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The
Martyrdom of Joseph and Hyrum Smith
By Pamela Price
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| The Prophet Joseph Smith, who was
martyred on June 27, 1844. |
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| Presiding Patriarch Hyrum Smith,
martyred with his brother. |
The date of June twenty-seventh is important to RLDS members
because it is the anniversary of the martyrdom of Joseph Smith,
Jr., who restored the Church in 1830, and of his brother Hyrum
Smith who was the presiding patriarch at that time. They were
assassinated in the county jail at Carthage, Illinois, 165 years
ago, while awaiting trial on trumped-up charges.
Joseph's death in 1844 marked a turning point in the history
of the Church, for over a hundred thousand people had joined the
Church in the fourteen years that he was the Prophet. As an instrument
for the Lord, Joseph had laid a firm foundation for the Church,
for he translated the Book of Mormon, produced the Inspired Version
of the Bible, and had given 105 revelations which are recorded
in the Doctrine and Covenants. These Three Books are still the
basis of the Church.
The restoring of the New Testament
Church in 1830 was an extremely important event in the history
of the world, for it fulfilled Bible prophecy, brought the true
Church to earth again, and did much to change modern religious
history. The restoring of Christ's only true Church brought joy
to the many who joined it, but animosity to those who "lost"
friends or relatives to the new faith—and hatred from the
other churches which lost the members (and their financial support).
Then too, the Saints' city of Nauvoo on the Mississippi grew so
fast that it caused political problems. There was fear that the
Saints would overrun that part of the country, and would gain
control of political parties and government offices there. And
to make matters worse, there were dissidents and conspirators
at Nauvoo who wanted Joseph prosecuted (see Joseph
Smith Fought Polygamy, volume one). These and other
factors contributed to the cause of the martyrdom.
The story of the deaths of Joseph and Hyrum is available in
Church books—especially in The Story
of the Church by Inez Smith Davis, and The
History of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, volume two. Other accounts of the assassination
and the events surrounding it can be found in many articles in
The True Latter Day Saints' Herald,
The Saints' Herald, and the Journal
of History.
Mother Lucy Smith's Statement
The day after Joseph and Hyrum were martyred, their bodies were
taken back to Nauvoo on horse-drawn wagons. Their mother, Lucy
Smith, described the events which followed:
After the corpses were washed and dressed in their burial
clothes, we were allowed to see them. I had for a long time
braced every nerve, roused every energy of my soul, and called
upon God to strengthen me; but when I entered the room, and
saw my murdered sons extended both at once before my eyes, and
heard the sobs and groans of my family, and the cries of "Father!
Husband! Brothers!" from the lips of their wives, children,
brothers, and sisters, it was too much. I sank back, crying
to the Lord, in the agony of my soul, "My God, my God,
why hast thou forsaken this family!"
A voice replied, "I have taken them to myself, that they
might have rest!"
Emma was carried back to her room almost in a state of insensibility.
Her oldest son approached the corpse, and dropped upon his
knees, and laying his cheek against his father's, and kissing
him, exclaimed, "Oh, my father, my father!"
As for myself, I was swallowed up in the depths of my afflictions;
and, though my soul was filled with horror past imagination,
yet I was dumb, until I arose again to contemplate the spectacle
before me. Oh! at that moment how my mind flew through every
scene of sorrow and distress which we had passed together, in
which they had shown the innocence and sympathy which filled
their guileless hearts!
As I looked upon their peaceful, smiling countenances, I seemed
almost to hear them say, "Mother, weep not for us, we have
overcome the world by love; we carried to them the gospel, that
their souls might be saved; they slew us for our testimony,
and thus placed us beyond their power; their ascendancy is for
a moment, ours is an eternal triumph." (Lucy Smith, Joseph
Smith the Prophet and His Progenitors, 354-355)
Apostle Lyman Wight's Testimony
Apostle Lyman Wight, who joined the Church November 1, 1830,
was among the converts made in Ohio as the first missionaries
of the newly organized Church went forth to take the Gospel to
the Lamanites. Apostle Wight wrote of Joseph:
He was greatly beloved and revered by the members of different
churches, as also by all his acquaintances with the exception
of the various denominations. His soundness in the belief of
the doctrine to which he gave heed; his firm, sound, candid
mind, and unshaken disposition to do the will of heaven as he
was instructed, caused him to have many enemies among the denominations
of the day, as also many in his society.
The greatest difficulty originated from his not giving up
his own faith and believing in that of others. As many, very
many, have grossly mistaken his character, I, having been acquainted
with him for at least fourteen years previous to his death,
take the liberty to say: That no man can draw any inference
of his religion or character from Salt Lake [with Brigham Young]
or Beaver Island [with James Strang]. Any person or persons
drawing inference of his true character, or of the tenets of
his doctrine, from these two histories, would do him great injustice,
and do a great injury to themselves....
Joseph Smith, the "author and proprietor" of the
Book of Mormon, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints, was six feet two inches high, of a form and
figure difficult to surpass among the human family. He was a
man possessed of a great share of good humor. As great a lover
of his country as could be found among men. Often spoke of the
government as being the most admirable on earth. Wept over the
mob of Missouri and Philadelphia alike. He often wept that mobs
should arise under the glorious institutions of the United States.
Always spoke highly of our chief magistrates and those who administered
the laws. (RLDS History of the Church
2:775)
The Testimony of Joseph Smith III
... About the first that now occurs to my memory was the appearance
of the messenger announcing the death of Father; I think it
was Lorenzo Wassen, my mother's nephew, the son of Benjamin
Wassen and my mother's sister Elizabeth. He came in, covered
with dust, bringing the news.
I remember the gathering of the crowd at the Nauvoo Mansion,
and recall seeing Doctor Willard Richards on a platform erected
in the frame house or building across the road from the Mansion
on the south side of Water Street, and the congregations of
thousands who gathered to listen to him and others detailing
something of the tragedy and counseling quiet resignation.
I did not hear his speech, or if I did, I do not remember it,
as my mother and we children were in the livingroom in the Mansion—Mother
overwhelmed with her grief and we children sympathizing as children
will without fairly comprehending the importance of such an
event. I remember the hours of seclusion of the family from
intrusion, the gloom and the dread of the time, awaiting until
the bodies were brought home, they being placed in their coffins,
in the southwest corner of the diningroom, and the gathering
of the little group, my mother and her children—my brothers
Frederick and Alexander, and my adopted sister, Julia Murdock,
and myself.
Notwithstanding the grief and the oppression of the hour, the
darkness of which I can feel even now, I recall the attitude
of my mother. After leaning over the coffin, she placed her
hand upon the cheek of my father, and in grief-stricken accents
said, "Oh, Joseph, Joseph! My husband, my husband! Have
they taken you from me at last!"
Friendly hands ministered to us, and Mother was assisted to
her room again, and we were alone while the multitude flocked
through the house, taking a last look at him who in life had
been their leader and their friend.
I do not know much about the cavalcade which formed, nor was
I a witness to the depositing of the bodies (or the boxes supposed
to contain the bodies) of Father and Uncle Hyrum in the temporary
tomb, built in the hillside near the Temple. I remember some
of the rumors passed around as to the place where the bodies
were really deposited, but I knew where they were subsequently
buried, for I was present upon the occasion when, in the presence
of two others, there was an opening of the place of deposit,
and I saw the features of my father as they were exposed, and
a lock of hair was cut from his head, a portion of which I have
in my possession today, in a brooch which my mother used to
wear.
In view of the contention Brigham Young and those afterward
with him in the exodus to the West, and the charge made by the
enemies of my father and the opposers to the faith, it is a
source of gratification to me now to remember that no other
woman bowed beside the bodies of these brothers, as they were
waiting the passing of the last rites which the living could
pay to the dead, as wives to mourn and exhibit their grief before
relatives and friends, save my mother at my father's side and
Aunt Mary at the side of my Uncle Hyrum. The scene was sacred
to their grief and theirs alone! (Mary Audentia Anderson, The
Memoirs of President Joseph Smith III, 37–38; The
Saints' Herald [January 29, 1935], 143–144)
Although over 160 years have passed since the Martyrdom, the
Gospel has not dimmed but is still a marvelous work and a wonder. |
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