglect he 
would be cut off. Joseph soon observed the need of 
caution, for no sooner did his neighbors hear of his pre- 
tensions than they began all manner of persecutions. This 
made it necessary for him to leave Manchester, where he 
had been living since his elopement, and he removed to 
the home of his wife's parents in Harmony, Pennsylvania, 



4 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

being assisted in a financial way by Mr. Martin HarriSi 
a wealthy farmer from near Palmyra, who gave him 
fifty dollars. 

Apostle Parley P. Pratt gives us the following de- 
scription of the plates and the Urim and Thummim by 
which they were translated: 

These records were engraved on plates, which had the ap- 
pearance of gold. Each plate was not far from seven by eight 
inches in width and length, being not quite as thick as common 
tin. They were filled on both sides with engravings, in Re- 
formed Egyptian characters, and bound together in a volume 
as the leaves of a book, and fastened at the edge with three 
rings running through the whole. This volume was something 
near six inches in thickness, a part of which was sealed. The 
characters or letters upon the unsealed part were small, and 
beautifully engraved. The whole book exhibited many marks 
of antiquity in its construction, as well as much skill in the 
art of engraving. With the records was found a curious instru- 
ment, called by the ancients the Urim and Thummim. which 
consisted of two transparent stones, clear as crystal, set in two 
rims of a bow. This was in use in ancient times by persons 
called seers. It was an instrtunent by the use of which they 
received revelation of things distant, or of things past or future. 
—A Voice of Warning, p. 73. 

In the month of February, 1828, Martin Harris came 
to visit Smith at Harmony, and obtained from him a 
transcript of characters from the plates, which he took 
to New York and submitted to Dr. Mitchell and Pro- 
fessor Anthon, two learned linguists of that city, for 
their examination. Harris afterwards declared that An- 
thon pronounced the characters to be Egyptian, Assyrian, 
Chaldaic and Arabic, and said that Smith's translation 
was correct, more so than any he had before seen from 
the Egyptian.* 



* Anthon afterwards positively denied making any such statement, and 
■aid: "This paper was, in fact, a singular scrawl. It consisted of all kinds' 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 6 

Harris returned to Palmyra, arranged his business 
and then came to Harmony, where he began to write for 
Joseph. Between April 12 and June 14, 1828, he suc- 
ceeded in writing 116 pages of foolscap, which, with 
Smith's permission, he carried home to Palmyra to read 
to his wife. This manuscript came up missing, and it 
afterwards leaked out that Mrs. Harris in a rage had 
burned it. For his carelessness, Harris lost his place as 
Smith's scribe and Joseph was told that he need not 
translate that portion of the record again.^ 

The work of translation was now interrupted until 
April 15, 1829, when Oliver Cowdery appeared on the 
scene. He had been a schoolteacher in the Smith neigh- 
borhood in New York, and, hearing of Joseph's claims 
from his parents, he had come down to Harmony to visit 
him. On the 17th of April, following, the work of trans- 
lation was resumed, and continued without further in- 
terruption until it was completed. David Whitmer gives 
the following description of the manner in which the 
plates were translated: 

I will now give you a description of the manner in which 
the Book of Mormon was translated. Joseph Smith would put 
the seer stone into a hat, and put his face in the hat, drawing 
It closely around his face to exclude the light; and in the 
darkness the spiritual light would shine. A piece of something 

of crooked characters disposed in columns, and had evidently been pre- 
pared by some person who had before him a book containing various 
alphabets. Greek and Hebrew letters, crosses and flourishes, Roman letters 
inverted or placed sideways, were arranged in perpendicular columns, and 
the whole ended in a rude delineation of a circle divided into various 
compartments, decked with various strange marks, and evidently copied 
after the Mexican Calendar given by Humboldt, but copied in such a way 
as not to betray the source whence it was derived." — History of Mor- 
monism t p. 271, 

> "Behold, I say unto you, that you shall not translate again those 
words, which have gone forth out of your hands; for, behold, they shall 
not accomplish their evil designs in lying against those words." — Docinn§ 
mtd Covgnants, 3: 6. 



« THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

resembling parchment would appear; and on that appeared the 
writing. One character at a time would appear, and under it 
was the interpretation in English. Brother Joseph would read 
off the English to Oliver Cowdery, who was his principal scribe, 
and when it was written down and repeated to Brother Joseph 
to see if it was correct, then it would disappear, and another 
character with the interpretation would appear. Thus the 
Book of Mormon was translated by the gift and power of God, 
and not by any power of man. — Whitmer^s Address, p. 12.* 

On the 15th of the following month, John the Bap- 
tist appeared and ordained Smith and Cowdery to the 
Aaronic priesthood, after which, by the Baptist's com- 
mand, they baptized and reordained each other. 

Soon after Smith's arrival in Harmony, he formed 
the acquaintance of Peter Whitmer, of Fayette, Seneca 
County, New York, and in the month of June following 
his ordination, Whitmer's son, David, came to visit him 
and urgently invited him to accompany him home and 
remain until the translation should be finished. Smith 
acceded, and from this time, until their apostasy in 1838, 
the Whitmers were among his staunchest friends and 
most devoted disciples. 

During the course of the translation, it was ascer- 
tained that the Lord intended to provide three special 
witnesses who were to have the privilege of viewing the 
plates. Almost immediately after this discovery, Oliver 
Cowdery, David Whitmer and Martin Harris requested 
Joseph to inquire of the Lord if they might not be these 
special witnesses. Joseph did so, and through the Urim 
and Thtmmiim received a favorable answer, upon which 
they all retired to the forest, where, after fervent and 

* If the characters were interpreted for Smith upon the seer-stone, upon 
what principle was he a tranaJator? Would not this, also, make the 
Almighty responsible for erery grammatical and rhetorical error in the 
book? If not, why not? 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 7 

humble prayer, the plates were shown to them by the 
angel. Their testimony follows: 

Be it known unto all nations, kindreds, tongues, and people, 
unto whom this work shall come, that we, through the grace 
of God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ, have seen the 
plates which contain this record, which is a record of the people 
of Nephi, and also of the Lamanites, their brethren, and also 
of the people of Jared, who came from the tower of which 
hath been spoken; and we also know that they have been trans- 
lated by the gift and power of God, for his voice hath de- 
clared it unto us: wherefore we know of a surety, that the 
work is true. And we also testify that we have seen the en- 
gravings which are upon the plates; and they have been shown 
tmto us by the power of God, and not of man. And we declare 
with words of soberness, that an angel of God came down 
from heaven, and he brought and laid before our eyes, that we 
beheld and saw the plates, and the eng^ravings thereon; and we 
know that it is by the g^ace of God the Father, and our Lord 
Jesus Christ, that we beheld and bear record that these things 
are true; and it is marvelous in our eyes, nevertheless, the 
voice of the Lord commanded us that we should bear record 
of it; wherefore, to be obedient unto the commandments of 
God, we bear testimony of these things. And we know that if 
we are faithful in Christ, we shall rid our garments of the blood 
of all men, and be found spotless before the judgment-seat of 
Christ, and shall dwell with him eternally in the heavens. 
And the honor be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the 
Holy Ghost, which is one God. Amen. 

Oliver Cowdery, 
David WnrrMER, 
Martin Harris. 

Soon after this, the following testimony was obtained 
from eight other witnesses who had been permitted to 
view the plates : 

Be it known unto all nations, kindreds, tongues and people, 
unto whom this work shall come, that Joseph Smith, Jr., the 
translator of this work, has shown unto us the plates of which 
hath been spoken, which have the appearance of gold; and as 
many of the leaves as the said Smith has translated, we did 
(2) 



8 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

handle with our hands : and we also saw the engravings thereon, 
all of which has the appearance of ancient work, and x)f curious 
workmanship. And this we bear record with words of sober- 
ness, that the said Smith hath shown unto us, for we have seen 
and hefted, and know of a surety, that the said Smith has 
got the plates of which we have spoken. And we give our 
names unto the world to witness unto the world that which 
we have seen; and we lie not, God bearing witness of it. 

Christian Whitmer. Hiram Page. 

Jacob Whitmer. Joseph Smith, Sen. 

Peter Whitmer, Jr. Hyrum Smith. 

John Whitmer. Samuel H. Smith. 

When Smith and Cowdery had been ordained to the 
Aaronic priesthood, John the Baptist informed them that 
if they would continue faithful, they would also be ad- 
mitted into the Melchisedec, or higher, priesthood of 
which Peter, James and John held the keys. They now 
became anxious to have this promise fulfilled, and so 
made their desire the subject of fervent prayer. At 
length, while tarrying before the Lord in a chamber in 
Whitmer's house, the word of the Lord came to them 
commanding Joseph to ordain Oliver, and Oliver Joseph, 
to the eldership of the Church of Jesus Christ. 

When the translation of the Book of Mormon was 
completed, the copyright was secured, June ii, 1829, by 
Joseph Smith, "Author and Proprietor." The work of 
publication, which occupied seven months,* was let out to 
Mr. Egbert Grandin, of Pabnyra, New York, who agreed 
to print five thousand copies for the sum of three thou- 
sand dollars. Martin Harris, one of the three witnesses, 
furnished the means for the publication of this edition, 
and J. H. Gilbert, whose name will be frequently men- 
tioned in the pages of this book, set the type. 



* Letter of J. H. Gilbert to Th. Gregg, dated at Palmyra, New York, 
December 30, 1884. 



THE 



BOOK OF MOBMON: 



AN ACCOUNT WKITTEN BY TliE HAND OF UOU- 

MON, WOK PLATES TAKEN FROM 

THE PLATES OF NEPfH- 



m 



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rtifbid AfKrileM ti tb« Jcid£i»Dt o^bi ef Chkift. 



f 



BY JASEPH SJIITH, JirrVlOB, 

AUTHOR ANO PRtfPenKTORi 



PALMVRAi 

VnUVTfil BIT B^ B.^GRANPIN, FOH.in^ AIJTIIOR. 
1830. 



FsCigMMt <♦> TiTt-f--iH''.i' iJi' J'(*i»,i l'!lMTN»^ or \|i.in^iix IHiwh 
TITLE-PAGE PALMYRA EDITION OF THE BOOK 
OF MORMON. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON % 

On April 6, 1830, the "Church of Jesus Christ of 
Latter-day Saints" was organized at Fayette, Seneca 
County, New York, with six members, Joseph Smith, 
Oliver Cowdery, Samuel Smith, Hyrum Smith, David 
Whitmer and Peter Whitmer ; Joseph Smith and Oliver 
Cowdery becoming elders of the same. 

This, in brief, is the history of the rise of Mormonism 
as given by the Mormons themselves. It is one of the 
strangest phenomena of htmian history that a story so 
absurd and foundationless, and one in which the repu- 
table citizens of Smith's own neighborhood placed not 
the least bit of credence, should be accepted as a truthful 
account of what actually happened, by hundreds of thou- 
sands of people. It must be because men love darkness 
rather than light and fiction rather than fact. 

THE HISTORICAL OUTLINE OF THE BOOK OF MORMON. 

Turning our attention now to the Book of Mormon 
as a reputed sacred history of ancient America, we find 
that it is written on the plan of the Bible and is divided 
into fifteen different books, as follows : i Nephi, 2 Nephi, 
Jacob, Enos, Jarom, Omni, Words of Mormon, Mosiah, 
Alma, Helaman, Nephi, Disciple of Nephi, Mormon, 
Ether and Moroni. Historically, these books cover a 
period of about twenty-six centuries and describe two 
distinct nations of people, the Jaredites and Nephites; 
the Book of Ether being an abridged history of the 
former, the other fourteen of the latter. 

The first people to inhabit America, according to the 
Book of Mormon, were the Jaredites, who came from 
the tower of Babel under Jared and his brother, the 
latter a prophet of the Lord. Leaving Babel, the Jared- 
ites are said to have journeyed northward into Armenia 
and from there westward over southern Europe to Spain, 



10 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

the Bcx>k of Mormon land of Moriancumer. Here they 
dwelt on the seashore for four years, at the close of 
which time they put to sea in eight cigar-shaped barges," * 
and landed, after a voyage of 344 days, upon "the east 
coast of Central America, near the mouth of the river 
Motagua." — Report of Committee on American Archceol- 

ogy, p. 70-* 

Here they are said to have founded a government, to 
have built large cities (the ruins of which still remain), 
to have practiced the arts and customs of an advanced 
civilization, and to have settled the adjacent country. 

From Central America, the Jaredites are said to 
have spread their borders northward until, finally, they 
included within their boundaries all of the territory of 
the present United States. Many Mormon writers iden- 
tify them with the m3rthical "Mound Builders," and at- 
tribute the earthworks of the Mississippi and Ohio Val- 
leys to their construction, a theory that is nullified by 
the more recent archaeological researches, which make it 
necessary to identify the "Mound Builders" with our 
Indian tribes.* 

After dwelling here for about sixteen hundred years, 
spreading over the extensive country mentioned and suf- 

^"And thej were small, and they were light upon the water, eyen 
like tinto the lightness of a fowl upon the water: and they were built 
after a manner that they were exceeding tight, even that they would hold 
water like unto a dish; and the bottom thereof was tight like unto a dish; 
and the sides thereof were tight like unto a dish; and the ends thereof 
were peaked; and the top thereof was tight like unto a dish; and the length 
thereof was the length of a tree; and the door thereof, when it was shut, 
was tight like unto a dish."— £«/(er, i : 5. 

•This committee was appointed at the General Conference of the Re- 
organized Church, held at Lamoni, Iowa, April 6-19, 1894, for the purpose 
of outlining and preparing a map of Book of Mormon history. 

•See Chapter VI. of my "Cumorah Revisited; or. The Book of Mor* 
mon, and the Claims of the Mormons, Re-examined, from the Viewpoint of 
American Archaeology and Ethnology," for a full discussion of the ques- 
tion of the aattonalitj of the Mound Builders. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 11 

fering from dissensions and revolts, the Jaredites came 
to an end in civil war in a battle fought about 600 B. C. 
at "Hill Ramah" in western New York, in which thou- 
sands were slain in a few days, only two escaping — 
Coriantimir, one of the generals, and Ether, a prophet 
of the Lord. The former was afterward discovered 
by the people of Zarahemla and dwelt with them "nine 
moons ;" Ether wrote a history of his people on a set of 
plates and hid them in such a manner that they were 
afterwards discovered by their successors. This, in brief, 
is the history of the first colony of immigrants to reach 
our shores as given in the Book of Mormon. 

The book further claims that in the first year of the 
reign of Zedekiah, king of Judah, there was dwelling at 
Jerusalem a prophet and righteous man by the name of 
Lehi. Lehi had four sons, Laman, Lemuel, Sam and 
Nephi, and, as the wickedness of the city was great, he 
was commanded to take them and his wife, Saraiah, and 
depart into the wilderness. After their departure, the 
sons returned to Jerusalem at two different times, first 
to obtain a set of brass plates which contained the gen- 
ealogy of their fathers, and, second, to induce the family 
of Ishmael to join them. 

After eight years, by the command of God, this little 
company, now augmented by the addition of Ishmael's 
family, built a ship and launched out into the Indian 
Ocean, committing themselves to the care of God. The 
voyage was a stormy one, but, notwithstanding this, they 
successfully crossed the sea, and, in due time, landed "on 
the coast of Chili, not far from the thirtieth degree, south 
latitude." — Report of Committee on American Archceol- 
ogy, p. II. 

Here, they found all manner of beasts — ^the cow, ox, 
ass, horse, goat and wild goat; also such ores as gold. 



12 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

silver, iron and copper. Nephi began at once to keep a 
record of his people, and for this purpose he made a set 
of plates and began to engrave thereon their history in 
the "Reformed Egyptian" * language. In course of time, 
Lehi died and the company broke up into two contending 
factions, the Nephites and Lamanites, named from his 
two sons, Nephi and Laman. The Nephites were enlight- 
ened and civilized ; the Lamanites degenerated into com- 
mon savages — ^they were the ancestors of our Indians. 

Sometime after the division, the Nephites moved 
northward into what is now Colombia and Venezuela, 
their land of Zarahemla, where they found a colony of 
people called the Mulekites or Zarahemlaites, who had 
come over from Jerusalem about the time of its destruc- 
tion by Nebuchadnezzar, under Mulek, one of the sons 
of Zedekiah. From this time onward, the Nephites And 
Zarahemlaites were one people. 

Being a prolific people, and having their numbers in- 
creased by the addition of the Zarahemlaites, the Nephites 
now sent out colonies into Central America and Mexico 
and, finally, into the United States, so that in the short 
space of one thousand years from the time of their land- 
ing upon American soil, and notwithstanding their wars 
with the Lamanites, they inhabited the whole of North 
America as far to the northward, at least, as the Great 
Lakes. 

But at last they met their downfall. Drunken with 
the pride of their wonderful achievements, they had for- 
gotten God, and with this forgetfulness came national 
deterioration, so that they fell an easy prey to their in- 
veterate foes, the Lamanites. Near "Hill Cumorah" 



^This has been verbally objected to, it being claimed that the "Re« 
formed Egyptian'* was not invented until later, but see "Joseph the Seer/' 
p. 14s, where ^Elder Blair coincides with my ttatemtot 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 13 

(the same as the Jaredite "Ramah") in western New 
York, the decisive battle was fought about 400 A. D., and 
the Nephite people were nearly all exterminated. Most 
of those who escaped, "dissented" to the Lamanites, and 
from them, it is thought, have come the tribes of "white 
Indians."' Moroni, a prince of royal blood who did 
not "dissent," hid himself from his enemies, and, in the 
year 420 A. D., finished the record of his people upon the 
plates and deposited them in "Hill Cumorah," where they 
were discovered by Joseph Smith on the twenty-second 
day of September, 1823. 

This is, substantially, the historical account of the 
Book of Mormon. Wild and weird as it is, it has ap- 
pealed to those of a dreamy, visionary nature with mar- 
velous effectiveness. And the Mormon churches are 
largely made up of the dreamy, visionary class. If you 
take the dream and vision out of Mormonism, you will 
have but very little left.* 

THE PROPOSITION STATED. 

Since about the year 1832, it has been asserted by the 
opponents of Mormonism that, instead of being a true 
and authentic history of the ancient inhabitants of Amer- 
ica, the Book of Mormon is, in fact, a story written by 
the Rev. Solomon Spaulding, a Congregational" clergy- 
man, for the purpose of whiHng away the hours of his 
poor health and providing him the means of paying his 
debts. Although all anti-Mormon writers and polemics 

> "White Indians" is a misnomer. No such Indians, strictly speaking, 
ever existed. The term is applied to the lighter tribes of the American race. 

*This is more apparent to one who has been in the faith than to an 
outsider. The child that is raised a strict Mormon is taught to carefully 
regard his dreams. Visions that, to ordinary people, are the effects of a 
disordered stomach or overworked nerves, are to the good Mormon the 
voice of the Lord. 

•Or Presbyterian. 



14 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

have not adopted this view/ it is the one most usually 
relied upon to account for the origin of the book, and, 
when understood, is one of the most effective arguments 
that can be brought to bear against the delusion. 

The Spaulding theory is, briefly, this: About 1809, 
Solomon Spaulding, who was then living at Conneaut, 
or New Salem, Ohio, became very much interested in the 
aboriginal works of the country and began to write 
romances based upon them. One of these, which de- 
scribed a colony of Jews who came over from Jerusalem 
under the leadership of Lehi and Nephi, he entitled "The 
Manuscript Found." In 1812, Spaulding removed from 
Conneaut to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and put this man- 
uscript in the hands of one Robert Patterson, for publica- 
tion. Patterson had an employe by the name of J. Har- 
rison Lambdin, who, in turn, had a friend by the name 
of Sidney Rigdon, who frequently lounged around the 
printing-office. The manuscript, at length, came up miss- 
ing, and Rigdon was suspected of the theft. This sus- 
picion was afterwards confirmed by the fact that he ex- 
hibited such a manuscript which he said had been written 
by a preacher by the name of Spaulding. This manu- 
script, it is claimed, Rigdon worked over, and, through 
the assistance of Smith and Cowdery, palmed off upon 
the religious world as a new revelation from God, the 
Book of Mormon. 

Of course the Mormons strenuously deny any con- 
nection whatever between the Book of Mormon and "The 
Manuscript Found," declaring that the latter was dis- 
covered in the possession of Mr. L. L. Rice, of Honolulu, 

> Chief of these is the Rer. D. H. Bays, now deceased, who, after 
serving as a missionary in the Reorganised Church for twenty-seven 
years, apostatised and wrote his "Doctrines and Dogmas of Mormonism,** 
ia which he denies the above position. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON U 

Sandwich Islands, in 1884, and that, upon comparison, 
it is shown to be entirely diflferent from the former. The 
Brighamite paper, the Deseret News, for July 19, 1900, 
says: 

The discovery of the manuscript written by Mr. Spaulding 
and its deposit in the Library at Oberlin College, Ohio, . . . 
has so completely demolished the theory once relied upon by 
superficial minds that the Book of Mormon was concocted from 
that manuscript, that it has been entirely abandoned by all 
opponents of Mormonism, except the densely ignorant or un- 
scrupulously dishonest. 

I deny the charge. The opponent of Mormonism, 
who holds to the theory that the Book of Mormon orig- 
inated in Spaulding's "The Manuscript Found," is neither 
"densely ignorant" nor "tmscrupulously dishonest." The 
Honolulu manuscript is not now, and never has been, 
"The Manuscript Found," but another manuscript, upon 
an entirely different subject, which was written before 
Spaulding began his Jewish story. It never was claimed 
that the Book of Mormon originated in the manuscript 
found in the Sandwich Islands. That manuscript was 
known of and was described by the opponents of Mor- 
monism as early as 1834, but it was expressly denied that 
it had any connection, whatever, with the Book of Mor- 
mon. The "densely ignorant" and "unscrupulously dis- 
honest" are the Mormons who purposely confuse the 
public mind by confounding these manuscripts and speak- 
ing of them as one and the same. 



16 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 



CHAPTER 11. 

The Character of Joseph Smith— The Affidavit of Peter Inger- 
soU— The Affidavit of Willard Chase— The Affidavit of 
William Stafford— The Affidavit of Isaac Hale— The Signed 
Statements of the Citizens of Palmyra and Manchester, New 
York— ^The Mormon Attempt to Exonerate Smith. 

The early life of Joseph Smith was spent in an en- 
vironment of superstition and deception that peculiarly 
fitted him for the part that he was afterwards to play 
as the prophet of "the new dispensation." His father 
before him was a man of questionable veracity and indo- 
lent habits, who spent a considerable part of his time in 
"witching" with a hazel rod/ or practicing other cere- 
monies of a like mysterious nature, in order that he might 
discover lost mines and buried treasures; while his 
mother was a conmion fortune-teller, who turned many a 
penny by tracing in the lines of the open palm the fortime 

a The "rod" was almost as much of an essential part of the para> 
phemalia of early Mormonism as the seer-stone. In a reyelatton given to 
Oliver Cowdery at Harmony, Pennsylvania, April, 1829, I find the follow- 
ing: "O, remember these words and keep my commandments. Remember 
this is your gift. Now this is not all, for you have another gift, which 
Is the gift of working with the rod: behold, it has told you things: behold, 
there is no other power save God, that can cause this rod of nature to work 
in your hands, for it is the work of God; and therefore whatsoever you 
shall ask me to tell you by that means, that will I grant unto you, that 
you shall know." This appears in the "Book of Commandments" 7: 3, 
but, as it smacked too much of superstition and dark practices, it was 
subsequently disguised in the "Doc. and Gov." 8:3, to read: "O, remem* 
ber these words, and keep my commandments! Remember this is your 
gift. Now, this is not all thy gift, for you have another gift, which is the 
gift of Aaron; behold, it has told you many things; behold, there Js n« 
other power save the power of God that can cause this gift of Aaron to 
be with you; therefore doubt not, for it is the gift of God, and you shall 
hold it in your hands and do marvellous works; and no power shall bo 
able to take it away out of your hands, for it is the work of God." 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 17 

of the inquirer.* With these examples before him, there 
is little wonder that, in the earlier years of his life, 
Joseph easily fell into questionable habits and engaged 
in dark practices, or that later he became one of the 
prime deceivers in the fraud of Mormonism. 

As the foregoing characteristics of the Smith family 
were well known throughout their immediate neighbor- 
hood, and even in that vicinity for miles around, they 
were not very successful in obtaining, among their ac- 
quaintances, adherents to their peculiar religious claims 
and beliefs. Not a single man of wealth or influence, 
from either Palmyra or Manchester, excepting Martin 
Harris, ever joined their standard. The few from that 
locality, outside of Harris, who followed the Smiths into 
the Mormon delusion, were all of the bwer strata and 
were largely pals of their midnight mysteries. 

At first, Joseph began his deceptions on a small scale 
and contented himself with simply "peeping" for hidden 
treasures, but, being phenomenally successful in this 
small way, he conceived the idea of launching out in a 
more colossal deception, and, through the assistance of 
Rigdon, Cowdery, Pratt and others, Mormonism was the 
result. And, as he found a few who bit at the bait of the 
"money-digger," he has also found many who have bitten 
at the bait of the "prophet." 

When Smith first promulgated the claim that he had 
found and deciphered the golden plates, his story was 
treated with silent contempt by the majority of his ac- 
quaintances. Knowing his poor reputation for veracity 
at home, they supposed that his tale would find few 
believers abroad. But, when the Mormons had left New 
York and had become settled at Kirtland, Ohio, and hun- 

^Mn. Dr. Horace Eatoa in "Hand-book on Mormonism/' p. i. 



18 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

dreds had begun to flock to their standard, they saw the 
necessity of doing something to counteract the influence 
of the delusion, and so gave to the world, in the form of 
affidavits and signed statements, what they knew of the 
eccentricities and poor practices of the Smith family. 

A number of these affidavits and statements were pub- 
lished in Howe's "Mormonism Unveiled," of 1834, and 
are copied here for the purpose of giving the reader a 
true history of the early operations of the Smiths and 
also showing that Joseph was not above being a party 
to the transformation of one of Spaulding's novels into 
a "truthful" and "divine" history of the ancient inhab- 
itants of America. 

THE AFFIDAVIT OF PETER INGERSOLL. 

Palmyra, Wayne County, N. Y., Dec. 2, 1833. 

I, Peter Ingersoll, first became acquainted with the family 
of Joseph Smith, Sen., in the year of our Lord, 1822. I lived 
in the neighborhood of said family, until about 1830; during 
which time the following facts came under my observation. 

The general employment of the family, was digging for 
money. I had frequent invitations to join the company, but 
always declined being one of their number. They used various 
arguments to induce me to accept of their invitations. I was 
once ploughing near the house of Joseph Smith, Sen., about 
noon, he requested me to walk with him a short distance from 
his house, for the purpose of seeing whether a mineral rod 
would work in my hand, saying, at the same time, he was 
confident it would. As my oxen were eating, and being myself 
at leisure, I accepted the invitation. When we arrived near 
the place at which he thought there was money, he cut a small 
witch-hazel bush, and gave me direction how to hold it. He 
then went off some rods, and told me to say to the rod, **Work 
to the money,** which I did in an audible voice. He rebuked 
me severely for speaking it loud, and said it must be spoken in 
a whisper. This was rare sport for me. While the old man was 
standing off some rods, throwing himself into various shapes, 
I told him the rod did not work. He seemed much surprised at 



THE BOOK OF MORMON » 

this, and said he thought he saw it move in my hand. It was 
now time for me to return to my labor. On my return, I 
picked up a small stone and was carelessly tossing it from one 
hand to the other. Said he, (looking very earnestly,) "What 
are you going to do with that stone?" "Throw it at the birds," 
I replied. "No," said the old man. "it is of great worth;" and 
upon this I gave it to him. "Now," says he, "if you only knew 
the value there is back of my house," and pointing to a place 
near, "there" exclaimed he, "is one chest of gold and another of 
silver." He then put the stone which I had given him into his 
hat, and stooping forward, he bowed and made sundry ma- 
noeuvres, quite similar to those of a stool-pigeon. At length, 
he took down his hat, and, being very much exhausted, said, in 
a faint voice, "If you knew what I had seen, you would be- 
lieve." To see the old man thus try to impose upon me, I 
confess, rather had a tendency to excite contempt than pity. 
Yet I thought it best to conceal my feelings, preferring to appear 
the dupe of my credulity, than to expose myself to his resent- 
ment. His son Alvin then went through with the same per- 
formance, which was equally disgusting. 

Another time, the said Joseph, Sen., told me that the best 
time for digging money, was in the hsat of summer, when the 
heat of the sun caused the chests of money to rise near the 
top of the ground. "You notice," said he, "the large stones 
on the top of the ground — ^we call them rocks, and they truly 
appear so, but they are, in fact, most of them chests of money 
raised by the heat of the sun." 

At another time, he told me that the ancient inhabitants of 
this country used camels instead of horses. For proof of this 
fact, he stated that in a certain hill, on the farm of Mr. Cuyler, 
there was a cave containing an immense value of gold and sil- 
ver, stands of arms, also, a saddle for a camel, hanging on a 
peg, at one side of the cave. I asked him of what kind of 
wood the peg was. He could not tell, but said it had become 
similar to stone orMron. 

The old man, at last, laid a plan which he thought would 
accomplish his design. His cows and mine had been gone for 
sometime, and were not to be found, notwithstanding our dili- 
gent search for them. Day after day was spent in fruitless 
search, until, at length, he proposed to find them by his art 



20 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

of divination. So he took his stand near the corner of his 
house, with a small stick in his hand, and made several strange 
and peculiar motions, and then said he could go directly to the 
cows. So he started off, and went into the woods, about one 
hundred rods distant, and found the lost cows. But, on finding 
out the secret of the mystery, Harrison had found the cows, 
and drove them to the above-named place, and milked them. 
So that his stratagem turned out rather more to his profit than 
it did to my edification. The old man, finding that all his 
efforts to make me a money-digger had proved abortive, at 
length ceased his importunities. One circumstance, however, I 
will mention, before leaving him. Sometime before young 
Joseph found, or pretended to find, the gold plates, the old man 
told me that in Canada, there had been a book found, in a 
hollow tree, that gave an account of the first settlment of this 
country, before it was discovered by Columbus. 

In the month of August, 1827, I was hired by Joseph Smith, 
Jr., to go to Pennsylvania, to move his wife's household furni- 
ture up to Manchester, where his wife then was. When we ar- 
rived at Mr. Hale's in Harmony, Pa., from which place he had 
taken his wife, a scene presented itself truly affecting. His 
father-in-law (Mr. Hale) addressed Joseph, in a flood of tears: 
"You have stolen my daughter, and married her. I had much 
rather have followed her to her grave. You spend your time 
in digging for money — pretend to see in a stone and thus try 
to deceive people." Joseph wept, and acknowledged he could 
not see in a stone now, nor never could; and that his former 
pretensions in that respect, were all false. He th^n promised 
to give up his old habits of digging for money and looking 
into stones. Mr. Hale told Joseph, if he would move to Penn- 
sylvania and work for a living, he would assist him in getting 
into business. Joseph acceded to this proposition. I then 
returned with Joseph and his wife to Manchester. One cir- 
cumstance occurred, on the road, worthy of notice, and I be- 
lieve this is the only instance where Joe ever exhibited true 
Yankee wit On our journey to Pennsylvania, we could not 
make the exact change at the toll gate near Ithaca. Joseph 
told the gate tender that he would "hand" him the toll on his 
return, as he was coming back in a few days. On our return, 
Joseph tendered to him 25c, the toll being 12^- He did not 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 21 

recognize Smith, so he accordingly gave him back I2^c. After 
we had passed the gate, I asked him if he did not agree 
to pay double gateage on our return? "No," said he, "I agreed 
to hand it to him, and I did, but he handed it back again." 

Joseph told me, on his return, that he intended to keep 
the promise which he had made to his father-in-law; "but," 
said he, "it will be hard for me, for they will all oppose, as 
they want me to look in the stone for them to dig money." 
And, in fact, it was as he predicted. They urged him, day after 
day, to resume his old practice of looking in the stone. He 
seemed much perplexed as to the course he should pursue. In 
this dilenuna, he made me his confident, and told me what 
daily transpired in the family of Smiths. One day he came 
and greeted me, with a joyful countenance. Upon asking the 
cause of his unusual happiness, he replied in the following lan- 
guage: "As I was passing, yesterday, across the woods, after a 
heavy shower of rain, I found, in a hollow, some beautiful white 
sand, that had been washed up by the water. I took off my 
frock, and tied up several quarts of it and then went home. 
On my entering the house, I found the family at the table, 
eating dinner. They were all anxious to know the contents 
of my frock. At that moment, I happened to think of what I 
had heard about a history found in Canada, called the golden 
Bible; so I very gravely told them it was the golden Bible. 
To my surprise, they were credulous enough to believe what 
I said. Accordingly I told them that I had received a com- 
mandment to let no one see it; for, says I, no man can see 
it with the naked eye and live. However, I offered to take 
out the book and show it to them, but they refused to see it, 
and left the room. Now," said Joe, "I have got the d— d 
fools fixed, and will carry out the fun." Notwithstanding, he 
told me he had no such book, and believed there never was 
any such book, yet, he told me that he actually went to Willard 
Chase, to get him to make a chest, in which he might deposit his 
golden Bible. But, as Chase would not do it, he made a box 
himself, of clapboards, and put it into a pillow-case, and allowed 
people only to lift it, and feel of it through the case. 

In the fall of 1827, Joseph wanted to go to Pennsylvania. 
His brother-in-law had come to assist him in moving, but he 
himself was out of money. He wished to borrow the money 



22 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

of me, and he presented Mr. Hale as security. I told him in 
case he could obtain assistance from no other source, I would 
let him have some money. Joseph then went to Palmyra; and, 

said he, "I there met that d ^n fool Martin Harris, and told 

him that I had a command to ask the first honest man I met 
with for fifty dollars in money, and he would let me have it. 
I saw at once," said Joe, "that it took his notion, for he 
promptly gave me the fifty." 

Joseph thought this sum was sufficient to bear his expenses to 
Pennsylvania; so he immediately started off, and since that time 
I have not been much in his society. While the Smiths were 
living at Waterloo, William visited my neighborhood; and, 
upon my inquiry how they came on, he replied, "We do better 
there than here; we were too well known here to do much." 

Peter Ingersoll. 
State of New York, ") 
Wayne County. j ^^' 
I certify, that on this 9th day of December, 1833, personally 
appeared before me the above-named Peter Ingersoll, to me 
known, and made oath, according to law, to the truth of the 
above statement. Th. P. Baldwin, 

Judge of Wayne County Court 

THE AFFIDAVIT OF WILLARD CHASE. 

Manchester, Ontario County, New York, 1833. 
I became acquainted with the Smith family, known as the 
authors of the Mormon Bible, in the year 1820. At that time, 
they were engaged in the money-digging business, which they 
followed until the latter part of the season of 1827. In the 
year 1822 I was engaged in digging a well. I employed Alvin 
and Joseph Smith to assist me; the latter of whom is now 
known as the Mormon Prophet. After digging about twenty 
feet below the surface of the earth, we discovered a singularly 
appearing stone, which excited my curiosity. I brought it to the 
top of the well, and as we were examining it, Joseph put it 
into his hat, and then his face into the top of his hat. It 
has been said by Smith, that he brought the stone from the 
well; but this is false. There was no one in the well but 
myself. The next morning he came to me and wished to 
obtain the stcne, alleging that he could see in it; but I told 




HYRUM SMITH. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 2S 

him I did not wish to part with it» on account of its being a 
curiosity, but would lend it After obtaining the stone, he 
began to publish abroad what wonders he could discover by 
looking in it, and made so much disturbance among the credu- 
lous part of the community, that I ordered the stone to be re- 
turned to me again. He had it in his possession about two 
years. I believe, some time in 1825, Hiram Smith (brother of 
Joseph Smith) came to me, and wished to borrow the same 
stone, alleging that they wanted to accomplish some business of 
importance, which could not very well be done without the aid 
of the stone. I told him it was of no particular worth to me, 
but merely wished to keep it as a curiosity, and if he would 
pledge me his word and honor that I should have it when 
called for, he might take it; which he did, and took the stone. 
I thought I could rely on his word at this time, as he had 
made a profession of religion. But in this I was disappointed, 
for he disregarded both his word and honor. 

In the fall of 1826, a friend called upon me, and wished to 
see that stone, about which so much had been said; and I told 
him, if he would go with me to Smith's, (a distance of about 
half a mile,) he might see it But, to my surprise, on going 
to Smith's, and asking him for the stone, he said, "You cannot 
have it;" I told him it belonged to me, repeated to him the 
promise he made me, at the time of obtaining the stone: upon 
which he faced me with a malignant look, and said, "I don't 
care who in the devil it belongs to, yon shall not have it" 

In the month of June, 1827, Joseph Smith, Sen., related to 
me the following story: "That some years ago, a spirit had ap- 
peared to Joseph his son, in a vision, and informed him that in 
a certain place there was a record on plates of gold, and that he 
was the person that must obtain them, and this he must do in 
the following manner: On the 22d of September, he must re- 
pair to the place where was deposited this manuscript, dressed 
in black clothes, and riding a black horse with a switch tail, 
and demand the book in a certain name, and after obtaining it 
he must go directly away, and neither lay it down nor look 
behind him. They accordingly fitted out Joseph with a suit of 
black clothes and borrowed a black horse. He repaired to the 
place of deposit and demanded the book which was in a stone 
box, unsealed, and so near the top of the ground that he could 

(8) 



24 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

see one end of it, and raising it up, took out the book of gold; 
but fearing some one might discover where he got it, he laid 
it down to place back the top stone as he found it; and turning 
round, to his surprise there was no book in sight. He again 
opened the box, and in it saw the book, and attempted to take 
it out, but was hindered. He saw in the box something like a 
toad which soon assumed the appearance of a man, and struck 
him on the side of his head. Not being discouraged at trifles, 
he again stooped down and strove to take the book, when the 
spirit struck him again, and knocked him three or four rods 
and hurt him prodigiously. After recovering from his fright, he 
inquired why he could not obtain the plates; to which the spirit 
made reply, "Because you have not obeyed your orders." He 
then inquired when he could have them, and was answered thus * 
Come one year from this day, and bring with you your oldest 
brother, and you shall have them. This spirit, he said, was 
the spirit of the prophet who wrote this book, and who was 
sent to Joseph Smith, to make known these things to him. 
Before the expiration of the year, his oldest brother died; 
which the old man said was an accidental providence! 

Joseph went one year from that day, to demand the book, 
and the spirit inquired for his brother, and he said that he was 
dead. The spirit then commanded him to come again, in just 
one year, and bring a man with him. On asking who might be 
the man, he was answered that he would know him when he 
saw him. 

Joseph believed that one Samuel T. Lawrence was the man 
alluded to by the spirit, and went with him to a singular lookr 
ing hill, in Manchester, and showed him where the treasure 
was. Lawrence asked him if he had ever discovered anything 
with the plates of gold; he said no; he then asked him to look 
in his stone, to see if there was anything with them. He 
looked, and said there was nothing; he told him to look again, 
and see if there was not a large pair of specs with the plates; 
he looked and soon saw a pair of spectacles, the same with 
which Joseph says he translated the Book of Mormon. Law- 
rence told him it would not be prudent to let these plates be 
seen for about two years, as it would make a great disturbance 
in the neighborhood. Not long after this Joseph altered his 
mind, and said L. was not the right man, nor had he told him 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 25 

the right place. About this time he went to Harmony in Penn- 
sylvania, and formed an acquaintance with a young la^y by the 
name of Emma Hale, whom he wished to marry. In the fall 
of 1826 he wanted to go to Pennsylvania to be married; but 
being destitute of means, he now set his wits to work how ne 
should raise money, and get recommendations, to procure the 
fair one of his choice. He went to Lawrence with the following 
story, as related to me by Lawrence himself. That he had 
discovered in Pennsylvania, on the bank of the Susquehanna 
River, a very rich mine of silver, and if he would go there 
with him, he might have a share in the profits; that it was near 
high-water mark, and that they could load it into boats and take 
it down the river to Philadelphia, to market. Lawrence then 
asked Joseph if he was not deceiving him; no, said he, for I 
have been there and seen it with mine own eyes, and if you do 
not find it so when we get there, I will bind myself to be your 
servant for three years. By these grave and fair promises 
Lawrence was induced to believe something in it, and agreed 
to go with him. L. soon found that Joseph was out of money, 
and had to bear his expenses on the way. When they got to 
Pennsylvania, Joseph wanted L. to recommend him to Miss H., 
which he did, although he was asked to do it ; but could not well 
get rid of it as he was in his company. L. then wished to see 
the silver mine, and he and Joseph went to the river, and 
made search, but found nothing. Thus Lawrence had his trouble 
for his pains and returned home lighter than he went, while 
Joseph had got his expenses borne, and a recommendation to 
his girl. 

Joseph's next move was to get married; the girl's parents 
being opposed to the match; as they happened to be from home, 
he took advantage of the opportunity, and went off with her 
and was married. 

Now, being still destitute of money, he set his wits at work 
how he should get back to Manchester, his place of residence; 
he hit upon the following plan, which succeeded very well 
He went to an honest old Dutchman, by the name of Stowel 
and told him that he had discovered on the bank of Black 
River, in the village of Watertown, Jefferson County, N. Y., 
a cave, in which he had found a bar of gold, as big as his leg, 
and about three or four feet long. That he could not get it 



«« THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

out alone, on account of its being fast at one end; and if he 
would move him to Manchester, N. Y., they would go together, 
and take a chisel and mallet and get it, and Stowel should share 
the prize with him. Stowel moved him. 

A short time after their arrival, at Manchester, Stowel re- 
minded Joseph of his promise; but he calmly replied that he 
would not go, because his wife was now among strangers, 
and would be veiy lonesome if he went away. Mr. Stowel 
was then obliged to return without any gold, and with less 
money than he came. 

In the forepart of September, (I believe,) 1827, the prophet 
requested me to make him a chest, informing me that he de- 
signed to move back to Pennsylvania, and expecting soon to get 
his gold book, he wanted a chest to lock it up, giving me to 
understand, at the same time, that if I would make the chest he 
would give me a share in the book. I told him my business 
was such that I could not make it; but if he would bring the 
book to me, I would lock it up for him. He said that would 
not do, as he was commanded to keep it two years, without 
letting it come to the eye of any one but himself. This 
commandment, however, he did not keep; for in less than two 
years, twelve men said they had seen it I told him to get it 
and convince me of its existence, and I would make him a 
chest; but he said, that would not do, as he must have a 
chest to lock the book in, as soon as he took it out of the 
ground. I saw him a few days after when he told me that I 
must make the chest I told him plainly that I could not^ 
upon which he told me that I could have no share in the book. 

A few weeks after this conversation he came to my house, 
and related the following story: That on the 22d of September, 
he arose early in the morning and took a one-horse wagon, 
of some one that had staid over night at their house, without 
leave or license; and, together with his wife, repaired to the 
hill which contained the book. He left his wife in the wagon, 
by the road, and went alone to the hill, a distance of thirty or 
forty rods from the road; he said he then took the book out 
of the ground and hid it in a tree top, and returned home. 
He then went to the town of Macedon to work. After about 
ten days, it having been suggested that some one had got his 
book, his wife went after him ; he hired a horse, and went home 



THE BOOK OF MORMON IT 

in the afternoon, staid long enough to drink one ctip of tea, 
and then went for his book, found it safe, took off his frock, 
wrapt it round it, put it under his arm and ran all the way 
home, a distance of about two miles. He said he should think it 
would weigh sixty pounds, and was sure it would weigh forty. 
On his return home, he said he was attacked by two men in the 
woods, and knocked them both down and made his escape, 
arrived safe and secured his treasure. He then observed that if 
it had not been for that stone, (which he acknowledged be- 
longed to me,) he would not have obtained the book. A few 
days afterwards, he told one of my neighbors that he had not 
^ot any such book, nor never had such an one; but that he 
had told the story to deceive the d— d fool, (meaning me,) to 
get him to make a chest. His neighbors having become dis- 
gusted with his foolish stories, he determined to go back to 
Pennsylvania, to avoid what he called persecution. His wits 
were now put to the task to contrive how he should get money 
to bear his expenses. He met one day in the streets of Palmyra 
a rich man, whose name was Martin Harris, and addressed him 
thus: "I have a commandment from (}od to ask the first man 
I meet in the street to give me fifty dollars to assist me in 
doing the work of the Lord by translating the golden Bible." 
Martin being naturally a credulous man, hands Joseph the 
money. In the spring of 1829 Harris went to Pennsylvania, 
and on his return to Palmjrra, reported that the prophet's wife, 
in the month of June following, would be delivered of a male 
child that would be able when two years old to translate the 
golden Bible. Then, said he, you will see Joseph Smith, Jr., 
walking through the streets of Palmyra with a gold Bible under 
his arm, and having a gold breast plate on, and a gold sword 
hanging by his side. This, however, by the by, proved false. 

In April, 1830, I again asked Hiram for the stone which he 
had borrowed of me; he told me that I should not have it, 
for Joseph made use of it in translating his Bible. I reminded 
him of his promise and that he had pledged his honor to re- 
turn it; but he gave me the lie. sajring the stone was not mine 
nor never was. Harris at the same time flew in a rage, took 
me by the collar and said I was a liar, and he could prove it 
by twelve witnesses. After I had extricated myself from him, 
Hiram in a rage shook his fist at me and abused me in a most 



28 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

scandalous manner. Thus I might proceed in describing the 
character of these high priests by relating one transaction after 
another, which would all tend to set them in the same light 
in which they were regarded by their neighbors; viz.: as a 
pest to society. I have regarded Joseph Smith, Jr., from the 
time I first became acquainted with him until he left this part 
of the country, as a man whose word could not be depended 
upon. Hiram's character was but very little better. What I 
have said respecting the character of these men, will apply to 
the whole family. What I have stated relative to the characters 
of these individuals, thus far, is wholly true. After they became 
thorough Mormons, their conduct was more disgraceful than 
before. They did not hesitate to abuse any man, no matter how 
fair his character, provided he did not embrace their creed. 
Their tongues were continually employed in spreading scandal 
and abuse. Although they left this part of the country without 
paying their just debts, yet their creditors were glad to have 
them do so, rather than to have them stay, disturbing the 
neighborhood. Willard Chase. 

On the nth December, 1833, the said Willard Chase ap- 
peared before me, and made oath that the foregoing statement 
to which he has subscribed his name, is true, according to his 
best recollection and belief. Fred'k Smith, 

Justice of the Peace of Wayne County. 

THE AFFIDAVIT OF WILLIAM STAFFORD. 

Manchester, Ontario County, N. Y., Dec. 8, 1833. 
I, William Stafford, having been called upon to give a true 
statement of my knowledge, concerning the character and con- 
duct of the family of Smiths, known to the world as the founders 
of the Mormon sect, do say, that I first became acquainted with 
Joseph, Sen., and his family, in the year 1820. They lived, at 
that time, in Palmyra, about one mile and a half from my resi- 
dence. A great part of their time was devoted to digging for 
money: especially in the night time, when they said the money 
could be the most easily obtained. I have heard them tell 
marvellous tales, respecting the discoveries they had made in 
their peculiar occupation of money-digging. They would say, for 
instance, that in such a place, in such a hill, on a certain man's 
farm, there were deposited keys, barrels and hogsheads of coined 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 21 

silver and gold— bars o£ gold, golden images, brass kettles filled 
with gold and silver, gold candlesticks, swords, &.&. They 
would say, also, that nearly all the hills in this part of New 
York, were thrown up by human hands, and in them were large 
caves, which Joseph, Jr., could see, by placing a stone of singular 
appearance in his hat, in such a manner as to exclude all light; 
at which time they pretended he could see all things within and 
under the earth, — that he could see within the above-mentioned 
caves, large gold bars and silver plates, — that he could also 
discover the spirits in whose charge these treasures were, 
clothed in ancient dress. At certain times, these treasures could 
be obtained very easily; at others, the obtaining of them was 
difficult The facility of approaching them, depended, in a great 
measure, on the state of the moon. New moon and good Friday, 
I believe, were regarded as the most favorable times for ob- 
taining these treasures. These tales I regarded as visionary. 
However, being prompted by curiosity, I at length accepted of 
their invitations, to join them in their nocturnal excursions. I 
will now relate a few incidents attending these excursions. 

Joseph Smith, Sen., came to me one night, and told me, that 
Joseph, Jr., had been looking in his glass, and had seen, not 
many rods from his house, two or three kegs of gold and silver, 
some feet under the surface of the earth; and that none others 
but the elder Joseph and myself could get them. I accordingly 
consented to go, and early in the evening repaired to the place 
of deposit. Joseph, Sen., f rst made a circle, twelve or fourteen 
feet in diameter. This circle, said he, contains the treasure. 
He then stuck in the ground a row of witch-hazel sticks, around 
the said circle, for the purpose of keeping off the evil spirits. 
Within this circle he made another, of about eight or ten feet in 
diameter. He walked around three times on the periphery of 
this last circle, muttering to himself something which I could 
not understand. He next stuck a steel rod in the center of the 
circles, and then enjoined profound silence upon us, lest we 
should arouse the evil spirit who had the charge of these 
treasures. After we had dug a trench about five feet in depth 
around the rod, the old man, by signs and motions, asked leave 
of absence, and went to the bouse to inquire of young Joseph 
the cause of our disappointment He soon returned, and said, 
that Joseph had remained all this time in the house, looking in 



«0 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

his stone and watching the motions of the evil spirit— ^at he 
saw the spirit come up to the ring, and as soon as it beheld the 
cone wdiich we had formed around the rod, it caused the money 
to sink. We then went into the house, and the old man ob- 
served, that we had made a mistake in the conunencement of 
the operation; if it had not been for that, said he. we should 
have got the money. 

At another time, they devised a scheme, by which they might 
satiate their hunger with the mutton of one of my sheep. They 
had seen in my flock of sheep, a large, fat, black wether. Old 
Joseph and one of the boys came to me one day, and said that 
Joseph, Jr., had discovered some very remarkable and valuable 
treasures, which could be procured only in one way. That way 
was as follows: — ^That a black sheep should be taken on to the 
ground where the treasures were concealed— that after cutting 
its throat, it should be led around a circle while bleeding. This 
being done, the wrath of the evil spirit would be appeased: the 
treasures could then be obtained, and my share of them was 
to be fourfold. To gratify my curiosity, I let them have a large 
fat sheep. They afterwards infomicd me that the sheep was 
killed pursuant to commandment ; but as there was some mistake 
in the process, it did not have the desired effect This, I believe, 
is the only time they ever made money-digging a profitable 
business. They, however, had around them constantly a worth- 
less gang, whose employment it was to dig money nights, and 
who, day times, had more to do with mutton than money. 

When they found that the people of this vicinity would no 
longer put any faith in their schemes for digging money, they 
then pretended to find a Gold Bible, of which, they said, the 
Book of Mormon was only an introduction. This latter book 
was at length fitted for the press. No means were taken by 
any individual to suppress its publication : no one apprehended 
any danger from a book, originating with individuals who had 
neither influence, honesty or honor. The two Josephs and 
Hiram, promised to show me the plates, after the Book of 
Mormon was translated. But, afterwards, they pretended to 
have received an express commandment, forbidding them to 
show the plates. Respecting the manner of receiving and trans- 
lating the Book of Mormon, their statements were always dis- 
cordant The elder Joseph would say that he had seen the 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 81 

plates» and that he knew them to be gold; at other limes he 
would say that they looked like gold; and other times he wotdd 
say that he had not seen the plates at all. I have thus briefly 
stated a few of the facts, in relation to the conduct and char- 
acter of this family of Smiths; probably sufficient has been 
stated without my going into detail William Stafvoui. 

State of New Y(StK. 1 

Wayne County. j ^^* 

I certify, that on this 9th day of December, 1833, personally 
appeared before me William Stafford, to me known, and made 
oath to the truth of the above statement, and signed the same. 

Th. p. Baldwin, 
Judge of Wayne County Court 

THE affidavit OF ISAAC HALE. 

Harmony, Pa., March 20, 1834. 

I first became acquainted with Joseph Smith, Jr., in Novem- 
ber, 1825. He was at that time in the employ of a set of men 
who were called '^money-diggers" ; and his occupation was that 
of seeing, or pretending to see by means of a stone placed in 
his hat, and his hat closed over his face. In this way he pre- 
tended to discover minerals and hidden treasure. His appear- 
ance at his time, was that of a careless young man — ^not very 
well educated, and very saucy and insolent to his father. Smith, 
and his father, with several other "money-diggers," boarded at 
my house while they were employed in digging for a mine that 
they supposed had been opened and worked by the Spaniards, 
many years since. Young Smith gave the "money-diggers" great 
encouragement, at first, but when they had arrived in digging, 
to near the place where he had stated an immense treasure 
would be found — he said the enchantment was so powerful that 
he could not see. They then became discouraged, and soon 
after dispersed. This took place about the 17th of November, 
18:^; and one of the company gave me his note for $12.68 for 
his board, which is still unpaid. 

After these occurrences, young Smith made several visits at 
my house, and at length asked my consent to his marrying my 
daughter Emma. This I refused, and gave my reasons for so 
doing; some of which were, that he was a stranger, and fol- 
lowed a business that I could not approve ; he then left the place. 



82 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Not long after this, he returned, and while I was absent from 
home, carried off my daughter into the state of New York, 
where they were married without my approbation or consent 
After they had arrived at Palmyra, N. Y., Emma wrote to mc 
inquiring whether she could taJce her property, consisting of 
clothing, furniture, cows, &. I replied that her property was 
safe and at her disposal. In a short time they returned, bring- 
ing with them a Peter Ingersoll, and subsequently came to the 
conclusion that they would move out, and reside upon a place 
near my residence. 

Smith stated to me, that he had given up what he called 
"glass-looking," and that he expected to work hard for a living; 
and was willing to do so. He also made arrangements with my 
son Alva Hale, to go to Palmyra, and move his (Smith's) 
furniture, &, to his place. He then returned to Palmyra, and 
soon after, Alva, agreeable to the arrangement, went up and 
returned with Smith and his family. Soon after this, I was 
informed they had brought a wonderful Book of Plates down 
with them. I was shown a box in which it is said they were 
contained, which had, to all appearances, been used as a glass 
box of the common window glass. I was allowed to feel the 
weight of the box, and they gave me to understand, that the 
Book of Plates was then in the box — into which, however, I 
was not allowed to look. 

I inquired of Joseph Smith, Jr., who was to be the first 
who would be allowed to see the Book of Plates? He said it 
was a young child. After this, I became dissatisfied, and in- 
formed him that if there was anything in my house of that 
description, which I could not be allowed to see, he must take 
it away; if he did not, I was determined to see it. After that, 
the plates were said to be hid in the woods. 

About this time, Martin Harris made his appearance upon 
the stage; and Smith began to interpret the characters or hiero- 
glyphics which he said were engraven upon the plates, while 
Harris wrote down the interpretation. It was said, that Harris 
wrote down one hundred and sixteen pages, and lost them. 
Soon after this happened, Martin Harris informed me that he 
must have a greater witness, and said that he had talked with 
Joseph about it—Joseph informed him that he could not or 
durst not show him the plates, but that he (Joseph) would go 



THE BOOK OF MORMON SS 

into the woods where the Book of Plates was, and that after 
he came back, Harris should follow his track in the snow, and 
find the Book, and examine it for himself. Harris informed 
me afterwards, that he followed Smith's directions, and could 
not find the plates, and was still dissatisfied. 

The next day after this happened, I went to the house where 
Joseph Smith, Jr., lived, and where he and Harris were engaged 
in the translation of their book. Each of them had a written 
piece of paper which they were comparing, and some of the 
words were "my servant seeketh a greater witness, hut no 
greater witness can be given him" There was also something 
said about "three that were to see the thing'* — meaning, I sup- 
posed, the Book of Plates, and that "if the three did not go 
exactly according to the orders, the thing would he taken from 
them" I inquired whose words they were, and was informed 
by Joseph or Emma, (I rather think it was the former,) that 
they were the words of Jesus Christ. I told them, that I con- 
sidered the whole of it a delusion, and advised them to abandon 
it The manner in which he pretended to read and interpret, 
was the same as when he looked for the money-diggers, with 
the stone in his hat, and his hat over his face, while the Book 
of Plates was at the same time hid in the woods! 

After this, Martin Harris went away, and Oliver Cowdery 
came and wrote for Smith while he interpreted as above de- 
scribed. This is the same Oliver Cowdery, whose name may be 
found in the Book of Mormon. Cowdery continued a scribe 
for Smith until the Book of Mormon was completed, as I sup- 
posed and understood. 

Joseph Smith, Jr., resided near me for some time after this, 
and I had a good opportunity of becoming acquainted with him, 
and somewhat acquainted with his associates, and I conscien- 
tiously believe from the facts I have detailed, and from many 
other circumstances, which I do not deem it necessary to relate. 
that the whole Book of Mormon (so called) is a silly fabrica- 
tion of falsehood and wickedness, got up for speculation, and 
with a design to dupe the credulous and unwary — ^and in order 
that its fabricators may live upon the spoils of those who swal- 
low the deception. Isaac Hale. 

Affirmed to and subscribed before me, March 20, 1834. 

Charles Dimon, J. Peace. 



34 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

State of Pennsylvania, ' 



'|ss. 



Susquehanna County. 

We, the subscribers, associate Judges of the G>urt of Com- 
mon Pleas, in and for said county, do certify that we have been 
many years personally acquainted with Isaac Hale, of Harmony 
township in this county, who has attested the foregoing state* 
ment; and that he is a man of excellent moral character, and 
undoubted veracity. Witness our hands. 

William Thompson. 
Davis Dimock. 
March 21, 1834. 

THE STATEMENT OF FIFTY-ONE CITIZENS OF PALMYRA^ 
NEW YORK. 

Palmyra, December 4, 1833. 

We, the undersigned, have been acquainted with the Smith 
family for a number of years, while they resided near this 
place, and we have no hesitation in saying, that we consider 
them destitute of that moral character, which ought to entitle 
them to the confidence of any community. They were par- 
ticularly famous for visionary projects, spent much of their 
time in digging for money which they pretended was hid in the 
earth; and to this day, large excavations may be seen in the 
earth, not far from their residence, where they used to spend 
their time in digging for hidden treasures. Joseph Smith, 
Senior, and his son Joseph, were in particular considered en- 
tirely destitute of moral character and addicted to vicious 
habits. 

Martin Harris was a man who had acquired a handsome 
property, and in matters of business his word was considered 
good; but on moral and religious subjects, he was perfectly 
visionary, — sometimes advocating one sentiment, and sometimes 
another. And in reference to all with whom we were ac- 
quainted, that have embraced Mormonism from this neighbor- 
hood, we are compelled to say, were very visionary and most 
of them destitute of moral character, and without influence in 
this community; and this may account why they were permitted 
to go on with their impositions undisturbed. It was not sup- 
posed that any of them were possessed of sufficient character 
or influence to make any one believe their book or their senti- 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 86 

ments, and we know not of a single individual in this vicinity 
that puts the least confidence in their pretended revelations. 
(Signed by fifty-one citizens of Palmyra, New York.) 

THE STATEMENT OF ELEVEN CITIZENS OF MANCHESTER, 
NEW YORK. 

Manchester, November 3, 1833. 
We, the undersigned, being personally acquainted with the 
family of Joseph Smith, Sen., with whom the celebrated Gold 
Bible, so-called, originated, state: that they were not only a 
lazy, indolent set of men, but also intemperate; and their word 
was not to be depended upon; and that we are truly glad to 
dispense with their society. 

(Signed by eleven citizens of Manchester, New York.) 

The foregoing affidavits and statements were first 
published in Howe's "Mormonism Unveiled," of 1834/ 
and, subsequently, in Bennett's "Mormonism Exposed," 
of 1842, from which I have copied them. Yet, notwith- 
standing their damaging charges and the fact that they 
have been before the public for eighty years, the Mor- 
mons have never made a successful attempt to refute 
them. Indeed, so far as I am able to learn, but one effort 
at all has ever been made to clear the reputation of Joseph 
Smith from the charges made against him by his old 
neighbors, and this ended in^ ignominious failure. 

In the year 1880, the Reorganized Mormon Church 
became active in Cadillac, Wexford County, Michigan, 
and added a number to their faith. To counteract their 
influence, one Rev. A. Marsh, through a brother minister, 
Rev. C. C. Thome, of Manchester, New York, secured 
the statements of three of the old neighbors of the 
Smiths, Danford Booth, Orrin Reed and William Bryant, 
relative to their poor reputation, and published them in 



* Howe's book was reimblished in 1840 under the title of "BQttory of 
Mormonism." 



86 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

the Cadillac News of April 6, 1880. These statements 
are as follows : 

I knew Joe Smith, personally to some extent, saw him fre- 
quently, knew well his reputation, he was a lazy, drinking fellow, 
and loose in his habits in every way. — Danford Booth. Smith's 
reputation was bad. I was acquainted with Oliver Cowdery. 
He was a low pettifogger, the cat's-paw of the Smiths to do 
their dirty work. — Orrin Reed, I knew the Smiths, but did not 
associate with them, for they were too low to associate with. 
There was no truth in them. Their aim was to get in where 
they could get property. They broke up homes in that way. 
Smith had no regular business. He had frequent revelations. 
— Wm. Bryant, 

This aroused the Mormons to action, and the fol- 
lowing spring two of their elders went to New York, 
concealed their identity, interviewed the individuals men- 
tioned, with others, and, returning, published the in- 
terviews in the issue of the Saints' Herald, oi Piano, 
Illinois, for June i, 1881. While these purported inter- 
views do not entirely remove the traditional stigma from 
the character of Smith and his associates, it must be con- 
ceded that, if they were correct, these individuals stood 
somewhat higher in the moral and social scale than was 
before believed. 

During the interview with Mr. Bryant, this gentleman 
is said to have denied being personally acquainted with 
the Smiths, but stated that they were considered a shift- 
less set and that Joseph had the reputation of being a liar. 
Mr. Booth is said to have stated that he knew nothing of 
the Smiths or their character, and to have denied that 
he ever had any interview with Rev. Mr. Thome on the 
subject of Mormonism in which he made the statements 
as published in the Cadillac News, while Mr. Reed is 
also said to have stated that he did not know the Smiths 
and that he had not given a statement to Thome for pub- 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 87 

Ucation. These purported interviews have been repeat- 
edly published as an answer to the affidavits and state- 
ments heretofore given.* 

But this effort to relieve the reputation of Smith from 
the stains that had been placed upon it, ended in bitter 
defeat. Within six weeks from the time of the publica- 
tion of these purported interviews, two of the parties 
mentioned, Danford Booth and Orrin Reed, with another 
who was interviewed, J. H. Gilbert, came out with affi- 
davits,* in which they affirmed that they had been grossly 
misrepresented. Their affidavits follow : 

Danford Booth, of the town of Manchester and county of 
Ontario, N. Y., being duly affirmed, deposes: He has read the 
article in the Cadillac Weekly News of April 6th, 1880, re- 
specting "Cowdery and the Smith family" over the signature of 
C. C. Thorne. The interview therein mentioned between de- 
ponent and Thorne did take place The matters therein set 
forth, alleged to have been stated by the deponent to Thome, 
were so stated by deponent to Thome. He has read also in a 
paper called the Saints' Herald, of June ist, 1881, an article pur- 
porting to give what was said in an interview between W. H. 
Kelley and another party and the deponent, in which it is stated 
that deponent informed said parties that deponent and Thome 
never had an interview as alleged by Thome. Deponent de- 
clares that he did not so inform said parties, and that he has 
ao recollection of such a question being asked him by them. 

(Signed) Danford Booth. 

Swom to and subscribed before me, July ist, 1881. 

(Signed) N. K. Cole. J.P. 

Orrin Reed, of the township of Manchester, county of 
Ontario, N. Y., being duly affirmed, deposes: His age is 77. 
He was bom in the town of Farmington, about four miles from 

'They may be found in the "Braden-Kelley Debate," pp. iox-io4, and 
**From Palmyra to Independence," pp. 34I-378. 

'The county clerk of Ontario County, New York, informs me that 
tliese affidavits, with an affidavit of Samantha Pajme, an old neighbor of 
the Smiths, and a letter of Rev. Mr. Thome, are now on file in the 
clerk's office at Canandaigtuu 



88 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

what is called "Mormon Hill." During the last forty-six years 
he has resided in the town of Manchester, and in the same 
school district in which Joseph Smith and family, of Mormon 
notoriety, resided, and three-fonrths of a mile from "Mormon 
Hill." He has read an article published in the Cadillac News of 
April 6th, 1880, respecting "Cowdeiy and the Smith family," 
over the signature of C. C. Thome. The matters therein set 
forth and alleged to have been stated by deponent to Thorne 
were so stated by deponent, at the time and in the manner stated 
in said published article. (Signed) Orrin Reed. 

Affirmed and subscribed before me, June 29th, 1881. 

(Signed) N. K. Cole, J.P. 

John H. Gilbert, of the town of Palmyra, Wayne county, 
N. Y., being duly sworn, deposes: That in the article published 
in the Saints^ Herald, at Piano, III, June ist, 1881, over the 
signature of W. H. Kelley, purporting to give an interview with 
the deponent on Mormonism, the deponent is grossly misrepre- 
sented in almost every particular. Words are put in the mouth 
of the deponent that he never uttered. The pretended answers 
to the questions that the deponent did answer, are totally at 
variance with the answers that the deponent really gave. The 
deponent believes that such misrepresentation was done de- 
signedly. (Signed) John H. Gilbert. 

Sworn to and subscribed before me, July 12th, 1881. 

(Signed) M. C Finley, J.P. 

The affidavits of Booth, Reed and Gilbert plainly re- 
fute the only attempt that Mormonism has ever made to 
secure from the old citizens of Palmyra and Manchester 
testimonies favorable to the Smiths and their followers, 
and so leave their reputation about where it was before. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 89 



CHAPTER III. 

The Three Witnesses to the Book of Mormotv^David Whitmer 
— Martin Harris — Oliver Cowdeiy. 

The three special witnesses to the Book of Mormon 
were David Whitmer, Martin Harris and Oliver Cow- 
dery. Whitmer was an ordinary farmer of Fayette, 
Seneca County, New York; Harris was a well-to-do 
farmer of Pahnyra, and Cowdery was a wandering 
schoolmaster. Whitmer and Harris possessed inferior 
educations; Cowdery was probably above the ordinary 
in this respect and was a ready scribe, because of which 
he was chosen by Smith as his amanuensis and copied 
from his lips the entire Book of Mormon, as we now have 
it, with the possible exception of a few pages. 

Before these witnesses were permitted to view the 
plates, the Lord spoke to them through Joseph, as fol- 
k)ws: 

Behold, I say unto you, that you must rely upon my word, 
which if you do, with full purpose of heart, you shall have a 
view of the plates, and also of the breastplate, the sword of 
Laban, the Urim and Thummim, which were given to the brother 
of Jared upon the mount, when he talked with the Lord face 
to face, and the miraculous directors which were given to Lehi 
while in the wilderness, on the borders of the Red Sea; and it 
is by your faith that you shall obtain a view of them, even by 
that faith which was had by the prophets of old. 

And after that you have obtained faith, and have seen them 
with your eyes, you shall testify of them, by the power of God; 
and this you shall do that my servant Joseph Smith, Jr., may 
not be destroyed, that I may bring about my righteous purposes 
unto the children of men, in this work. And ye shall testify 
that you have* seen them, even as my servant Joseph Smith, Jr., 

(4) 



40 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

has seen them, for it is by my power that he has seen them» 
and it is because he had faith; and he has translated the book, 
even that part which I have commanded him, and as your Lord 
and your God liveth it is true. — Doctrine and Covenants, Sec. 15. 

Subsequent to this, these men published the testimony 
already given, in which they affirmed that an angel of 
God had shown them the plates and that the voice of God 
had declared that the translation was His gift and by 
His power. 

In reference to this testimony, one of three things is 
true: they either actually saw the plates and what they 
described concerning them really occurred, or they were 
themselves deceived, or their testimony is part of a grand 
deception of which they were among the prime movers. 

The last explanation of the part played by the three 
witnesses in the genesis of Mormonism I believe to be 
the true one, for, while Whitmer stubbornly maintained 
the truthfulness of his testimony up to the very time of 
his death, Harris, at the beginning of the Mormon move- 
ment, made certain assertions to his relatives and ac- 
quaintances which go to show that with him Mormonism 
was only a cold-blooded money proposition ; while Cow- 
dery, in 1839, published a full recantation and, in 1840 
or 1841, became a member of the Methodist Protestant 
Church of Tiffin, Ohio, serving it later in the capacity 
of clerk and Sunday-school superintendent. 

DAVID WHITMER. 

The first connection of David Whitmer with Mor- 
monism was in June, 1829, when he went to Harmony, 
Pennsylvania, where Smith and Cowdery were at work 
upon the translation, and brought them back to the home 
of his father, Peter Whitmer, in Fayette, New York. 
Shortly after this, in the same month, he was baptized 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 41 

by Joseph in Seneca Lake and was ordained an elder, 
and when the Mormon Church was organized at his 
father's house on April 6, 1830/ he became one of its 
charter members. In 1831, with the larger part of the 
church in New York, he removed to Kirtland and subse- 
quently to Missouri, where he was cut off from the 
church April 13, 1838. After this he settled at Rich- 
mond, Missouri, where he lived until his death, January 
25, 1888. 

Whitmer, undoubtedly, adhered to his testimony up 
to the very last. In a statement issued March 19, 1881, 
he says: 

Unto All Nations, Kindred, Tongues and People, unto Whom 

These Presents Shall Come: 

It having been represented by one John Murphy, of Polo, 
Caldwell County, Mo., that I, in a conversation with him last 
summer, denied my testimony as one of the three witnesses to 
the "Book of Mormon" 

To the end, therefore, that he may understand me now, if 
he did not then; and that the world may know the truth, I wish 
now, standing as it were, in the very sunset of life, and in the 
fear of God, once for all to make this public statement : 

That I have never at any time denied that testimony or any 
part thereof, which has so long since been published with that 
Book, as one of the three witnesses. Those who know me best, 
well know that I have always adhered to that testimony. And 
that no man may be misled or doubt my present views in regard 
to the same, I do again affirm the truth of all of my state- 
ments, as then made and published. 

"He that hath an ear to hear let him hear;" it was no delu- 
sion! What is written is written, and he that readeth let him 
understand. 

And that no one may be deceived or misled by this state- 



' Whitmer, in the later years of his life, denied that the church was 
founded on April 6, 1830. He says: "It is all a mistake about the 
church being organised on April 6, 1830, as I will show. We were as 
fully organised — spiritually — before April 6th as we were on that day.*' — 
Address to All Believers in Christ, p. 33. 



U THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

ment, I wish here to state: that I do not endorse polygamy or 
spiritual wifeism. It is a great evil, shocking to the moral senses 
and the more so» because practiced in the name of religion. It 
is of man and not of God, and is especially forbidden in the 
Book of Mormon itself. 

I do not endorse the change of the name of the church, for 
as the wife takes the name of her husband so should the church 
of the Lamb of God take the name of its head, even Christ 
himself. It is the Church of Christ 

As to the High Priesthood, Jesus Christ himself is the last 
Great High Priest, this too after the order of Melchisedec, as I 
understand the Holy Scriptures. 

Finally, I do not endorse any of the teachings c ' the so- 
called Mormons, of Latter Day Saints, which are in conflict with 
the gospel of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, as taught in 
the Bible and Book of Mormon; for the same gospel is plainly 
taught in both of these books as I understand the word of 
God. 

And if any man doubt should he not carefully and honestly 
read and understand the same, before presuming to sit in judg- 
ment and condemning the light which shineth in darkness, and 
showeth the way of eternal life as pointed out by the unerring 
hand of God. 

In the spirit of Christ who hath said, "Follow thou me, for 
I am the life, the light and the way,'' I submit this statement 
to the world. God in whom I trust being my judge as to the 
sincerity of my motives and the faith and hope that is in me of 
eternal life. 

My sincere desire is that the world may be benefitted by this 
plain and simple statement of the truth. 

And all the honor be to the Father, the Son and the Holy 
Ghost, which is one God. Amen. David Whitmer. 

Richmond, Mo., March 19, 1881. 

To this statement is subjoined the following certifi- 
cate: 

We, the undersigned citizens of Richmond, Ray County, Mo., 
where David Whitmer has resided since the year A. D. 1838, 
certify that we have been long and intimately acquainted with 
him and know him to be a man of the highest integrity, and of 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 43 

undoubted truth and veracity Given at Richmond, Mo., this 
March 19, A. D. 1881. 

Gen. Alexander W. Doniphan. Hon. Geo. W. Dunn, Judge 
of the Fifth Judicial Circuit. Thos. D. Woodson, President of 
Ray Co. Savings Bank. J. T. Child, editor of Conservator. H. 

C. Gamer, Cashier of Ray Co. Savings Bank. L. C. Cantwell, 
Postmaster, Richmond. Geo. I. Wasson, Mayor. Jas. A. Davis, 
County Collector. C. J. Huges, Probate Judge and Presiding 
Justice of Ray County Court. Geo. W. Trigg, County Qerk. 
W. W. Mosby, M.D. W. A. Holman, County Treasurer. J. S. 
Hughes, Banker, Richmond. James Hughes, Banker, Richmond. 

D. P. Whitmer, Attomey-at-law. Hon. James W. Black, Attor- 
ney-at-law. Thos. McGinnis, ex-Sheriff Ray County. J. P, 
Quisenberry, Merchant. W. R. Holman, Furniture Merchant 
I^wis Slaughter, Recorder of Deeds. Geo. W. Buchanan, M.D. 
A. K. Reybum. 

In view of the overwhelming evidences which clearly 
established that the Book of Mormon is a fraud, two ex- 
planations may be given of the adherence of David Whit- 
mer to his original testimony up to the time of his death : 
first, he may himself have been the victim of deception 
and may have honestly believed that he saw the plates; 
or, being fully cognizant of the imposture, he may have 
preferred to die with the world believing that he was 
deceived rather than with it believing that he was a de- 
ceiver. In either case his story was, evidently, not ac- 
cepted even by those who certified to his integrity and 
veracity, for but few, if any, of them were adherents of 
the Mormon faith. 

MARTIN HARRIS. 

The first that we hear of Martin Harris in connection 
with Mormonism, was in the fall of 1827, when he gave 
Joseph fifty dollars to enable him to remove from Man- 
chester to the home of his wife's parents in Harmony, 
Pennsylvania. In the month of February, following, he 



44 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

came to Harmony, obtained a transcript of the char- 
acters on the plates and took them to Professor Anthon, 
of New York City. He then returned home, arranged 
his business, and, going to Harmony, began to write for 
Joseph, April 12, 1828, continuing as his scribe until he 
lost the 116 pages of manuscript, when he was deposed. 
He was baptized in April, 1830, and removed with the 
church to Kirtland, Ohio, in 1831. In June of the 
same year, with Joseph Smith and other elders, he left 
Kirtland for Missouri, where he was present at the 
dedication of the Temple lot, at Independence, August 
3, 183 1. He was subsequently cut off, after which he 
lectured against Mormonism both in this country and in 
England,* but later became somewhat, though probably 
not entirely, reconciled to the church, and removed to 
Utah in August, 1870, where he died, at Smithfield, 
Cache County, in July, 1875. 

It is claimed that Harris never denied his testimony, 
but adhered to it up to the time of his death. As proof 
of this, the following letters to H. B. Emerson, of New 
Richmond, Ohio, are submitted: 

Smithfield, Utah, Nov. 23, 1870. 
Mr. Emerson, 

Sir: — I received your favor. In reply I will say concerning 
the plates, I do say that the angel did show to me the plates 
containing the Book of Mormon. Further, the translation that 
I carried to Professor Anthon was copied from these same 
plates; also, that the professor did testify to it being a correct 
translation. I do firmly believe and do know that Joseph Smith 
was a prophet of God; for without, I know he could not have 



* This is sometimes denied. The proof of Harris lecturing against 
Mormonism in this country is to be found in the charges to that effect 
published in the Mormon papers after his apostasy. While, as to his 
lecturing in England, the Josephite, Elder Charles Derry, says that he 
went there not to oppose Mormonism in general, but only the pretensions 
of Brigham Young ("Joseph the Seer," p. zo6, and other works). 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 45 

had that gift; neither could he have translated the same. I can 
give, if you require it, one hundred witnesses to the proof of 
the Book of Mormon. I defy any man to show me any passage 
of Scripture that I am not posted on or familiar with. I will 
answer any question you feel like asking to the best of my 
knowledge, if you can rely on my testimony of the same. In 
conclusion, I can say that I arrived in Utah safe, in good health 
and spirits, <:onsidering the long journey. I am quite well at 
present, and have been, generally speaking, since I arrived. 
With many respects, I remain your humble friend, 

Martin Harris. 
Smithfield, Cache Co., Utah, January, 1871. 
To H, Emerson, 

Dear Sir: — Your second letter, dated December, 1870, came 
duly to hand. I am truly glad to see a spirit of inquiry mani- 
fested therein. I reply by a borrowed hand, as my sight has 
failed me too much to write myself. Your questions: 

Question i. "Did you go to England to lecture against 
Mormonism ?" 

Answer. I answer emphatically, No, I did not. No man 
ever heard me in any way deny the truth of the Book of Mor- 
mon, the administration of the angel that showed me the plates; 
nor the organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- 
day Saints, under the administration of Joseph Smith, Jun., the 
prophet whom the Lord raised up for that purpose in these 
latter days that He may show forth His power and glory. The 
Lord has shown me these things by His Spirit, by the admin- 
istration of ho!y angels, and confirmed the same with signs 
following, step by step, as the work has progressed, for the 
space of fifty-three years. 

I am, very respectfully, 

Martin Harris, Sen. 

Without denying the genuineness of the foregoing 
letters, I now present to the reader the evidence which 
goes to prove that Martin Harris, while a resident of 
Palni3rra, was of a greedy disposition, possessed an un- 
governable temper, lived a questionable life and held ex- 
travagant religious views — ^the kind of character that 



46 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

would not hesitate to sign a false statement, provided it 
might be to his pecuniary interests to do so. The follow- 
ing is a letter of his wife, Lucy Harris, which was first 
published in Howe's "Mormonism Unveiled" : 

Palmyra, November 29, 1833. 

Being called upon to give a statement to the world of what 
I know respecting the Gold Bible speculation, and also of the 
conduct of Martin Harris, my husband, who is a leading char- 
acter among the Mormons, I do it free from prejudice, realizing 
that I must give an account at the bar of God for what I say. 
Martin Harris was once industrious, attentive to his domestic 
concerns, and thought to be worth about ten thousand dollars. 
He is naturally quick in his temper, and in his mad-fits fre- 
quently abuses all who may dare to oppose him in his wishes. 
However strange it may seem, I have been a great sufferer by 
his unreasonable conduct. At different times while I lived with 
him, he has whipped, kicked and turned me out of the house. 
About a year previous to the report being raised that Smith had 
fotmd gold plates, he became very intimate with the Smith 
family, and said he believed Joseph could see in his stone any 
thing he wished. After this he apparently became very san- 
guine in his belief, and frequently said he would have no one 
in his house that did not believe in Mormonism; and because I 
would not give credit to the report he made about the gold 
plates, he became more austere towards me. In one of his fits 
of rage he struck me with the butt-end of a whip, which I 
think had been used for driving oxen, and was about the size 
of my thumb, and three or four feet long. He beat me on the 
head four or five times, and the next day turned m** lut of 
doors twice, and beat me in a shameful manner. The next day 
I went to the town of Marion, and while there my flesh was 
black and blue in many places. His main complaint against me 
was, that I was always trying to hinder his making money. 

When he found out that I was going to Mr. Putnam's, in 
Marion, he said he was going too, that they had sent for him 
to pay them a visit. On arriving at Mr. Putnam's, I asked them 
if they had sent for Mr. Harris ; they replied, they knew nothing 
about it; he, however, came in the evening. Mrs. Putnam told 
him never to strike or abuse me any more; he then denied ever 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 47 

striking me; she was however convinced that he lied, as the 
marks of his beating me were plain to be seen, and remained 
more than two weeks. Whether the Mormon religion be true 
or false, I leave the world to judge, for its effects upon Martin 
Harris have been to make him mor^ cross, turbulent and abusive 
to me. His whole object was to make money by it. I will 
give one circumstance in proof of it. One day, while at Peter 
Harris's house, I told him he had better leave the company of 
the Smiths, as their religion was false; to which he replied: 
**If you would let me alone, I could make money by it." 

It is in vain for the Mormons to deny these facts; for they 
are all well known to most of his former neighbors. The man 
has now become rather an object of pity; he has spent most of 
his property, and lost the confidence of his former friends. If 
he had labored as hard on his farm as he has to make Mormons, 
he might now be one of the wealthiest farmers in the country. 
He now spends his time in traveling through the country spread- 
ing the delusion of Mormonism, and has no regard whatever 
for his family. 

With regard to Mr. Harris's being intimate with Mrs. 
Haggard, as has been reported, it is but justice to myself to state 
what facts have come within my own observation, to show 
whether I had any grounds for jealousy or not Mr. Harris 
was very intimate with this family, for some time previous to 
their going to Ohio. They lived a while in a house which he 
had built for their accommodation, and here he spent the most 
of his leisure hours; and made her presents of articles from the 
store and house. He carried these presents in a private manner, 
and frequently when he went there, he would pretend to be 
going to some of the neighbors, on an errand, or to be going 
into the fields. After getting out of sight of the house, he 
would steer a straight course for Haggard's house, especially 
if Haggard was from home. At times when Haggard was from 
home, he would go there in the manner above described, and 
stay till twelve or one o'clock at night, and sometimes until 
daylight. 

If his intentions were evil, the Lord will judge him accord- 
ingly, but if good, he did not mean to let his left hand know 
what his right hand did. The above statement of facts I affirm 
to be true. Lucy Hakris. 



48 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

In a statement, published by Howe and dated at 
Palmyra, November 28, 1833, Mrs. Abigail Harris, sister- 
in-law of Martin, says : 

In the second month following, Martin Harris and his wife 
were at my house. In conversation about Mormonites» she ob- 
served that she wished her husband would quit them, as she 
believed it was all false and a delusion. To which I heard Mr. 
Harris reply: "What if it is a lie; if you mil let me alone I 
will make money out of it!" I was both an eye and ear witness 
of what has been stated above. 

Henry Harris, brother of Martin, made oath to the 
following statement before Jonathan Lapham, justice of 
the peace : 

Joseph Smith, Jr., Martin Harris and others, used to meet 
together in private, a while before the gold plates were found, 
and were familiarly known by the name of the "Gold Bible 
Company." They were regarded by the community in which 
they lived, as a lying and indolent set of men, and no confidence 
could be placed in them. 

After Harris had apostatized. Smith denounced him 
in the Elders^ Journal^ of August, 1838 — 

as so far beneath contempt that a notice of him would be too 
great a sacrifice for a gentleman to make. The church exerted 
some restraint on him, but now he has given loose to all kinds 
of abominations, lying, cheating, swindling, with all kinds of 
debauchery. 

Such a man was Martin Harris, one of the three 
witnesses to the Book of Mormon. With such a char- 
acter, who can doubt that he would scruple to sign a lie 
or to maintain its truthfulness up to the very hour of his 
death? 

^Not having the Elders' Journal at hand, I have copied this from 
the "Braden-Kelley Debate," p. 173. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 49 

OLIVER COWDERY. 

Oliver Cowdery was bom in the town of Wells, Rut- 
land County, Vermont, October, 1805. When about 
twenty years of age, he removed to the State of New 
York, where he was employed as a clerk in a store until 
the winter of 1828-9, when he taught school in the town 
of Manchester/ Here he became acquainted with the 
Smiths, and through them learned of Joseph and the 
plates. In April, 1829, he went to Harmony, Pennsyl- 
vania, where he became the celebrated scribe of Mor- 
monism. He was baptized by Joseph in May, 1829, and 
continued with the church up to the time of his expul- 
sion, April 12, 1838. After this he removed to Tiffin, 
Ohio, where he practiced law, and, renouncing Mormon- 
ism, united with the Methodist Protestant Church. Later, 
he went to Elkhorn, Wisconsin, where he followed his 
profession and became a candidate for the Legislature, 
but was defeated because of his former connection with 
Mormonism.' The Mormons claim that in 1848 he was 
rebaptized into the church at Kanesville, Iowa, by Apos- 
tle Orson Hyde, and that he contemplated moving to 
Salt Lake, but was cut off by death before this desire 
was realized. He died at Richmond, Missouri, in March, 
1850, while visiting his brother-in-law, David Whitmer. 
Whitmer declares that on his death-bed Cowdery charged 
him to be true to his testimony to the Book of Mormon.* 
However true this last statement may be, and I neither 
affirm nor deny it, we have positive proof that Oliver 
Cowdery did, in 1839, renounce Mormonism, and did, 



^ Lorenzo Saunders, whose letter is published in Chapter IX., says 
that he was in league with the Smiths as early as i8a6. 

•This information comes from a letter of Judge Gibson, of Tiffin, 
Ohio, to Th. Gregg, of Hamilton, Illinois, and dated August 3, 1882. 

« See "Whitmer's Address," p. 8. 



60 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

later, become a member of the Methodist Protestant 
Church. The evj^dence in support of this is so clear 
and conclusive that it is sheer folly for the Mormons to 
deny it 

In 1839 the following "Defense in a Rehearsal of My 
Grounds for Separating Myself from the Latter Day 
Saints"* was published by Cowdery, the printing being 
done at Pressley's job-office, Norton, Ohio: 

Dear People of God : — I offer you a "Defense" which I am 
grieved to make, but my opposers have put me to the necessity, 
and so far as my memory serves, I pledge my veracity for the 
correctness of the account. 

I deny that I have ever conspired with any, or ever exerted 
any influence to destroy the reputation of the First Elder, al- 
though evidence which is to be credited assures me that he has 
done everything he could to injure my standing, and his in- 
fluence has been considerably exerted to destroy my reputation 
andi I fear, my life. 

You will remember in the meantime, that those who seek 
to villify my character have been constantly encouraged by him. 
There was a time when I thought myself able to prove to the 
satisfaction of every man that the translator of the Book of 
Mormon was worthy of the appellation of a Seer and a Prophet 
of the Lord, and in which he held over me a mysterious power 
which even now I fail to fathom; but I fear I may have been 
deceived, and especially so fear since knowing that Satan has 
led his mind astray. 

(i) When the Church of Christ was set up by revelation, 
he was called to be First Elder, and I was called to be Second 
Elder, and whatever he had of Priesthood (about which I am 
beginning to doubt) also had I. 

(2) But I certainly followed him too far when accepting 
and reiterating, that none had authority from God to administer 
the ordinances of the gospel, as I had then forgotten that John, 
the beloved disciple, was tarrying on earth and exempt from 
death. 



^Cowdery't "Defense" may be obtained of R. B. Neal, Grayson, Ky., 
for ten cents per copy. 



DEFENCE 

IN A 

fUehearsal ef Mi( irounda 

FOR 

6eparatinq Mii^elf 

FROM THE 

LATTER DAY SAINTS 

BY OUVER COWDERY 

Second Elder df Tbe Cburch of Christ 



This Defenee is not protected by a copyright, as 
1 wisn no man, to be confined alone to my permis- 
sion in printing what is meant for the eyes and 
knowledge of tho nations of the earth. 

"God doth not wallL in crooked paths; 
Neither doth he tnm to the right hand. 
Nor the the left neither doth he vary 
From that which he hath said." 



Pressley's Job Office, 

Norton. Ohio, 

1839. 



FACSIMILE OF THE TITLE-PAGE OF COWDERY'S TRACT 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 61 

I am well aware that a rehearsal of these things at this day 
will be unpleasant reading to the First Elder ; yet so it is, and it 
is wisdom that it should be so. Without rehearsing too many 
things that have caused me to lose my faith in Bro. Joseph's 
seership, I regard his frequent prediction that he himself shall 
tarry on the earth till Christ shall come in glory, and that neither 
the rage of devils nor the malice of men shall ever cause him 
to fall by the hand of his enemies until he has seen Christ in 
the flesh at his final coming, as little short of a piece of blas- 
phemy; and it may be classed with that revelation that some 
among you will remember which sent Bro. Page and me so un* 
wisely to (3) Toronto with a prediction from the Lord by Urim 
and Thummim that we would there ^d a man anxious to buy 
the First Elder's copyright. I well remember we did not find 
him, and had to return surprised and disappointed. But so 
great was my faith, that, in going to Toronto, nothing but calm- 
ness pervaded my soul, every doubt was banished, and I as 
much expected that Bro. Page and I would fulfill the revelation 
as that we should live. And you may believe without asking me 
to relate the particulars, that it would be no easy task to describe 
our desolation and grief. 

Bro. Page and I did not think that God would have deceived 
us through "Urim and Thummim," exactly as came the Book 
of Mormon; and I well remember how hard I strove to drive 
away the foreboding which seized me, that the First Elder had 
made tools of us, where we thpught, in the simplicity of our 
hearts, that we were divinely commanded.* 

And what served to render the reflection past expression 
in its bitterness to me, was, that from his hand I received bap- 
tism, by the direction of the Angel of God, whose voice, as it 
has since struck me, did most mysteriously resemble the voice of 
Elder Sidney Rigdon,* who, I am sure, had no part in the trans- 
actions of that day, as the Angel was John the Baptist, which I 
doubt not and deny not. When I afterward first heard Elder 
Rigdon, whose voice is so strikingly similar, I felt that this 
"dear" brother was to be in some sense, to me unknown, the 
herald of this church as the Great Baptist was of Christ. 

(4) I never dreamed, however, that he would influence the 



> This is a mild way of letting the cat out of the bag. I am stronglx 
of the opinion that Rigdon was the "angel" of Mormonism. 



62 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Prophet, Seer and Revelator to the Church of Latter Day Saints, 
into the formation of a secret band at Far West, committed to 
depredations upon Gentiles and the actual assassination of apos- 
tates from the church, which was done in June last and was 
only one of many wrong steps. 

These are facts which I am rehearsing, and if they shall be 
called in question, I am able to establish them by evidence which 
I can bring forward in abundance. 

Still, although favored of God as a chosen witness to bear 
testimony to the divine authority of the Book of Mormon, and 
honored of the Lord in being permitted, without money and 
without price, to serve as scribe during the translation of the 
Book of Mormon, I have sometimes had seasons of skepticism, 
in which I did seriously wonder whether the prophet and I were 
men in our sober senses when we would be translating from 
plates through "the U-im and Thummim" and the plates not be 
in sight at all. 

But I believed both in the Seer and in the "Seer Stone," and 
what the First Elder annotmced as revelation from God, I 
accepted as such, and committed to paper with a glad mind and 
happy heart and swift pen; for I believed him to be the soul 
of honor and truth, a young man who would die before he 
would lie. 

Man may deceive his fellow man, deception may follow de- 
ception, and the children of the wicked one may seduce the 
unstable, untaught in the ways of righteousness and peace, for 
I felt a solemn awe about me, being deep in the faith* that the 
First Elder was a Seer and Prophet of God, giving the truth 
unsullied through "Urim and Thummim," dictated by the will 
of the Lord, and that he was persecuted for the sake of the 
truth which he loved. Could I have been deceived in him? 

I could rehearse a number of things to show either that I 
was then deceived, or that he has since fallen from the lofty 
place in which fond affection had deemed him secure. 

I remember his experience as he had related it to me, and 
lacking wisdom, I went to God in prayer. I said : "O Lord, how 
dark everything is ! Let thy glory lighten it, and make bright the 
path for me. Show me my duty. Let me be led of thy Spirit." 

Shall I relate what transpired? I had a message from the 
Most High, as from the midst of eternity; for the vail was 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 63 

parted and the Redeemer Himself, clothed in glory, stood before 
me. And He said: 

"After reproving the Latter Day Saints for their corruption 
and blindness in permitting their President, Joseph Smith, Jr., 
to lead them forth into errors, where I led him not, nor com- 
manded him, and saying unto them, *Thus saith the Lord,' when 
' I said it not unto him, thou shalt withdraw thyself from among 
them." 

And I testify that Jesus, whose words I have been rehearsing, 
hath even so commanded me in an open vision. 

The Lord revealed to me that the First Elder is leading the 
Saints astray, and ordered me to quit them after delivering the 
message which this "Defense" delivers. I shall ever remember 
this expression of the Saviour's grace with thanksgiving, and 
look upon his amazing goodness to me with wonder. 

When I had sufficiently recovered my self-possession to ask 
in regard to the errors into which Joseph Smith, Jr., was taking 
the Saints, the Redeemer instructed me plainly: "He hath given 
revelations from his own heart and from a defiled conscience as 
coming from my mouth and hath corrupted the covenant and 
altered words which I had spoken. He bath brought in high 
priests, apostles and other officers, which in these days, when 
the written word sufficeth, are not in my church, and some of 
his deeds have brought shame to my heritage by the shedding of 
blood. He walketh in the vain imaginations of his heart, and my 
Spirit is holy and does not dwell in an unholy temple, nor are 
angels sent to reveal the great work of God to hypocrites." 

I bowed my face in shame and said: "Lord! I entreat thee, 
give me grace to bear thy message in print where I fear to take 
it by word of mouth." 

And he said, "The grace is given thee," and he vanished out 
of my sight. 

Prepare your hearts, O ye saints of the Most High, and come 
to understanding. The prophet hath erred and the people are 
gone astray through his error. God's word is open. We may 
read it. There is no "First Presidency" there, no "High Priest- 
hood" save that of Christ himself, no Patriarch to the Church, 
and wonderful to tell, the "First Elder" hath departed from God 
in giving us these things, and in changing the name of the church. 

Oh, the misery, distress and evil attendant upon giving heed 



64 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

unto the "doctrines of men"! The gospel has been perverted 
and the Saints are wandering in darkness, while a full cup of 
suffering is poured upon them. A society has been organized 
among them to inflict death upon those who are deemed apos- 
tates, with the knowledge and sanction of the First Elder. 

This, I confess, is a dark picture to spread before those 
whom I am to warn, but they will pardon my plainness when I 
assure them of the truth of what I have written. 

Bearing this message to them is the hardest work of my 
life, although many have been the privations and fatigues which 
have fallen to my lot to endure for the Gospel's sake since 
April 5th, 1829. 

It is disgraceful to be led by a man who does not scruple to 
follow his own vain imagination, announcing his own schemes as 
revelations from the Lord. 

And I fear he is led by a groundless hope, no better than 
the idle wind or the spider^s web. Having cleared my soul by 
delivering the message, I do not deem it necessary to write 
further on the subject now. 

Jesus has saved men in all ages and saves them now, and 
not by our Priesthood either. The "First Elder" errs as to that 
The Lord has said, long since, and his word remains steadfast 
as the eternal hills, that to him who knocks it shall be opened, 
and whosoever will, may come and partake of the waters of life 
freely; but a curse will surely fall upon those who draw near to 
God with their mouths, and honor him with their lips, while 
their hearts are far from him. 

I no longer believe that all the other churches are wrong. 

Get right, O ye people, get right with God, and may the Lord 
remove his judgments from you, preserve you in his kingdom 
from all evil, and crown you in Christ. Amen. 

March 3, 1839. O. Cowdery. 

After G>wdery had apostatized, his life, with that 
of Whitmer and others, was threatened by his former 
brethren and he was forced to flee from Missouri to 
Ohio. At this time, it was freely admitted by the Mor- 
mons that he had denied his testimony to the Book of 
Mormon, and the following poem was composed in ref- 
erence to his renunciation : 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 56 

''Amazed with wonder! I look round 

To see most people of our day 
Reject the glorious gospel sound 

Because the simple turn away: 
But does it prove there is no time, 

Because some watches will not go? 

"Or prove that Christ was not the Lord 
Because that Peter cursed and swore. 

Or Book of Mormon not his word 
Because denied by Oliver? 

Or prove that Joseph Smith is false 
Because apostates say 'tis so?" 

After severing his connection with the church, and 
his return to the state of Ohio, Cowdery settled at 
Tiffin, where he practiced law, and in 1840 or 1841 
became a member of the Methodist Protestant Church. 
During the time that he practiced law in Tiffin, Cow- 
dery's partner was Judge W. Lang. In the following 
letter, addressed to Thomas Gregg, of Hamilton, Illinois, 
author of "The Prophet of Palmyra," this gentleman says 
respecting the history of Cowdery at Tiffin : 

TuFiN, O., Nov. 5, 1881. 
Dear Sir:— Your note of the ist inst I found upon my desk 
when I returned home this evening and I hasten to answer. 
Once for all I desire to be strictly understood when I £:.y to 
you that I cannot violate any confidence of a friend though he 
be dead. This I will say that Mr. Cowdery never spoke of 
his connection with the Mormons to anybody except to me. We 
were intimate friends. The plates were never translated and 
could not be, were never intended to be. What is claimed to 
be a translation is the "Manuscript Found" worked over by C. 
He was the best scholar amongst them. Rigdon got the original 
at the job printing office in Pittsburgh as I have stated. I often 
expressed my objection to the frequent repetition of "And it 
came to pass" to Mr. Cowdery and said that a true scholar 
ought to have avoided that, which only provoked a gentle smile 
from C. Without going into detail or disclosing a confided 
(6) 



66 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

word, I say to you that I do know, as well as can now be known* 
that C. revised the "Manuscript" and Smith and Rigdon appra/ed 
of it before it became the "Book of Mormon." I have no 
knowledge of what became of the original. Never heard C. say 
as to that Smith was killed while C. lived here. I well remem- 
ber the effect upon his countenance when he read the news in 
my presence. He immediately took the paper over to his house 
to read to his wife. On his return to the office we had a long 
conversation on the subject, and I was surprised to hear him 
speak with so much kindness of a man that had so wronged 
him as Smith had. It elevated him greatly in my already high 
esteem, and proved to me more than ever the nobility of his 
nature. C never gave me a full history of the troubles of the 
Mormons in Mo. and 111., but I am sure that the doctrine of 
polygamy was advocated by Smith and opposed by Cowdery, 
Then when they became rivals for the leadership. Smith made 
use of this opposition by Cowdery to destroy his popularity and 
influence, and which finally culminated in the mob that demol- 
ished Cowder/s house the night when he fled. This Whitmer 
you speak of must be the brother-in-law of Cowdery whose 
wife was a Whitmer. It may be true that he has the original 
MS. Now as to whether C. ever openly denounced Mormonism 
let me say this to you: no man ever knew better than he how 
to keep one's own counsel. He would never allow any man to 
drag him into a conversation on the subject. Cowdery was a 
Democrat and a most powerful advocate of the principles of the 
party on the stump. For this he became the target of the 
Whig stumpers and press, who denounced him as a Mormon 
and made free use of C.'s certificate at the end of the Mormon 
Bible to crush his influence. He suffered great abuse for this 
while he lived here on that account In the second year of his 
residence here he and his family attached themselves to the 
Methodist Protestant Church, where they held fellowship to the 
time they left for Elkhom. I have now said about all that I feel 
at liberty to say on these points and hope it may aid you some in 
your researches. If Mrs. Cowdery is still living, I would be 
glad to learn her post office address so as to enable me to write 
to her. You have now the substance of all I remember on the 
subject and if it proves of any benefit to your enterprise (in 
which I wish you success), jrou are certamly welcome. I could 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 57 

only answer your questions in the manner I did because some of 
them were not susceptible of a direct answer by me. 

Resp. Yours, W. Lang. 

In a letter to Mr. Gregg, dated at Tiffin, Ohio, August 
3, 1882, Judge W. H. Gibson, an old acquaintance and 
friend of Cowdery, says: 

Referring, now, to yours of the 13th February, making in- 
quiries as to Oliver Cowdery, I beg to reply, though perhaps 
too late for your purpose. I think that it is absolutely certain 
that Mr. C, after his separation from the Mormons, never con- 
versed on the subject with his most intimate friends, and never 
by word or act, disclosed an3rthing relating to the conception, 
development or progress of the "Church of Jesus Christ of 
Latter-day Saints." He was an able lawyer, a fine orator, a 
ready debater and led a blameless life, while residing in this 
city. He united with the Methodist Protestant Church, and was 
a consistent, active member. 

Mrs. Adeline M. Bernard, adopted daughter of Oliver 
Cowdery, wrote as follows of Cowdery 's connection with 
the Methodist Protestant Church : 

Jackson, Oct. 3, 1881. 
Mr. Gregg, 

Sir: — Your letter of August 18 was received in due time, and 
the reason that I did not answer it sooner was on account of 
sickness. In the first place, you say that Whitmer states that 
Mr. Cowdery held the original ^ Manuscripts of the Book of Mor- 
mon and when he came to die placed them in the hands of Mr. 
Whitmer. All he, O. C, had was the B. of M. and the M. 
h3rmn book. Joe Smith said that as fast as he translated from 
the golden plates the B. of M., the angel took them from them 
and nothing was left him but the B. of M. Second, I know 
that Mr. Cowdery joined the Protestant Methodist Church in 
1841 and you can write to W. M. Lang, of Tiffin, Ohio, and he 
will search the Ch. records and send you a transcript of his, 
O. C.*s membership. I suppose that Maria Cowdery, or Mrs. 
Johnson as she is now, feels a delicacy in saying anything about 
her father's belief in M. I don't think that any of the family 
connection belong to the M. C except David Whitmer, and he 



6» THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

was always a very visionary man, but he renounced M. when 
O. C. did. I do not know of anything more you want to know, 
but if there is tell me and I will try and inform you the best I 
can. AoEUN£ M. Bernard.^ 

I now introduce the affidavit of G. J. Keen, a highly 
respected citizen of Tiffin, as proof that Cowdery re- 
nounced Mormonism and united with the Methodist 
Protestant Church : 

State of Ohio, | 
County of Seneca, j ^^• 

Personally appeared before me, the undersigned, a Notary 
Public within and for said county, G. J. Keen, a resident of said 
county, to me well known, and being sworn according to law 
makes oath and says: 

I was well acquainted with Oliver Cowdery who formerly 
resided in this city, that sometime in the year 1840 Henry 
Cronise, Samuel Waggoner and myself, with other Democrats 
of this county, determined to establish a Democratic newspaper 
in this city to aid in the election of Martin Van Buren to the 
Presidency, and we authorized Henry Cronise, Esq., to go East 
and purchase a suitable press for that purpose. Mr. Cronise 
went East, purchased a press and engaged Oliver Cowdery to 
edit the paper. Mr. Cowdery arrived in Tiflfin (O.) some time 
before the press arrived. Some time after Mr. Cowder/s ar- 
rival in Tiffin, we became acquainted with his (Cowder/s) con- 
nection with Mormonism. 

We immediately called a meeting of our Democratic friends, 
and having the Book of Mormon with us, it was unanimously 
agreed that Mr. Cowdery could not be permitted to edit said 
paper. 

Mr. Cowdery opened a law office in Tiffin, and soon effected 
a partnership with Joel W. Wilson. 

In a few years Mr. Cowdery expressed a desire to associate 
himself with a Methodist Protestant church of this city. 

Rev. John Souder and myself were appointed a committee 



> The letters of Lang, Gibson and Mrs. Bernard have been turned over 
to the American Anti-Mormon Association by the family of Th. Gregg, to 
whom they are addressed. I have made these copies directly from the 
originals. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 60 

to wait on Mr. Cowdery and confer with him respecting his 
connection with Mormonism and the Book of Mormon. 

We accordingly waited on Mr. Cowdery at his residence in 
Tiffin, and there learned his connection, from him, with that 
order, and his full and final renunciation thereof. 

We then inquired of him if he had any objection to making 
a public recantation. 

He replied that he had objections; that, in the first place, 
it could do no good ; that he had known several to do so and 
they always regretted it And, in the second place, it would 
have a tendency to draw public attention, invite criticism, and 
bring him into contempt. 

"But," said he, "nevertheless, if the church require it, I will 
submit to it, but I authorize and desire you and the church to 
publish and make known my recantation." 

We did not demand it, but submitted his name to the church, 
and he was unanimously admitted a member thereof. 

At that time he arose and addressed the audience present, 
admitted his error and implored forgiveness, and said he was 
sorry and ashamed of his connection with Mormonism. 

He continued his membership while he resided in Tiffin, and 
became superintendent of the Sabbath-school, and led an ex- 
emplary life while he resided with us. 

I have lived in this city upwards of fifty-three years, was 
auditor of this county, was elected to that office in 1840. 

I am now in my eighty-third year, and well remember the 
facts above related. (Signed) G. J. Keen. 

Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 
14th day of April, A. D 1885. Frank L. Emich, 

Notary Public in Seneca, O. 

Another very interesting proof of Cowdery's con- 
nection with the Methodist Protestant Church at Tiffin 
is to be found in the records of the business meetings of 
the male members of that church. The minutes of such 
a meeting, held January 18, 1844, are as follows : 

Minutes of a meeting of the Male Members of the Methodist 
Protestant Church of Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio, held pursuant 
to adjournment. 

The meeting came to order by appointing Rev. Thomas 



60 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Cushman Chairman, and Oliver Cowdery Secretary. On ascer- 
taining and it appearing that more than two-thirds of the male 
members of said Society were present, it was on motion 

Resolved, That we accept the Charter for the legal orgsaiza- 
tion of said Society passed by the General Assembly of the 
State of Ohio, January 19th, 1843, and that we become and now 
are organized tmder and in accordance with the provisions of 
the same. 

On motion, it was further resolved that John Souder, Joseph 
Walker, William Campbell, John Shinefelt and Benjamin Nye 
be, and they are hereby appointed and chosen Trustees for said 
Society for and during the term of one year and until their 
successors are chosen and accept said office. 

Resolved, That the annual meeting of the male members of 
this Society be held at this place one year from this date at 
half past 6 p. m. for the purpose of electing five Trustees for 
said Society, unless previously called by a vote of two-thirds 
of the male members of this Society to be held at another 
time. 

Resolved, That the Trustees appointed by this meeting be 
authorized to call a special meeting of this Society for the pur- 
pose of adopting such By-laws as may be necessary for the well 
being of the same. 

Resolved, That the first meeting of the Trustees of this 
Society, elected by this meeting, be held at the office of O. 
Cowdery on Tuesday, the 23rd inst., at half past 6 o'clock p. nu 

Resolved, That the proceedings of this meeting be signed by 
the Chairman and Secretary. 

On motion the meeting adjourned without delay. 

Thos. B. Cushman, Chairman. 

Oliver Cowdery, Secretary. 

Jan. 18, 1844. 

It is not at all likely that Oliver Cowdery would have 
been chosen secretary of "a meeting of the Male Mem- 
bers of the Methodist Protestant Church of Tiffin, Ohio," 
if he was not a member of that church ; and it is not at 
all likely that he would have been a member of that 
church if he had not renounced Mormonism. 

With these facts before us, it is sheer folly for Mor- 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 61 

monism any longer to deny that Oliver G)wdery did at 
one time in his history renounce the faith and did con- 
nect himself with the Methodist Protestant Church of 
Tiffin, Ohio. 



6J THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 



CHAPTER IV. 

The Life of Solomon Spaulding— Spaulding's Roman Story— The 
Fairchild-Rice-Smith Correspondence — A Mormon Lie Nailed. 

Solomon Spaulding was tx>m at Ashford, G>nnecti- 
cut, in 1761 ; graduated from Dartmouth College in 1785, 
and completed his course in theology in 1787. After this 
he preached for a time, but finally became an infidel/ quit 
preaching and engaged in the mercantile business' in 
Cherry Valley, New York, where he failed financially in 
1807. In 1809, with a business partner, Henry Lake, he 
built a forge at Conneaut, or New Salem, Ohio, where he 
again failed in 18 12. The same year he removed to 
Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, where he lived two years, re- 
moving, at the expiration of this time, to the town of 
Amity, in the same State, where he made his home up to 
the time of his death in 1816. 

SPAULDING'S ROMAN STORY. 

It was while living at Conneaut that Spaulding be- 
came interested in the aboriginal works of the country 
and began to write romances based upon them. The 
first of these, which is variously known as his "Manu- 
script No. I," "Manuscript Story — Conneaut Creek," 
"Honolulu Manuscript" and "Roman Story," he began 
in the year 1809.* This manuscript gives an account of 

* The proof of this it the fragment of a letter attached to his "Manu- 
script Story." 

*Mrs. Dickenson says that Spaulding was principal of an academy at 
Cherry Valley, New York. ("New Light on Mormonism,** p. 13.) His 
brother John says, however, that he went into the mercantile business in 
that place with his brother Josiah. 

*Some say in the year 1808. 



THB BOOK OF MORMON 6S 

a party of Romans who, in the time of G)nstantine, in a 
voyage to Britain, were driven from their course by con- 
trary winds and were thrown upon our Atlantic coast 
Making their way inland, they came in contact with two 
native tribes, the Sciotans and Kentucks, who are de- 
scribed as living, respectively, north and south of the 
Ohio River. This story is the purported history of these 
aboriginal tribes, giving an account of their customs, 
habits, manner of government and wars. Its author was 
a Roman by the name of Fabius, who is represented as 
writing it on twenty-eight rolls of parchment in the Latin 
language and afterward depositing it in an artificial cave 
near Conneaut, where Spaulding claims that he dis- 
covered it. It was never 'finished, for it ends abruptly. 
Spaulding gave as his reason for throwing it aside that 
he wished to go further back in his dates and write in 
the old Scriptural style, that his story might appear more 
ancient — ^a wish that was afterwards accomplished in his 
"Manuscript Found," from which, it is claimed, the Book 
of Mormon has been revamped. 

After Spaulding's death, his widow removed to the 
home of her brother, W. H. Sabine, of Onondaga Valley, 
New York. Among the things that she carried with her 
was an old, "hair-covered trunk" which contained the 
sermons, essays and a "single manuscript" of her de- 
ceased husband. In 1820, Mrs. Spaulding married a Mr. 
Davison, of Hartwick, New York, and took the trunk to 
that place with her. Her daughter, Matilda Spaulding, 
was married to Dr. A. McKinstry in 1828, and removed 
to Monson, Hampden County, Massachusetts, where her 
mother followed her soon afterwards and where she 
spent the remainder of her life. When Mrs. Davison re- 
moved from Hartwick, the trunk spoken of was left in 
the care of her cousin, Mr. Jerome Clark, of that place. 



64 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Leaving the Spauldings for the present, we return ta 
Conneaut, Ohio. In 1832 or 1833, a "woman preacher" 
came to that place and read copious extracts from the 
Book of Mormon before a congregation composed, in 
part, of Spaulding's relatives and old acquaintances. The 
book was immediately recognized by Spaulding* s brother 
and others as a plagiarism of the "Manuscript Found," 
and considerable indignation was manifested that it 
should have been put to so unholy a use as to be trans- 
formed into a new Bible. The excitement was so in- 
tense that a citizens' meeting was called, and Dr. Philas- 
trus Hurlburt, who had been a Mormon, but who had 
been cut off from the church, Mormons say, for immo- 
rality, was deputed to visit Mrs. Davison and secure, if 
possible, the "Manuscript Found," that it might be com- 
pared with the Book of Mormon and the fraud be ex- 
posed. 

Hurlburt went, first, to Onondaga Valley, New York, 
where he secured the recommendation of Mr. Sabine, 
Mrs. Davison's brother, and from there to Monson, Mas- 
sachusetts, where he met Mrs. Davison herself. At first 
this lady declined to give her consent to let the writings 
of her former husband pass out of her possession, but 
upon receiving Hurlburt's solemn promise that the man- 
uscript he was seeking would be returned, she reluctantly 
acceded, and Hurlburt went to Hartwick and obtained 
from the old trunk in Mr. Clark's possession the "single 
manuscript which it contained, and which at that time 
was supposed to be the "Manuscript Found." 

Hurlburt then returned to Ohio and delivered the 
manuscript, with other matter which he had collected, to 
a Mr. E. D. Howe, editor of the Painesville Telegraph, 
who was then engaged in writing his book, "Mormonism 
Unveiled." But, when this gentleman examined the 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 66 

manuscript, he discovered that it was not the "Manu- 
script Found" at all, but Spaulding^s first story, entitled 
"Manuscript Story — G)nneaut Creek." He also afte*- 
awards exhibited it to the old acquaintances of Spaulding, 
who immediately recognized it as his work, but who de- 
clared that it was not the "Manuscript Foimd," but an- 
other manuscript written earlier. 

This romance was not returned to Mrs. Davison, as 
had been agreed upon, and was soon lost track of. Howe 
declared that it had been destroyed by fire, while the 
Spauldings accused Hurlburt of having sold it to the 
Mormons. But neither of these explanations of its dis- 
appearance proved true. In 1839-40, Howe sold his print- 
ing establishment to a Mr. L. L. Rice, who, with a part- 
ner, began publishing an antislavery newspaper. Rice 
subsequently sold out and removed to Honolulu, Sand- 
wich Islands, where, in 1884, he accidentally discovered 
this manuscript in his possession, it having been inad- 
vertently transferred to him by Howe, among other 
things, when he bought out his printing establishment. 

Soon after its discovery, this manuscript was placed 
in the library of Oberlin College, Ohio, where it still re- 
mains. Both of the Mormon Churches have made copies 
of it, which they publish under the erroneous title, "Man- 
uscript Foimd." 

THE FAIRCHILD-RICE-SMITH CORRESPONDENCE. 

With the finding of the Honolulu manuscript, interest 
in the question of the origin of the Book of Mormon was 
re-aroused, and papers and magazines throughout the 
country heralded the news of the new find and discussed 
its probable bearing upon the traditional theory, so long 
held, of the origin of the Book of Mormon in the Spaul- 
ding Romance. Pres. J. H. Fairchild, of Oberlin College, 



«6 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

having been in Honolulu at the time of the discovery 
of this manuscript, wrote a brief note in regard to the 
same for the Bibliotheca Sacra, which was widely copied 
by papers and magazines* throughout the country. This 
note, with three letters from the pen of Mr. L. L. Rice, 
the finder, appear in the preface to the Josephite edition 
of this manuscript The note is as follows : 

The theory of the origin of the Book of Mormon in the 
traditional manuscript of Solomon Spaulding, will probably have 
to be relinquished. That manuscript is doubtless now in the 
possession of Mr. L. L. Rice, of Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, 
formerly an anti-slavery editor in Ohio, and f^'/r many years 
State Printer at Columbus. During a recent visit to Honolulu, 
I suggested to Mr. Rice that he might have valuable anti-slavery 
documents in his possession, which he would be willing to con- 
tribute to the rich collection already in the Oberlin College 
Library. In pursuance of this suggestion, Mr. Rice began look- 
ing over his old pamphlets and papers, and at length came upon 
an old, worn and faded manuscript of about one hundred and 
seventy-five pages, small quarto, purporting to be a history of 
the migrations and conflicts of the ancient Indian Tribes, which 
occupied the territory now belonging to the States of New York, 
Ohio and Kentucky. On the last page of this manuscript is a 
certificate' and signature, giving the names of several persons 
known to the signer, who have assured him that to their per- 
sonal knowledge the manuscript was the writing of Solomon 
Spaulding. Mr. Rice has no recollection how or when this 
manuscript came into his possession. It was enveloped in a 
coarse piece of wrapping paper, and endorsed in Mr. Rice's 
hand-writing, "A Manuscript Story." 

There seems no reason to doubt that this is the long-lost 
story. Mr. Rice, myself and others compared it with the Book 
of Mormon; and could detect no resemblance between the two. 
in general or in detail. There seems to be no name or incident 



^Grinnell (Iowa) Herald; Western Watchman, Eureka, California; 
New York Observer, Frank Leslie's Sunday Magasine, etc. 

•"The Writings of Sollomon Spaulding Proved by Aron Wright, 
Oliver Smith, John N. Miller & others. The testimonies of the above 
gentlemen are now in my possession. (Signed) D. P. Huklbukt." 



THE BOOK OF MORMON «T 

common to the two. The solemn style of the Book of Mormon» 
in imitation of the English Scriptures, does not appear in the 
manuscript. The only resemblance is in the fact that both 
profess to set forth the history of lost tribes. Some other ex- 
planation of the origin of the Book of Mormon must be found, 
if any explanation is required. 

(Signed) James H. Fairchild. 

The three letters of Mr. Rice I now give, reserving 
my comments on the same, as I also shall on the note of 
President Fairchild, until their close : 

Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, March 28, 1885. 

Ms. Joseph Smith -} — ^The Spaulding Manuscript in my pos- 
session came into my hands in this wise. In 1839-40 my partner 
and myself bought of R D. Howe the Painesville Telegraph, 
published at Painesville, Ohio. The transfer of the printing de- 
partment, types, press, &c., was accompanied with a large col- 
lection of books, manuscripts, &., this manuscript of Spaulding 
among the rest So, you see, it has been in my possession over 
forty years. But I never examined it, or knew the character 
of it, until some six or eight months since. The wrapper was 
marked, "Manuscript Story— Conneaut Creek." The wonder is, 
that in some of my movements, I did not destroy or bum it 
with a large amount of rubbish that had accumulated from 
time to time. 

It happened that Pres't Fairchild was here on a visit, at the 
time I discovered the contents of it, and it was examined by 
him and others with much curiosity. Since Pres't Fairchild pub- 
lished the fact of its existence in my possession, I have had 
applications for it from half a dozen sources, each applicant 
seeming to think that he or she was entitled to it. Mr. Howe 
says when he was getting up a book to expose Mormonism as a 
fraud at an early day, when the Mormons had their head* 
quarters at Kirtland, he obtained it from some source, and it 
was inadvertently transferred with the other effects of his 
printing office. A. B. Deming, of Painesville, who is also get- 
ting up some kind of a book I believe on Mormonism, wants 
me to send it to him. Mrs. Dickinson, of Boston, claiming to 



^President of the Reorganized Church. 



es THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

be a relative of Spaulding, and who is getting up a book to show 
that he was the real author of the Book of Mormon, wants it. 
She thinks, at least, it should be sent to Spaulding's daughter, a 
Mrs Somebody— but she does not inform me where she lives. 
Deming says that Howe borrowed it when he was getting up 
his book, and did not return it, as he should have done, &c. 

This Manuscript does not purport to be "a story of the 
Indians formerly occupying this continent;" but is a history of 
the wars between the Indians of Ohio and Kentucky, and their 
progress in civilization, &c. It is certain that this Manuscript 
is not the origin of the Mormon Bible, whatever some other 
manuscript may have been. The only similarity between them, 
is, in the manner in which each purports to have been found — 
one in a cave on Conneaut Creek — the other in a hill in Ontario 
Q)unty, New York. There is no identity of names, of persons, 
or places; and there is no similarity of style between them. As 
I told Mr. Deming, I should as soon think the Book of Revela- 
tion was written by the author of Don Quixote, as that the 
writer of this Manuscript was the author of the Book of Mor- 
mon. Deming says Spaulding made three copies of "Manuscript 
Found," one of which Sidney Rigdon stole from a printing 
office in Pittsburg. You can probably tell better than I can, 
what ground there is for such an allegation. 

As to this Manuscript, I can not see that it can be of any 
use to any body, except the Mormons, to show that IT is not 
the original of the Mormon Bible. But that would not settle 
the claim that some other manuscript of Spaulding was the 
original of it. I propose to hold it in my own hands for a while, 
to see if it can not be put to some good use. Deming and Howe 
inform me that its existence is exciting great interest in that 
region. I am under a tacit, but not a positive pledge to Presi- 
dent Fairchild, to deposit it eventually in the Library of Oberlin 
College. I shall be free from that pledge, when I see an oppor- 
tunity to put it to a better use. Yours, &c., L. L. Rice. 

P. S. — ^Upon reflection, since writing the foregoing, I am of 
the opinion that no one who reads this Manuscript will give 
credit to the story that Solomon Spaulding was in any wise the 
author of the Book of Mormon. It is unlikely that any one who 
wrote so elaborate a work as the Mormon Bible, would spend 
his time in getting up so shallow a story as this, which at best 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 69 

is but a feeble imitation of the other. Finally, I am more than 
half convinced that this is his only writing of the sort, and that 
any pretense that Spaulding was in any sense the author of the 
other, is a sheer fabrication. It was easy for any body who 
may have seen this, or heard anything of its contents, to get up 
the story that they were identical. L. L. R. 

Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, May 14th, 1885. 
IIr. Joseph Smith: 

Dear Sir — I am greatly obliged to you for the information 
concerning Mormonism, in your letters of April 30th and May 
2d. As I am in no sense a Mormonite, of course it is a matter 
of curiosity, mainly, that I am interested in the history of Mor- 
monism. 

Two things are true concerning this manuscript in my pos- 
session: First, it is a genuine writing of Solomon Spaulding; 
and second, it is not the original of the Book of Mormon. 

My opinion is, from all I have seen and learned, that this 
is the only writing of Spaulding, and there is no founda- 
tion for the statement of Deming and others, that Spaulding 
made another story, more elaborate, of which several copies 
were written, one of which Rigdon stole from a printing 
office in Pittsburgh, &c. Of course I can not be as certain 
of this, as of the other two points. One theory is, that 
Rigdon, or some one else, saw this manuscript, or heard it 
read, and from the hints it conveyed, got up the other and 
more elaborate writing on which the Book of Mormon was 
founded. Take that for what it is worth. It don't seem to me 
very likely. 

You may be at rest as to my putting the manuscript into 
the possession of any one who will mutilate it, or use it for a 
bad purpose. I shall have it deposited in the Library of Oberlin 
College, in Ohio, to be at the disposal for reading of any one 
who may wish to peruse it; but not to be removed from that 
depository. My friend, President Fairchild, may be relied on as 
security for the safe keeping of it. It will be sent there in 
July, by a friend who is going there to "take to himself a 
wife." Meantime, I have made a literal copy of the entire 
document — errors of orthography, grammar, erasures, and all — 
which I shall keep in my possession, so that any attempt to 
mutilate it will be of easy detection and exposure. Oberlin is 



70 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

a central place, in the vicinity of Conneaut, where the nuuitt- 
script was written. 

I have had an idea, sometimes, that it is due to the Mor- 
mons to have a copy of it, if they took interest in it chough 
to publish it. As it is only of interest as showing that it is 
not the original of the Book of Mormon, no one else is likely 
to wish it for publication. 

Miss Dickinson, whom you call a granddaughter of Solomon 
Spaulding, represents herself to me as his grandniece: ''My 
great uncle. Rev. Solomon Spaulding," she writes. 

Rev. Dr. Hyde, President of the Institution, in this place, 
for training Native Missionaries for Micranesia, (a very promi- 
nent and successful institution,) has written an elaborate account 
of this manuscript, and of Mormonism, and sent it for publica- 
tion in the Congregationalist, of Boston. I presume it will be 
published, and you will be interested in reading it 

Very respectfully yours, L. L. Rice. 

Honolulu, H. I., June 12, 1885. 
President J. H. Fairchild: — Herewith I send to you the 
Solomon Spalding Manuscript, to be deposited in the Library of 
Oberlin College, for reference by any one who may be desirous 
of seeing or examining it. As a great deal of inquiry has been 
made about it since it became known that it was in my posses- 
sion^ I deem it proper that it be deposited for safe keeping, 
where any one interested it it, whether Mormon or Anti-Mor- 
mon, may examine it It has been in my possession forty-six 
years— from 1839 to i885--and for forty-four years of that time 
no one examined it, and I was not aware of the character of 
its contents. I send it to you enclosed in the same paper 
wrapper, and tied with the same string that must have enclosed 
it for near half a century— certainly during the forty-six years 
since it came into my possession. I have made and retain in 
my possession a correct literal copy of it, errors of orthography, 
of grammar, erasures and all. I may allow the Mormons of 
Utah to print it from this copy, which they are anxious to do; 
and a delegation is now in the Islands, awaiting my decision on 
this point They claim that they are entitled to whatever benefit 
they may derive from its publication; and it seems to me there 
is some justice in that claim. Whether it will relieve them in 
any measure, from the imputation that Solomon Spalding was 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 71 

the author of the Book of Mormon, I do not attempt to decide. 
It devolves upon their opponents to show that there are or were 
other writings of Spalding— since it is evident that this writing 
is not the original of the Mormon Bible. 

Truly yours, &c., L. L. Rice. 

P. S.— The words "Solomon Spaulding's Writings" in ink on 

the wrapper were written by me, after I became aware of the 

contents. The words "Manuscript Story— Conneaut Creek," in 

faint penciling, were as now when it came into my possession. 

Having put before the reader the foregoing corre- 
spondence, I now invite his attention to a brief, critical 
examination of the same. 

First, the manuscript described is not the "Manu- 
script Found," from which it is claimed the Book of 
Mormon was revamped, but an entirely different ro- 
mance, entitled on the wrapper, "Manuscript Story — Con- 
neaut Creek." Professor Fairchild says that this title 
appeared on the wrapper in Mr. Rice's handwriting, but 
Rice, himself, declares that it was there, "in faint pencil- 
ing," when it first came into his possession. For a reason 
that will appear in the next chapter, I believe that it was 
on the wrapper long before it fell into the hands of Dr. 
Hurlburt. 

Secondly, Professor Fairchild seems not to have fully 
understood, at this time, the Spaulding-manuscript the- 
ory. He speaks of this manuscript as "the long-lost 
story," wholly unmindful of the fact that, fifty years be- 
fore, Howe, in his "Mormonism Unveiled," had given a 
paragraph outline of it and had declared that he had sub- 
mitted it to the acquaintances of Spaulding, who had ad- 
mitted that the latter was its author, but who had ex- 
pressly denied that it was the "Manuscript Found." It 
is, therefore, not "the long-lost story" at all, but a 
totally different story, written earlier and bearing no 
more relation to the "Manuscript Found" than Long- 

(6) 



7a THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

fellow's "Evangeline" bears to his "Hiawatha." The 
difference in style between this manuscript and the Book 
of Mormon is explained by the statement of Spaulding, 
when he threw it aside, that he intended to change the 
style and go further back in his dates that his story 
might appear more ancient. 

Thirdly, Mr. Rice, in denying that the "Manuscript 
Story" was in any sense the basis of the Book of Mor- 
mon, admits the contention of nearly all learned anti- 
Mormon polemics, both before and since his time, that 
another manuscript of Spaulding's might have formed 
such a basis. He says: 

It is certain that this Manuscript is not the origin of the 
Mormon Bible, whatever some other ntanuscript may have been. 

And: 

But that would not settle the claim that some other manu- 
script of Spaulding was the original of it. 

Fourthly, Professor Fairchild, in October, 1900, so 
far changed his sentiments expressed sixteen years be- 
fore, that he admitted the same contention. In the month 
mentioned, and shortly before his death, he signed the 
following statement in the presence of Rev. J. D. Nut- 
ting: 

fairchild's last statement. 

With regard to the manuscript of Mr. Spaulding now in the 
Library of Oberlin College, I have never stated, and know of 
no one who can state, that it is the only manuscript which 
Spaulding wrote, or that it is certainly the one which has been 
supposed to be the original of the Book of Mormon. The dis- 
covery of this Ms. does not prove that there may not have been 
another, which became the basis of the Book of Mormon. The 
use which has been made of statements emanating from me af 
implying the contrary of the above is entirely unwarranted. 

James H. Fairchild. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 73 

With this last statement, Professor Fairchild nullifies 
the wrong inferences which have been drawn from his 
first declaration, and swings into line with the position 
generally assumed by intelligent anti-Mormon polemics, 
that there was another manuscript, different from the one 
found in Honolulu, which became the basis of the Book 
of Mormon. 

A MORMON LIE NAILED. 

In the preface to the copy of the Honolulu manu- 
script, as published by the Reorganized Mormon Church, 
I find the following false and misleading statement: 

Herewith we present to the reader the notorious "Manu- 
script Story" ("Manuscript Found"*) of the late Rev. Solomon 
Spalding. What gives this document prominence is the fact 
that, for the past fifty years, it has been made to do duty by 
the opposers of the Book of Mormon and the Church of Jesus 
Christ of Latter Day Saints, as the source, the root, and the 
inspiration, by and from which Joseph Smith and Sydney Rigdon 
wrote said Book of Mormon and organized said Church. . . . 

This seeming huge hindrance and insurmountable obstacle 
which is always thrown in the way of the investigator with all 
the skill and power that craft and cunning and malice and fear 
and blind zeal can invent and command, vanishes from the pres- 
ence of this original witness in the case; for when it speaks 
it reveals the flimsiness and falsity of the claim that it was in 
any way or in any sense the origin of the Book of Mormon, 
or that there is the least likeness between the two. This newly 
found "missing link" completes the chain of evidence which 
proves that the "Manuscript Found" never was and never could 
be made the occasion, cause or germ of the Book of Mormon. 

It would be difficult to find, among all that has been 
written upon this subject, a more false, misleading and 



* Notice that the title, "Manuscript Found," appears in parentheses. 
It is not to be found on the manuscript anywhere, and it is wholly ft 
gratuitous assumption to call the latter the "Manuscript Found." 



n THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

incorrect statement than the foregoing. How an in- 
telligent and honest writer could have penned these 
words, in the face of what Howe, Hurlburt, Bennett and 
Braden had written prior to this time to the contrary, is 
inexplicable. The "Manuscript Story" was never "made 
to do duty by the opposers of the Book of Mormon and 
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, as the 
source, the root, and the inspiration, by and from which 
Joseph Smith and Sydney Rigdon wrote said Book of 
Mormon and organized said Church." From 1834 it was 
expressly denied that this manuscript had an)rthing to do 
with the Book of Mormon or that it was the "Manuscript 
Found." ' A paragraph review of it was given in Howe's 
book in 1834, and the contents of it were well known and 
employed in public discussion* before the manuscript, it- 
self, was found in 1884. The writer of the foregoing 
could not have been ignorant of these facts ; they were to 
be found in the books widely known of and read among 
the members of his church.' 

In 1834, Howe wrote as follows of the "Manuscript 
Story": 

The tnink referred to by the widow was subsequently ex- 
amined and found to contain only a single MS. book, in Spal- 
ding's handwriting, containing about one quire of paper. This 
is a romance, purporting to have been translated from the 

» "Disbelievers in Joseph Smith's 'find* hare nerer claimed that the 
Book of Mormon was a plagiarism of the Oberlin manuscript, and all 
the powder used by the Mormons on that subject is a wasted explosive." 
— Stanton*s "The Three Movements," p. 43. 

«See the "Braden-Kelley Debate," p. 91. 

•The Mormons well knew the contents of the "Manuscript Story" 
long before it was found in Honolulu, and Reynolds, in his "Myth of the 
Manuscript Found," p. 52 (1883), gives the outline of it. Then, in the 
face of the fact that Howe, Bennett and other anti-Mormons, following 
the Conneaut testimonies about to be given, claimed that the "Manuscript 
Found" was a Jewish romance, how could he honestly assert that they 
claimed that the Book of Mormon came from the former? There has been 
some pretty hard Mormon lying all along the line. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 76 

Latin, found on twenty-four rolls of parchment, in a cave, on 
the banks of Conneaut Creek, but written in modem style, and 
giving a fabulous account of a ship's being driven upon the 
American coast, while proceeding from Rome to Britain, a 
short time previous to the Christian era, this country then being 
inhabited by the Indians. This old MS. has been shown to 
several of the foregoing witnesses, who recognize it as Spal- 
ding's, he having told them that he had altered his first plan of 
writing, by going farther back with dates, and writing in the old 
Scripture style, in order that it might appear more ancient 
They say that it bears no resemblance to the ^'Manuscript 
Found." 

This is the first description ever g^ven in print of 
this "Manuscript Story" which was afterwards found in 
the possession of Mr. Rice, of Honolulu. And Howe 
here disclaims that it was the "Manuscript Fotmd," hence 
that it was the basis of the Book of Mormon. Yet, in 
the face of this fact, we are coolly told that this manu- 
script has been made to do service "as the source, the 
root, and the inspiration, by and from which Joseph 
Smith and Sydney Rigdon wrote said Book of Mormon 
and organized said Church" ! 

This same statement appeared again in the second 
edition of Howe's book of 1840, and in Bennett's "Mor- 
monism Exposed" of 1842. 

Howe, again, in 1881, disclaimed any connection or 
resemblance, whatever, between the "Manuscript Story" 
and the "Manuscript Found." In a letter, addressed to 
Elder T. W. Smith, an apostle of the Reorganized 
Church, he says : 

Painesville, Ohio, July 26th, 1881. 

Sir: — ^Your note of 21st is before me,— and I will answer 
your queries seriatim. 

1st— The manuscript you refer to was not marked on the 
outside or inside "Manuscript Found." It was a common-place 
story of some Indian wars along the borders of our Great Lakei^ 



76 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

between the Chicagoes and Eries, as I now recollect*— not in 
Bible style — ^but purely modem. 

2d. — It was not the original "Manuscript Found," and I do 
not believe Hurlburt ever had it. 

3d. — I never saw or heard read the "Manuscript Found," but 
have seen five or six persons who had, and from their testimony, 
concluded it was very much like the Mormon Bible. 

4th. — 'Never succeeded in finding out anything more than was 
detailed in my book of exposure published about fifty years ago. 

5th. — The manuscript that came into my possession I suspect 
was destroyed by fire forty years ago. 

I think there has been much mist thrown around the whole 
subject of the origin of the Mormon Bible and the "Manuscript 
Found," by the several statements that have been made by those 
who have been endeavoring to solve the problem after sleeping 
quietly for half a century. Every effort was made to unravel 
the mystery at the time, when nearly all the parties were on 
earth, and the result published at the time, and I think it all 
folly to try to dig out anjrthing more. Yours, etc., 

E. D. Howe. 

Dr. Hurlburt, also, bears testimony to the fact that 
the manuscript which he obtained from Mrs. Davison, 
and which is now in Oberlin College Library, is not the 
"Manuscript Found.'' In a statement issued at Gibson- 
burg, Ohio, January 10, 1881, he says: 

To all whom it may concern: 

In the year eighteen hundred and thirty-four (1834), I went 
from Geauga county, Ohio, to Monson, Hampden county, Mass., 
where I found Mrs. Davison, late widow of the Rev. Solomon 
Spaulding, late of Conneaut, Ashtabula county, Ohio. Of her 
I obtained a manuscript, supposing it to be the manuscript of 
the romance written by the said Solomon Spaulding, called the 
"Manuscript Found," which was reported to be the foundation 
of the "Book of Mormon." I did not examine the manuscript 
till I got home, when upon examination I found it to contain 



* Notice Howe saying, "As I now recollect" He is mistaken in 
regard to the tribes mentioned. They were not the Chicagoes and the 
Eries, but the Sciotans and Kentucks. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 77 

nothing of the kind, but being a manuscript upon an entirely 
different subject. This manuscript I left with £. D. Howe, of 
Painesville, Geauga county, Ohio, now Lake county, Ohio, with 
the understanding that when he had examined it he should 
return it to the widow. Said Howe says the manuscript was 
destroyed by fire, and further the deponent saith not. 

(Signed) D. P. Hurlburt. 

The manuscript, then, which Hurlburt obtained from 
Mrs. Davison, was not the "Manuscript Found," from 
which it is claimed the Book of Mormon was taken, but 
was "upon an entirely different subject.** The same dis- 
tinction between the manuscripts was also made by Clark 
Braden in the celebrated Braden-Kelley debate, held at 
Kirtland, Ohio, in 1884, a short time before the Hono- 
lulu manuscript came to light.* 

Reader, when the Mormon elder, who comes to your 
door with his literature, tells you that the "Manuscript 
Found,** from which it is claimed the Book of Mormon 
was taken, was discovered in Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, 
in 1884, and that they now have it in printed form for 
twenty-five cents per copy, don*t you believe it. The 
manuscript from Honolulu is not the "Manuscript 
Found," but the "Manuscript Story ;*' the former may be 
found, revamped, as the Book of Mormon, at the pub- 
lishing-houses of the Brighamite and Josephite Mormon 
Churches. 



^ See "Braden-Kelley Debate" (first ed.), p. 7S« 



78 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 



CHAPTER V. 

Mrs. Davison's Boston Recorder letter— The Quincy Whig Re- 
ply—Mrs. McKinstry's Affidavit 

Immediately after the death of Solomon Spaulding, 
his widow removed to the home of her brother, William 
H. Sabine, a prominent lawyer of Onondaga Valley, 
New York, carrying with her the trunk which contained 
the writings of her deceased husband. In 1820, she was 
married to a Mr. Davison, of Hartwick, near Coopers- 
town, New York, and removed to that place, taking the 
trunk and its contents with her. And eight years later 
we find her at Monson, Massachusetts, living with her 
daughter, Mrs. McKinstry, having left the trimk at Hart- 
wick in the care of her cousin, Jerome Clark. 

It has been the contention of some that Spaulding 
made several drafts of the "Manuscript Found," one of 
which was in the trimk while it remained at the house of 
Squire Sabine at Onondaga Valley, and that Joseph 
Smith, who worked as a teamster for Sabine, either stole 
or copied it. But I am convinced that this contention is 
not correct, for, if Smith worked for Sabine at this 
time, as alleged,* but which is doubtful, he was both 
too young and too illiterate to have taken much interest 
in such a romance, and the "single manuscript which 
this trunk contained is now known to have been, not 
the "Manuscript Found," but the "Manuscript Story," 
while the testimony of Joseph Miller, a friend of Spaul- 
ding at Amity, Pennsylvania, reveals the fact that the 
"Manuscript Foimd," itself, was stolen from the Patter- 

>*^cw Uffht on Monnonitm," p. 21. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 7» 

son printing-office before Spaulding's death, which oc- 
curred in 1816. The confusion upon this point largely 
arises from the letters of Mrs. Davison and her daughter, 
Mrs. McKinstry, who seem to have retained but a vague 
recollection of what Spaulding wrote and to have paid 
but little attention to his writings after his death. In 
the letters of both, while a number of statements are un- 
doubtedly correct, there is a distinct tendency to identify 
the '^single manuscript in the old hair trtmk with the 
"Manuscript Fotmd," which is disproved by that manu- 
script, itself, since its discovery in 1884. 

MRS. Davison's boston "recorder" letter. 

In 1838-39, the missionaries of the Mormon Church 
opened operations in the town of HoUiston, Massachu- 
setts. In that town there existed a G)ngregational church 
of which the Rev. John Storrs was the pastor. Some 
of the members of Dr. Storrs' church became prosel)rtes 
to the Mormon faith, and this caused him to bestir 
himself to action,* and, through Prof. D. R. Austin, 
principal of the Monson (Massachusetts) Academy, he 
obtained a statement from Mrs. Davison which he pub- 
lished in May, 1839, in the Boston Recorder. This state- 
ment of Mrs. Davison is as follows : 

As the Book of Mormon, or Golden Bible (as it was origi- 
nally called), has excited much attention, and is deemed by a 
certain new sect of equal authority with the Sacred Scriptures, 
I think it is a duty which I owe to the public to state what I 
know touching its origin. 

That its claims to a divine origin are wholly unfounded 



>P. P. Pratt sajrs: "If the public will be patient, they will doubtlest 
find that the piece signed 'Matilda Davison' (Spaulding's widow) is a base 
fabrication by Priest Storrs, of Holliston, Massachusetts, in order to save 
his craft, after losing the deacon of his church, and several of iu most 
pious and intelligent members, who left his society to embrace what they 
considered to be truth."— L#<#rr in New York Era, 1839* 



80 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

needs no proof to a mind unperverted by the grossest delusions. 
That any sane person should rank it higher than any other 
merely human composition is a matter of the greatest astonish- 
ment; yet it is received as divine by some who dwell in enlight- 
ened New England, and even by those who have sustained the 
character of devoted Christians. Learning recently that Mor- 
monism had found its way into a church in Massachusetts, and 
has impregnated some with its gross delusions, so that excom- 
munication has been necessary, I am determined to delay no 
longer in doing what I can to strip the mask from this mother 
of sin, and to lay open this pit of abominations. 

Solomon Spaulding, to whom I was united in marriage in 
early life, was a graduate of Dartmouth College, and was dis- 
tinguished for a lively imagination, and a great fondness for 
history. At the time of our marriage he resided in Cherry 
Valley, New York. From this place, we removed to New 
Salem, Ashtabula county, Ohio, sometimes called Conneaut as 
it is situated on Conneaut Creek. Shortly after our removal 
to this place, his health sunk, and he was laid aside from active 
labors. In the town of New Salem there are numerous mounds 
and forts supposed by many to be the dilapidated dwellings and 
fortifications of a race now extinct. These ancient relics arrest 
the attention of the new settlers, and become objects of research 
for the curious. Numerous implements were found, and other 
articles evincing great skill in the arts. Mr. Spaulding being an 
educated man, and passionately fond of history, took a lively 
interest in these developments of antiquity; and in order to 
beguile the hours of retirement and furnish employment for his 
lively imagination, he conceived the idea of giving an historical 
sketch of this long lost race. Their extreme antiquity led him 
to write in the most ancient style, and as the Old Testament is 
the most ancient book in the world, he imitated its style as 
nearly as possible. His sole object in writing this imaginary 
history was to amuse himself and his neighbors. This was about 
the year 1812. Hull's surrender at Detroit occurred near the 
same time, and I recollect the date well from that circumstance. 
As he progressed in his narrative, the neighbors would come in 
from time to time to hear portions read, and a g^reat interest 
in the work was excited among them. It claimed to have been 
written by one of the lost nation, and to have been recovered 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 81 

from the earth, and assumed the title of "Manuscript Found." 
The neighbors would often inquire how Mr. Spaulding pro- 
gressed in deciphering the manuscript; and when he had a suf- 
ficient portion prepared, he wtmld inform them, and they would 
assemble to hear it read. He was enabled, from his acquaintance 
with the classics and ancient history, to introduce many singular 
names, which were particularly noticed by the people, and could 
be easily recognized by them. Mr. Solomon Spaulding had a 
brother, Mr. John Spaulding, residing in the place at the time, 
who was perfectly familiar with the work, and repeatedly heard 
the whole of it read. From New Salem we removed to Pitts- 
burg, in Pennsylvania. Here Mr. Spaulding found a friend and 
acquaintance in the person of Mr. Patterson, an editor of a 
newspaper. He exhibited his manuscript to Mr. Patterson, who 
was very much pleased with it, and borrowed it for perusal. He 
retained it for a long time, and informed Mr. Spaulding that 
if he would make out a title page and preface, he would publish 
it and it might be a source of profit. This Mr. Spaulding re- 
fused to do. Sidney Rigdon, who has figured so largely in the 
history of the Mormons, was at that time connected with the 
printing office of Mr. Patterson, as is well known in that region, 
and as Rigdon himself has frequently stated, became acquainted 
with Mr. Spaulding's manuscript, and copied it. It was a matter 
of notoriety and interest to all connected with the printing 
establishment. At length the manuscript was returned to its 
author, and soon after we removed to Amity, Washington 
county, etc., where Mr. Spaulding deceased in 1816. The manu- 
script then fell into my hands, and was carefully preserved. 
It has frequently been examined by my daughter, Mrs. M'Kens- 
try, x)f Monson, Mass., with whom I now reside, and by other 
friends. 

After the Book of Mormon came out, a copy of it was 
taken to New Salem, the place of Mr. Spaulding's former resi- 
dence, and the very place where the "Manuscript Found" was 
written. A woman* preacher appointed a meeting there; and in 



^Mormons claim that they never had a "woman preacher," and use 
this as one of the arguments in their attempt to discredit Mrs. Davison's 
testimony. But it does not say that it was a Mormon "woman preacher." 
It may have heen a woman preacher of some other connection. The 
probahility, however, is that it is a typographical error for "Mormon 
preacher." Or it may have been some lady convert to Mormonism, who. 



W THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

the meeting read and repeated copious extracts from the Book 
of Moimon. The historical part was immediately recognized 
by all the older inhabitants, as the identical work of Mr. Spaul- 
ding, in which they had all been so deeply interested years before. 
Mr. John Spaulding was present and recognized perfectly the 
work of his brother. He v^as amazed and afflicted that it should 
have been perverted to so wicked a purpose. His grief found 
vent in a flood of tears, and he arose on the spot, and expressed 
to the meeting his sorrow and regret that the writings of his 
deceased brother should be used for a purpose so vile and 
shocking. The excitement in New Salem became so great, that 
the inhabitants had a meeting, and deputed Dr. Philastrus Hurl- 
burt, one of their number, to repair to this place and to obtain 
from me the original manuscript of Mr. Spaulding, for the 
purpose, of comparing it with the Mormon Bible, to satisfy their 
own minds, and to prevent their friends from embracing an 
error so delusive. This was in the year 1834. Dr. Hurlburt 
brought with him an introduction and request for the manu- 
script, which was signed by Messrs. Henry Lake, Aaron Wright, 
and others, with all of whom I was acquainted, as they were my 
neighbors when I resided at New Salem. I am sure that nothing 
would grieve my husband more, were he living, than the use 
which has been made of his work. The air of antiquity which 
was thrown about the composition, doubtless suggested the 
idea of converting it to the purposes of delusion. Thus an 
historical romance, with the addition of a few pious expressions, 
and extracts from the sacred Scriptures, has been construed into 
a new Bible, and palmed off upon a company of poor deluded 
fanatics as Divine. I have given the previous brief narration, 
that this work of deep deception and wickedness may be searched 
to the foundation and the authors exposed to the contempt and 
execration they so justly deserve. 

(Signed) Matilda Davison. 

This letter of Mrs. Davison, judging from the facts 
that we now possess, presents to us a strange conglom- 

while not a preacher officially, was practically such by reading copious 
extracts from the Book of Mormon. Mormon women are not forbidden 
taking part in their social services, and I have heard them do as much 
•s claimed here. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 8J 

eration of truth and error. This confusion is, doubtless, 
due to the failure of memory during the lapse of time 
between the death of her husband and the date of her 
writing. She is certain that one of her husband's ro- 
mances resembled the Book of Mormon and was written 
in imitation of the Old Testament style of speech. In 
this supposition she is doubtless correct. But she is also 
certain that this manuscript was copied by Rigdon while 
it lay in the Patterson printing-office, and that it was 
afterwards returned to her family and was by them care- 
fully preserved until it was delivered to Dr. Hurlburt. 
In this she is doubtless incorrect. Everything goes to 
show that the "Manuscript Found" was not finally re- 
turned to the Spaulding family, but that it was stolen, 
not copied, by Sidney Rigdon, who, with the assistance 
of Smith and Cowdery, transformed it into the Book of 
Mormon. Mrs. Davison has made a mistake in sup- 
posing* that the manuscript which she preserved so long 
was the "Manuscript Found," whereas it was an entirely 
different manuscript upon an entirely different subject. 

THE QUINCY "wHIG" REPLY. 

Some months after the purported letter of Mrs. Davi- 
son appeared in the Boston Recorder, the following inter- 
view was published, in reply, in the Whig of Quincy, 
Illinois : 



* At another time, Mrs. Davison was not so certain that the "Manu- 
script Found'* was returned to her family or that it was the trunk 
manuscript. Howe says: "She states that Spaulding had a great variety 
of manuscripts, and recollects that one was entitled the 'Manuscript 
Found;' but of its contents she has now no distinct knowledge. While 
they lived in Pittsburgh, she thinks it was once taken to the printing-office 
of Patterson & Lambdin; but whether it was ever brought back to the 
house again, she is quite uncertain; if it was, however, it was then, with 
his other writings, in a trunk which she had left in Otsego County, New 
York." — Quoted in "Mormonistn Exposed/* p. 120. 



«4 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 



A CUNNING DEVICE DETECTED. 

It will be recollected that a few months since an article ap- 
peared in several of the papers, purporting to give an account 
of the origin of the Book of Mormon. How far the writer of 
that piece has effected his purposes, or what his purposes were 
in pursuing the course he has, I shall not attempt to say at this 
time, but shall call upon every candid man to judge in this 
matter for himself, and shall content myself by presenting be- 
fore the public the other side of the question in the form of a 
letter, as follows: 

Copy of a letter written by Mr. John Haven, of Holliston, 
Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, to his daughter, Elizabeth Haven, 
of Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois. 

"Your brother Jesse passed through Monson, where he saw 
Mrs. Davison and her daughter, Mrs. McKinstry, and also Dr. 
Ely, and spent several hours with them, during which time he 
asked them the following questions, viz.: 

"Question — Did you, Mrs. Davison, write a letter to John 
Storrs, giving an account of the origin of the Book of Mormon? 

"Answer— I did not. 

"Q. — Did you sign your name to it? 

"A. — I did not, neither did I ever see the letter until I saw 
it in the Boston Recorder, the letter was never brought to me 
to sign. 

"Q. — What agency had you in having this letter sent to Mr. 
Storrs? 

"A. — D. R. Austin came to my house and asked me some 
questions, took some minutes on paper, and from these minutes 
wrote that letter. 

"Q. — Have you read the Book of Mormon? 

"A. — I have read some of it. 

"Q. — Does Mr. Spaulding's manuscript and the Book of Mor- 
mon agree? 

"A. — I think some few of the names are alike. 

"Q. — Does the manuscript describe an idolatrous or a re- 
ligious pepole? 

"A.— An idolatrous people. 

"Q. — ^Where is the manuscript? 

"A.— D. P. Hurlburt came here and took it, said he would 
get it printed and let me have one half of the profits. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 86 

•*Q. — ^Has D. P. Hurlburt got the manuscript printed? 

"A. — ^I received a letter stating that it did not read as he 
expected, and he should not print it 

"Q.— How large is Mr. Spaulding's manuscript? 

"A. — ^About one-third as large as the Book of Mormon. 

"Q. — ^To Mrs. McKinstry: How old were you when your 
* father wrote the manuscript? 

"A. — About five years of age. 

"Q. — Did you ever read the manuscript? 

"A.— When I was about twelve years old I used to read it 
for diversion. 

"Q. — Did the manuscript describe an idolatrous or a religious 
people? 

"A. — ^An idolatrous people. 

"Q. — ^Does the manuscript and the Book of Mormon agree? 

"A. — I think some of the names agree. 

•*Q. — ^Are you certain that some of the names agree? 

"A. — I am not. 

"Q. — ^Have you read any in the Book of Mormon? 

"A. — I have not 

''Q.— Was your name attached to that letter, which was sent 
to Mr. John Storrs, by your order? 

"A. — No, I never meant that my name should be there. 

"You see by the above questions and answers, that Mr. Austin, 
in his great zeal to destroy the Latter^ay Saints, has asked Mrs. 
Davison a few questions, then wrote a letter to Mr. Storrs in 
his own language. I do not isay that the above questions and 
answers were given in the form that I have written them, but 
these questions were asked, and these answers given. Mrs. 
Davison is about seventy years of age, and somewhat broken.'* 

This may certify that I am personally acquainted with Mr. 
Haven, his son and daughter, and am satisfied they are persons 
of truth. I have also read Mr. Haven's letter to his daughter, 
which has induced me to copy it for publication, and I further 
say, the above is a correct copy of Mr. Haven's letter. 

A. Badlam.* 

There are a few points in this "Gunning Device De- 



*I have copied thii letter from Reynolds' "Myth of the Manutcript 
Found," pp. 31, 22, 



86 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

tected" * to which it will be well to call the reader's at- 
tention : 

First, if the purported letter of Mrs. Davison, as 
published in the Boston Recorder, is not genuine, but is 
the production of Principal D. R. Austin, this may ac- 
count for the errors which it contains, and which have 
been circulated as truths by the Mormons themselves. 
By this letter, the Mormons have zealously sought to 
establish the identity of the "Manuscript Found" with 
the "single manuscript*' in the old hair trimk and which 
afterwards fell into the hands of Hurlburt. 

Secondly, the charge is made that the "Cunning De- 
vice Detected," as I have given it and as it appears in 
present-day Mormon literature, has been maliciously gar- 
bled and an important admission of Mrs. Davison left 
out. A. T. Schroeder, in his excellent little pamphlet, 
"The Origin of the Book of Mormon Re-examined in 
Its Relation to the Spaulding's Manuscript Found," page 
I3> says : 

On page 22 of the "Myth of the Manuscript Found" this in- 
terview appears with the statement that the Boston Recorder 
article was in the main true, carefully omitted. 

Thomas Gregg, also, claims that the admission of 
Mrs. Davison, that the Boston Recorder article "was in 
the main true," was to be found in the Mormon paper, 
the Times and Seasons, Vol. I., p. 47.* 

If this is true, why have the Mormons left this im- 
portant admission out of their later publications of the 
Haven letter?" 

Thirdly, Haven does just what Austin is accused of 



^I have tried to locate the files of the Quincy Whig, containing ihi« 
letter, but so far have been unsuccessful. 

•"Prophet of Palmyra," p. 421. 

*If this is true, it is not the first time that Mormonism has garbled 
testimony to further its ends. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 87 

having done. He declares that Mrs. Davison told his 
son, Jesse, that she did not write or sign the Boston 
Recorder letter, but that Professor Austin came to her 
home, asked some questions, took down some minutes 
and wrote the letter. And then Haven, himself, admits 
that the questions and answers in the "Cunning Device 
Detected" are not given in their original form. So, if 
there are just grounds for questioning the Boston Re- 
corder letter, there are equally as just grotmds for ques- 
tioning the Quincy Whig reply. If Mrs. Davison did not 
write and sign the former, she certainly did not write 
and sign the latter, and, by his own admission. Haven 
took as much liberty with what Mrs. Davison told his 
son, Jesse, as Austin took with what Mrs. Davison told 
him. And, in favor of the Boston Recorder letter, we 
have the admission published in the Mormon paper, the 
Times and Seasons, that it was "in the main true." 

Fourthly, this purported interview with Mrs. Davison 
and her daughter, Mrs. McKinstry, disagrees with the 
sworn statement of Mrs. McKinstry afterwards made. 
In her purported interview with Jesse Haven, we find the 
following questions and answers: 

Q. — Does the manuscript and the Book of Mormon agree? 
A. — I think some of the names agree. 
Q. — Are you certain that some of the names agree? 
A. — I am not 

In her sworn statement, on this point, which we shall 
presently give, Mrs. McKinstry says: 

Afterward he (Spaulding) read the manuscript which I had 
seen him writing, to the neighbors and to a clergyman, a friend 
of his, who came to see him. Some of the names that he men- 
tioned, while reading to these people, I have never forgotten. 
They are as fresh to me today as though I heard them jresterday. 
They were Mormon, Maroni, Lamenite, Nephi. 
(7) 



8S THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

In the Haven letter, Mrs. McKinstry is said to hsnt 
been uncertain in regard to the identity of certam names 
in her father's manuscript with those in the Book of 
Mormon; in her affidavit, made in 1880, she says that 
the four Book of Mormon names given were as fresh to 
her then as though she had heard them only the day 
before. It seems very probable that Haven, who was evi- 
dently either a Mormon or a Mormon. s)mipathizer, wrote 
down the answers of Mrs. McKinstry so as to make them 
appear as favorable as possible to the claims of the Book 
of Mormon — ^an art in which the Mormons are partic- 
ularly accomplished. 

MRS. li'KINSTRY'S AFFIDAVIT. 

Mrs. Matilda Spaulding McKinstry has left us the 
following sworn statement in regard to the manuscripts 
of her father : 

Washington, D. C, April 3rd, 1880. 

So much has been published that is erroneous concerning the 
"Manuscript Found," written by my father, the Rev. Solomon 
Spaulding, and its supposed connection with the book, called the 
Mormon Bible, I have willingly consented to make the following 
statement regarding it, repeating all that I remember personally 
of this manuscript, and all that is of importance which my 
mother related to me in connection with it, at the same time 
affirming that I am in tolerable health and vigor, and that my 
memory, in common with elderly people, is clearer in regard to 
the events of my earlier years, rather than those of my maturer 
Kfe. 

During the war of 1812, I was residing with my parents in a 
little town in Ohio called Conneaut. I was then in my sixth 
yeat. My father was in business there, and I remember his 
iron foundry and the men he had at work, but that he remained 
at home most of the time and was reading and writing a great 
deal. He frequently wrote little stories, which he read to me. 
There were some round mounds of earth near our house which 
greatly interested him, imd he said a tree on the top of one of 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 89 

them was a thousand years old. He set some of his men to 
work digging into one of these moimds, and I vividly remember 
how excited he became when he heard that they had exhumed 
some human bones, portions of gigantic skeletons, and various 
relics. He talked with my mother of these discoveries in the 
mound, and was writing every day as the work progressed. 
Afterward he read the manuscript which I had seen him writing, 
to the neighbors and to a clergyman, a friend of his, who came 
to see him. Some of the names that he mentioned while reading 
to Aese people I have never forgotten. They are as fresh to 
me today as though I heard them yesterday. They were Mor- 
mon, Maroni, Lamenite, Nephi. 

We removed from Conneaut to Pittsburg while I was still 
very young, but every circumstance of this removal is distinct 
in my memory. In that city my father had an intimate friend 
named Patterson, and I frequently visited Mr. Patterson's library 
with him, and heard my father talk about books with him. In 
1816 my father died at Amity, Pennsylvania, and directly after 
his death my mother and myself went to visit at the residence 
of my mother's brother, William H. Sabine, at Onondaga Val- 
ley, Onondaga County, New York. Mr. Sabine was a lawyer oi 
distinction and wealth, and greatly respected. We carried all 
our personal effects with us, and one of these was an old trunk, 
in which my mother had placed all my father's writings which 
had been preserved. I perfectly remember the appearance of 
this trunk, and of looking at its contents. There were sermons 
and other papers, and I saw a manuscript, about an inch thick, 
closely written, tied with some of the stories my father had 
written for me, one of which he called "The Frogs of Wynd- 
ham." On the outside of this wrapper were written the words, 
"Manuscript Found." I did not read it, but looked through it 
and had it in my hands many times, and saw the names I had 
heard at Conneaut, when my father read it to his friends. I 
was about eleven years of age at this time. 

After we had been at my uncle's for some time, my mother 
left me there and went to her father's house at Pomfret, Con- 
necticut, but did not take her furniture nor the old trunk of 
manuscripts with her. In 1820 she married Mr. Davison, of 
Hartwicks, a village near Cooperstown, New York, and sent for 
the things she had left at Onondaga Valley, and I remember that 



W THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

the old trunk, with its contents, reached her in safety. In 1828, 
I was married to Dr. A. McKinstry of Hampden County, Massa- 
chusetts, and went there to reside. Very soon after my mother 
joined me there, and was with me most of the time until her 
death in 1844. We heard, not long after she came to live with 
me — I do not remember just how long — something of Mor- 
monism, and the report that it had been taken from my father's 
"Manuscript Found;" and then came to us direct an account of 
the Mormon meeting at Conneaut, Ohio, and that, on one occa- 
sion, when the Mormon Bible was read there in public, my 
father's brother, John Spaulding, Mr. Lake and many other 
persons who were present, at once recognized its similarity to 
the "Manuscript Found," which they had heard read years be- 
fore by my father in the same town. There was a great deal 
of talk and a great deal published at this time about Mormonism 
all over the country. I believe it was in 1834 that a man named 
Hurlburt came to my house at Monson to see my mother, who 
told us that he had been sent by a com&nittee to procure the 
"Manuscript Found" written by the Rev. Solomon Spaulding, 
so as to compare it with the Mormon Bible. He presented a 
letter to my mother from my uncle, Wm. H. Sabine, of Onon- 
daga Valley, in which he requested her to loan this manuscript 
to Hurlburt, as he (my uncle) was desirous "to uproot (as he 
expressed it) this Mormon fraud." Hurlburt represented that 
he had been a convert to Mormonism, but had given it up, and 
through the "Manuscript Found," wished to expose its wicked- 
ness. My mother was careful to have me with her in all the 
conversations she had with Hurlburt, who spent a day at my 
house. She did not like his appearance and mistrusted his 
motives, but having great respect for her brother's wishes and 
opinions, she reluctantly consented to his request. The old 
trunk, containing the desired "Manuscript Found," she had 
placed in tho care of Mr. Jerome Qark of Hartwicks, when 
she came to Monson, intending to send for it. On the re- 
peated promise of Hurlburt to return the manuscript to us, she 
gave him a letter to Mr. Clark to open the trunk and deliver 
it to him. We afterwards heard tha': he had received it from 
Mr. Clark, at Hartwicks, but from that time we have never had 
it in our possession, and I have no present knowledge of its 
existence, Hurlburt never returning it or answering letters re- 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 91 

questing him to do so.- Two years ago, I heard he was still 
living in Ohio» and with my consent he was asked for the 
"Manuscript Found." He made no response although we have 
evidence that he received the letter containing the request. So 
far I have stated facts within my own knowledge. My mother 
mentioned many other circumstances to me in connection with 
this subject which are interesting, of my father's literary tastes, 
his fine education and peculiar temperament. She stated to me 
that she had heard the manuscript alluded to read by my father, 
was familiar with its contents, and she deeply regretted that her 
husband, as she believed, had innocently been the means of 
furnishing matter for a religious delusion. She said that my 
father loaned this "Manuscript Found" to Mr. Patterson, of 
Pittsburg, and that when he returned it to my father, he said: 
"Polish it up, finish it and you will make money out of it." 
My mother confirmed my remembrances of my father's fondness 
for history, and told me of his frequent conversations regarding 
a theory which he had of a prehistoric race which had inhabited 
this continent, etc., all showing that his mind dwelt on this 
subject. The "Manuscript Found," she said, was a romance 
written in Biblical style, and that while she heard it read, she 
had no special admiration for it more than other romances he 
wrote and read to her. We never, either of us, ever saw, or in 
any way communicated with the Mormons, save Hurlburt as 
above described ; and while we have no personal knowledge that 
the Mormon Bible was taken from the "Manuscript Found," 
there were many evidences to us that it was and that Hurlburt 
and the others at the time thought so. A convincing proof to 
us of this belief was that my uncle, William H. Sabine, had 
undoubtedly read the manuscript while it was in his house, and 
his faith that its production would show to the world that the 
Mormon Bible had been taken from it, or was the same with 
slight alterations. I have frequently answered questions which 
have been asked by different persons regarding the "Manuscript 
Found," but until now have never made a statement at length 
for publication. (Signed) M. S. McKinstry. 

Sworn and subscribed to before me this 3rd day of April, 
A. D. 1880, at the city of Washington, D. C. 

Charles Walter, Notary Public* 



> This affidavit was first published in Scribner^s Monthly for August, i88a 



92 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

We call the attention of the reader to the following 
points which are brought out in the foregoing affidavit: 

First, Mrs. McKinstry certifies that her mother told 
her that her father wrote a number of romances. 

Secondly, she states further that one of these ro- 
mances, called the "Manuscript Found," resembled the 
Book of Mormon in the use of such proper names as 
Mormon, Maroni, Lamenite and Nephi. This manu- 
script, then, could not have been the one that Hurlburt 
afterwards obtained from the old trunk, for that manu- 
script contains no such names as these. 

Thirdly, she declares that her mother informed her 
that the "Manuscript Found" was written in Biblical 
style ; another proof that it was not the manuscript now 
in the library of Oberlin College, which is not written in 
Biblical style. 

Fourthly, she states that the manuscript in the old 
trunk was examined by her when eleven years of age 
and that it had the words "Manuscript Found" written 
on the wrapper. In this we know that she was mis- 
taken, for no such title appears on the manuscript found 
in Honolulu. But the words, "Manuscript Story — Con- 
neaut Creek," do appear in "faint penciling." This is 
the title which Mrs. McKinstry undoubtedly saw when 
she was eleven years of age, and her mistake is probably 
due to the failure of memory during the great number of 
years that elapsed between the time when she last saw 
this manuscript and the date of her affidavit. This would 
seem to show that as early as 1817 the title, "Manu- 
script Story," in "faint penciling," was on the wrapper 
of the romance from Honolulu and that it was probably 
placed there by her father himself. 

Fifthly, Mrs. McKinstry thinks that the trunk manu- 
script was the same as the one recognized by the old 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 93 

citizens of Conneaut as the basis of the Book of Mormon. 
We shall see, presently, that in this she is mistaken. 

Although tile letters of both Mrs. Davison and Mrs. 
McKinstry contain a number of errors, these are easily 
detected by the facts that have been brought to light 
since 1884. So, culling these errors out, we have the in- 
vuhierable facts remaining that Solomon Spaulding wrote 
one manuscript in BibKcal style and employed names that 
afterwards appeared in the Book of Mormon. This was 
his celebrated "Manuscript Found'' 



94 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 



CHAPTER VI. 

The Manuscript Found— Its Identity with the Book of Mormon 
Established— The Testimony of John Spaulding, Martha 
Spaulding, Henry Lake, John N. Miller, Aaron Wright 
Oliver Smith, Nahum Howard and Artemas Cunningham. 

Having established the distinction between the manu- 
script discovered in Honolulu and the "Manuscript 
Foimd," I now pass to those evidences which go to iden- 
tify the latter with the basis of the Book of Mormon. 
These evidences consist of the testimonies of eleven of 
the relatives and acquaintances of Solomon Spaulding, 
who heard him read his celebrated "Manuscript Found." 
They are met by the Mormons either with silence, with 
evasion or with a blustering denial. 

The opinion of some of those, outside of Mormonism, 
who have made the matter the subject of special study, 
is that Solomon Spaulding made three copies, or drafts, 
of his "Manuscript Found," * as follows : 

1. The Nephite copy. This copy was written at Con- 
neaut, and is thought to have contained only the outline 
of Nephite history as given in the Book of Mormon. 

2. The Zarahemlaite copy. This copy is thought to 
have been begun at Gjnneaut and completed at Pitts- 
burgh. It is supposed to have contained all that was in 
the former copy, with the account added of the colony 
which came to America under Mulek at the time of the 
destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar. 

3. The Jaredite copy. This copy is supposed to have 
been written at Pittsburgh, and to have contained all that 



>See "Braden-Kelley Debate," i». 75. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 95 

was in the preceding copies, with the Jaredite portion of 
the Book of Mormon added. 

I must confess that this classification of the writings 
of Solomon Spaulding is ingenious, but it requires the 
following of altogether too slender lines of evidence to be 
very trustworthy. I shall, therefore, make no attempt to 
discriminate between the different copies, or drafts, of 
the "Manuscript Found," if such really existed, as some 
other authors have done, but to settle down to the easier 
task of showing that this manuscript, whether it orig- 
inally existed in one or in three drafts, was identical with 
the Book of Mormon in proper names and general his- 
torical outline.* 

In order to accomplish this, I shall put before the 
reader, in this chapter and in the following chapter, the 
testimonies of the eleven witnesses referred to, who 
either at G)nneaut or Amity heard the "Manuscript 
Found" read. The testimonies of the eight to be given 
in this chapter were first published in Howe's "Mormon- 
ism Unveiled" of 1834,* and constitute, says A. T. 
Schroeder, "the most important single collection of orig- 
inal evidence ever made upon the subject." * 

THE TESTIMONY OF JOHN SPAULDING. 

Solomon Spaulding was bom in Ashford, Conn., in 1761, 
and in early life contracted a taste for literary pursuits. After 
he left school, he entered Plainfield Academy, where he made 
great proficiency in study, and excelled most of his classmates. 

* Personally, I very much doubt if Spaulding ever wrote more than 
one copy of his "Manuscript Found," though this may have been written 
in three installments, first the Nephite i>art, then the Zarahemlaite, and 
lastly the Jaredite. But that he did write one manuscript at least, which 
gave a history of the first two peoples, is beyond question. 

' Not having Howe's book at hand, I have copied them from Bennett's 
"Mormonism Exposed,** pp. Ii5'i20. 

■"The Origin of the Book of Mormon, Re-examined in Its Relation to 
SjAulding's 'Manuscript Found,' " p. 40. 



96 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

He next commenced the study of law, in Windham county, in 
which he made little progress, having in the meantime turned 
his attention to religious subjects. He soon after entered Dart- 
mouth College, with the intention of qualifying himself for the 
ministry, where he obtained the degree of A.M., and was after- 
wards regularly ordained. After preaching three or four years, 
he gave it up, removed to Cherry Valley, N. Y., and commenced 
the mercantile business, in company with his brother Josiah. In 
a few years he failed in business, and in the year 1809 removed 
to Conneaut, in Ohio. The year following, I removed to Ohio, 
and found him engaged in building a forge. I made him a visit 
in about three years after, and found that he had failed, and 
was considerably involved in debt. He then told me he had 
been writing a book, which he intended to have printed, the 
avails of which he thought would enable him to pay all his debts. 
The book was entitled the "Manuscript Found," of which he 
read to me many passages. It was an historical romance of the 
first settlers of America, endeavoring to show that the Ameri- 
can Indians are the descendants of the Jews, or the lost tribes. 
It gave a detailed account of their journey from Jerusalem, by 
land and sea, till they arrived in America, under the command 
of Nephi and Lehi. They afterwards had quarrels and con- 
tentions, and separated into two distinct nations, one of which 
he denominated Nephites, and the other Lamanites. Cruel and 
bloody wars ensued, in which great multitudes were slain. They 
buried their dead in large heaps, which caused the mounds so 
common in this country. Their arts, sciences and civilization 
were brought into view in order to account for all the curious 
antiquities found in various parts of North and South America. 
I have recently read the Book of Mormon, and to my great 
surprise I find it nearly the same historical matter, names, 
&c., as they were in my brother's writings. I well remember 
that he wrote in the old style, and commenced about every 
sentence with "And it came to pass," or "Now it came to 
pass," the same as in the Book of Mormon, and according 
to the best of my recollection and belief, it is the same as 
my brother Solomon wrote, with the exception of the religious 
matter. By what means it has fallen into the hands of Joseph 
Smith, Jr., I am unable to determine. 

John Spaulding. 



THE BOOK OF HOEMOtf «f 

THE TESTIMONY OF MARTHA SPAULDING. 

I was personally acquainted with Solomon Spaulding, about 
twenty years ago. I was at his house a short time before he 
left Conneaut; he was then writing an historical novel founded 
upon the first settlers of America. He represented them as an 
enlightened and warlike people. He had for many years con- 
tended that the aborigines of America were the descendants of 
some of the lost tribes of Israel, and this idea he carried out 
in the book in question. The lapse of time which has inter- 
vened, prevents my recollecting but few of the leading incidents 
of his writings; but the names of Nephi and Lehi are yet fresh 
in my memory, as being the principal heroes of his tale. Th^ 
were officers of the company which first came off from Jeru- 
salem. He gave a particular account of their journey by land 
and sea, till they arrived in America, after which disputes arose 
between the chiefs, which caused them to separate into dif- 
ferent bands, one of which was called Lamanites, and the other 
Nephites. Between these were recounted tremendous battles, 
which frequently covered the ground with the slain; and their 
being buried in large heaps was the cause of the numerous 
mounds in the country. Some of these people he represented as 
being very large. I have read the Book of Mormon, which has 
brought fresh to my recollection the writings of Solomon Spaul- 
ding; and I have no manner of doubt that the historical part of 
it is the same that I read and heard read more than twenty 
years ago. The old, obsolete style, and the phrases of "and it 
came to pass," &c., arc the same. Martha SpAULDiMa 

THE TESTIMONY OF HENRY LAKE. 

CoNKEAxrr, Ashtabula Co., Ohio, Sept, 1833. 
I left the State of New York, late in the year 1810, and ar- 
rived at this place, about the first of January following. Soon 
after my arrival, I formed a copartnership with Solomqn Spaul- 
ding, for the purpose of rebuilding a forge which he had com- 
menced a year or two before. He very frequently read to me 
from a manuscript which he was writing, which he entitled the 
'Manuscript Found," and which he represented as being found 
in this town. I spent many hours in hearing him read said 
writings, and became well acquainted with its contents. He 



08 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

wished me to assist him in getting his production printed, al- 
leging that a book of that kind would meet with a rapid sale. I 
designed doing so, but the forge not meeting our anticipations, 
we failed in business, when I declined having anjrthing to do 
with the publication of the book. This book represented the 
American Indians as the descendants of the lost tribes, gave an 
account of their leaving Jerusalem, their contentions and wars, 
which were many and great One time, when he was reading to 
me the tragic account of Laban, I pointed out to him what I 
considered an inconsistency, which he promised to correct; but 
by referring to the Book of Mormon, I find, to my surprise, 
that it stands there just as he read it to me then. Some months 
ago, I borrowed the Golden Bible, put it into my pocket, carried 
it home, and thought no more of it. About a week after, my 
wife found the book in my coat pocket, as it hung up, and com- 
menced reading it aloud as I lay upon the bed. She had not 
read twenty minutes, till I was astonished to find the same 
passages in it that Spaulding had read to me more than twenty 
years before, from his "Manuscript Found." Since that, I have 
more fully examined the said Golden Bible, and have no 
hesitation in sa3ring that the historical part of it is principally, if 
not wholly, taken from the "Manuscript Found.' 1 well recol- 
lect telling Mr. Spaulding that the so frequent use of the words 
"And it came to pass," "Now it came to pass," rendered it 
ridiculous. Spaulding left here in 1812, and I furnished him the 
means to carry him to Pittsburgh, where he said he would get 
the book printed and pay me. But I never heard any more from 
him or his writings, till I saw them in the Book of Mormon. 

Henry Lake. 

THE TESTIMONY OF JOHN N. MILLER. 

Springfield, Pa., September, 1833. 
In the year 1811, I was in the employ of Henry Lake and 
Solomon Spaulding, at Conneaut, engaged in rebuilding a forge. 
While there, I boarded and lodged in the family of said Spaul- 
ding for several months. I was soon introduced to the manu- 
scripts of Spaulding, and perused them as often as I had leisure. 
He had written two or three books or pamphlets on different 
subjects; but that which more particularly drew my attention 
was one which he called the "Manuscript Found.** From this 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 9d 

he would frequently read some humorous passages to the com- 
pany present It purported to be the history of the first settle- 
ment of America, before discovered by Columbus. He brought 
them off from Jerusalem, under their leaders; detailing their 
travels by land and water, their manners, customs, laws, wars, 
&c. He said that he designed it as an historical novel, and that 
in after years it would be believed by many people as much as 
the history of England. He soon after failed in business, and 
told me he would retire from the din of his creditors, finish his 
book and have it published, which would enable him to pay his 
debts and support his family. He soon after removed to Pitts- 
burgh, as I understood 

I have recently examined the Book of Mormon, and find in 
it the writings of Solomon Spaulding, from beginning to end, 
but mixed up with Scripture and other religious matter, which 
I did not meet with in the "Manuscript Found." Many of the 
passages in the Mormon book are verbatim from Spaulding, and 
others in part. The names of Nephi, Lehi, Moroni, and !n fact 
all the principal names, are brought fresh to my recollection by 
the Golden Bible. When Spaulding divested I.I3 history of its 
fabulous names, by a verbal explanation, he landed Lis people 
near the Straits of Darien, which I am very confident Le called 
Zarahemla; they were marched about that country for a length 
of time, in which wars and great bloodshed ensued; he brought 
them across North America in a northeast direction. 

John N. Miller. 

THE TESTIMONY OF AARON WRIGHT. 

CONNEAUT, August, 1833. 

I first became acquainted with Solomon Spaulding in 1808 
or '9, when he commenced building a forge on Conneaut Creek. 
When at his house, one day, he shov/ed and read to me a history 
he was writing, of the lost tribes of Israel, purporting that they 
were the first settlers of America, and that the Indians were 
their descendants. Upon this subject we had frequent conver- 
sations. He traced their journey from Jerusalem io America, 
as it is given in the Book of Mormon, excepting the religious 
matter. The historical part of the Book of Mormon I know to 
be the same as I read and heard read from the writings of 
Spaulding, more than twenty years ago; the names, more espe- 



100 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

cially, are the same without any alteration. He told me his 
object was to accomit for all the fortifications, &c., to be fomid 
in this country, and said that in time it would be fully believed 
by all, except learned men and historians. I once anticipated 
reading his writings in print, but little expected to see them in 
a new Bible. Spaulding had many other manuscripts, which I 
expect to see when Smith translates his other plate. In con- 
clusion, I will observe, that the names of, and most of the his- 
torical part of the Book of Mormon, were as familiar to me 
before I read it, as most modern history. If it is not Spaulding's 
writing, it is the same as he wrote ; and if Smith was inspired, I 
think it was by the same spirit that Spaulding was, which he 
confessed to be the love of money. Aaron Wright. 

THE TESTIMONY OF OUVER SMITH. 

CONNEAUT, August, I833. 

When Solomon Spaulding first came to this place, he pur- 
chased a tract of land, surveyed it out, and commenced selling 
it. While engaged in this business,^ he boarded at my house, in 
all nearly six months. All his leisure hours were occupied in 
writing an historical novel, founded upon the first settlers of 
this country. He said he intended to trace their journey from 
Jerusalem, by land and sea, till their arrival in America; give 
an account of their arts, sciences, civilization, wars, and con- 
tentions. In thic way, he would give a satisfactory account of 
all of the old mounds so common to this country. During the 
time he was at my house, I read and heard read one htmdred 
pages or more. Nephi and Lehi were by him represented as 
leading characters, when they first started for America. Their 
main object was to escape the judgments which they supposed 
were coming upon the old world. But no religious matter was 
introduced as I now recollect. Just before he left this place, 
Spaulding sent for me to call on him, which I did. He then 
said that although he was in my debt, he intended to leave the 
country, and hoped I would not prevent him. For, says he, you 
know I have been writing the history of the first settlement 
of America, and I intend to go to Pittsburgh, and there live a 
retired life, till I have completed the work, and when it is 
printed, it will bring me a fine sum of money, which will enable 
me to return and pay oflF all my debts. The book, you know. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 101 

will sell, as every one is anxious to learn something upon that 
subject This was the last I heard of Spaulding or his book, 
until the Book of Mormon came into the neighborhood. When 
I heard the historical part of it related, I at once said it was 
the writings of old Solomon Spaulding. Soon after, I obtained 
the book, and on reading it, found much of it the same as 
Spaulding had written, more than twenty years before. 

Oliver Smith. 

THE TESTIMONY OF NAHUM HOWARD. 

CONNEAUT, August, 1833. 

I first became acquainted with Solomon Spaulding, in Decem- 
ber, 1810. After that time, I frequently saw him at his house, 
and also at my house. I once, in conversation with him, ex- 
pressed a surprise at not having any account of the inhabitants 
once in this country, who erected the old forts, mounds, &c. 
He then told me that he was writing a history of that race of 
people; and afterwards frequently showed me his writings, 
which I read. I have lately read the Book of Mormon, and be- 
lieve it to be the same as Spaulding wrote, except the religious 
part. He told me that he intended to get his writings published 
in Pittsburgh, and he thought that in one century from that time, 
it would be believed as much as any other history. 

Nahum Howard. 

THE TESTIMONY OF ARTEMAS CUNNINGHAM. 

In the month of October, 1811, I went from the township of 
Madison to Conneaut, for the purpose of securing a debt due 
me from Solomon Spaulding. I tarried with him nearly two 
days, for the purpose of accomplishing my object, which I was 
finally unable to do. I found him destitute of the means of 
paying his debts. "His only hope of ever paying his debts ap- 
peared to be upon the sale of a book which he had been writing. 
He endeavored to convince me from the nature and character 
of the work, that it would meet with a ready sale. Before show- 
ing me his manuscripts, he went into a verbal relation of its 
outlines, saying that it was a fabulous or romantic history of the 
first settlement of this country, and as it purported to have been 
a record found buried in the earth, or in a cave, he had adopted 
the ancient or Scripture style of writing. He then presented his 



102 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

manuscripts, when we sat down, and spent a good share of the 
night in reading them, and conversing upon them. I well re- 
member the name of Nephi, which appeared to be the principal 
hero of the story. The frequent repetition of the phrase, "I 
Nephi," I recollect as distinctly as though it was but yesterday, 
although the general features of the story have passed from my 
memory, through the lapse of twenty-two years. He attempted 
to account for the numerous antiquities which are found upon 
this continent, and remarked that, after this generation had 
passed away, his account of the first inhabitants of America 
would be considered as authentic as any other history. The 
Mormon Bible I have partially examined, and am fully of the 
opinion that Solomon Spaulding had written its outlines before 
he left Conneaut. 

This completes the original testimony on the "Manu- 
script Found" as given by E. D. Howe in 1834. By it 
the following points are established : 

First, Solomon Spaulding wrote several manuscripts 
which he was fond of exhibiting to his acquaintances. 

Secondly, one of these manuscripts, and the most im- 
portant of them, bore the title of the "Manuscript 
Found." 

Thirdly, this manuscript agreed with the Book of 
Mormon in its general historical outline and proper 
names, it containing such proper names as Lehi, Nephi, 
Nephites, Lamanites, Laban, Zarahemla and Moroni. 

Fourthly, it was also written in Scripture style, and 
began nearly every paragraph with "And it came to pass" 
and "Now it came to pass." It could not, therefore, 
have been identical with the manuscript found in Hono- 
lulu, which does not contain these introductory expres- 
sions. 

Fifthly, the "Manuscript Found" was devoid of the 
religious matter found in the Book of Mormon, hence 
this must have been added later, presumably by Rigdon. 
Are these coincidences purely accidental? 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 103 



CHAPTER VII. 

The Testimony of Other Witnesses — Joseph Miller — ^Ruddick 
McKee — Abner Jackson — The Mormon Admissions of Gen* 
uineness — ^The Disclosures of J. C. Bennett. 

Since 1834, other witnesses have borne testimony to 
the close resemblance of the "Manuscript Foimd" to the 
Book of Mormon, even as touching certain details. 

THE TESTIMONY OF JOSEPH MILLER. 

Joseph Miller was a resident of Amity, Pennsylvania, 
and a particular friend of Solomon Spaulding while he 
resided at that place. In a letter to Thomas Gregg,* he 
says: 

Ten Mile, Washington Co., Pa., Jan. 20, 1882. 
Dear Sir: — In answer to yours, I would state that I was 
familiar with Solomon Spaulding. I worked in Amity, where he 
lived, and as the fashion was at that day, we all assembled at 
his house in the evenings (as he kept tavern), and he frequently 
would read from his manuscript. The work was very odd. The 
words "Moreover," "And it came to pass," occurred so often 
that the boys about the village called him "Old Came to Pass." 
He told me he lived in Ohio when he wrote his manuscript. 
He said he lost his health, and he commenced writing a history 
of the mounds near where he lived, or of the people who built 
them. He afterwards removed to Pittsburgh, and kept a little 
store to support his family, and while there he took his manu- 
script to Mr. Patterson, then engaged in a publishing house. 
Mr. Patterson told him if he would write a title page he would 
publish it. He left the copy and moved to Amity. He after- 
wards went back to have his MS. published, but it could not be 
found. He said there was a man named Sidney Rigdon about 
the office, and they thought he had stolen it The passage you 

* "Prophet of Palmyra," pp. 441, 443. 
(8) 



104 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

refer to, on i>age 148, as Cooper has it, is in reference to being 
marked with red in their foreheads. 

"Nephites," I recollect distinctly, as occurring very often; 
as to "Lamanites" it is not so distinct,— and a great many other 
names that were very odd. 

The MS. that I saw, would not, I think, make as large a 
book as the Book of Mormon, 

Spaulding was a very poor man ; during his stay at Amity, I 
was very familiar with him, bailed him for money at least twice; 
and by request of Spaulding, assisted his wife some in settling 
up his litde business—made his coffin and helped lay him in 
his grave. Joseph Miller. 

In the Pittsburgh Telegraph of February 6, 1879, we 
find the following from the pen of Mr. Miller: 

Mr. Spaulding seemed to take great delight in reading from 
his manuscript written on foolscap. I heard him read most if 
not all of it; and had frequent conversations with him about tt 
Some time ago I heard most of the Book of Mormon read. On 
hearing read the account of the battle between the Amlicites 
and the Nephites (Book of Alma, chapter II.), in which the 
soldiers of one army placed a red mark on their foreheads, to 
distinguish them from their enemies, it seemed to reproduce in 
my mind hot only the narrative, but the very words, as they had 
been imprinted on my mind by reading Spaulding's manuscript^ 

THE TESTIMONY OF RUDDICK M*KEE. 

In the Washington (Pennsylvania) Reporter for 
April 21, 1879, Ruddick* McKee, of Washington, Dis- 
trict of Colimibia, said in regard to Spaulding and his 
romance : 

In the fall of 1814 I arrived in the village of "Good Wiir 
and for eighteen or twenty months sold goods in the store pre- 
viously occupied by Mr. Thos. Brice. It was on Main street, a 
few doors west of Spaulding's Tavern, where I was a boarder. 
With both Mr. Solomon Spaulding and his wife I was quite in- 

> "Brmden-Kelley Debate," p. 4a. 
•Sometimet tpdled Redkk. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 105 

timately acquainted. I recoHect quite well Mr Spaulding spend- 
ing much time in writing (on sheets of paper torn out of an old 
book) what purported to be a veritable history of the nations 
or tribes who inhabited Canaan. He called it "Lost History 
Found," "Lost Manuscript," or some such name, not disguising 
that it was wholly a work of the imagination, written to amuse 
himself and without any immediate view to publication. I was 
struck with the minuteness of his details and the apparent truth- 
fulness and sincerity of the author. I have an indistinct recol- 
lection of the passage referred to by Mr. Miller about the 
Amlicites making a cross with red paint on their, foreheads to 
distinguish them from enemies in the confusion of battle.^ 

THE TESTIMONY OF ABNER JACKSON. 

The evidence that I have already given is sufficient to 
establish the plagiarism, but I introduce one more testi- 
mony. The following statement of Rev. Abner Jackson, 
of Canton, Ohio, was communicated to the Washington 
Coimty (Pennsylvania) Historical Society, December 20, 
i88o*: 

It is a fact well established that the book called the Book of 
Mormon, had its origin from a romance that was written by 
Solomon Spaulding, in Conneaut, a small village in Ashtabula 
County, Ohio, about A. D. 1812. Spaulding was a highly edu- 
cated man about six feet high, of rather slender build, with a 
dark complexion, black eyes, black hair, rather slow of speech, 
never trifling, pleasant in conversation, but seldom laughing 
aloud. His deportment was grave and dignified in society, and 
he was much respected by those of his acquaintance. He was 
a clergyman of the Presb)rterian order, and for a time a settled 
pastor in the city of New York. So said his brother John 
Spaulding and others in the neighborhood, who heard him preach. 
It was said that failing health caused him to resign the pastorate. 
He then came to Richfield, Otsego County, New York, and 
started a store, near wher? my father lived, about the beginning 
of the present century. 

* Schroeder, p. 46. 

•"Prophet of Palmyra," pp. 444-450. 



106 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Spaulding contracted for large tracts of land along the 
shore of Lake Erie, on each side of the state line, in both Penn- 
sylvania and Ohio. My father exchanged with him, the farm 
on which he lived in Otsego County, New York, for land in 
Erie County, Pa., where the town of Albion now stands, and 
moved on it A. D. 1805. It was then a dense forest. Shortly 
after my father moved, Spaulding sold his store in Richfield, 
and moved to Conneaut, Ashtabula County, Ohio, and built a 
forge on Conneaut Creek, two miles from Conneaut Harbor, 
and two miles from the state line. In building this he failed, 
sold out, and about the beginning of the year 1812, com- 
menced to write his 'famous romance called by him the Manu- 
script Found, 

This romance, Mr. Spaulding brought with him on a visit to 
my father, a short time before he moved from Conneaut to Pitts- 
burgh. At that time I was confined to the house with a lame 
knee, and so I was in company with them and heard the conver- 
sation that passed between them. Spaulding read much of his 
manuscript to my father, and in conversation with him, ex- 
plained his views of the old fortifications in this country, and 
told his romance. A note in Morse's Geography suggested it as 
a possibility that our Indians were descendents of the lost tribes 
of Israel. Said Morse, they might have wandered through Asia 
up to Behring's Strait, and across the strait to this continent 
Besides there were habits and ceremonies among them that re- 
sembled some habits and ceremonies among the Israelites of 
that day. Then the old fortifications and earth mounds, con- 
taining so many kinds of relics and human bones, and some of 
them so large, altogether convinced him that they were a larger 
race and more enlightened and civilized than are found among 
the Indians among us at this day. These facts and reflections 
prompted him to write his Romance, purporting to be a history 
of the lost tribes of Israel. 

He begins with their departure from Palestine, or Judea, 
then up through Asia,* points out their exposures, hardships and 
sufferings, also their disputes and quarrels, especially when they 
built their craft for passing over the straits. Then after their 



* If Spaulding's "Manuscript Found" gave this migrational direction, 
the account was afterwards changed, because the Book of Mormon hat 
them come across the Pacific Ocean to South America. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 107 

landing, he gave an account of their divisions and subdivisions 
tinder different leaders, but two parties controlled the balance. 
One of them was called the righteous, worshipers and servants 
of God. These, organized with prophets, priests and teachers, 
for the education of their children, and settled down to culti- 
vate the soil, and to a life of civilization. The others were idol- 
aters. They contended for a life of idleness; in short, a wild, 
wicked, savage life. 

They soon quarreled, and then commenced war anew, and 
continued to fight, except at very short intervals. Sometimes 
one party was successful and sometimes the other, until finally 
a terrible battle was fought, which was conclusive. All the 
righteous were slain, except one, and he was Chief Prophet and 
Recorder. He was notified of the defeat in time by Divine 
authority; told where, when and how to conceal the record, and 
He would take care that it should be preserved, and brought to 
light again at the proper time, for the benefit of mankind*. So 
the Recorder professed to do, and then submitted to his fate. I 
do not remember what that fate was. He was left alone of 
his party. I do not remember that anything more was said of 
him. 

Spaulding's romance professed to find the record where the 
Recorder concealed it, in one of those mounds, one of which 
was but a few rods from Spaulding's residence. Soon after this 
visit, Spaulding moved to Pittsburgh, and took his manuscript 
to the Pittsburgh Gazette office, intending to iiave it printed, but 
in this he failed. My brother, J. J. Jackson, was a recruiting 
officer in the U. S. Army, and stationed at Pittsburgh at that 
time. Being well acquainted with Spaulding and his lady, he 
soon found them, and in his letters home would inform us how 
they were getting along. The last account he gave us of them 
was that he was selling pictures and she was sewing up clothing 
for the soldiers. The next we heard of them was by report. 
Spaulding moved to Amity, Washington County, Pa., and soon 
after died and was buried there. His wife and daughter went 
to her brother. Lawyer Sabine, Onondaga Valley, Onondaga Co., 
N. Y. When I was returning from Clarksburg, W. Va., to my 
home in New Brighton, Beaver Co., Pa., A. D. 1840, I passed 
through Amity, hunted the grave of Spaulding and copied from 
the headstone the following inscription: 



108 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

"IN MEMORY OF 
Solomon Spaulding, who departed this life Oct 20th, A. D., 1816. 
Aged 55 years. 

"Kind cherubs guard the sleeping clay, 

Until the great decision day, 

And saints complete in glory rise, 

To share the triumph of the skies." 
Spaulding frequently read his manuscript to the neighbors 
and amused them as he progressed with his work. He wrote it 
in Bible style. "And it came to pass" occurred so often that 
some called him "Old Come to Pass," 

So much for Spaulding's romance; now for the Book of 
Mormon. 

The first account of the Book of Mormon that 1 saw, was a 
notice in my father's newspaper, stating that Joseph Smith, Jr., 
professed having dreamed that an angel liad appeared to him 
and told him to go and search in a place he named in Palmyra, 
N. Y., and he would find a gold-leaf Bible. Smith was incred- 
ulous and did not go until the second or third time he dreamed 
the same dream. Then he said he went, and, to his surprise, he 
found the golden Bible, according to his dreams. But it was 
written in a language so ancient that none could be found able 
either to read it or tell in what language it v.*r.3 written. Some 
time after, another statement appeared that an angel had con- 
sented to read and interpret it to Joseph Smith, and he should 
report it to a third person, who should write it in plain English, 
so that all might read the new Bible and understand its import 
Some time after, in 1830, the book was published at Palmyra, 
N. Y., called a New Revelation; the Book of Mormon, This 
purports to be a history of the lost tribes of the Children of Is- 
rael. It begins with them just where the romance did, and it 
follows the romance very closely. It is true there are some 
verbal alterations and additions, enlarging the production some- 
what, without changinrr its main features. The Book of Mormon 
follows the romance too closely to be a stranger. In both many 
persons appear having the same name; as, Maroni, Mormon, 
Nephites, Moroni, Lama, Lamanite, Nephe and others. 

Here then we are presented with romance second, called the 
Book of Mormon, telling the same story of the same people, 
traveling from the same plain, in the same way, having the same 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 109 

difficulties and destination, with the same wars, same battles and 
same results, with thousands upon thousands slain. Then see 
the Mormon account of the last battle at Cumorah, where all 
the righteous were slain. They were called the Nephites, the 
others were called Lamanites (see Moroni's accoimt of the 
closing scene), "and now it came to pass that a great battle was 
fought at Cumorah. The Lamanites slew all the Nephites (ex- 
cept Moroni), and he said, I will write and hide up the Record 
in the earth, and whither I go, it mattereth not"— Book of 
Mormon, page 344, third American edition.^ How much this 
resembles the closing scene in the Manuscript Found. The most 
singular part of the whole matter is, that it follows the romance 
so closely, with this difference : the first claims to be a romance ; 
the second claims to be a revelation of God, a new Bible ! When 
it was brought to Conneaut and read there in public, old Esq. 
Wright heard it, and exclaimed, "Old Come to Pass has come 
to life again." Here was the place where Spaulding wrote and 
read his manuscript to the neighbors for their amusement and 
'Squire Wright had often heard him read his romance. This 
was in 1832, sixteen years after Spaulding'c death. This 'Squire 
Wright lived on z farm just outside of the little village. I was 
acquainted with him for twenty-five years. I lived on his farm 
when I was a boy and attended school in the village. I am par- 
ticular to notice these things to show that I had an opportunity 
of knowing what I am writing about. 

After I commenced writing this article, I heard that an 
article in Scribner^s Monthly, for August, 1880, on the Book of 
Mormon, contained a note and affidavit of Mrs. Matilda S. Mc- 
Kinstry, Solomon Spaulding's only child, stating that she re- 
membered her father's romance. I sent at once for the Monthly, 
and on the 613, 614, 615 and 616 pages, found the article and 
her testimony. Her statement from the commencement, until 
they moved to Pittsburgh, in all essential particulars I know to 
be true. She relates those acts as they occurred to my own 
personal knowledge, though she was then a littie girl. She is 
now about seventy-five years of age. 

I stated before that I knew nothing of Spaulding after he 
moved to Pittsburgh, except by letters and newspapers. He 
soon moved to Amity, Washington County, Pa., and shortly 

*Thit it not an exact <iuotation. 



110 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

after this he died and his wife went to her brother's. His 
daughter's account of the deceitful method by which Hurlburt 
gained possession of and retained Spaulding's manuscript, is, I 
think, important and should not be lost sight of. She was no 
child then. I think she has done her part well in the vindi- 
cation of the truth by her unvarnished statement of what she 
remembered of her father's romance. I have not seen her since 
she was a little girl, but I have seen both of these productions, 
heard Spaulding read much of his romance to my father and 
explain his views and reasons for writing it. I also have seen 
and read the Book of Mormon, and it follows Spaulding's 
romance too closely to Le anything else than a borrowed pro- 
duction from the romance. I think that Mrs. McKinstry*s state- 
ment fills a gap in my account from Spauldincj's removal to Pitts- 
burgh, to the death of his wife in 1844. I wish, if my statement 
is published that hers also be published with it, that the truth 
may be vindicated by the truth beyond any reasonable doubt. 

(Signed) Abner Jackson. 
Canton, Ohio, Dec. 20, 1880. 

THE MORMON ADMISSIONS OF GENUINENESS. 

While the Mormons deny the truthfulness of the 
testimony in this and the preceding chapter, they con- 
cede its genuineness.^ As proof of this, I submit the 
following extract from the pen of Elder Brigham H. 
Roberts, of the Utah Mormon Church, taken from the 
"Young Men's Mutual Improvement Associations Man- 
ual" for 1905-1906, pages 465 and 466: 

In the fall of 1833, a number of affidavits were taken from 
the former neighbors and friends of Solomon Spaulding, and 
one was given by his brother, John Spaulding, and one by the 
tatter's wife, Martha Spaulding. They at the time were residing 
in Crawford, Pennsylvania, and both testified that they had 
"recently read the Book of Mormon," and recognized in it the 
general outlines of Solomon Spaulding's story, claimed especially 

>By the genuineness of these testimonies, I mean that they were 
actually made and subscribed to by the parties to whom they are ac- 
credited. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 111 

to remember the names "Nephi and Lehi;" the words "Nephites 
and Lamanites;" as also the ancient scriptural style and the 
frequent use of the phrase "and it came to pass;" and that the 
American Indians are descendents of the Jews, or "lost tribes 
of Israel." 

Mr. Henry Lake, an associate in business with Mr. Spaulding, 
living at Conneaut in the fall of 1833, in connection with others 
that will be named, living in the same neighborhood, testified 
that Solomon Spaulding read to him from the "Manuscript 
Found;" that it represented the American Indians as the de- 
scendants of the "lost tribes" of Israel, and that he suggested 
to Mr. Spaulding that the frequent use of the phrase "and it 
came to pass" rendered the book ridiculous. 

John N. Miller testified substantially to the same things say- 
ing in addition that Spaulding's story landed his colony near the 
"Straits of Darien," which he was confident he called "Zara- 
hemla." 

Aaron Wright testified substantially to the same things as 
the foregoing. That the American Indians, according to Spaul- 
ding's story, were descendants of the "lost tribes" of Israel, and 
claims especially that the historical part of the Book of Mormon 
is substantially what he heard read from the "Manuscript Found" 
though he excepts out of the work, a9 not being Spaulding's, the 
religious matter. 

Oliver Smith testified substantially to the same things, say- 
ing in effect that on reading the Book of Mormon he at once 
recognized it as the writings of Solomon Spaulding. 

Nahum Howard testified that he had recently read the Book 
of Mormon and believed that all but the religious part of it was 
the same as that written by Spaulding. 

Artemas Cunningham, living in Perry, Geauga county, Ohio, 
testified that in 181 1 he waited upon Solomon Spaulding at his 
home in New Salem, to collect debts, and that the latter read 
to him on that occasion some parts of his manuscript story, 
after partially examining the Book of Mormon he became con- 
vinced that Spaulding had written its outlines before he left 
Conneaut. 

It is upon the testimony of these parties that the Spaulding 
theory rests. Subsequently many others claimed to have informa- 
tion upon the subject, and gave affidavits and statements to news- 
papers almost ad infinitum, constantly varying the claims and 



112 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

adding items that so burdened the theory with inconsistencies 
and contradictions that it breaks down, as we shall see, under 
the accumulation. 

As further proof of the genuineness of the testimony 
already given, I submit the following admission from the 
pen of Joseph Smith, president of the Reorganized 
Church, as foimd in his pamphlet, "The Spaulding Story 
Re-examined," page 6: 

The witnesses, with scarcely an exception, are of that class 
that gives secondary or hearsay evidence/ John Spaulding tells 
what his brother told him. Martha Spaulding states, that having 
read the Book of Mormon, she has no doubt it is the same 
historically that she read and heard read more than twenty years 
ago. Nahum Howard states only what he says Spaulding told 
hinL Artemas Cunningham recollects an expression, "I Nephi," 
as occurring in the reading of a manuscript by Spaulding— but 
pleads the lapse of twenty-two years as accounting for a failure 
to remember more fully the general plot. After a partial ex- 
amination, he believes that Spaulding wrote the outlines before 
leaving Conneaut. 

Having established by the admissions of these gentle- 
men that the testimonies given were really borne by the 
individuals to whom they are ascribed, I now pass to 
prove that the latter were persons of excellent reputa- 
tion for honesty and veracity. Of the eight whose testi- 
monies are given in the preceding chapter, E. D. Howe 
says : 

We might therefore introduce a great number of witnesses, 
all testifying to the same general facts; but we have not taken 
the trouble to procure, the statements of but few, all of whom 
are the most respectable men, and highly esteemed for their 
moral worth, and their characters for truth and veracity are un- 
impeachable. In fact, the word of any one of them would have 
more weight in any respectable community, than the whole 

'CompAre this assertion carefully with the statements of these parties 
and see how wide of the truth it is. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 113 

family of Smiths and Whitmers, who have told about hearing 
the voice of an angel. 

As throwing light upon the reputation of two of our 
witnesses, Aaron Wright and Henry Lake, I also oflFer 
the following affidavit of Mr. J. H. Britton, of Paines- 
ville, Ohio: 

TfiE State of Ohio, 1 

Lake County. j ^^• 

Before me, a notary public in and for said county, per- 
sonally appeared J. H. Britton, who, being duly sworn, on his 
oath says: 

That he is now a resident of Painesville in said county, and 
is now of the age of seventy-two years; was bom in the town 
of Van Buren, Onondaga Co., N. Y., and he further says: I 
was living in my father's home in the township of Richmond, 
Ashtabula Co., O., from about 1836 until about 1848, and during 
that time I became and was acquainted with Aaron Wright and 
Henry Lake, two of the persons who have furnished statements 
as to the origin of the Book of Mormon; which statements are 
published in E. D. Howe*s "History of Mormonism" or "Mor- 
monism Unveiled," published at Painesville, O., in 1834; that I 
knew said Wright and Lake well, that they were men of good 
reputation for truth and veracity, and were in every way well 
esteemed and respected in the community where they lived. Mr. 
Wright then lived in the village of Conneaut, in said county, and 
was one of the pioneers of the vicinity, and a large owner of 
real-estate, and owned a flouring-mill which was reported to be 
the first mill of its kind built in that vicinity. Mr. Lake also 
lived near Mr. Wright, and was also one of the first settlers 
of the vicinity. And further affiant sayeth not 

J. H. Britton. 

Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 22d 
day of June, 1905. G. N. Tuttle, 

(Seal) Notary public in and for said county. 

In this chapter and the preceding, we have established 
three things: 

First, that Spaulding's "Manuscript Found'* resem- 
bled the Book of Mormon in general historical outline 



114 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

and in such proper names as Lehi, Nephi, Laman, 
Nephites, Lamanites, Amiicites and Zarahemla. 

Secondly, that the testimonies of the eleven indi- 
viduals, who have certified to these facts, are genuine. 

Thirdly, that the character of these individuals was 
considered the best and their reputation for honesty and 
veracity was unimpeachable. 

THE DISCLOSURES OF JOHN C. BENNETT. 

Dr. John C. Bennett, Quartermaster General of the 
state of Illinois, became a convert to Mormonism in the 
summer of 1840 and soon after removed to the city of 
Nauvoo. Here he rapidly grew in favor with the prophet 
Joseph Smith and the Mormon people until he was ele- 
vated to the position of "assistant president" ' of the 
Church during the illness of Sidney Rigdon. The in- 
timacy between Smith and Bennett continued until the 
summer of 1842, when they quarreled and Bennett 
left Nauvoo. Later, he published an expose of the 
conditions in that city through the columns of the San- 
gamo Journal, of Springfield, Illinois, and his book, 
"Mormonism Exposed." On the origin of the Book of 
Mormon, he says : 

I will remark here, in confirmation of the above, that the 
Book of Mormon was originally written by the Rev. Solomon 
Spaulding, A.M., as a romance, and entitled the "Manuscript 
Found," and placed by him in the printing-office of Patterson 
and Lambdin, in the city of Pittsburg, from whence it was 
taken by a conspicuous Mormon divine, and re-modeled, by 
adding the religious portion, placed by him in Smith's possession, 
and then published to the world as the testimony exemplifies. 
This I have from the Confederation, and of its perfect cor- 
rectness there is not the shadow of a doubt. There never were 
any plates of the Book of Mormon, excepting what were seen 

> See Timgs and Stasons, Vol. II., p. 387. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 115 

by the spiritual, and not the natural, eyes of the witnesses. The 
story of the plates is all chimerical.' 

The Mormons answer this and other disclosures of 
Bennett by saying that he had been cut off from the 
church, that he was therefore sore at the Prophet, and 
that his testimony is all a lie. But they can not deny that 
before his apostasy he was held in the very highest 
esteem,' or that he enjoyed the confidence of the other 
Mormon leaders as few men did. Therefore, as his story 
agrees perfectly with what others have testified to, I be- 
lieve that it must be accepted as true. The "conspicuous 
Mormon divine" was none other than Sidney Rigdon, 
who was a warm friend of Bennett and who was on the 
verge of leaving the Mormons at this time himself. 



* "Mormonism Exposed," pp. 123, 124. Bennett says further: "Shortly 
after I located in Nauvoo, Joe promised to me to go to New York and 
get some plates engraved, and bring them to him, so that he could exhibit 
them as the genuine plates of the Book of Mormon, which he pretended 
had been taken from him and 'hid up* by an angel, and which he would 
profess to have recovered. He calculated upon making considerable money 
by this trick, as there would of course be a great anxiety to see the plates, 
which he intended to exhibit at twenty-five cents a sight. I mentioned 
this proposition to Mrs. Sarah M. Pratt, on the day the Prophet made it, 
and requested her to keep it in memory, as it might be of much im^ 
portancc" (p. 175). Mrs. Pratt afterwards confirmed Bennett's state- 
ment. Dr. Wyl, "Mormon Portraits," p. 21, says: "When asked by me 
in the spring of 1885 about this statement of John C. Bennett, Mrs. Pratt 
confirmed it fully and stated also that Bennett had reported to her this 
conversation with Joseph on the very day when it happened." Was there 
ever a bigger grafter than Joseph Smith? 

"Here is one of the many good things said about Bennett by the 
Mormon press before his apostasy: "We would say, that if untiring dili- 
gence to aid the afflicted and the oppressed, zeal for the promotion of 
literature and intelligence, and a virtuous and consistent conduct, are evi- 
dences of popularity, &c., we venture to say that no man deserves the 
appellations of 'popular and deserving* more than Gen. J. C. BennetL"— 
Times and Seasons, a: 351. 



116 THE TRUE .ORIGIN OP 



CHAPTER VIII. 

Rigdon's Connection with the Spaulding Romance — His Rda* 
tions with J. Harrison Lambdin — Suspected of Stealing the 
Manuscript — Exhibits the Manuscript — ^Foretells the Coming 
Out of the Book of Mormon. 

Sidney Rigdon was bom at Piney Fork, Allegheny 
County, Pennsylvania, February 19, 1793. The place of 
his birth is variously estimated at from six to twelve 
miles from Pittsburgh/ He lived on the farm with his 
parents up to the time of his father's death in 1810, and 
after that until his twenty-sixth year, or till 1819. He 
united with the Baptist Church at Piney Fork, May 31, 
1817, and was licensed to preach in March, 1819. In the 
month of May following, he removed to Trumbtdl 
County, Ohio. The following year he was ordained a 
Baptist minister and was married to Phoebe Brooks, a 
sister of the wife of Adamson Bentley, who at that time 
was a minister in the Baptist Church, but who was 
afterwards prominently connected with the movement of 
the Campbells. In November, 1821, Rigdon received a 
call from the Baptist Church of Pittsburgh, and began 
his pastoral duties in February, 1822. On October 11, 
1823, he was excluded for heresy, and, subsequently, with 
the assistance of Alexander Campbell and Walter Scott, 
organized a Disciple church of which he became the 
pastor. He continued to preach for the Disciples up to 
the time that he became a Mormon in November,* 1830. 

> Schroeder, p. 15. 

*Some accounts say in December. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 117 

RIGDON'S relations with J. HARRISON LAMBDIN. 

In the year 1812, Spaulding removed from Conneaut, 
Ohio, to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in order to have his 
"Manuscript Found" published. At this time, Robert 
. Patterson was in the printing business in that city in the 
firm of Patterson & Hopkins, which continued until Jan- 
uary, 1818/ During the years 1812-16, in which the re- 
lations of Spaulding with Patterson existed, J. Harrison 
Lambdin was an employe at the printing-office. It has 
been claimed that Rigdon was also employed by Patter- 
son at this time, but this claim lacks proof. However, 
the facts are established that he was a particular friend 
of Lambdin and that he spent considerable of his time 
lounging around the office. As establishing this point, 
I submit the testimony of Mrs. R. J. Eichbaimi, given 
September 18, 1879: 

My father, John Johnson, was postmaster at Pittsburg for 
about eighteen years, from 1804 to 1822. My husband, William 
Eichbaum, succeeded him, and was postmaster for about eleven 
years, from 1822 to 1833. I was born August 25, 1792, and when 
I became old enough, I assisted my father in attending to the 
postoffice, and became familiar with his duties. From 181 1 to 
1816, I was the regular clerk in the office, assorting, making up, 
dispatching, opening and distributing the mails. Pittsburg was 
then a small town, and I was well acquainted with all the stated 
visitors at the office who called regularly for their mails. So 
meager at that time w^ere the mails that I could generally tell 
without looking whether or not there was anything for such 
persons, though I would usually look in order to satisfy them. 
I was married in 1815, and the next year my connection with 
the office ceased, except during the absences of my husband. I 
knew and distinctly remember Robert and Joseph Patterson, J. 
Harrison Lambdin, Silas Engles and Sidney Rigdon. I re- 
member Rev. Mr. Spaulding, but simply as one who occasionally 
called to inquire for letters. I remember there was an evident 

* Schroeder, p. 19. 



118 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

intimacy between Lambdin and Rigdon. I'hey very often came 
to the office together. I particularly remember that they would 
thus come during the hour on Sabbath afternoon when the office 
was required to be open, and I remember feeling sure that Rev. 
Mr. Patterson knew nothing of this, or he would have put a 
stop to it. I do not know what position, if any, Rigdon filled 
in Patterson's store or printing office, but am well assured he 
was frequently, if not constantly, there for a large part of the 
time when I was clerk in the postoffice. I recall Mr. Engles say- 
ing that "Rigdon was always hanging around the printing office." 
He was connected with the tannery before he became a preacher, 
though he may have continued the business whilst preaching.^ 

The testimony of Mrs. Eichbaum nullifies the claim 
of certain Mormon writers that "Sidney Rigdon never 
was at Pittsburgh, or any other place, at the same time 
as Mr. Spaulding's manuscript was there, and therefore 
he could not have seen or read it." * While he may not 
have lived * at Pittsburgh until he assumed the pastorate 
of the Baptist Church of that city, it is very improbable, 
even if we lay aside the foregoing statement, that he was 
never there before that event, as his parents' farm was 
only between six and twelve miles distant and as he con- 
tinued to reside with his mother until the year 1819. 
Spaulding's Romance was stolen from Patterson's estab- 
lishment in 1815 or 1816, at which time Rigdon was 
twenty-three or twenty-four years of age. To contend, 
therefore, that a young man that old, in good health and 
mental vigor, would live but a few miles distant from 
the leading city and chief trading-point of that part of 
the country and never visit it, is so absurd that it is not 



* Schroeder, p. 21. 

'"Myth of the Manuscript Found," p. 23. 

■The testimonies that Mormons present (see "Myth, etc.," p. 2$) to 
prove that Rigdon could not have stolen the manuscript simply prove that 
he did not live in Pittsburgh before 1822, and this we concede. But he 
did live only a few miles from there until 1819. This Mormons have to 
concede. 




SIDNEY RIGDON. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 119 

worth consideration. The fact is, that while Rigdon 
lived at Piney Fork, he was frequently in Pittsburgh, 
and while there lounged around the printing-office, so he 
had ample opportunity to steal the manuscript as has been 
charged. 

RIGDON SUSPECTED OF THE THEFT. 

Rigdon not only had the opportunity to steal the man- 
uscript, but he was also suspected of being the. thief by 
Spaulding himself. On this point, Joseph Miller, whose 
testimony upon another occasion we have given, says : 

My recollection is that Spaulding left a transcript of the 
manuscript with Patterson for publication. The publication was 
delayed until Spaulding could write* a preface. In the meantime 
the manuscript was spirited away, and could not be found. 
Spaulding told me that Sidney Rigdon had taken it, or was sus- 
pected of taking it. I recollect distinctly that Rigdon's name 
was mentioned in connection with it* 

This same gentleman, in a letter to Mrs. Ellen E. 
Dickinson and dated at Ten Mile, Pennsylvania, Feb- 
ruary 13, 1882, says again : 

Patterson said he, Patterson, would publish it, if he, Spauld- 
ing, would write a title page. He told me he kept a little store 
in Pittsburg. He then moved to Amity» leaving a copy of the 
manuscript in Patterson's hands. After being at Amity some 
time, he went back to Pittsburg, took his title page; he called 
it the lost manuscript found. When he went to Pittsburg, the 
manuscript could not be found. He said there was, or had been, 
a man by the name of Sidney Rigdon (who) had stole it.^ 

The physician who attended Spaulding during his last 
illness was Dr. Cephas Dodd. With him Spaulding was 
very confidential, and confided to him his suspicions of 
the theft. After the death of Spaulding, Dr. Dodd pur- 

* "Braden-Kelley Debate," p. 44. 

* "New Light on Mormonism," p. 240. 

(0) 



120 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

chased a copy of the Book of Mormon, and, after reading^ 
it, inscribed the following on one of the fly-leaves, June 
6, 1831 : 

This work, I am convinced by facts related to me by my de- 
ceased patient, Solomon Spaulding, has been made from writings 
of Spaulding, probably by Sidney Rigdon, who was suspicioned 
by Spaulding with purloining his manuscript from the publishing- 
house to which he had taken it; and I am prepared to testify 
that Spaulding told me that his work was entitled, 'The Manu- 
script Found in the Wilds of Mormon; or Unearthed Records 
of the Nephites." From his description of its contents, I fully 
believe that this Book of Mormon is mainly and wickedly copied 
from it. Cephas Dodd. 

June 6, 1831. 

RIGDON EXHIBITS THE MANUSCRIPT. 

The next step in the history of this manuscript is its 
exhibition by Rigdon. While he was pastor of the Bap- 
tist Church of Pittsburgh, Rev. John Winter, M.D., was 
a member of his church and a schoolteacher of that city. 
Dr. Winter testifies as foltows : 

In 1822 or 3, Rigdon took out of his desk in his study a 
large MS. stating that it was a Bible romance purporting to be 
a history of the American Indians. That it was written by one, 
Spaulding, a Presbyterian preacher whose health had failed and 
who had taken it to the printers to see if it would pay to publish 
it. And that he (Rigdon) had borrowed it from the printer as a 
curiosity.* 

Dr. Winter died at Sharon, Pennsylvania, in the year 
1878, but his testimony is vouched for by Rev. J. A. 
Bonsall, his son-in-law. Rev. A. G. Kirk and Mrs. Mary 
W. Irvine, Dr. Winter's daughter. 

Under date of December 7, 1879, Mrs. Amos Dunlap, 
a niece of Mrs. Rigdon, wrote as follows from Warren, 
Ohio: 



> "Bradcn-KcUcy Debate," p. 4s. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 121 

When I was quite a child I visited Mr. Rigdon's family. He 
married my amit. They at that time lived at Bainbridge, Ohio, 
(1826-27). During my visit, Mr. Rigdon went to his bedroom 
and took from a trunk which he kept locked, a certain manu- 
script He came out into the other room and seated himself by. 
the fireplace and commenced reading it. His wife at that moment 
came into the room and exclaimed: "What, you are studying 
that thing again?'' or something to that effect. She then added: 
"I mean to bum that paper." He said: "No, indeed, you will 
not; this will be a great thing some day." Whenever he was 
reading this, he was so completely occupied that he seemed en- 
tirely unconscious of anything passing around him.* 

Since Rigdon, and no one else, has ever claimed that 
he himself wrote such a manuscript, we are warranted, 
in the light of the other evidences adduced, in believing 
that this was none other than the romance of Solomon 
Spaulding which he had exhibited to Dr. Winter three 
or four years before. 

RIGDON FORETELLS THE COMING OUT OF THE BOOK OF 
MORMON. 

Rigdon did not stop with the exhibition of this man- 
uscript; he foretold the coming out of a book describing 
the ancient inhabitants of America, at least three years 
before the Book of Mormon appeared. In the Millennial 
Harbinger for 1844, page 39, there appeared the follow- 
ing letter from Adamson Bentley, Rigdon's brother-in- 
law: 

Solon, January 22, 1841. 
Dear Brother Scott: — ^Your favor of the 7th December is 
received. I returned from Philadelphia, Pa., on the loth, and the 
answer to your acceptable letter has been deferred. I was nmch 
gratified to hear from you and family, but would be much more 
so to see you once more in the flesh, and talk over our toils and 
anxieties in the cause of our blessed Redeemer. 



^ Schroeder, p. 44. 



122 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

You request that I should give you all the information I 
am in possession of respecting Mormonism. I know that Sidney 
Rigdon told me there was a book coming out (the manuscript 
of which had been found engraved on gold plates) as much as 
two years before the Mormon book made its appearance in this 
country or had been heard of by me. The same I communicated 
to brother A. Campbell. The Mormon book has nothing of 
baptism for the remission of sins in it;^ and of course at the 
time Rigdon got Solomon Spaulding's manuscript he did not 
understand the scriptures on that subject I cannot say he 
learnt it from me, as he had been about a week with you in 
Nelson and Windham, before he came to my house. I, however, 
returned v/ith him to Mentor. He stated to me that he did not 
feel himself capable of introducing the subject in Mentor, and 
would not return without me if he had to stay two weeks with 
us to induce me to go. This is about all I can say. I have no 
doubt but the account given in Mormonism Unmasked is about 
the truth. It was got up to deceive the people and obtain their 
property, and was a wicked contrivance with Sidney Rigdon and 
Joseph Smith, Jr. May God have mercy on the wicked men, 
and may they repent of this their wickedness! 

May the Lord bless you, brother Scott, and family! 

Yours most affectionately, Adamson Bentley. 

In the same paper, Alexander Campbell, editor, cor- 
roborated the foregoing statement and commented upon 
Bennett's letter in the following note : 

The conversation alluded to in Brother Bentle3r*s letter of 
1841, was in my presence as well as his, and my recollection of 
it led me, some two or three years ago, to interrogate Brother 
Bentley touching his recollection of it, which accorded with 
mine in every particular, except the year in which it occurred, 
he placing it in the summer of 1827, I in the summer of 1826, 
Rigdon at the same time observing that in the plates dug up in 
New York, there was an account, not only of the aborigines of 
this country, but also it was stated that the Christian religion 
had been preached in this country during the first century, just 
as we were preaching it in the Western Reserve. 



*In this Bentley was mistaken, and CampbeU corrected his mistake ia 
the same issue. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 128 

Adamson Bentley and Alexander Campbell were pio- 
neer preachers in the great Restoration movement, and 
their testimonies will not fail to carry weight. They 
establish beyond a doubt that Rigdon knew of the opera- 
tions of Smith years before his pretended conversion to 
Mormonism. 

As further confirmatory of the same contention, we 
have the testimony of Darwin Atwater, of Mantua 
Station, Ohio, communicated to A. S. Hayden April 26, 
1873, in the form of a letter which is published in the 
latter's book, "History of the Disciples in the Western 
Reserve," pages 239, 240. Mr. Atwater says: 

Soon after this, the great Mormon defection came on us 
(Disciples of Christ). Sidney Rigdon preached for us, and not- 
withstanding his extravagantly wild freaks, he was held in high 
repute by many. For a few months before his professed con- 
version to Mormonism, it was noticed that his wild, extravagant 
propensities had been more marked. That he knew before of the 
coming of the Book of Mormon is to me certain, from what he 
said the first of his visits at my father's, some years before. He 
gave a wonderful description of the mounds and other antiquities 
found in some parts of America, and said that they must have 
been made by the Aborigines. He said there was a book to be 
published containing an account of those things. He spoke of 
these in his eloquent, enthusiastic style, as being a thing most 
extraordinary. 

Still another witness, to whom Rigdon expressed his 
expectations, was Dr. S. Rosa. This gentleman wrote 
from Painesville, Ohio, under date of June 3, 1841, as 

follows : 

In the early part of the year 1830, when the Book of Mor- 
mon appeared, either in May or June, I was in company with 
Sidney Rigdon, and rode with him on horseback a few miles. 
Our conversation was principally upon the subject of religion, 
as he was at that time a very popular preacher of the denom- 
ination calling themselves "Disciples," or Campbellites. He re- 



124 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

marked to me that it was time for a new religion to spring up; 
that mankind were all rife and ready for it. I thought he al- 
luded to the Campbellite doctrine. He said it would not be long 
before something would make its appearance; he also said that 
he thought of leaving Pennsylvania, and should be absent for 
some months. I asked him how long. He said it would depend 
upon circumstances. I began to think a little strange of his re- 
marks, as he was a minister of the gospel. I left Ohio that fall 
and went to the state of New York to visit my friends who lived 
in Waterloo, not far from the mine of golden Bibles. In No- 
vember 1 was informed that my old neighbor, E. Partridge, and 
the Rev. Sidney Rigdon were in Waterloo, and that they both 
had become the dupes of Joe Smith's necromancies. It then 
occurred to me that Rigdon's new religion had made its ap- 
pearance, and when I became informed of the Spaulding manu- 
script, I was confirmed in the opinion that Rigdon was at least 
accessory, if not the principal, in getting up this farce.' 

Dr. Rosa supplies a number of links for the chain 
that connects Sidney Rigdon with the Mormon fraud. 
In the first place, the foregoing conversation occurred, 
according to Rosa, in May or June of 1830, which was 
about six months before Rigdon openly united with the 
Mormons. In the second place, Rigdon told him that a 
new religion was about to make its appearance, which 
shows that he had some anticipations along that line, 
hence that he must have kept informed of the movements 
of Smith. And, in the third, Rigdon declared that he 
thought of leaving Pennsylvania and of being gone some 
months, probably to confer with Smith in regard to the 
launching of the new ecclesiastical craft. 

The evidence which I have presented in this chapter 
seems to establish conclusively that Sidney Rigdon was 
an intimate friend of J. Harrison Lambdin, an employe 
in the Patterson printing-office, and that he, living not 
more than twelve miles distant from Pittsburgh, was 

^Schroeder, p. <$. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 125 

frequently in that city and lounged around the office; 
that at this time the "Manuscript Found" of Spaulding, 
which had been placed in Patterson's hands for publica- 
tion, came up missing and that Rigdon was suspected of 
the theft ; that Rigdon, after Spaulding's death, exhibited 
such a manuscript, which, upon one occasion, he de- 
clared had been written by Spaulding, and that at least 
three years before the Book of Mormon came out and 
the Mormon Church was organized, he made disclosures 
to certain individuals which go to show that at this time 
he was perfectly familiar with the movements and plans 
of Joseph Smith/ 

» The "Doctrine and CovenanU" (34: a) throws out a hint of Rigdon'f 
former connection with Mormonism in these words: *'Behold, verily, verily 
I say unto my servant Sidney, I have looked upon thee and thy works. I 
have heard thy prayers and prepared thee for a greater work. Thou art 
blessed, for thou shalt do great things. Behold, thou wast sent forth even 
as John, to prepare the way before me, and before Elijah which should 
come, and thou knew it not." Nearly all Gentiles will agree with the 
Mormons that Sidney prepared the way before the Mormon delusion, but 
when it comes to the sutement that he knew it not* it is quite another 
thing. 



12(5 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 



CHAPTER IX. 

Rigdon's Connection with Smith — The Pretended Conversion of 
Rigdon— Rigdon's Previous Visits to Smith— The Mormon 
Alibi — Katherine Salisbury's Affidavit. 

It is the conviction of nearly all of the opponents of 
Mormonism, who have paid particular attention to the 
history of its origin, that the Church of Jesus Christ of 
Latter-day Saints was not an emanation from the mind 
of Joseph Smith, but that it was first conceived of by 
Sidney Rigdon,* and that Smith was merely his tool in 
gfiving the movement publicity while he played his part 
behind the scenes until his pretended conversion in the 
year 1830. And it is a further conviction that Rigdon 
and his puppet, Smith, were not the only members of 
the conspiracy, but that associated with them were Hyrum 
Smith, Oliver Cowdery, Parley P. Pratt, Martin Harris 
and probably others, who came in to play their particular 
roles and to receive in return the honors and pecuniary 
benefits of the Mormon kingdom.* 

The part that Rigdon played in the genesis of Mor- 
monism was most secret, but the evidences of it, though 
meager, are conclusive. It is certain that he made a 



* Strange as it may seem upon any other hypothesis, the very doctrines 
that Rigdon preached before 1830 became a most vital part of the Mormon 
system after that date. 

* Personally, I am satisfied that the "Gold Bible Company" was com- 
posed of a larger number of individuals than the ordinary reader has ever 
dreamed of, and that each had his part to play in springing the system 
upon the world. Rigdon was the theologian, Smith the prophet, Cowdery the 
scribe, Harris the financier. Parley P. Pratt the dreamer and Orson Pratt 
the logician. The underlying motives were two: first, to make money out 
of the fraud, and, secondly, to gratify lust. These motives come to the 
surface, here and there, all the way through th& history of Mormonism. 




PARLEY PARKER PRATT. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 127 

number of clandestine visits to Palmyra before 1830, and 
was known in that vicinity as the "mysterious stranger," 
while it is also believed that he communicated with Smitli 
through their confederates, Oliver Q)wdery and Parley 
P. Pratt. Cowdery first appeared publicly upon the 
Mormon stage in the year 1829, although we have every 
reason to believe that he was secretly playing an im- 
portant part before; but Pratt withheld his debut until 
August, 1830, when he was suddenly and miraculously 
converted while on a visit to New York and began at 
once his work as a missionary. From this time on, he 
was a prominent actor in the Mormon drama until he 
fell a victim of his own lust at the hands of an enraged 
husband, Hector McLean, in 1857, whose wife he had 
seduced and whose home he had broken up.* 

THE PRETENDED CONVERSION OF RIGDON. 

In October, 1830, a revelation was received directing 
Parley P. Pratt, Oliver Cowdery, Peter Whitmer, Jr., and 
Ziba Peterson to leave New York and go on a mission 
among the Indians.* As soon as this revelation was re- 
ceived, the "sisters" of the church set themselves to the 
task of providing the requisite clothing, and, about the 
15th of the month, the four men designated "started on 
their mission, preaching and baptizing on their way, 
wherever an opportunity offered.* 

* Mrs. McLean, who lived in Arkansas, had been converted to Mor- 
monism by Pratt, and, later, had left her husband and children and gone 
to Salt Lake City, where she became his polygamous wife. After this, 
she and Pratt returned axd attempted to abduct the children, but failed. 
The enraged father threatened Pratt's life, and the latter fled on horse- 
back. When McLean heard of his flight, he gave chase, and, overtaking 
him, killed him with his bowie-knife, twelve miles north of Van Buren, 
Arkansas. 

•"Doctrine and Covenants," Sec. 31. 

'"Joseph Smith and His Progenitors," p. sos* 



128 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Sidney Rigdon, at this time, lived at Mentor, two 
miles from Kirtland, Ohio, and had given up preaching 
and gone to farming, declaring that "he had been mis- 
taken all his lifetime." * He was evidently cleaning and 
garnishing his house for its early reception of Mor- 
monism. 

Sometime in November, the Mormon missionaries 
reached Mentor, and Pratt, being acquainted with Rig- 
don, called upon him and presented him with a copy of 
the Book of Mormon. Pratt says : 

Wc called on Elder S. Rigdon, and then for the first time 
his eyes beheld the Book of Mormon, I, myself, had the happi- 
ness to present it to him in person. He was much surprised, and 
it was with much persuasion and argument * that he was prevailed 
on to read it, and after he had read it, he had a great struggle 
of mind, before he fully believed and embraced it; and when 
finally convinced of its truth, he called together a large congre- 
gation of his friends, neighbors and brethren, and then ad- 
dressed tiiem very affectionately for nearly two hours during 
most of which time, both himself and nearly all the congregation 
were melted into tears. He asked forgiveness of everybody who 
might have had occasion to be offended with any part of his 
former life; he forgave all who had persecuted or injured him 
in any manner, and the next morning himself and wife were 
baptized by Elder O. Cowdery. I was present, it was a solemn 
scene, most of the people were great affected, they came out of 
the water overwhelmed in tears * 

The date of Rigdon's baptism, according to the 
^'Diary" of Lyman Wight, who was baptized at the same 
time, was November 14, 1830. This is said to have been 

> Testimony of Reuben P. Harmon in the "Braden-Kelley Debate." 
'Pratt did not always tell the same story in regard to the manner ia 
which Rigdon received the Book of Mormon. At another time, he said: 
"He was much interested, and promised a thorough perusal of the book." 
— Journal of History , January, 1910, p. 15. The two diverse accounts by 
the same person are probably inadvertencies due to neither being the tniClu 
•"Myth of the Manuscript Found," p. 33. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 119 

about a fortnight* after the Book of Mormon was first 
presented to him. But Howe declares that Rigdon was 
baptized the second day after Pratt's arrival,* while H. 
H. Clapp, a resident of Rigdon's vicinity, more specif- 
ically puts the baptism within thirty-six hours.* In any 
of these cases, Rigdon's conversion was altogether too 
sudden and romantic for a truly candid, careful and con- 
scientious investigator, especially when we consider the 
startling claims of Mormonism, and we are strongly im- 
pressed that it was only part of a prearranged plan and 
that his pretended emotions were invented for the oc- 
casion to swing his neighbors to that imposture which 
he had, covertly, been one of the means of foisting upon 
the world. 

rigdon's previous visits to smith. 

In the month of December following his conversion, 
Sidney Rigdon went to Waterloo, New York, accom- 
panied by Edward Partridge, for the purpose of meeting 
Joseph Smith, and immediately took up the work of 
openly promulgating the Mormon faith. In the latter 
part of January, Joseph and his family left New York 
and started for Kirtland, the home of Rigdon, where they 
arrived about the first of February.* 

Mormons declare that prior to this visit of Rigdon to 
the Smiths in New York, he had no acquaintance with 
them and never visited them, and, hence, that he could 
not have been in collusion with Joseph in springing Mor- 
monism upon the world. As an answer to this claim, I 
now submit the testimonies of a number of the neighbors 

» "Church History ." Vol. I., p. 141. 

* "Mormonism Unveiled," p. 104. 

*H. H. Oapp, in a letter to James T. Cobb, of Utah. 

* "Church History," Vol. I., p. 169. 



130 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

of the Smiths in New York, who declare that Rigdon 
did know of Joseph and that he personally visited him 
before the year 1830. 

Mrs. Horace Eaton, wife of Dr. Horace Eaton, who, 
for thirty-two years, had been a resident of Palmyra and 
who had heard of the doings of the Smith family from 
the lips of their acquaintances, says, in a paper read be- 
fore the Union Home Missionary Meeting held at Buf-, 
falo. New York, May 27, 188 1 : 

Early in the summer of 1827, a "mysterious stranger" seeks 
admittance to Joe Smith's cabitK The conferences of the two 
are most private. This person, whose coming immediately pre- 
ceded a new departure in the faith, was Sidney Rigdon, a back- 
sliding clergyman, at this time a Campbellite preacher in Mentor, 
Ohio.* 

Pomeroy Tucker, a neighbor of the Smiths and one 
of the proof-readers of the Book of Mormon, says : 

A mysterious stranger now appears at Smith's and holds 
intercourse with the famed money-digger. For a considerable 
time no intimation of the name or purpose of this stranger 
transpired to the public, not even to Smith's nearest neighbors. 
It was observed by some that his visits were frequently repeated. 
The sequel of the intimacies of this stranger and the money- 
digger will sufficiently appear hereafter. There was great con- 
sternation when the 118 pages of manuscript were stolen from 
Harris, for it seems to have been impossible, for some unac- 
countable reason, to retranslate the stolen portion. The reap- 
pearance of this mysterious stranger at Smith's at this juncture 
was again the subject of inquiry and conjecture by observers, 
from whom was withheld all explanations of his identity and 
purpose. When the Book of Mormon appeared, Rigdon was an 
early convert. Up to this time, he had played his part in the 
background; and his occasional visits to Smith's had been ob- 
served by the inhabitants as those of the mysterious stranger. 
It had been his policy to remain in concealment until all things 
were in readiness for blowing the trumpet of the new gospel. 

* "Hand-book on Mormonism," p. 3. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 131 

He now came to the front as the first regular preacher in 
Palmyra.* 

On May 2, 1879, Abel D. Chase, another neighbor 
of the Smiths, signed the following statement, relative to 
the visits of Sidney Rigdon to Pahnyra before 1830: 

Palmyra, Wayne Co., N. Y., May 2, 1879. 

I, Abel D. Chase, now living in Palmyra, Wajme Co., N. Y., 
make the following statement regarding my early acquaintance 
with Joseph Smith and incidents about the production of the 
so-called Mormon Bible. I was well acquainted with the Smith 
family, frequently visiting the Smith boys and they me. I was 
a youth at the time from twelve to thirteen years old, having 
been born Jan. 19, 1814, at Palmyra, N. Y. During some of my 
visits at the Smiths, I saw a stranger there who they said was 
Mr. Rigdon. He was at Smith's several times, and it was in the 
year of 1827 when I first saw him there, as near as I can recol- 
lect. Some time after that tales were circulated that young Joe 
had found or dug from the earth a book of plates which the 
Smiths called the Golden Bible. I don't think Sm-th had any 
such plates. He was mysterious in his actions. The pecpstone, 
in which he was accustomed to look, he got of my elder brother 
Willard while at work for us digging a well. It was a singular- 
looking stone and young Joe pretended he could discover hidden 
things in it. 

My brother Willard Chase died at Palmyra, N. Y., March 
10, 1871. His affidavit, published in Howe's "History of Mor- 
monism," is genuine. Peter Ingersoll, whose afiidavit was pub- 
lished in the same book, is also dead. He moved West years 
ago and died about two years ago. Ingersoll had the reputation 
of being a man of his word, and I have no doubt his sworn state- 
ment regarding the Smiths and the Mormon Bible is genuine. 
I was also well acquainted with Thomas P. Baldwin, a lawyer 
and Notary Public, and Frederick Smith, a lawyer and magis- 
trate, before whom Chase's and Ingersoll's depositions were 
made, and who were residents of this village at the time and for 
several years after. Abel D. Chase. 

Abel D. Chase signed the above statement in our presence, 



* "Bradcn-Kelley Debate," p. 46. 



183 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

and he is known to us and the entire community here as a mai^ 
whose word is always the exact truth and above any pobsible 
suspicion. Pliny T. Sexton. 

J. H. Gilbert.^ 

I now have the pleasure of presenting to the reader 
two letters touching upon this point that have never 
been published before. The first of these was written 
by Mr. Thomas Gregg, of Hamilton, Illinois, the author 
of "The Prophet of Pahnyra;" the second is the reply 
to the same, written by Mr. Lorenzo Saunders, of Read^ 
ing, Hillsdale County, Michigan, who was an intimate 
acquaintance of the Smiths. Mr. Gregg died before he 
had the opportunity of publishing Mr, Saunders' letter^ 
and later the correspondence was turned over to Mr. IL 
B. Neal, of Grayson, Kentucky, secretary of the Ameri-. 
can Anti-Mormon Association, who has kindly loaned 
these documents to me to publish in this book. The 
letters have been carefully copied from their originals 
and appear just as they were formerly written, except 
that in that of Satmders a ntmiber of errors in spelling,, 
capitalization and punctuation have been corrected. 
Satmders was an aged man, and this, coupled with his. 
poor educational advantages as a boy, accounts for the« 
errors which appear. I regard his letter as one of the 
most important documents which we have bearing onr 
the present question. 

The letter of Mr. Gregg is as follows : 

Hamilton, Hancock G>., 111., January 19, 1885. 
Mr. Lokenzo Saunders, 

Dear Sir: — Permit me, a stranger, to "interview" you by 
letter. Mr. J. H, Gilbert, of Palmyra, N, Y., introduces us. He 
names you among the very few left, who know something about: 



"Monnon Portnuts/' p. 230. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 18S 

the origin of Mormonism, and the life and career of Joe Smith, 
the pretended Prophet. I am engaged on a work — ^mainly a 
History of the Mormon Era in Illinois— but with which I wish 
to incorporate the Rise and Progress of the miserable fraud in 
and about Palmyra. A main point I wish to investigate is as 
to how the Spaulding Manuscript got into Smith's hands previous 
to 1829 when the B. of M. was first printed. Some think Cow- 
dery was the medium — some that it was Rigdon. Of course, it is 
hard to remember after a period of 50 or 60 years, little occur- 
rences unimportant at the time; but I am induced to apply to 
you, as a neighbor of the Smiths, hoping you may be able to 
recall events that may help me out. What can you recall of 
Cowdery^s career? His first appearance among you— what he 
was doing— where he came from— and what seemed to have 
brought him into closer relationship with Smith? Also, of 
Rigdon — Gilbert says it is thought you saw him once at Smith's. 
Can you be sure of that? and whether it was before the B. of M. 
was printed? Did you know the 12 signers, certifying to the 
Divine origin of the B. of M. — the Whitmers — Harris — ^Hiram 
Page — and all the Smiths — and were they ignorant or sensible — 
learned or unlearned— and did they, or any of them, seem to 
adhere to Smith while he was digging for treasure, &c.? 

You see I can chalk out a great variety of subjects or points 
on which I want information ; but I might cut it short by asking, 
in general, for such information as you can give that will en- 
lighten the public on the Origin of Mormonism — and more 
especially its connection with the Rev. Spaulding's book. Of 
course you are an aged man — I know what it is to be an old 
man, myself; but these cold winter days, we can do little else 
than sit in the house and read and write — and perhaps you will 
be able to find time to reply to this, and thus oblige very much, 
Your friend and obt. Ser., Tb. GuEca 

P. S. — More questions : Did you ever sec, or try to see, the 
pretended plates, or how Smith acted in regard to them? Or 
did you ever see the hole in the ground, on Cumorah Hill, in 
which the plates were found— or was there ever such a hole? 
Please answer on, and return this sheet, and if not enough of 
paper, add to it — I will pay postage. 

In reply to Mr. Gregg's letter, Mr. Saunders wrote 
from Reading, Michigan, as follows: 



134 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Reading, January 28, 1885. 
Mister Gregg, 

Dear Sir. I received your note ready at hand and will try 
(to) answer the best I can and give all the information I can as 
respecting Mormonism and the first origin. As respecting Oliver 
Cowdery, he came from Kirtland in the summer of 1826 and 
was about there until fall and took a school in the district where 
the Smiths lived and the next summer he was missing and I 
didn't see him until fall and he came back and took our school 
in the district where we lived and taught about a week and went 
to the schoolboard and wanted the board to let him off and 
they did and he went to Smith and went to writing the Book 
of Mormon and wrote all winter. The Mormons say it want 
wrote there but I say it was because I was there. I saw Sidney 
Rigdon in the Spring of 1827, about the middle of March. I 
went to Smiths to eat maple sugar, and I saw five or six men 
standing in a group and there was one among them better 
dressed than the rest and I asked Harrison Smith who he was 
(and) he said his name was Sidney Rigdon, a friend of Joseph's 
from Pennsylvania. I saw him in the Fall of 1827 on the road 
between where I lived and Palmyra, with Joseph. I was with a 
man by the name of Jugegsah (spelling doubtful, C. A. S.). 
They talked together and when he went on I asked Jugegsah 
(spelling doubtful, C. A. S.) who he was and he said it was 
Rigdon. Then in the summer of 1828 I saw him at Samuel 
Lawrence's just before harvest. I was cutting* corn for Law- 
rence and went to dinner and he took dinner with us and when 
dinner was over they went into another room and I didn't see 
him again till he came to Palmjrra to preach. You want to 
know how Smith acted about it The next morning after he 
claimed to have got (the) plates he came to our house and said 
he had got the plates and what a struggle he had in getting 
home with them. Two men tackled him and he fought and 
knocked them both down and made his escape and secured the 
plates and had them safe and secure. He showed his thumb 
where he bruised it in fighting those men. After (he) went 
from the hou^e, my mother says, "What a liar Joseph Smith is ; 
he lies every word he says; I know he lies because he looks so 

* He probably means plowing corn, as this was too early in the season 
for the other. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 186 

guilty; he can't see out of his eyes; how dare (he) tell such 
a lie as that." The time he claimed to have taken the plates 
from the hill was on the 22 day of September, in 1827, and I 
went on the next Sunday following with five or six other ones 
and we hunted the side hill by course and could not find no place 
where the ground had been broke. There was a large hole 
where the money diggers had dug a year or two before, but no 
fresh dirt. There never was such a hole; there never was any 
plates taken out of that hill nor any other hill in that county, 
was in Wayne county. It is all a lie. No, sir, I never saw the 
plates nor no one else. He had an old glass box with a tile 
(spelling doubtful, C. A. S.) in it, about 7x8 inches, and that 
was the gold plates and Martin Harris didn't know a gold plate 
from a brick at this time. Smith and Rigdon had an intimacy 
but it was very secret and still and there was a mediator between 
them and that was Cowdery. The Manuscripts was stolen by 
Rigdon and modelled over by him and then handed over to Cow- 
dery and he copied them and Smith sat behind the curtain and 
handed them out to G>wdery and as fast as Cowdery copied 
them, they was handed over to Martin Harris and he took them 
to Egbert Granden, the one who printed them, and Gilbert set 
the type. I never knew any of the twelve that claimed to have 
seen the plates except Martin Harris and the Smiths. I knew 
all of the Smiths, they had not much learning, they was poor 
scholars. The older ones did adhere (spelling doubtful, C. A. S.) 
to Joseph Smith. He had a peep stone he pretended to see in. 
He could see all the hidden treasures in the ground and all the 
stolen property. But that was all a lie, he couldn't see nothing. 
He was an impostor. I now will close. I don't know as you 
can read this. If you can, please excuse my bad spelling and 
mistakes. Yours With Respect, 

From Lorenzo Saunders.* 

* State of Nbbsaska, "I 
County of Dawson, p*' 
Charles A. Shook, being duly sworn according to law» deposeth and 
saith that the foregoing letters of Thomas Gregg and Lorenzo Saunders 
are verbatim copies (excepting spelling, punctuation and capitalization) of 
the originals now in the possession of the American Anti-Mormon Associa- 
tion. Chaklbs a. Shook. 

Subscribed to in my presence and sworn to before me, at Eddyville, 
Nebraska, this 13th day of February, 19 13. 

B. R. Hbdglin, Notary Public. 
(10) 



186 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

The following deductions from Mr. Saunders' letter 
should be noted by the reader : 

First, Oliver Cowdery first came to Pabnyra in the 
summer of 1826 instead of in the winter of 18^^3-9, as the 
Mormons claim. 

Secondly, he came from Kirtland, Geauga County^ 
Ohio. Rigdon had removed to the same county the 
spring before, and Cowdery may have been sent by him 
to New York for a purpose. 

Thirdly, part of the Book of Mormon was written 
at the home of the Smiths near Pabnyra, instead of all 
of it being written at Harmony, Pennsylvania, and Fay- 
ette, New York. 

Fourthly, according to Saunders' positive knowledge, 
Rigdon made at least three visits to Palmyra before 1830: 
in March, 1827 ; in the fall of 1827, and in the summer 
of 1828. We shall, presently, make good use of these 
dates. 

THE MORMON AUBI. 

In their attempt to refute the testimony just given, 
the Mormons claim that the distance between Mentor, 
Ohio, where Rigdon resided, and PaUnyra, New York, 
where Smith lived, was so great that, in those days of 
slow locomotion, it would have been impossible for Rig- 
don, who was so burdened with the arduous duties of an 
active minister, to have visited and conferred with Smith 
as charged. On this point, Elder Heman C. Smith, his- 
torian of the Reorganized Church, says : 

The life of Sidney Rigdon was that of an active minister, 
and his whereabouts can be determined by public records so 
frequently as to make it impossible that he could have made the 
long and tedious journeys to New York (which this story makes 
necessary) for the purpose of conspiring with Joseph Smith in 
those days of slow transportation. — Church History, Vol. i, p. 145- 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 137 

But this position is wholly untenable. Sidney Rigdon 
was an itinerant preacher and did just what Elder Smith 
says it was impossible for him to do ; he made "long and 
tedious journeys." And the fact that he made such long 
and tedious journeys is to be found largely in the litera- 
ture of the Mormon Church itself. In May, 1819, we 
find him moving from near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to 
Trumbull County, Ohio, and later back again.* Next, 
we find him on a mission to Kentucky with his brother- 
in-law, Adamson Bentley.* In the spring of 1826, he re- 
moved to Geauga County, Ohio, and located at Bain- 
bridge.* After this, we hear of him at Mentor, Perry, 
Austintown, Shalersville, New Lisbon and Warren, 
Ohio, and in May or June, 1830, in Pennsylvania.* All 
of these movements occurred before he became a 
Mormon. 

After his pretended conversion, we find him going 
straight to Waterloo, New York, to confer with Smith 
and to return with him two months later. In company 
with Joseph Smith and Freeman Nickerson, in the fall of 
1833, he went on a mission to Canada, where he labored 
one month. In the summer and fall of 1836, we find him 
in the Eastern States with Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith 
and Oliver Cowdery. And last, but not least, we are told 
that between the years 183 1 and 1838, he made four trips 
to Missouri, a distance of not less than eight hundred 
miles.* As Pahnyra, New York, is only 252 miles from 
Mentor, Ohio, over the L. S. & M. S. and N. Y. C. 
& H. R. Railroads, and as Rigdon was accustomed to 
long and frequent moves, the distance would not have 

»"Cliurcli Hirtory." Vol. I., p. 130. 

•"History of the Disciples in the Western Reserve," pw 19. 

•"History of the Disciples," p. 191. 

*See testimony of Dr. Rosa. 

•'•Journal of History," July, 19x0, pp. a79-a86. 



138 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

made it impossible for him to have conferred with Smith 
before 1830. 

But, says the Mormon objector, even if what you 
say is true, it would have required time for Rigdon to 
have made such visits, and we have his whereabouts de- 
termined by public records so frequently that this element 
is wanting and thus the impossibility still remains. Very 
well, then, let us examine the alibi. 

The following list of events and dates has been com- 
piled by Elder E. L. Kelley, of the Reorganized Church, 
from court records and historical and personal sources, 
and arranged as I give it, by Elder Heman C. Smith, of 
the same church, and published in the Josephite "Journal 
of History," Vol. III., No. i, pages 16-20. This list is 
said to cover the movements of Rigdon from November 
2, 1826, to November 14, 1830, so thoroughly and fully 
that no opening is left to slip in spaces of time sufficiently 
lengthy for him to visit Palmyra, New York, before his 
conversion in 1830. 

State op Ohio, *) 
Geauga County. 3 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between John G. Smith and Julia Giles, on the second of Novem- 
ber, 1826, agreeable to license obtained from court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
Edward Paine, Jun., Clerk Com. Pleas. 
Recorded the 13th of Dec., 1826. 



January, 1827. Elder Rigdon held public meetings in Mantua, 
Ohio. (Haydcn's History of the Disciples of the Western Re- 
serve.) 

February, 1827. Preached funeral discourse of Hannah Tan- 
ner, Chester, Ohio. (Authenticated by Henry Tanner.) 



March and April, 1827. Held protracted meetings at Mentor, 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 139 

Ohio; baptizing Nancy M. Sanford, William Dtmson and wife, 
and others. (Evidence by Nancy M. Sanford, Mantua, Ohio.) 



State op Ohio, | 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that on the fifth day of June, 1827, in the 
village of Painesville, I solemnized the marriage contract be- 
tween Theron Freeman and Elizabeth Waterman, agreeable to 
license obtained from the clerk of the court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
Edward Paine, Jun., Qerk Com. Pleas. 
Recorded June 7, 1827. 



June 15, 1827. Baptized Thomas Clapp, and others. Mentor, 
Ohio. Personal testimony of Henry H. Clapp, Mentor, Ohio. 



State op Ohio, ^ 
Geauga County. J 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between James Gray and Mary Kerr, in township of Mentor, 
on the 3d of July, 1827. Sidney Rigdon. 

Edward Paine, Jun., Qerk Com. Pleas. 

Recorded July 12, 1827. 



State op Ohio, "^ 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that on the 19th of July, 1827, I solemnized 
the marriage contract in the township of Kirtland, between 
Alden Snow and Ruth Parker, agreeably to license obtained from 
clerk of the court of the said county. Sidney Rigdon. 

Edward Paine, Jun., Qerk Com. Pleas. 

Recorded August 10, ^1827. 



August 23, 1827. Elder Rigdon met with the Ministerial 
Association of the Western Reserve at New Lisbon, Ohio. 



State op Ohio, 1 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract on 
the 9th of October, 1827, in the township of Mentor, between 



140 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

Stephen Sherman and Wealthy Mathews» agreeably to license 
obtained from the clerk of court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
Edward Paine, Jun., Clerk G>m. Pleas. 
Recorded October 2;^^ 1827. 



October 20, 1827. A member of the ministerial council at 
iWarren, Ohio. 

November, 1827. Held a series of meetings at New Lisbon, 
Ohio. 



State op Ohio, ) 
Geanga County. J 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Alvin Wait and Sophia Gunn, on the 6th of Dec., 1827, 
in the township of Kirtland, agreeably to license obtained from 
the clerk of the court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
Edward Paine, Jun., Clerk Com. Pleas. 
Recorded December 12, 1827. 



State of Ohio, 1 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Roswell D. Cottrell and Matilda Olds, in the township 
of Concord, on the 13th day of December, 1827, agreeably to 
license obtained from the clerk of court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
Edward Paine, Jun., Clerk Com. Pleas. 
Recorded January 8, 1828. 



State of Ohio, ) 

> ss 
Geauga County. J 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 

between Otis Harrington and Lyma Coming, in the township of 

Mentor, on the 14th of February, 1828, agreeably to license 

obtained from the clerk of the court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 

Edward Paine, Jun., Qerk Com. Pleas. 

Recorded March 31, 1828. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 141 

March, 1828. Instructor of a class in theology at Mentor* 
Ohio ; and also held a series of meetings at Mentor and Warren, 
Ohio. Zehtrlon Rudolph, afterwards an elder in the Disciples 
Church, was a member of this class in theology, with others. 
He became a man of note in the Western Reserve. 



April, 182S. Elder Rigdon conducted a great religious re- 
vival at Kirtland, Ohio. ^ 



May, 1828. He meets with Alexander Campbell at Shaler* 
ville, Ohio, and held a protracted meeting at that place. 



June, 1828. Elder Rigdon baptized Henry H. Clapp at Men- 
tor, Ohio. 



August, 1828. Attended great yearly association at Warren, 
Ohio. 



State of Ohio, \ 
Geauga County. J 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Luther Dille and Qarissa Kent, in the township of 
Mentor, on the 7th day of September, 1828, agreeably to license 
obtained from the clerk of the court of said county. 

SiDNiY Rigdon. 
D. D. Aiken, Qerk Com. Pleas. 
Recorded October 13, 1828. 



State of Ohio, 1 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Nachor Coming and Phebe E. Wilson, in the township 
of Mentor, on the i8th day of September, 1826, agreeably to 
license obtained from the clerk of the court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
D. D. Aiken, Qerk Com. Pleas. 
Recorded October 13, 182B. 



142 THE TRUE, ORIGIN OP 

State of Ohio, 



ih 



Geauga County. 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Albert Churchill and Anna Fosdick on the ist of 
January, 1829, in the township of Concord, agreeably to license 
obtained from the clerk of the court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
D. D. Aiken, Clerk of Com. Pleas. 
Recorded February 12, 1829. 



State op Ohio, 1 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Erastus Root and Rebecca Tuttle on the ist day of 
February, 1829, in the township of Mentor, agreeably to a license 
obtained from clerk of court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
D. D. Aiken, Qerk of Com. Pleas. 
Recorded February 12, 1829. 



March, 1829. Protracted meeting, Mentor, Ohio. 



April 12, 1829. Protracted meeting at Kirtland, Ohia 

Lyman Wight, in his private journal, says: "I resided in 
this place. (War reus ville, Ohio) till 1829, about the month of 
May, when I heard Sidney Rigdon preach what was then called 
Rigdonite doctrine. After hearing him go through the principle 
of baptism for the remission of sins, I went forward and was 
baptized by his hands. 



July I, 1829. Organized church at Perry, Ohio. 



In the journal of Lyman Wight, he writes August (same 
year) : "My wife was baptized together with John Murdock and 
many others by Sidney Rigdon." 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 143 

State of Ohio, 



Mss. 



Geauga County. 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between John Strong and Ann Eliza More, on the 13th of 
August, 1829, in the township of Kirtland, agreeably to license 
obtained from clerk of court of said county. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
D. D. Aiken, Clerk of Com. Pleas; 
Recorded September 14, 1829. 



State of Ohio, | 
Geauga County, j 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Darwin Atwater and Harriett Clapp, on the 14th day of 
September, 1829, in the township of Mentor, agreeably to license 
obtained from clerk of said county. Sidney Rigdon. 

D. D. Aiken, Clerk of Com. Pleas. 

Recorded October 7, 1829. 



September, 1829. Series of meetings at Montor, Ohio, bap- 
tizing J. J. Moss, who was afterwards Disciple minister of some 
note. 



State of Ohio, , 

■ ss. 



Geauga County, j ' 

This is to certify that I solemnized the marriage contract 
between Joel Roberts and Relief Bates, on the ist of October, 
1829, in the township of Perry, agreeably to license obtained 
from clerk of court of said county. Sidney Rigdon. 

D. D. Aiken, Qerk of Com. Pleas. 

Recorded October 7, 1829. 



October, 1829. At Perry, Ohio. 



November, 1829. Held meetings at Wait Hill, Ohio; bap- 
tizing Alvin Wait _^__ 



State of Ohio, , 



Cuyahoga County. J 

This certifies that I solemnized the marriage contract be* 
tween David Chandler and Polly Johnson in the township of 



144 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Chagrin on the 31st day of December, one thousand, eight htin* 
dred and twenty-nine, agreeably to license obtained from the 
clerk of the court of said county. Sidney Rigdon, 

Pastor Baptist Church in Mentor, Geauga Ca» Ohio. 
Filed and Recorded January 12, 183a 



March, 1830. At Mentor, Ohio. 



June I to 3a At Mentor, Ohio. 



July, 183a Protracted meeting at Pleasant Valley, Ohio; 
baptized forty-five. 



August, 1830. With Alexander Campbell at Austintown^ 
Ohio. 



State of Ohio, ) 
Geauga County. J 

This certifies that I married Lewis B. Wood to Laura QeaTe- 
land in Kirtland Township, on the 4th of November, 1830. 

Sidney Rigdon. 
D. D. Aiken, Qerk of Com. Pleat. 
Recorded November 11, 183a 



Lyman Wight states Uiat "my Family and myself were bap- 
tized on November 14, 1830." And his widow states that she 
distinctly remembers that Rigdon was baptized on the same day. 

This is the alibi by which our Mormon friends seek 
so zealously to combat and overthrow the testimonies of 
Smith's neighbors. But, giving them every date, and 
this includes the dates of the recording of the various 
marriage certificates which probably would not have re- 
quired the personal presence of Rigdon either at court or 
at any other particular place, and we have them "beaten 
to a frazzle." Their alibi is so full of great gaps (and 
these occur right at the very times when our witnesses 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 



146 



declare that Rigdon was in Palmyra) that it is not only 
worthless as evidence to the Mormons, but is of positive 
value to their opponents. I now submit the list of dates 
and events arranged in simpler form and with the wide 
gaps of time indicated, so that the reader can readily dis- 
cover the weakness of this alibi as evidence to those who 
seek by it to prove that Sidney Rigdon could not have 
been in New York between the years 1826 and 1830. 



s 

m 


1 


5 

K 


■VI)fT 


1826 


Nov. 


2 


Marriage of Smith and Giles. 


1826 


Dec. 


13 


Above marriage recorded. 


1827 


Jan. 


, , 


Held meeting at Mantua, 0. 


1827 


Feb. 


•• 


Funeral of Hannah Tanner, Chester, O. 
(Gap of about one month.) 


1827 


Mar. 


. . 


Held meeting at Mentor, 0. 


18^ 


Apr. 


•• 


Held meeting at Mentor, 0. 

(Gap of possibly month and a half.) 


1827 


June 


s 


Marriage of Freeman and Waterman. 


1827 


June 


7 


Above marriage recorded. 


1827 


June 


IS 


Baptized Thomas Clapp at Mentor, 0. 


I&27 


July 


3 


Marriage of Gray and Kerr. 


1827 


July 


12 


Above marriage recorded. 


1827 


July 


19 


Marriage of Snow and Parker. 


x8^ 


Aug. 


10 


Above marriage recorded. 


1827 


Aug. 


23 


Met with Ministerial Asso., New Lisbon, 0. 
(GJap of one month and seventeen days.) 


1827 


Oct. 


9 


Marriage of Sherman and Mathews. 


1827 


Oct. 


20 


At Ministerial Council, Warren, 0. 


1827 


Oct 


27 


Marriage of Sherman and Mathews recorded. 


1827 


Nov. 


. , 


Held meeting at New Lisbon, 0. 


X827 


Dec. 


6 


Marriage of Wait and Gunn. 


1827 


Dec 


12 


Above marriage recorded. 


1827 


Dec. 


13 


Marriage of Cottrell and Olds. 


1828 


Jan. 


8 


Above marriage recorded. 


X823 


Feb. 


14 


Marriage of Herrington and Coming. 


1828 


Mar. 


31 


Above marriage recorded. 


1826 


Mar. 


• • 


Instructed theological dass. Mentor, 0. 



146 



THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 





1 


f 


1828 


Apr. 




1828 


May 




1828 


June 




1828 


Aug. 




1828 


Sept 




1828 


Sept 


18 


1828 


Oct 


13 


1829 


Jan. 




1829 


Feb. 




1829 


Feb. 


12 


1829 


Mar. 


, , 


1829 


Apr. 


12 


1829 


May 


•• 


1829 


July 




X829 


Aug. 




1829 


Aug. 


13 


1829 


Sept 


14 


1829 


Sept 


14 


1829 


Sept 


, , 


X829 


Oct 




1829 


Oct 




1829 


Oct 


, , 


X829 


Nov. 


, , 


X829 


Dec. 


31 


1830 


Jan. 


12 


1830 


Mar. 


•• 


X830 


June 


, , 


1830 


July 


. . 


X830 


Aug. 


•• 


1830 


Nov. 


4 


1830 


Nov. 


II 


1830 


Nov. 


14 



BvmT 



Conducted revival at Kirtland, O. 
Met Campbell at Shalersville. 
Baptized H. H. Clapp, Mentor, O. 

(Gap of possibly two months.) 
At Association, Warren, O. 
Marriage of Dille and Kent 
Marriage of Coming and Wilsoa 
Above marriages recorded. 

(Gap of two months and a half.) 
Marriage of Churchill and Fosdick. 
Marriage of Root and Tuttle. 
Above marriages recorded. 
Meeting at Mentor, O. 
Meeting at Kirtland, O. 
Baptized Lyman Wight. 

(Gap of possibly one month and a half.) 
Organized church at Perry, O. 
Baptized Mrs. Lyman Wight 
Marriage of Strong and More. 
Above marriage recorded. 
Marriage of Atwater and Clapp. 
Held meeting at Mentor, Ohio. 
Marriage of Roberts and Bates. 
The last two marriages recorded. 
At Perry, O. 

Held meeting at Wait Hill, O. 
Marriage of Chandler and Johnson. 
Above marriage recorded. 

(Gap of possibly two months.) 
At Mentor, O. 

(Gap of two months.) 
At Mentor, O. 

Held meeting at Pleasant Valley, O. 
Met Campbell at Austintown, O. 

(Grap of easily two and a half months.) 
Marriage of Wood and Cleaveland. 
Above marriage recorded. 
Rigdon baptized by Cowdery. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 147 

In this alibi, we have nine wide gaps, of over a month 
in each, in which the whereabouts of Rigdon is not ac- 
counted for, and some of them occurring at the very 
times when the old citizens of Palmyra say that he was 
in New York conferring with Smith. Three of these 
gaps occur in the year 1827, two in 1828, one in 1829 and 
three in 1830. 

As Rigdon lived only 252 miles from Palmyra, if he 
traveled at the rate of fifty miles a day, which was less 
than the ordinary distance traveled by stage in those days/ 
it would have required five days to go and five days to 
return, so in all our calculations concerning Rigdon's 
visits to New York, we must make an allowance of ten 
days for time spent on the road. 

Again, it is not to be supposed that it would have been 
necessary for his visits to have been of extraordinary 
lengths, for, according to the generally accepted theory, 
the "Manuscript Found" had been thoroughly worked 
over and was ready for transcription before it passed 
out of Rigdon's hands. This would make \\u presence 
necessary only as an adviser, and this would require him 
being there only a few days at most. So, the time it 
took to go to Palmyra and to return, with sufficient time 
for a reasonable visit, could be easily included within one 
month. Rigdon could, therefore, have been in Palmyra, 
New York, a dozen times between the years 1826 and 
1830 and still the list of dates and events as given by 
Elders Kelley and Smith remain intact. 

^ An ex-stage-driver here in Nebraska tells me that he used to make 
seventy-five miles a day» but the roads were probably better than in New 
York and Ohio. However, fifty miles a day was easily made. When 
Rigdon left Kirtland in January, 1838, he went at the rate of sixty miles 
in ten hours ("Church History/' 2: 136), and David Whitmer, at the time 
that he went to Harmony, Pennsylvania, for Smith, in 1829, took just two 
days to make the distance of 135 miles ("Mother Lucy," p. 162). 



148 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

The date when Rigdon first met Smith is not known 
and never will be definitely known, but a statement in 
Mother Lucy's "J<^seph Smith and His Progenitors" (ed* 
1908), page loi, raises a strong suspicion that it was late 
in 1824 or early in 1825. She says : 

Shortly after the death of Alvin, a man commenced laboring 
in the neighborhood, to effect a union of the different churches, 
in order that all might be agreed, and thus worship God with 
one heart and with one mind. 

Alvin died in November, 1824. Rigdon had left the 
Baptist Church in August preceding, according to his 
own account, and had become identified with Campbell 
in preaching the doctrine, which might, in the colloquial 
of the common people, be defined as "a tmion of the dif- 
ferent churches, in order that all might be agreed, and 
thus worship God with one heart and one mind." Rela- 
tively speaking, there were but few ministers preaching 
this doctrine at that time, and it should not surprise us 
if Rigdon were the "man" who came to the Smith neigh- 
borhood soon after Alvin's death, and that this event 
marked his first contact with his "prophet," Joseph Smith. 

But, permitting the reader to accept this inference for 
what it is worth, we pass on to surer ground. Lorenzo 
Saunders declares that he saw Rigdon at Palmyra three 
times before 1830: in the middle of March, 1827; in the 
fall of 1827, and in the stunmer of 1828. On the last 
visit, Pomeroy Tucker agrees with Saunders, while Zeb- 
ulon Rudolph, father-in-law of President Garfield, sup- 
plies us with information which would seem to establish 
a later visit, during the early part of the year 1830. Let 
us now consider the circumstances which might have re- 
quired the presence of Rigdon at Palmyra at the different 
times specified. 

In tfie present consideration, we shall move upon the 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 14* 

theory that Sidney Rigdon was the "angel" that ap- 
peared to Joseph Smith. Angels, in Mormon theology, 
are simply exalted men/ and, according to Oliver Cow- 
dery, the voice of the "angel of God," who spoke to 
himself and Smith at the time of their baptism, did "most 
mysteriously resemble the voice of Elder Sidney Rigdon." 
Therefore, I believe that if we put the appearance of 
Sidney Rigdon at those points in Mormon history wher- 
ever "angels" appear, we will have established a number 
of historical facts. 

Saunders says that he first, saw Rigdon at the Smiths 
in the middle of March, 1827. He tells us that he was 
there to eat maple sugar, and saw a group of five or six 
men (probably the "Gold Bible Company"), and that 
Harrison Smith told him that one of them, better dressed 
than the rest, was Sidney Rigdon, a friend of Joseph's 
from Pennsylvania. In the month of February of that 
year, Rigdon preached the funeral sermon of Hannah 
Tanner, of Chester, Ohio, and in the following month of 
March commenced a series of meetings at Mentor. After 
the funeral of the Tanner woman, he could easily have 
found time to go to Palmyra, play the "angel stunt" and 
then return in time for the Mentor meeting. And, 
strange to say, according to Mother Lucy's account,* the 
"angel" did appear to Joseph about this time. In Jan- 
uary, 1827, Joseph had returned with his wife from 
Pennsylvania, "in good health and fine spirits." Some 
time after this, his father had occasion, one morning, to 
send him to Manchester. Joseph did not return until 
nearly six o'clock in the evening, and when his father 
asked the reason, he replied that he had taken the worst 

* "Gods, angels and men are all of one species, one race, one great, 
family." — Kty to Theology, p. 33. 

^"'Jowtilh Smith and His Progenitora," p. iia. 



150 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

chastisement that he had ever received in his life. Smith, 
senior, supposing that the chastisement had been given at 
the hands of some of the neighbors, was very angry, but 
Joseph quieted him and said that "it was the angel of the 
Lord : as I passed by the Hill Cumorah, where the plates 
are, the angel met me, and said that I had not been en- 
gaged enough in the work of the Lord ; that the time had 
come for the record to be brought forth ; and that I must 
be up and doing, and set myself about the things which 
God had commanded me to do." Sure, Joseph had not 
been paying enough attention to business, but, instead, he 
had been down to Harmony, Pennsylvania, stealing a 
wife and, because of the opposition of her people, had 
some notion of throwing up his prophetic office and 
working for a living, and "angel" Rigdon, after he had 
preached Hannah Tanner's funeral sermon, had just 
quietly slipped over into New York to see about it and 
give him a chastisement. Joseph said further: "But, 
father, give yourself no uneasiness concerning the repri- 
mand that I have received, for I know the course that I 
am to pursue, so all will be well." The course that he 
was to pursue was to continue to do as he had been doing 
in deceiving the people by getting them ready for the 
springing of the great "Latter-day Swindle." 

The second time that Saunders saw Rigdon at Pal- 
myra was in the fall of 1827. What occurred in the fall 
of 1827? On the 22d of September of that year, Joseph 
Smith claimed to receive the plates, and it was necessary 
again for "angel" Rigdon, alias Moroni, to be present. 
And the Mormon alibi is deficient at this point, for, be- 
tween August 23 and October 9, 1827, we have a gap of 
one month and seventeen days in which it does not ac- 
count for Rigdon's whereabouts. 

The third visit of Rigdon to Palmyra, that Saunders 



THE BOOK OF MORMON ISl 

mentions, was in the summer of 1828, just before harvest 
Tucker seems, also, to have known something about this 
visit, as he speaks of Rigdon being at the Smiths soon 
after the 116 pages of manuscript were destroyed by Mrs. 
Harris. This occurred in the month of June, and again 
we have the alibi coinciding with the testimony of 
Saimders and also with the testimony of Pomeroy 
Tucker. Between the months of June and August, 1828, 
there are weeks in which no light is thrown upon the 
movements of Rigdon by the Mormon alibi. 

Lastly, we have every reason to believe that Rigdon 
and Smith were together during the winter preceding 
the publication of the Book of Mormon. Zebulon Ru- 
dolph says : 

During the winter previous to the appearance of the Book 
of Mormon, Rigdon was in the habit of spending weeks awaj 
from home, going no one knew whither. He often appeared 
preoccupied and he would indulge in dreamy, visionary talks, 
which puzzled those who listened. When the Book of Mormon 
appeared and Rigdon joined in the advocacy of the new religion 
the suspicion was at once aroused that he was one of the framers 
of the new doctrine, and that probably he was not ignorant of 
the authorship of the Book of Mormon. 

Between December 31, 1829, and the month of March, 
1830, the alibi does not give us a single clue as to the 
movements of Rigdon except mentioning the fact that on 
January 12, 1830, the certificate of the marriage between 
David Chandler and Polly Johnson was recorded. 

By the facts that I have just^g^ven, I believe that it is 
positively proved that Sidney Rigdon was in Palmyra, 
New York, at least four times before he openly became 
a Mormon : in March, 1827 ; in September, 1827 ; in June, 
1828, and in the winter of 1830,* 

*0n May 15, 18^, "John the Baptist/* whose voice, Cowdeiy says, 
^'did most mjrttcriously resemble the voice of Elder Sidney Rigdon," ap* 
(11) 



152 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

THE AFFIDAVIT OF KATHERINE SALISBURY. 

Katherine Salisbury was a sister of Joseph Smith. 
In the year 1881, she made the following sworn state- 
ment, in which she certifies that Sidney Rigdon never 
was, to her knowledge, in the home of her parents until 
after his conversion to Mormonism in November, 1830. 

State of Illinois, | 
Kendall County. J ^^• 

I, Katherine Salisbury, being duly sworn, depose and say, 
that I am a resident of the state of Illinois, and have been for 
forty years last past; that I will be sixty-eight years of age, 
July 28th, 1881. 

That I am a daughter of Joseph Smith, Senior, and sister to 
Joseph Smith, Jr., the translator of the Book of Mormon. That 
at the time the said book was published, I was seventeen years 
of age ; that at the time of the publication of said book, my 
brother, Joseph Smith, Jr., lived in the family of my father, in 
the town of Manchester, Ontario county. New York, and that he 
had all of his life to this time made his home with the family. 

That at the time, and for years prior thereto. I lived in and 
was a member of such family, and personally knowing to the 
things transacted in said family, and those who visited at my 
father's house, and the friends of the family, and the friends 
and acquaintances of my brother, Joseph Smith, Jr., who visited 
at or came to my father's house. 

That prior to the latter part of the year A. D. 1830, there 
was no person who visited with, or was an acquaintance of, or 
called upon the said family, or any member thereof to my knowl- 
edge, by the name of Sidney Rigdon; nor was such person 
known to the family, or any member thereof, to my knowledge, 
until the last part of the year A. D. 1830, or the first part of 
the year 183 1, and some time after the organization of the 
Church of Jesus Christ, by Joseph Smith, Jr., and several months 
after the publication of the Book of Mormon. 

That I remember the time when Sidney Rigdon came to my 

peared to Smith and Cowdery at Harmony, Pennsylvania, and conferred 
upon them the Aaronic priesthood. Notice that part of May and all of 
June of that year are not accounted for in the alibL 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 153 

father's place, and that it was after the removal of my father 
from Waterloo, N. Y., to Kirtland, Ohio. That this was in the 
year 1831, and some months after the publication of the Book 
of Mormon, and fully one year after the Church was organized, 
as before stated herein. 

That I made this statement, not on account of fear, favor» 
or hope of reward of any kind; but simply that the truth may 
be known with reference to said matter, and that the foregoing 
statements made by me are true, as I verily believe. 

Katherine Salisbury. 

Sworn before me, and subscribed in my presence, by the said 
Katherine Salisbury, this isth day of April, A. D. 1881. 

J. H. Jenks, Notary Public. 

It would be supposed that a member of the Smith 
family, and one who was seventeen years of age in 1830, 
would, from personal knowledge, be able to give the 
public information upon the point at issue that would be 
both valuable and accurate. But such is not the case in 
the present instance. The affidavit of Mrs. Salisbury is 
so full of glarring errors that it is wholly valueless as 
evidence, and the investigator is impressed that it was 
either made with the design of concealing events that 
really did happen or else that the affiant was lamentably 
ignorant of her own family history. 

In the first place, Mrs. Salisbury says : 

At the time of the publication of said book, my brother, 
Joseph Smith, Jr., lived in the family of my father, in the town 
of Manchester, Ontario county, New York, and that he had, all 
of his life to this time, made his home with the family. 

The very contrary of this last statement is true. In- 
stead of living all of bis life, up to the publication of the 
Book of Mormon, with his parents in Manchester, New 
York, Joseph went, some time after he was married, to 
the home of his wife's people, the Hales, in Harmony, 
Pennsylvania, where he resided from December, 1827, 
up to June, 1829, when he removed to the home of the 



164 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

Whitmers in Seneca County. Mother Lucy, in writing of 
Mrs. Harris, says : 

When she returned home, being about two weeks after her 
arrival in Harmony, the place where Joseph resided, she en- 
deavored to dissuade her husband from taking any further part 
fai the publication of the record.— /we^A Smith and His Pro- 
genitors (ed. 1908) » p. 135. 

The second error that Mrs. Salisbury makes is m re- 
gard to the time of the first public visit of Rigdon to the 
Smiths. She says : 

I remember the time when Sidney Rigdon came to my 
father's place, and that it was after the removal of my father 
from Waterloo, N. Y., to Kirtland, Ohio. That this was in the 
year 183 1, and some months after the publication of the Book of 
Mormon, and fully one year after the Church was organized, as 
before stated herein. 

Here Mrs. Salisbury has Rigdon visiting her father's 
family, for the first time, after they had removed to 
Kirtland, Ohio, in the year 183 1 and "fully one year 
after the Church was organized." In refutation of this, 
I cite the foltowing from Lucy Smith (p. 205) : 

In December of the same year (1830), -Joseph appointed a 
meeting at our house. While he was preaching, Sidney Rigdon 
and Edward Partridge came in, and seated themselves in the 
congregation. 

This was in Waterloo, New York, before 1831, and 
only about nine months after the Church was organized. 
If Mrs. Salisbury failed to remember this most important 
visit of Sidney Rigdon to her father's family in Water- 
loo, New York, in 1830, when she was seventeen years 
of age, is it unlikely that she failed to remember the 
other visits of this gentleman made secretly and when she 
was still younger? 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 1» 



CHAPTER X. 

Internal Proofs from Spauldingfs First Manuscript that He Was 
the Author of the Book of Mormon — Both Found under a 
Stone— A Great Storm at Sea— The Great Spirit— The Revo- 
lution of the Earth— The Use of the Horse— The Manu- 
facture of Iron — High Priests— The Seer-stone. 

On the authorship of the "Manuscript Story," now 
on deposit in the library of Oberlin G)llege, there is a 
unanimity of opinion. Mormons and Gentiles, alike, are 
agreed that it was written by Solomon Spaulding. The 
difference exists between the two parties on the grounds 
of its identification with the "Manuscript Found;" the 
Mormons claiming that it is one and the same with that 
manuscript, the Gentiles claiming that it is another manu- 
script entirely. 

While I am forced by the logic of the evidence to take 
the latcer view, I believe that Solomon Spaulding incor- 
porated in his "Manuscript Found" some of the features 
which first appeared in his "Manuscript Story," and that 
these, notwithstanding the undoubted thorough revision 
of Sidney Rigdon, have come down to us and appear in 
the Book of Mormon. 

It is my purpose in the present chapter to point out 
these points of resemblance and to weave them into my 
fabric as cumulative evidence to support the general 
position that I have taken that the author of the "Manu- 
script Story" was the author of the basis of the Book of 
Mormon. 

Before making my quotations from the "Manuscript 
Story," it will be necessary for me to explain the peculiar 



156 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

markings that occur. As the original manuscript stands, 
it is full of erasures and mistakes of various kinds/ In 
order to represent these, so that the reader can have the 
work in print just as it appears in manuscript, it was 
found necessary by the publishers to invent a system of 
marking. In this system, those words and sentences 
which are underlined are stricken out in the original, 

while those places marked thus are illegible. 

With this explanation, I shall give my quotations from 
this manuscript just as they appear in the copy of the 
original as published by the Reorganized Church. My 
quotations from the Book of Mormon will also be taken 
from their reprint of the third American edition of that 
book. 

BOTH FOUND UNDER A STONE. 

Both the "Manuscript Story" and the Book of Mor- 
mon are said to have been found under a stone, which 
stone was raised with a lever in the hands of the finder. 
Spaulding gives the following account of the reputed 
finding of the first : 

Near the west Bank of the Coneaught River there are the 
remains of an ancient fort. As I was walking and forming 
various conjectures respecting the character situation & numbers 
df those people who far exceeded the preesent Indians in works 
of art and inginuety, I hapned to tread on a flat stone. This 
was at a small distance from the fort, & it lay on the top of a 
great small mound of Earth exactly horizontal. The face of it 
had a singular appearance. I discovered a number of characters, 
which appeared to me to be letters, but so much effaced by the 
ravages of time, that I could not read the inscription. With the 
assistance of a leaver I raised the stone. But you may easily 

^ These are sometimes held up to prove that Spaulding was not as 
learned a man as he is supposed to have been, but a careful study of his 
•'Manuscript Story" will show that they are due to pure carelessness. In 
aome instances, he spells a word correctly and in others incorrectly. This 
was, probably, his first draft, which he never expected any one to see. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 157 

conjecture my astonishment when I discovered that its ends 
and sides rested on stones & that it was designed as a cover to 
an artificial Cave. I found by examining that its sides were 

lined with stones built in a cosnical form with 

down, & that it was about eight feet deep. — M, S,, p. ii. 

After giving a description of this cave, Spaulding 
continues : 

Observing one side (of the cave, C. A. S.) to be perpendicular 
nearly three feet from the bottom, I began to inspect that part 
with accuracy. Here I noticed a big flat stone fixed in the form 
of a doar. I immediately tore it down and Lo, a cavity within 
the wall presented itself it being about three feet in diamiter 
from side to side and about two feet high. Within this cavity I 
found an earthen Box with a cover which shut it perfectly tite. 
The Box was two feet in length one & half in breadth & 
one & three inches in diameter. My mind filled with awful 
sensations which crowded fast upon me would hardly permit my 
hands to remove this venerable deposit, but curiosity soon gained 
the assendency & the box was taken & raised to open it When 
I had removed the Cover I found that it contained twenty-eight 

rolls of parchment — & — that when appeared to be 

manuscrips written in eligant hand with Roman Letters & in 
the Latin Language. — M, S., p. 12. 

This is Spaulding's fictitious account of the finding 
of the "Manuscript Story." Now let us read Joseph 
Smith's description of the finding of the Mormon plates : 

Convenient to the village of Manchester, Ontario County, 
New York, stands a hill of considerable size, and the most ele- 
vated of any in the neighborhood. On the west side of this hill, 
not far from the top, under a stone of considerable size, lay the 
plates deposited in a stone box. This stone was thick and round- 
ing in the middle on the upper side, and thinner toward the 
edges, so that the middle part of it was visible above the ground, 
but the edge all around was covered with earth. Having re- 
moved the earth and obtained a lever which I got fixed under 
the edge of the stone and with a little exertion raised it up, I 
looked in and there indeed did I behold the plates, the Urim 
and Thummim, and the "Breastplate, as stated by the me»- 



168 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

senger. The box in which they lay was formed by laying stones 
together in some kind of cement; in the bottom of the box« 
were laid two stones crossways of the box, and on these stones 
lay the plates and the other things with them. — Church History, 
Vol. L. p. i6. 

Spaulding claimed to find his manuscripts under a 
flat stone, which he raised with a lever, and in an earthen 
box. Smith claimed to find his plates under a stone, 
which was thick in the middle, but thin at the edges, and 
which he raised with a lever, and in a stone box. Spaul- 
ding represents himself as accidentally discovering his 
records; Smith declares that the depository of his was 
revealed to him by the angel Moroni. 

A GREAT STORM AT SEA. 

The "Manuscript Story" and the Book of Mormon 
both agree in describing a great storm at sea during the 
voyage which brought the people they describe from the 
Old World to the New. The former says : 

One day he (Constantine, C. A. S.) says to me Fabius you 

must go to Brittian & carry a*' important to the 

general of our army there sail in a vessel & return 

when she returns. Preparation was made instantly and we 

sailed The vessel laden with provisions for the army 

Cloath-knives and other implements for their use had 

now arived near the coasts of Britain when a tremenduous storm 
arose & drove us into the midst of the boundless Ocean. Soon 
the whole crew became lost 8- bewildered. They knew not 
the direction f2r to the rising Sun or polar Star, for the heavens 
were covered with clouds; & darkness had spread her sable 
mantle over the face of the raging deep. Their minds were 
filled with consterration and despair. & rnanimously agrreed that 
What could we do? How be extrecated from the insatiable 
jaws of a watry tomb. Then it was that we felt our absolute 
dependence on that Almighty & gracious Being who holds the 

winds & floods in hands. From him alone could we 

expect deliverance. To him our most fervent desires assendcd. 
Prostrate & on bended nees we poured forth incessant Suppli- 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 159 

cation & even Old Ocean appeared to Sjrmpathize in our distress 
by returning the echo of our vociforos Cries & lamentations. 
After being driven five days with incridable velocity before the 
furious wind the storm abated in its violance. — M. S., p. 15. 

The Book of Mormon account of a similar storm is 
as follows: 

And it came to pass that after they (Laman and Lemuel, 
C A. S.) had bound me (Nephi, C A. S.)i insomuch that I 
could not move, the compass, which had been prepared of the 
Lord, did cease to work ; wherefore, they knew not whither they 
should steer the ship, insomuch, that there arose a great storm, 
yea, a great and terrible tempest ; and we were driven back upon 
the waters for the space of three days; and they began to be 
frightened exceedingly, lest they should be drowned in the sea: 
nevertheless they did not loose me. And on the fourth day 
which we had been driven back, the tempest began to be ex- 
ceeding sore. 

And it came to pass that we were about to be swallowed up 

in the depths of the sea. And after we had been driven back 

upon the waters for the space of four days, my brethren began 

to see that the judgments of God were upon them, and that 

they must perish, save that they should repent of their iniquities ; 

wherefore, they came unto me and loosed the bands which were 

upon my wrists, and behold, they had swollen exceedingly; and 

also mine ankles were much smollen, and great was the soreness 

thereof. 

• • • 

And it came to pass after they had loosed me, behold, I took 

the compass, and it did work whither I desired it. And it came 

to pass that I prayed unto the Lord; and after I had prayed, 

the winds did cease, and the storm did cease, and there was a 

great calm. — B. of M,, pp. 42, 43. 

In both accounts, the storm which occurred ceased in 
answer to prayer. 

THE GREAT SPIRIT. 

Both records declare that the ancient Americans be- 
lieved in the Great Spirit. Spaulding gives the following 
address of an ancient American chieftain: 

(12) 



160 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

The Speaker then extended his hands & spoke. Hail, ye 
favorite children of the great and good Spirit, who resides in 
the Sun who is the father of all living creatures & whose arms 
encircle us all around. — M, S., p. 23. 

In the Book of Mormon, I find King Lamoni saying 
this: 

Behold, is not this the Great Spirit who doth send such 
great punishments upon this people, because of their murders? 
— B. of M., p. 253. 

And Ammon is represented as asking King Lamoni : 

Believest thou that there is a Great Spirit? And he said. 
Yea. And Ammon said, This is God. — B, of M., p. 255. 

This appellation stamps both books as a fraud, for 
it is now conceded by all of the leading students of the 
ancient American religions that the American Indian 
knew nothing whatever of the "Great Spirit" tmtil he 
heard of him through the white missionary. The native 
terms for God do not express the idea of personality, 
but simply of the supernatural in general, the mysterious, 
the incomprehensible, the imknown.' 

Maj. J. W. Powell, former chief of the Smithsonian 
Institution, says: 

Nations with civilized institutions, art with palaces, mono- 
theism as the worship of the Great Spirit, all vanish from the 
priscan condition of North America in the light of anthropologic 
research. Tribes with the social institutions of kinship, art with 
its highest architectural development exhibited in the structure 
of communal dwellings, and polytheism in the worship of mythic 
animals and nature-gods Ttrmin,— First Report of the Bureau of 
American Ethnology, p. 69. 

Mr. F. S. Dellenbaugh, a prominent archaeologpist, also 
says: 

They had no understanding of a single "Great Spirit" till 

» See Chapter VIII. of my "Cumorah Revisited,* 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 161 

the Europeans, often unconsciously, informed them of their own 
ht\\ti,—N orth Americans of Yesterday, p. 375, 

THE REVOLUTION OF THE EARTH. 

Fabius, after reaching our shores, reasoned as follows 
on the revolution of the earth : 

Whereas, if according to the platonic system, the earth is a 
globe & the sun is stationary, then the earth by a moderate veloc- 
ity perform her revolutions. — M, S., p. 29. 

In the Book of Mormon, Helaman says : 

Yea, and if he say unto the earth. Move, it is moved; yea, if 
he say unto the earth. Thou shalt go back, that it lengthen out 
the day for many hours, it is done: and thus according to his 
word, the earth goeth back, and it appeareth unto man that the 
sun standeth still: yea, and behold, this is so; for sure it is the 
earth that moveth, and not the sun. — B, of M., p. 410. 

THE USE OF THE HORSE. 

Both the "Manuscript Story" and the Book of Mor- 
mon inform us that the ancient Americans made use of 
the horse. In the first mentioned, I find the following: 

The ground was plowed by horses & generally made very 
mellow for the reception of the seed. — M. S,, p. 35. 

There are a number of references in the Book of 
Mormon to the use of the horse, but the following will 
suffice: 

And it came to pass that the people of Nephi did till the 
land, and raise all manner of grain, and of fruit, and flocks of 
herds, and flocks of all manner of cattle, of every kind, and. 
goats, and wild goats, and also many horses.— B. of M,, p. 133. 

It is now agreed that, while the horse was an in- 
habitant of America in the earlier geologic epochs, he 
ceased to exist long before man had attained to any 
considerable degree of culture as represented in the Book 
of Mormon. Dr. D. G. Brinton says : 



l«a THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

There is no doubt but that the horse existed on the continent 
contemporaneously with postglacial man; and some palaeon- 
tologists are of the opinion that the European and Asian horses 
were descendents of the American species; but for some mys- 
terious reason the genus became extinct in the New World 
many generations before its discovery. — The American Race, 
p. SO. 

THE MANUFACTURE OF IRON. 

On the manufacture of iron tools and implements, the 
"Manuscript Story" says: 

The manufacturing of lead Iron & lead was understood, but 
was not carried on to that extent & perfection as in Europe. A 
small quantity of Iron in proportion to the number of Inhab- 
itants served to supply them with all the impliments which cus- 
tom had made necessary for their use. By hammering & hard- 
ening their Iron they would convert it nearly into the con- 
sistence of Steal & fit it for the purpose of edged tools. — M, S,, 
p. 36. 

In the Book of Mormon, Nephi says : 

And I did teach my people to build buildings: and to work 
in all manner of wood, and of iron, and of copper, and of 
brass, and of steel, and of gold, and of silver, and of precious 
ores, which were in great abundance. — B, of M,, p. 64. 

No fact is better established than that the American 
race did not use manufactured iron and steel tools before 
the discovery. Says Prof. Cyrus Thomas, of the Smith- 
sonian Institution : 

The use of iron as a metal was unknown in America previous 
to the discovery by Columbus. — American Archeology, p. 11. 

HIGH PRIESTS. 

On this point, the "Manuscript Story" says : 

Labamack accepted the office of Emperor & his four counsel- 
lor were appointed. Lambon was ordained high Priest & his 
four assistants chosen. — M, S., p. 63. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 118 

On the appointment of the Nephite Alma to such am 
office, the Book of Mormon says : 

And it came to pass that Alma was appointed to be the first 
chief judge; he being also the high priest; his father having 
conferred the office upon him, and had given him the charge 
concerning all the affairs of the church. — B, of M,, p. 204. 

THE SEER-STONE. 

We now come to an identity between the "Manuscript 
Story" and the claims of Mormonism which is most con- 
clusive in proving that the Mormon fraud had its in- 
ception in the brain of Solomon Spaulding, the dreamer 
of Conneaut. In the "Manuscript Story" we find one of 
the characters employing a stone exactly as Joseph Smith 
is said afterward to have employed the Urim and Thum- 
mim or the seer-stone. Of Hamack, a character in his 
first novel, Spaulding says: 

Hamack then arose & in his hand he held a stone which he 
pronounced transparent. Thro' this he could view things present 
& things to come, could behold the dark intriques & cabals of 
foreign courts, & behold discover hidden treasures, secluded from 
the eyes of other mortals. He could behold the galant and his 
mistress in their bedchamber, & count all their moles warts & 
pimples. Such was the clearness of his sight, when this trans- 
parent stone was placed before his eyes. He looked firmly h 
steadfastly on the stone & raised his prophetic voice. — M, S,, 
p. 98. 

The following is a description of the manner in which 
Joseph Smith is said to have employed the Urim and 
Thummim, from the pen of David Whitmer, one of the 
three witnesses, and published in the Chicago Times of 
August 7, 1875. Let the reader carefully compare this 
description with the foregoing account from the "Manu- 
script Story," and then decide for himself whether or not 
there are good grounds for believing that this feature of 



164 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

the Mormon fraud was first conceived in the mind of the 
dreamer of Conneaut. Whitmer says: 

And (I) was an eye-witness to the method of procedure. 
The plates were not before Joseph while he translated. . . . 
The method pursued was common-place, but nevertheless effec- 
tive. Having placed the Urim and Thummim in his hat, Joseph 
placed the hat over his face, and with prophetic eyes read die 
invisible sjrmbols, syllable by syllable and word by word, while 
Cowdery or Harris acted as recorders. ... So illiterate was 
Joseph at that time, that he didn't even know that Jerusalem 
was a walled city, and he was utterly unable to pronounce many 
of the names which the magic power of the Urim and Thummim 
revealed, and therefore spelled them out in syllables, and the 
more erudite scribe put them together. The stone was the same 
used by the Jaredites at (from?) Babel. I have frequently placed 
it to my eyes, but could see nothing through it. I have seen 
Joseph, however, place it to his eyes and instantly read signs 
one hundred and sixty miles distant, and tell exactly what was 
transpiring there. When I went to Harmony after him, he told 
me the name of every hotel at which I had stopped on the road, 
read the signs, and described various scenes without having ever 
received any information from me. — Quoted in "Joseph the 
Seer" p. 72. 

Hamack could view things present and things to 
come, dark intrigues and cabals, hidden treasures, amo- 
rous practices, and even moles and warts and pimples, 
through his stone. Joseph could read sig^ns one hundred 
and sixty miles distant, the names on the hotels, and 
behold various scenes through which Whitmer passed, 
through his. Reader, is not this coincidence suspicious, 
to say the least?* 

I close this chapter with the following verses from the 
pen of A. O. Hooten, of Bridge, Oregon, in which are 
summed up the points of identity between the "Manu- 
script Story" and the Book of Mormon : 



* See alto "Mottah" s^ 10 ^01^ * similar atone in use bjr a Nephite aeer. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 165 

Solomon and Joseph, they each found a ''record," 
And each of the "records/* was very, very old. 

Solomon's was in "Latin," and written on "parchment, 
Joseph's "Reformed Egyptian," "engraved" on "plates" of 
"gold." 

'Twas just under a "stone," which he raised by a "lever," 
That each found his "record," each dry, safe and sound. 

Solomon's in a "box," in a cave "artificial," 
Joseph's in a **box," near the surface of the ground. 

Of each of the "records," only part was "translated," 
Each one gave his reasons, why a part was reserved. 

Solomon's was a novel, while Joseph's was "more bible," 
For many centuries, hidden, miraculously preserved. 

The "records" each tell us, while parties crossed the ocean 
Tremenduous storms arose, surging billows everywhere. 

Yet all were safely landed, and not one life was lost. 
They were saved from destruction in answer to prayer. 

Each "record" mentions horses, that were found upon the land, 
"Burnt offerings" people offered, to cleanse them from all 
sin. 

Judges were appointed, that justice might be done, 
And different peoples, three, this land were dwelling in. 

Each "translator" must have "planets" that move in regular form. 

And "Oracles" their words received, as coming from above. 
"Sacred" writings kept separate, and "characters" used for words. 

The wicked punished for a while, then saved by redeeming 
love. 

Each builds his forts of "earth" thrown up with timbers placed 
on top, 

Has property held in "common," and counsellors four or two. 
Has a man whose words, accepted, as coming from above. 

Just so he calls it "revelation," that's enough to them 'tis true. 

But the tiling that was dearest, to each "translator's" heart, 
Was the magical "interpreters" or "transparent stone" so clear ; 

With them nothing could be hidden, all things came to view. 
Moles and pimples, warts and wrinkles, all things far and near. 



166 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

There's no "likeness" showts the "nigger" 'neath the "woodpile" 
of the saints, 
This "missing link" of "evidence" at last completes the 
"chain."* 
Yet Spaulding wrote his "manuscript," before Smith found his 
"book," 
And there's nineteen points of identity. Will Mormons please 
explain ? 

^The preface to the ''Manufcript Story*' by the Reorganised Church 
•peaks of it as "this hobgoblin of the pulpit, this 'nigger-in>the-woodpile' 
of the press and the forum," and this "newly found 'missing link' " which 
'^completes the chain of cvidcnoa.** 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 1«7 



CHAPTER XI. 

Mormon Objections Answered — Size of the Book of Mormon— 
Style of the Book of Mormon — Character of the Book of 
Mormon — Smith's Inability to Produce the Book of Mormon 
— ^The Challenge to Produce the Original Manuscript— The 
Character of Hurlburt and Howe— Supposed Contradictions 
in the "Manuscript Found" to the Book of Mormon— Re- 
capitulation. 

Various objections have, from time to time, been 
raised against the theory that the Book of Mormon orig- 
inated in the celebrated "Manuscript Found" df Solomon 
Spaulding. It is objected that the Book of Mormon 
is too elaborate a work to have come from such a 
small manuscript as Spaulding wrote; that the style of 
the book is too common for a scholar so learned as 
Spaulding is represented to have been, and that it differs 
widely from the style of his "Manuscript Story;" that its 
doctrinal teachings are radically different from those that 
one would expect from the pen of a Presbyterian clergy- 
man ; that Smith was wholly unable, independent of di- 
vine help, to perform the task assigned him; that the 
Mormon demand to produce Spaulding's purported Jew- 
ish manuscript has never been complied with, hence that 
this manuscript never existed ; that the character of Hurl- 
burt and Howe was so low and detestable that their testi- 
mony and work is discredited thereby, and that certain 
contradictions must have appeared in Spaulding's second 
manuscript, if that manuscript ever existed, to the his- 
torical and doctrinal teachings of the Book of Mormon. 
These are the most important objections that have 
been raised against the theory which finds the original 



16S THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

of the Book of Mormon in the "Manuscript Found/' 
While these objections possess but little force to those 
who are familiar with the evidences adduced and the 
positions taken by the advocates of the Spaulding theory, 
they are so plausible on the face of them and are so in- 
geniously presented as often to deceive the superficial 
and those who have little or no information on the 
grounds that are really occupied by those who hold to 
this view. It is for the purpose of supplying this in- 
formation, therefore, that this chapter is written. 

The Mormons have ever taken full advantage of the 
confusion that arises over the forced identification of the 
"Manuscript Found" with the "Manuscript Story," and 
in some instances they have applied the descriptions of 
the one to the other, and vice versa, and by so doing 
have produced a mass of apparent contradictions, incon- 
sistencies and absurdities that is both ludicrous and dis- 
gusting. It is only when the distinction between the two 
manuscripts is clearly fixed in the mind that the investi- 
gator is able to work himself out of the fog of Mormon 
sophistry and misrepresentation and into the sunlight of 
truth. 

The true theory of the revamping of the Book of 
Mormon from the "Manuscript Found" is this: About 
the year 1809, Solomon Spaulding began an historical 
novel, based upon the antiquities of America, in which he 
described the first colonists as coming to our shores from 
Jerusalem under the leadership of Lehi and Nephi. This 
novel, which he called the "Manuscript Found," he placed 
in the printing establishment of Robert Patterson, of 
Pittsburgh, from which it was stolen by Sidney Rigdon 
in 1815 or 1816. Rigdon afterwards rewrote this man- 
uscript, retaining only the historical outline, proper names 
and certain Scriptural expressions, but adding a large 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 169 

amount of religious matter and clothing the whole in his 
own style and manner of expression, after which he put 
it in the hands of Joseph Smith, a young "money-digger" 
of western New York, about the year 1827, who, in turn, 
read it off from behind a sheet to another accomplice, 
Oliver Cowdery, who wrote it down as it fell from his 
lips and got it in shape for the printer. I believe this to 
be the theory of the revamping of the Spaulding story 
as it would be stated by the majority, at least, of those 
who advocate it. No one claims that the historical part 
of the Book of Mormon is just as Spaulding wrote it, 
word for word. The whole thing was rewritten by Rig- 
don, who retained from the original only the outline, the 
proper names and certain Scriptural expressions. 

With this explanation, let us now take up the ob- 
jections that have been offered, and give them a fair, 
candid and careful examination. 

THE SIZE OF THE BOOK OF MORMON. 

It is objected that the "Manuscript Found" could not 
have been the basis of the Book of Mormon, for the 
reason that it was too meager a thing to make a book the 
size of the latter. Elder E. L. Kelley says: 

The manuscript Spaulding is said to have written was too 
meager a thing to in any sense compare with a manuscript that 
would make a book the size of the Book of Mormon. — Braden 
and Kelley Debate (first ed.), p. 8a 

Further on he adds : 

Taking up the first reason, it will at once be clear to you 
that a manuscript written in the English language, as they con- 
cede Spaulding's was, to contain the amount of matter that is 
included in the strictly historical part of the Book of Mormon, 
would cover at least fifteen hundred pages of foolscap paper. 
Was the "Manuscript Found" such? The statements of those 
who claim they saw the "Manuscript Found," place it beyond 



170 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

doubt that it was no such. Mrs. McKinstry, the daughter of 
Solomon Spaulding, in her evidence, says, that she, "Read the 
manuscript frequently when she was about twelve years of age, 
and that it was about one inch in thickness." She read it fre- 
quently, so it could not have been very large. Then their other 
trumped up witnesses all, or nearly all, say they heard it read. 
Henry Lake heard it read. John N. Miller heard it read from 
beginning to end. Aaron Wright heard Spaulding read it, etc 
Mrs. Matilda Spaulding, wife of Solomon Spaulding, states in 
her testimony published in the Illinois Quincy Whig, that it was 
about a third as large as the Book of Mormon and that her 
daughter (Mrs. McKinstry) read it frequently. Hurlburt who 
was commissioned by Henry Lake, John Miller, Aaron Wright, 
et al, (Braden's witnesses), to go and get the Spaulding writing, 
went and got it he says, and the only one in Spaulding's hand- 
writing which the widow had. That he delivered it to E. D. 
Howe of Painesville, who was writing the book to break down the 
Mormons, and Howe says, page 268, of his book in describing 
it, that, "The trunk referred to by the widow was subsequently 
examined and found to contain only a single manuscript book 
in Spaulding's handwriting, containing about one quire of paper.'* 
Then according to the description of the manuscript itself 
by those who actually saw it, it must have been a very small 
affair indeed in comparison to the historical portion of the Book 
of Mormon. In fact there was no comparison of the one, to 
the other, whatever. 

The above is confusion confounded. It is an instance 
of flagrantly jumbling the two manuscripts together in 
order to produce an effect of absurdity and inconsistency. 
The manuscript which Mesdames Davison and McKins- 
try describe could not have been the "Manuscript Found" 
at all, but was the "Manuscript Story." The former was 
never in the "old hair trunk" after Spaulding's death, 
for the reason that it was in the hands of Rigdon. These 
ladies, as we have already shown, were mistaken, for the 
manuscript they describe has been traced from the old 
trtink to Hurlburt, from Hurlburt to Howe, from Howe 
to Rice and from Rice to the Oberlin College Library, and 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 171 

the only title that it bears is "Manuscript Story — ^Con- 
neaut Creek," and this "in faint penciling," while it is 
profoundly different from the "Manuscript Found" as 
this is described by John Spaulding, Henry Lake and the 
others. 

Again, what if the original "Manuscript Found" was 
a much shorter work than the Book of Mormon? How 
does this prove that it could not have been the basis of 
the latter? Mr. Kelley's statement that the historical 
part of the Book of Mormon alone "would cover at 
least fifteen hundred pages of foolscap paper," is away 
wide of the mark. By a test which I have made, I have 
found that the whole Book of Mormon, historical part 
and all, can be easily written upon twelve hundred pages. 
Another fact is that about three-fourths of the book is 
religious matter, and we contend that this was the work 
of Rigdon. This would leave, by a fair estimate, about 
three hundred pages for the historical part, written just 
as it is, and if this were reduced to a consistent size by 
the omission of redundant and superfluous language, rep- 
etitions, etc., Rigdon's overdress, it would fill a space in 
print at most one-eighth the size of the Book of Mormon. 
So the statements of Lake, Miller and Wright, concern- 
ing the size of Spaulding's "Manuscript Found," may be 
correct after all. 

THE STYI-E OF THE BOOK OF MORMON. 

I. It is claimed that the historical and doctrinal parts 
of the Book of Mormon are so closely interwoven that 
they could not have been the work of two independent 
writers. Elder J. R. Lambert says : 

The historical and doctrinal parts are so closely blended and 
interwoven, throughout the book, that it is evident that who- 
ever wrote all or any part of the history contained in the book. 



172 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

also wrote the doctrine presented with it. — Objections to the 
Book of Mormon Answered and Refuted, p. 76. 

But Mr. Lambert proceeds to reason upon the 
grounds, which -we have already denied, that his op- 
ponents hold to the view that the historical part of the 
Book of Mormon is verbally the work of Spaulding. I 
feel sure that no anti-Mormon writer, who has given 
the matter due consideration, holds to any such theory. 
All that we claim is that Rigdon took the historical out- 
line, proper names and certain Scriptural expressions 
from the "Manuscript Found," and clothed them in his 
own particular literary style, and presented them to the 
world as the Book of Mormon. This would not have 
been an impossible feat, for it is done every day in our 
public schools, the scholars reproducing in their own 
language the thoughts of another. This is what we claim 
Rigdon did. 

2. Again, it is objected that the style of the Book of 
Mormon is altogether too common for a man of the 
education and literary ability of Solomon Spaulding.* 
Elder W. W. Blair writes : 

That any one of judgment, on reading the book, could for 
one moment think that Rev. Mr. Spaulding, commonly reputed 
to be a man of poetic nature, romantic tastes and high scholastic 
attainments, ever wrote the book, or even one page of it, is 
more than we can believe. Had he, or any man of finished 
education, written the book, their scholarly attainments would 
have been manifest in the style, language and arrangement of the 
book. — Joseph the Seer, p. 174. 

^When it it to the advantage of the Monnont, Spaulding's ability is 
run up, and when not to their advantage to run it up, it is run down. 
Right in this same connection, Blair says: "Whoever will read the 'Man- 
uscript Story' written by Rev. Spaulding, will perceive that he had neither 
the religion, the morals, the information, nor the intellectual ability, to 
write the Book of Mormon, nor anything to compare with it" (p. I7S)« 
In the first quotation, the Book of Mormon, as a literary production, ti 
below Spaulding; in this quotation, it Is above him. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 178 

But here, again, Mr. Blair proceeds to arg^e along 
the same line as Mr. Lambert, and assumes that his op- 
ponents hold that the Book of Mormon, or at least the 
historical part of it, is just as it came from Spaulding's 
pen without being worked over. I say that no such the- 
ory would, for a moment, be held by any anti-Mormon 
polemic who would give the subject the consideration 
that it deserves. While the outline, proper names and a 
few Scriptural expressions, as "And it came to pass," 
etc., are undoubtedly Spaulding's, the dress, with its frills 
and flounces of verbosity, redimdancy and repetition, 
comes from the dressmaking establishment of Sidney 
Rigdon. 

3. It is further objected that the Book of Mormon 
is not written either in the style of Rigdon or that of 
Smith, hence that it must have come from a higher 
source and must be divine. On this point, Elder George 
Reynolds says : 

It is not written in the language of either Joseph Smith or 
Sidney Rigdon. If we compare the revelations given through 
Joseph Smith at the time the plates were being translated, we 
find an altogether different diction; or let us compare it with 
the Lectures on Faith in the Book of Doctrine and Covemnts 
and then with the acknowledged writings of Sidney Rigdon, and 
we shall find there is nothing common in any of these with the 
peculiarities of grammatical construction and verbal idiosyn- 
crasies of the Book of Monnon.^Afy//f of the Manuscript Found, 
pp. 38, 39. 

But I am not so sure of this. In come respects the 
style of the Book of Mormon may differ from the style 
of Smith's revelations, the difference being due to the 
respective character of each, one being mainly historic, 
the other mainly prophetic. But, how about Rigdon? 
His style is described to have been "eloquent" and "en- 
thusiastic/' just such a style as would abotmd in verbosity 



174 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

and redundancy of speech/ Besides being a backwoods 
preacher of those times when revival excitement ran 
high, he undoubtedly employed the hackneyed expressions 
of the backwoods revivalist. Such Book of Mormon ex- 
pressions, therefore, as "everlastingly too late," "did sing 
redeeming love," "experienced a change of heart" and 
"lay down the weapons of your rebellion," strongly im- 
press us as Rigdonisms, and confine the production of 
the Book of Mormon to that period in the world's his- 
tory when such expressions were in common use. 

THE CHARACTER OF THE BOOK OF MORMON. 

The doctrinal character of the Book of Mormon is 
made a further objection to its Spaulding authorship, it 
being claimed that it smacks more of "Campbellism" than 
It does of Presbyterianism. 

The doctrinal portions of the Book of Mormon are not those 
that one would expect from a retired clergyman of the Presby- 
terian school. They begin with the history and are intimately 
interwoven with it from first to last; and some of the cardinal 
features of the Presbyterian Confession of Faith are discarded. 
A Baptist writer. Professor Whitsitt, in a lecture delivered be- 
fore a Baptist Pastors' G)nference, and published in the Western 
Recorder, takes the ground that the Book of Mormon was writ- 
ten in the direct interest of the Campbellites, and in support of 
their confession of faith, that "Jesus is the Christ"^/ oseph 
Smith, in "The Spaulding Story Re-examined," p. 13. 

If Mr. Spaulding, a Congregational (or Presbyterian) min- 
ister, wrote the book, he would have filled it with his doctrine 
instead of advocating in it such doctrines as are found in the 
book, many of which are in no sense Congregational, but rather 
un-Congregational. — JV. W. Blair, in "Joseph the Seer," p. 174. 

But it has never been claimed that Spauldingf's ro- 

^ Hayden tays of Rigdon: "Hit action was graceful, his language 
copious, fluent in utterance, with articulation clear and musical." — History 
of iho Disciphs, p, 19a. 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 175 

mance was a religious romance. It was purely an histor- 
ical account of a fictitious people, and to this all of his 
relatives and acquaintances agree. The religious part 
was added by Sidney Rigdon, who, from 1824 to 1830, 
was a colaborer with Alexander Campbell, Walter 
Scott and Adamson Bentley, in the great Restoration 
movement, hence the points of "Campbellism," so- 
called, which appear. Another thing to be taken into 
consideration is that Solomon Spaulding, at this time, was 
neither a Presbyterian nor a "Campbellite," but a skeptic, 
and so if he had any religious views at all, they must 
have been antagonistic to Christianity. All that the re- 
ligious character of the Book of Mormon proves is that 
it was revamped from the "Manuscript Found" after 
Rigdon had become familiar with the doctrine of bap- 
tism for the remission of sins and other points of the- 
otogy as held by the Campbells. 

smith's inability to produce the book of mormon. 

It is denied that Joseph Smith could, in any way, have 
produced the Book of Mormon, and, as it was above his 
ability, it is claimed that it must have come from God. 
Mr. Blair says : 

That Joseph Smith, without the inspiration of God, could 
write that book, abounding as it does in the most accurate items 
of history, declaring improbable historical facts, facts which have 
since been fully attested by the antiquarian and the geologist: 
disseminating a system of morals and religion that challenges 
the criticism, and that is worthy of the admiration of the race 
and publishing a series of prophecies the most important and 
startling, many of which are being fulfilled under our own ob- 
servation — ^that he could do such a work, under such conditions, 
it would be far more difficult to believe, than to believe what he 
claims, viz., the guidance and inspiration of God.— Joseph the 
Seer, p. 175. 

Let us, to start with, take a kx>k at the remarkable 

(18) 



176 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

things which Mr. Blair refers to as proof that Smith was 
under the guidance and inspiration of God. 

In the first place, it is claimed that he produced a 
book which abounds in the most accurate items of his- 
tory, many of which have since been fully attested by the 
antiquarian and the geologist. This statement is suf- 
ficient to raise a smile. Is a book which says that Christ 
was to be "bom at Jerusalem" (Abna 5:2) historically 
accurate? And is a book which stands in open conflict 
with the great facts pertaining to the ancient inhabitants 
of .^jnerica, as revealed by archaeological research, to be 
trusted as coming from God? I have proved conclu- 
sively a score or more of conflictions between the Book 
of Mormon and archaeological science,' and yet we re- 
peatedly hear, in spite of these proofs to the contrary, 
that the claims of the Book of Mormon have been fully 
confirmed "by the antiquarian and the ereologist" ! 

As for the morality of the Book of Mormon, it proves 
nothing as to its inspiration. Thousands of books teach 
good morals without being inspired. Such books as 
"Pilgrim's Progress," by Bunyan; "In His Steps," by 
Sheldon, and "What a Young Man Ought to Know," 
by Stall, are morally uplifting to a greater degree than 
the Book of Mormon, and yet their authors would hoot 
at the suggestion that they were inspired to write them. 
The moral light which shines from the pages of the 
Book of Mormon is reflected from the Bible. It has not 
given the world a single moral truth that it did not have 
in the Christian Scriptures before it appeared. 

Lastly, Smith's prophecies or revelations are decidedly 
weak in proving that he was under the guidance 2lnd in- 
spiration of God. The honest and virtuous mind can 

*See mj "CumorAh Revisited." 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 177 

have but little confidence in a prophet whose guiding 
spirit speaks of an individual as "my servant John C. 
Bennett," and promises to accept his work if he con- 
tinues (Doc. and Cov., 107:6), when, at the same time, 
he was "a very mean man" and a wife deserter, having 
"a wife and two or three children in McConnelsville, 
Morgan County, Ohio" (Church History, Vol. JL, p. 
585). Either the Mormon god connived at wife desertion 
in defiance of Matt. 19 : 5, or else he was ignorant in 
1841 of what Bennett did in 1838. 

So, whether you take up the Book of Mormon as a 
history or a code of morals, or consider the prophecies 
of Joseph Smith, you will find nothing so remarkable that 
It would be above the ability of the "Gold Bible Com- 
pany." 

But, turning now to the real part which Smith played 
in the imposture, we find that it would not require more 
than a young man of his age and education, and of that 
time, was able to perform. His sole work was, first, to 
play the prophet, and, secondly, to read off to Cowdery, 
from behind the sheet, "syllable by syllable and word by 
word," what Rigdon had already written down. And 
this he did, according to Whitmer, in a most bungling 
manner, having to spell some of the words out, letter 
by letter. To claim that he had to be inspired for such 
a procedure, is an insult to common sense. 

THE CHALLENGE TO PRODUCE THE MANUSCRIPT. 

But perhaps the flimsiest objection that has ever been 
raised against this theory is that the opponents of the 
Book of Mormon have never been able to produce the 
manuscript which they claim was its original, hence that 
this manuscript never existed. As early as 1839, Parley 
P. Pratt, through the New York Era, tauntingly uaid: 



178 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

Now if there is such a manuscript in existence, let it come 
forward at once and not be kept in the dark. 

In throwing out this challenge, Pratt knew perfectly 
well that he was safe, and every Mormon knows the 
same in issuing the same challenge to-day, for the "Gold 
Bible Company" would have had a smaller degree of 
common sense than we give them credit for if, after this 
manuscript had served its purpose, they had carelessly 
let it lie around to fall into Gentile hands and thus expose 
their fraud. 

It IS not strange that Mormons would take advantage 
of such an objection, and grasp at it as a drowning man 
would at a straw, in order to save their failing cause, but 
the incomprehensible thing is that some anti-Mormon 
writers, who have rejected the Spaulding theory, have 
also thrown out this challenge to the members of their 
own party, and at the inability of the latter to produce 
the manuscript have derisively declared that "the entire 
theory connecting Sidney Rigdon and the Spaulding ro- 
mance with Joseph Smith in originating the Book of 
Mormon must be abandoned." Rev. D. H. Bays, who 
for twenty-seven years was an elder in the Reorganized 
Church, and who, after his apostasy, wrote his "Doc- 
trines and Dogmas of Mormonism," in a rather caustic 
letter to A. T. Schroeder,* then of Salt Lake City, Utah, 
and dated at Battle Creek, Michigan, September 7, 1899, 
demands : 

If "three manuscripts" ever existed, why not produce the 
evidence to prove it? Why not induce that library of "over one 
thousand books and pamphlets" to 3rield up some of its hidden 
treasures of knowledge upon this point» and settle this mooted 
question once for all? Mormonism for more than half a century 



> Mr. Schroeder, later, ably refuted the contentions of Mr. Bays in liis 
'The Origin of the Book of Mormon Re-examined/' etc 



THE BOOK OP MORMON 179 

has been demanding the production of the "Manuscript Found," 
that it might be compared with the Book of liovmon.'—J osephite 
"Journal of History" January, 1909, p. 93. 

He then sums up his arguments against the Spaulding 
theory in the following astounding propositions: 

1. The existence of a second manuscript is assumed, not 
proved. 

2. If such manuscript really existed, no proof is offered to 
show the "absolute identity" of the names with those in the 
Book of Mormon. 

It is surprising to me now, after once having sided 
with Mr. Bays in his theory of the Cowdery-Smith origfin 
of the Book of Mormon, that a gentleman, so familiar 
with the history and evidence of the present controversy, 
as he claims to have been, should take his stand upon two 
such baseless propositions as these. 

First, the existence cf Spaulding's "second manu- 
script" is not assumed, but proved — ^proved by the testi- 
mony of eleven witnesses, the genuineness of which testi- 
mony is admitted both by the Brighamite, Roberts, and 
the Josephite, Smith. As these gentlemen, and no others, 
have ever shown that our eleven witnesses lied in the 
testimonies which it is admitted they gave, these testi- 
monies stand as proving that the "second manuscript" of 
Spaulding really existed. And yet Bays overlooked this 
fact! 

Secondly, how Mr. Bays could say that no proofs have 
ever been offered to show the "absolute identity" of the 
names in this "second manuscript" with those in the 
Book of Mormon, when eight of these admittedly genuine 
testimonies had been before the world for sixty-six years 
certifying to this very fact, is also beyond the limits of 
htunan understanding. 

Mr. Bays' whole argument, then, falls in the face of 



180 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

the eleven testimonies which we have already given in 
Chapters VI. and VII. 

The demand to produce Spaulding's second manu- 
script suggests the following illustration: Jones steals a 
hog from Brown. Eleven of Brown's friends see the 
hog in Jones' pen and identify it* as belonging to Brown. 
Jones takes the hog to White and they kill and eat it. 
After the hog is all devoured, Brown has Jones arrested 
for the crime and introduces his eleven witnesses to 
prove his guilt. But the justice decides that, as the hog 
can not be produced, Jones is innocent. 

Now for the application : Rigdon steals a manuscript 
from Spaulding and, with Smith's assistance, revamps it 
into the Book of Mormon, after which he destroys it, as 
no doubt he did. Eleven witnesses testify to the identity, 
in historical outline and proper names, of Spaulding^s 
manuscript with the Book of Mormon, but Rev. D. H. 
Bays and the Mormons demand that, as the Spaulding 
manuscript can not be produced, the case against Rigdon 
be dismissed and he be adjudged not guilty! 

THE CHARACTERS OF HURLBURT AND HOWE. 

It is charged that the characters of Hurlburt and 
Howe, who secured the testimonies of eight of the eleven 
witnesses which we have given, were so corrupt that 
these testimonies are discredited thereby. Elder E. L. 
Kelley says: 

Do you blame me, then, ladies and gentlemen, for stating 
before you I cannot take as evidence an3rthing that has passed 
through such hands as Mr. Hurlburt and Howe, unless I have 
the original statement to compare, or* it can be proven outside 
in some way that these statements that he has been referring 
to — ^but never reading in full to you — ^are unaltered a«id genuine? 
Here is where he gets his John Spaulding, Martha Spaulding, 
Henry Lake, John Miller, Aaron Wright, Oliver Smith and 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 181 

Nahum Howard. Do you want me to swallow their contra- 
dictory, self-accusing, wholly improbable, malicious falsehoods, 
rather than accept the truth of God? Could anything pure and 
immaculate have passed through that sewer of filth and come 
out worthy of the palate of decent men and women? — Bradeu 
and Kelley Debate (first ed.)> pp. II5» ii6. 

The charge that is tnade against Hurlburt is that he 
was cut off from the church for immorality, and against 
Howe, that he was jealous because his wife and sister 
united with the Mormons. 

But, suppose that both of these charges are true, how 
does that affect the testimonies of John Spaulding and the 
rest, since it is admitted by the highest Mormon authority 
that these testimonies are genuine? Hurlburt and Howe 
may have possessed characters as black as midnight, but 
if the statements they secured were actually made and 
signed as represented, how has their own individual cor- 
ruption affected them ? With the admissions of genuine- 
ness which their own leading men have made, it ap- 
pears very inconsistent for the Mormon churches to 
attempt to discredit the Conneaut testimonies by the poor 
characters of men who never made them. 

Mr. Kelley did with these testimonies just what all 
Mormons do and have to do : he issued a blustering de- 
nial and brought out no proof to support the same, simply 
calling them "contradictory, self-accusing, wholly im- 
probable, malicious falsehoods." Let the reader com- 
pare this charge with the statements themselves, and he 
will see how far it is from the truth. 

As for the accusations against Hurlburt and Howe, 
they may have been guilty of the things charged and 
they may not. The policy of Mormonism has always 
been to attempt to blacken the character of every man 
who has ever openly and successfully opposed it Howe's 



182 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

book is, probably, the most important book ever written 
against Mormonism, as it was the first and contains so 
much original testimony that stands as a huge mountain 
in the way of the onward advance of Mormonism. Un- 
able to meet and overthrow this testimony, the Mormons 
turn and vent their spleen on the devoted heads of its 
compilers. Other men, also, besides Hurlburt, were guilty 
of seduction in the Mormon Church, and among them 
Smith himself, but they were never excommunicated. 

SUPPOSED CONTRADICTIONS IN THE "MANUSCRIPT FOUND** 
TO THE BOOK OF MORMON. 

It is claimed, further, that in the descriptions of the 
purported "Manuscript Found" which exist, certain con- 
tradictions to the Book of Mormon appear. 

1. It is said that the "Manuscript Found" is declared 
to have described an idolatrous people instead of a people 
who worshiped God and obeyed his laws as the Book of 
Mormon describes. This objection is based upon a ques- 
tion and its answer found in the Haven-Davison inter- 
view as published in the Quincy Whig of 1839. 

Q. Does the manuscript describe an idolatrous or a religious 
people? 

A. An idolatrous people. 

But here, again, we have the same old play on Mrs. 
Davison's mistake of confounding the trunk manuscript 
with the "Manuscript Found." The former does describe 
an idolatrous people, the aborigines, but it also describes 
a Christian colony which came from Rome. The latter 
described a company of Jews that came from Jerusalem, 
and, while only incidentally religious, probably repre- 
sented them as worshipers of their Jehovah. 

2. It is objected, further, that, according to the Con- 
neaut testimonies, the "Manuscript Found" described the 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 183 

Jewish colony as the lost tribes of Israel, while the Book 
of Mormon makes them out to be only of the tribe of 
Joseph. After giving, on page 46 of his "Myth of the 
Manuscript Found/' the claim that Spaulding's "Man- 
uscript Found" gave an account of the immigration of 
the lost tribes to America, Re)molds says on page 47 : 

It is well to remark that the Book of Mormon makes but 
very few references to the ten tribes, and in those few, it directly, 
plainly and wiequivocally states that the American Indians are 
not the descendants of die ten tribes, and further, that the ten 
tribes never were in America, or any part of it, during any 
portion of their existence as a nation. On the other hand, the 
Book of Mormon as directly informs us from whom the abo- 
rigines, or natives of this continent, are descended. This being 
the case, how is it possible for the two works to be identical? 

To this objection I reply as follows: The theory of 
the Book of Mormon is so closely akin to the theory of 
the origin of the American Indians in the lost tribes, as 
advocated before and about 1830 by such writers as 
Adair, Boudinot, Smith and Priest, that it would be very 
easy for the witnesses, who had not heard the "Manu- 
script Found" read for twenty years, to confound one 
with the other. Even to-day we hear intelligent people, 
some of whom have read the Book of Mormon, tm- 
thoughtedly speak of it as a history of the lost tribes.* 
The important thing is that the writers of both romances 
have the ancient inhabitants (Israelites) coming from the 
city of Jerusalem and under the leadership of Lehi and 
Nephi. 

"As an example of this common mistake, see "Nortk Americans of 
Yesterday,** p. 403, by Frederick S. Dellenbaugh, an employe of onx 
National Museum and an accomplished archaeologist, where he sayt: "Cer^ 
tain resemblances between the myths of the Amerinds and those of the 
Israelites increased the belief that the American race is the Lost Tribes. 
The Mormons specially hold to this opinion. But there is positively no 
ground for the belief." 



184 THE TRUE ORIGIN OP 

3. The Rev. Abner Jackson, in his testimony, says 
that Spaulding begins "their [Nephites'] departure from 
Palestine, or Judea, then ^ up through Asia, points out 
their exposures, hardships and sufferings, also their dis- 
putes and quarrels, especially when they built their craft 
for passing over the straits." This is objected to as being 
entirely diflferent from the migrational account in the 
Book of Mormon, which has the Nephites crossing over 
the Pacific Ocean and landing upon the coast of South 
America. This objection may be met in several ways: 
First, it may have been according to the original plot of 
the "Manuscript Found," as heard read by Jackson, to 
have the Nephites enter America via Behring Strait, 
and this feature may have been afterwards changed by 
Spaulding himself ; or it may have been changed by Rig- 
don still later; or, what seems more probable, Jackson, 
who was a very aged man at the time that he made his 
statement, may have confused the migrational account in 
the "Manuscript Found" with the theory, so widely held 
when he was a boy, that the fost tribes entered America 
by way of Alaska. The latter was the theory of many 
investigators at the beginning of the nineteenth century. 

Recapitulation. 

In conclusion, I wish to sum up the points which I 
have endeavored to establish in the preceding pages : 

I. THE "manuscript STORY." 

I. About 1809, Solomon Spaulding, a retired Con- 
gregational or Presbyterian preacher, living at Conneaut, 
Ohio, wrote a small manuscript which he claimed to have 
found written in the Latin language on twenty-eight rolls 
of parchment in an artificial cave on Conneaut Creek, 
and which purported to be the historical account of a 



THE BOOK OF MORMON^ 185 

party of Romans who were thrown upon our shores in 
the time of Constantine the Great. 

2. This manuscript he abandoned and placed in an 
"old hair trtuik/' which at his death in 1816 was taken 
to the home of his wife's brother, W. H. Sabine, of 
Onondaga Valley, New York. 

3. In 1820, this trunk, with the manuscript, was re- 
moved to Hartwick, New York, where it was later placed 
in the care of Jerome Clark, a cousin of Mrs. Spaulding, 
now Mrs. Davison. 

4. The manuscript remained in the "old hair trunk" 
until 1834, when Dr. Hurlburt, from Ohio, with the per- 
mission of Mrs. Spaulding-Davison, took it to Paines- 
ville, of that State, and turned it over to E. D. Howe, 
author of "Mormonism Unveiled.'* 

5. It was in the possession of E. D. Howe until 1839 
or 1840, when it was inadvertently transferred to L. L. 
Rice, who bought Howe's printing establishment. Rice 
took it to Columbus, Ohio, where for years he was the 
State printer. 

6. After this. Rice removed to Honolulu, Hawaiian 
Islands, and, though unaware of it, carried this manu- 
script with him. In 1884 it was accidentally discovered 
by him, and later placed in the Oberlin College Library, 
Oberlin, Ohio. 

7. The Mormons have published copies of it, which 
they erroneously entitle "Manuscript Foimd." 



I. In 1809, after he had thrown aside his "Manu- 
script Story," Spaulding began a new romance in the 
Scriptural style, which he entitled "Manuscript Found." 
This romance, which he often read to his neighbors, pur- 
ported to be the history of a Jewish colony that came to 



186 THE TRUE ORIGIN OF 

our shores in early times under the leadership of LeM 
and Nephi. 

2. In 1812, Spaulding removed to Pittsburgh, Penn- 
sylvania, for the purpose of having this manuscript 
printed, and placed it in the printing establishment of 
Robert Patterson. 

3. In 1814, Spaulding left Pittsburgh and went to 
Amity, Pennsylvania, where he died in October, 1816. 

4. While Spaulding's relations with Patterson existed, 
the latter had in his employ a young man by the name 
of J. Harrison Lambdin, who, in turn, had a friend by 
the name of Sidney Rigdon, who lived a few miles in the 
country on his mother's farm, but who frequently lounged 
around the printing-office. 

5. Before Spaulding's death, his manuscript came up 
missing, and he told two intimate acquaintances, Joseph 
Miller and Dr. Cephas Dodd, that he suspected Rigdon 
of the theft. 

6. In 1822 or 1823, and again in 1826 or 1827, Rigdon 
exhibited such a manuscript to Dr. John Winter and Mrs. 
Amos Dunlap, his wife's niece, which he told the former 
had been written by a man by the name of Spaulding. 

7. Between the years 1826 and 1830 he told Adamson 
Bentley, Alexander Campbell, Darwin Atwater and Dr. 
Rosa a number of startling things, among them that a 
golden book had been dug up in New York which gave an 
account of the ancient inhabitants of this continent and 
stated that the Christian religion had been preached here 
in early times just as it was then being preached by 
Campbell and his coadjutors. 

8. During this time, Rigdon was seen at Palmyra, 
New York, or vicinity, at three different times : in March, 
1827; in the fall of 1827, and again in the summer of 
1828. 



THE BOOK OF MORMON 187 

9. In tlie late fall of 1830, Rigdon was converted to 
Mormonism, after only a few days' investigation, and 
later became one of its most prominent leaders. 

These, I believe, are the links in that chain of evi- 
dence which, when followed from the Book of Mormon, 
leads us directly to Spaulding's "Manuscript Found'* 

THE END. 



BOOKS 

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By CHARLES A. SHOOK 
CUMORAH REVISITED 

aoch. lino. 889 19. Price, iNMlpiJ4,$lM 

Thii book hat been wiitten to ditpiove the luAorical daiiiit 
of the Book of Mocmon and the Mormont. Iti adthor dKmt 
that the ancient mhahkanli of the American cnntmfnt diffoed 
ncially, cuhurally, leligiouiljr, KngiiMtically and todally from the 
peoples described in the Book of Monnon. Eveiy important 
aigament made by Monnon wrilen and based upon American 
archaeologr is caiefuDy co n skfaed and its falsily ncposed. 
This book is a veritable thesaimis of infannatkm for the anti- 
Mormon polemic 

THE TRUE ORIGIN OF MORMON 
POLYGAMY 

aodi.l2BM. Price, poslpiJd. $1.80 

The author in his preface says: ''While they rtran^ op- 
pose polygamy now, thqr acknowledge as prophet the man who 
confessed to being tfie father of the doctrine of the pfanality of 
wives.*' This work enables the reader to ''speak with audwrily.** 

By S. W. TRAUM 

MORMONISM AGAINST ITSELF 

Clolli.l2mo. Price, portpaid. $1.00 

This is just the book for the buqr man to have^ in order to 
meet and defeat this fake teaching. 

"Every one who doubts the claims of Mormo ni sm should 
secure a copy and give it a faithful study.** — Ge9, Hussiy. 

THE STANDARD PUBUSHING COMPANY 
CINCINNATI, O. 




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