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THE LIFE AND CONFESSIONS
OF THE LATE MORMON BISHOP,
JOHN D. LEE;
(Written by Himself)
ALSO THE TRUE HISTORY OF THE HORRIBLE BUTCHERY KNOWN AS
THE MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE.
--PUBLISHED 1877--
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LAST CONFESSION AND STATEMENT OF JOHN D. LEE. WRITTEN AT HIS DICTATION AND DELIVERED TO WILLIAM W. BISHOP,
CHAPTER XVIII.
ATTORNEY FOR LEE, WITH A REQUEST THAT THE
SAME BE PUBLISHED.
AS A DUTY to myself, my family, and mankind at large, I propose to give a full
and true statement of all that I know and all that I did in that unfortunate affair, which has
cursed my existence, and made me a wanderer from place to place for the last nineteen years, and
which is known to the world as the MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE.
I have no vindictive feeling against any one;
no enemies to punish by this statement; and no friends to shield by keeping back, or longer keeping
secret, any of the facts connected with the Massacre.
I believe that I must tell all that I do know,
and tell everything just as the same transpired. I shall tell the truth and permit the public to
judge who is most to blame for the crime that I am accused of committing. I did not act alone; I had
many to assist me at the Mountain Meadows. I believe that most of those who were connected with the
Massacre, and took part in the lamentable transaction that has blackened the character of all who
were aiders or abettors in the same, were acting under the impression that they were performing a
religious duty. I know all were acting under the orders and by the command of their Church leaders;
and I firmly believe that the most of those who took part in the proceedings, considered it a
religious duty to unquestioningly obey the orders which they had received. That they acted from a
sense of duty to the Mormon Church, I
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never doubted. Believing that those with me acted from a sense of religious duty on that
occasion, I have faithfully kept the secret of their guilt, and remained silent and true to the oath
of secrecy which we took on the bloody field, for many long and bitter years. I have never
betrayed those who acted with me and participated in the crime for which I am convicted, and for
which I am to suffer death.
My attorneys, especially Wells Spicer and Wm.
W. Bishop, have long tried, but tried in vain, to induce me to tell all I knew of the
massacre and the causes which led to it. I have heretofore refused to tell the tale. Until the last
few days I had in tended to die, if die I must, without giving one word to the public concerning
those who joined willingly, or unwillingly, in the work of destruction at Mountain Meadows.
To hesitate longer, or to die in silence,
would be unjust and cowardly. I will not keep the secret any longer as my own, but will tell all I
know.
At the earnest request of a few remaining
friends, and by the advice of Mr. Bishop, my counsel, who has defended me thus far with all his
ability, notwithstanding my want of money with which to pay even his expenses while attending to my
case, I have concluded to write facts as I know them to exist.
I cannot go before the Judge of the quick and
the dead with out first revealing all that I know, as to what was done, who ordered me to do what I
did do, and the motives that led to the commission of that unnatural and bloody deed.
The immediate orders for the killing of the
emigrants came from those in authority at Cedar City. At the time of the massacre, I and those with
me, acted by virtue of positive orders from Isaac C. Haight and his associates at Cedar City. Before
I started on my mission to the Mountain Meadows, I was told by Isaac C. Haight that his orders to me
were the result of full consultatation [sic] with Colonel William H. Dame and all in authority. It
is a new thing to me, if the massacre was not decided on by the head men of the Church, and it is a
new thing for Mormons to condemn those who committed the deed.
Being forced to speak from memory alone,
without the aid of my memorandum books, and not having time to correct the statements that I make, I
will necessarily give many things out of their regular order. The superiority that I claim for my
statement is this:
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I will begin my statement by saying, I was
born on the 6th day of September, A. D. 1812, in the town of Kaskaskia, Randolph County, State of
Illinois. I am therefore in the sixty-fifth year of my age.
I joined the Mormon Church at Far West, Mo.,
about thirty-nine years ago. To be with that Church and people I left my home on Luck Creek, Fayette
County, Illinois, and went and joined the Mormons in Missouri, before the troubles at Gallatin, Far
West and other points, between the Missourians and Mormons. I shared the fate of my brother Mormons,
in being mistreated, arrested, robbed and driven from Missouri in a destitute condition, by a wild
and fanatical mob. But of all this I shall speak in my life, which I shall write for publication if
I have time to do so.
I took an active part with the leading men at
Nauvoo in building up that city. I induced many Saints to move to Nauvoo, for the sake of their
souls. I traveled and preached the Mormon doctrine in many States. I was an honored man in the
Church, and stood high with the Priesthood, until the last few years. I am now cut off from the
Church for obeying the orders of my superiors, and doing so without asking questions--for
doing as my religion and my religious teachers had taught me to do. I am now used by the Mormon
Church as a scape-goat to carry the sins of that people. My life is to be taken, so that my death
may stop further enquiry into the acts of the members who are still in good standing in the Church.
Will my death satisfy the nation for all the crimes committed by Mormons, at the command of the
Priesthood, who have used and now have deserted me? Time will tell. I believe in a just God, and
I know the day will come when others must answer for their acts, as I have had to do.
I first became acquainted with Brigham Young
when I went to Far West, Mo., to join the Church, in 1837. I got very intimately acquainted with all
the great leaders of the Church. I was adopted by Brigham Young as one of his sons, and for many
years I confess I looked upon him as an inspired and holy man. While in Nauvoo I took an active part
in all that was done for the Church or the city. I had charge of the building of the "Seventy
Hall;" I was 7th Policeman. My duty as a police
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man was to guard the residence and person of Joseph Smith, the Prophet. After the death of Joseph
and Hyrum I was ordered to perform the same duty for Brigham Young. When Joseph Smith was a
candidate for the Presidency of the United States I went to Kentucky as the chairman of the Board of
Elders, or head of the delegation, to secure the vote of that State for him. When I returned to
Nauvoo again I was General Clerk and Recorder for the Quorum of the Seventy. I was also head or
Chief Clerk for the Church, and as such took an active part in organizing the Priesthood into the
order of Seventy after the death of Joseph Smith.
After the destruction of Nauvoo, when the
Mormons were driven from the State of Illinois, I again shared the fate of my brethren, and partook
of the hardships and trials that befel [sic] them from that day up to the settlement of Salt Lake
City, in the then wilderness of the nation. I presented Brigham Young with seventeen ox teams, fully
equipped, when he started with the people from Winter Quarters to cross the plains to the new
resting place of the Saints. He accepted them and said, "God bless you, John." But I never
received a cent for them--I never wanted pay for them, for in giving property to Brigham Young I
thought I was loaning it to the Lord.
After reaching Salt Lake City I stayed there
but a short time, when I went to live at Cottonwood, where the mines were afterwards discovered by
General Connor and his men during the late war.
I was just getting fixed to live there, when I
was ordered to go out into the interior and aid in forming new settlements, and opening up the
country. I then had no wish or desire, save that to know and be able to do the will of the Lord's
anointed, Brigham Young, and until within the last few years I have never had a wish for anything
else except to do his pleasure, since I became his adopted son. I believed it my duty to obey those
in authority. I then believed that Brigham Young spoke by direction of the God of Heaven. I would
have suffered death rather than have disobeyed any command of his. I had this feeling until he
betrayed and deserted me. At the command of Brigham Young, I took one hundred and twenty-one men,
went in a southern direction from Salt Lake City, and laid out and built up Parowan. George A. Smith
was the leader and chief man in authority in that settlement. I acted under him
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as historian and clerk of the Iron County Mission, until January, 1851. I went with Brigham
Young, and acted as a committee man, and located Provo, St. George, Fillmore, Parowan and other
towns, and managed the location of many of the settlements in Southern Utah.
In 1852, I moved to Harmony, and built up that
settlement. I remained there until the Indians declared war against the whites and drove the
settlers into Cedar City and Parowan, for protection, in the year 1853.
I removed my then numerous family to Cedar
City, where I was appointed a Captain of the militia, and commander of Cedar City Military Post.
I had commanded at Cedar City about one year,
when I was ordered to return to Harmony, and build the Harmony Fort. This order, like all other
orders, came from Brigham Young. When I returned to Harmony and commenced building the fort there,
the orders were given by Brigham Young for the reorganization of the military at Cedar City. The old
men were requested to resign their offices, and let younger men be appointed in their place. I
resigned my office of Captain, but Isaac C. Haight and John M. Higbee refued [sic] to resign, and
continued to hold on as Majors in the Iron Militia.
After returning to Harmony, I was President of
the civil and local affairs, and Rufus Allen was President of that Stake of Zion, or head of the
Church affairs.
I soon resigned my position as President of
civil affairs, and became a private citizen, and was in no office for some time. In fact, I never
held any position after that, except the office of Probate Judge of the County (which office I held
before and after the massacre), and member of the Territorial Legislature, and Delegate to the
Constitutional Convention which met and adopted a constitution for the State of Deseret, after the
massacre.
I will here state that Brigham Young honored
me in many ways after the affair at Mountain Meadows was fully reported to him by me, as I will more
fully state hereafter in the course of what I have to relate concerning that unfortunate
transaction.
Klingensmith, at my first trial, and White, at
my last trial, swore falsely when they say that they met me near Cedar City, the Sunday before the
massacre. They did not meet me as they have sworn, nor did they meet me at all on that occasion or
on
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any similar occasion. I never had the conversations with them that they testify about. They are
both perjurers, and bore false testimony against me.
There has never been a witness on the stand
against me 'that has testified to the whole truth. Some have told part truth, while others lied
clear through, but all of the witnesses who were at the massacre have tried to throw all the blame
on me, and to protect the other men who took part in it.
About the 7th of September, 1857, I went to
Cedar City from my home at Harmony, by order of President Haight. I did not know what he wanted of
me, but he had ordered me to visit him and I obeyed. If I remember correctly, it was on Sunday
evening that I went there. When I got to Cedar City, I met Isaac C. Haight on the public square of
the town. Haight was then President of that Stake of Zion, and the highest man in the Mormon
priesthood in that country, and next to Wm. H. Dame in all of Southern Utah, and as Lieutenant
Colonel he was second to Dame in the command of the Iron Military District. The word and command of
Isaac C. Haight were the law in Cedar City, at that time, and to disobey his orders was certain
death; be they right or wrong, no Saint was permitted to question them, their duty was obedience or
death.
When I met Haight, I asked him what he wanted
with me. He said he wanted to have a long talk with me on private and particular business. We took
some blankets and went over to the old Iron Works, and lay there that night, so that we could talk
in private and in safety. After we got to the Iron Works, Haight told me all about the train of
emigrants. He said (and I then believed every word that be spoke, for I believed it was an
impossible thing for one so high in the Priesthood as he was, to be guilty of falsehood) that the
emigrants were a rough and abusive set of men. That they had, while traveling through Utah, been
very abusive to all the Mormons they met. That they had insulted, outraged, and ravished many of the
Mormon women. That the abuses heaped upon the people by the emigrants during their trip from Provo
to Cedar City, had been constant and shameful; that they had burned fences and destroyed growing
crops; that at many points on the road they had poisoned the water, so that all people and stock
that drank of the water became sick, and many had died from the effects of poison. That these vile
Gentiles publicly proclaimed that they had the very
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pistol with which the Prophet, Joseph Smith, was murdered, and had threatened to kill Brigham
Young and all of the Apostles. That when in Cedar City they said they would have friends in Utah who
would hang Brigham Young by the neck until he was dead, before snow fell again in the Territory..
They also said that Johnston was coming, with his army, from the East, and they were going to return
from California with soldiers, as soon as possible, and would then desolate the land, and kill every
d--d Mormon man, woman and child that they could find in Utah. That they violated the ordinances of
the town of Cedar, and had, by armed force, resisted the officers who tried to arrest them for
violating the law. That after leaving Cedar City the emigrants camped by the company, or cooperative
field, just below Cedar City, and burned a large portion of the fencing, leaving the crops open to
the large herds of stock in the surrounding country. Also that they had given poisoned meat to the
Corn Creek tribe of Indians, which had killed several of them, and their Chief, Konosh, was on the
trail of the emigrants, and would soon attack them. All of these things, and much more of a like
kind, Haight told me as we lay in the dark at the old Iron Works. I believed all that he said, and,
thinking that he had full right to do all that he wanted to do, I was easily induced to follow his
instructions.
Haight said that unless something was done to
prevent it, the emigrants would carry out their threats and rob every one of the outlying
settlements in the South, and that the whole Mormon people were liable to be butchered by the troops
that the emigrants would bring back with them from California. I was then told that the Council had
held a meeting that day, to consider the matter, and that it was decided by the authorities to arm
the Indians, give them provisions and ammunition, and send them after the emigrants, and have the
Indians give them a brush, and if they killed part or all of them, so much the better.
I said, "Brother Haight, who is your
authority for acting in this way?"
He replied, "It is the will of all in
authority. The emigrants have no pass from any one to go through the country, and they are
liable to be killed as common enemies, for the country is at war now. No man has a right to go
through this country without a written pass."
We lay there and talked much of the night, and
during that
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time Haight gave me very full instructions what to do, and how to proceed in the whole affair. He
said he had consulted with Colonel Dame, and every one agreed to let the Indians use up the whole
train if they could. Haight then said:
"I expect you to carry out your
orders."
I knew I had to obey or die. I had no wish to
disobey, for I then thought that my superiors in the Church were the mouth pieces of Heaven, and
that it was an act of godliness for me to obey any and all orders given by them to me, without my
asking any questions.
My orders were to go home to Harmony, and see
Carl Shirts, my son-in-law, an Indian interpreter, and send him to the Indians in the South, to
notify them that the Mormons and Indians were at war with the "Mericats" (as the
Indians called all whites that were not Mormons) and bring all the Southern Indians up and have them
join with those from the North, so that their force would be sufficient to make a successful attack
on the emigrants.
It was agreed that Haight would send Nephi
Johnson, another Indian interpreter, to stir up all the other Indians that he could find,
in order to have a large enough force of Indians to give the emigrants a good hush. He
said, "These are the orders that have been agreed upon by the Council, and it is in accordance
with the feelings of the entire people."
I asked him if it would not have been better
to first send to Brigham Young for instructions, and find out what he thought about the matter.
"No," said Haight, "that is
unnecessary, we are acting by orders. Some of the Indians are now on the war-path, and all
of them must be sent out; all must go, so as to make the thing a success.
It was then intended that the Indians should
kill the emigrants, and make it an Indian massacre, and not have any whites interfere with
them. No whites were to be known in the matter, it was to be all done by the Indians, so that it
could be laid to them, if any questions were ever asked about it. I said to Haight:
"You know what the Indians are. They will
kill all the party, women and children, as well as the men, and you know we are sworn not to shed
innocent blood."
"Oh h--l!" said he, "there will
not be one drop of innocent
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blood shed, if every one of the d--d pack are killed, for they are the worse lot of out-laws and
ruffians that I ever saw in my life."
We agreed upon the whole thing, how each one
should act, and then left the iron works, and went to Haight's house and, got breakfast.
After breakfast I got ready to start, and
Haight said to me:
"Go, Brother Lee, and see that the
instructions of those in authority are obeyed, and as you are dutiful in this, so shall your reward
be in the kingdom of God, for God will bless those who willingly obey counsel, and make all things
fit for the people in these last days."
I left Cedar City for my home at Harmony, to
carry out the instructions that I had received from my superior.
I then believed that he acted by the direct
order and command of William H. Dame, and others even higher in authority than Colonel Dame. One
reason for thinking so was from a talk I had only a few days before, with Apostle George A. Smith,
and he had just then seen Haight, and talked with him, and I knew that George A. Smith never talked
of things that Brigham Young had not talked over with him before-hand. Then the Mormons were at war
with the United States, and the orders to the Mormons had been all the time to kill and waste away
our enemies, but lose none of our people. These emigrants were from the section of country most
hostile to our people, and I believed then as I do now, that it was the will of every true Mormon in
Utah, at that time, that the enemies of the Church should be killed as fast as possible, and that as
this lot of people had men amongst them that were supposed to have helped kill the Prophets in the
Carthage jail, the killing of all of them would be keeping our oaths and avenging the blood of the
Prophets.
In justice to myself I will give the facts of
my talk with George A. Smith.
In the latter part of the month of August,
1857, about ten days before the company of Captain Fancher, who met their doom at Mountain Meadows,
arrived at that place, General George A. Smith called on me at one of my homes at Washington City,
Washington County, Utah Territory, and wished me to take him round by Fort Clara, via Pinto
Settlements, to Hamilton Fort, or Cedar City. He said,
"I have been sent down here by the old
Boss, Brigham Young,
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to Instruct the brethren of the different settlements not to sell any of their grain to our
enemies. And to tell them not, to feed it to their animals, for it will all be needed by ourselves.
I am also to instruct the brethren to prepare for a big fight, for the enemy is coming in
large force to attempt our destruction. But Johnston's army will not be allowed to approach our
settlements from the east. God is on our side and will fight our battles for us, and deliver our
enemies into our hands. Brigham Young has received revelations from God, giving him the right and
the power to call down the curse of God on all our enemies who attempt to invade our Territory. Our
greatest danger lies in the people of California--a class of reckless miners who are strangers
to God and his righteousness. They are likely to come upon us from the south and destroy the small
settlements. But we will try and outwit them before we suffer much damage. The people of the United
States who oppose our Church and people are a mob, from the President down, and as such it is
impossible for their armies to prevail against the Saints who have gathered here in the
mountains."
He continued this kind of talk for some hours
to me and my friends who were with me.
General George A. Smith held high rank as a
military leader. He was one of the twelve apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, and as such he was considered by me to be an inspired man. His orders were to me sacred
commands, which I considered it my duty to obey, without question or hesitation.
I took my horses and carriage and drove with
him to either Hamilton Fort or Cedar City, visiting the settlements with him, as he had requested. I
did not go to hear him preach at any of our stopping places, nor did I pay attention to what he said
to the leaders in the settlements.
The day we left Fort Clara, which was then the
headquarters of the Indian missionaries under the presidency of Jacob Hamblin, we stopped to noon at
the Clara River. While there the Indians gathered around us in large numbers, and were quite saucy
and impudent. Their chiefs asked me where I was going and who I had with me. I told them that he was
a big captain.
"Is he, a Mericat Captain?"
"No," I said, "he is a
Mormon."
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The Indians then wanted to know more. They
wanted to have a talk.
The General told me to tell the Indians that
the Mormons were their friends, and that the Americans were their enemies, and the enemies of the
Mormons, too; that he wanted the Indians to remain the fast friends of the Mormons, for the Mormons
were all friends to the Indians; that the Americans had a large army just east of the mountains, and
intended to come over the mountains into Utah and kill all of the Mormons and Indians in Utah
Territory; that the Indians must get ready and keep ready for war against all of the Americans, and
keep friendly with the Mormons and obey what the Mormons told them to do--that this was the will of
the Great Spirit; that if the Indians were true to the Mormons and would help them against their
enemies, then the Mormons would always keep them from want and sickness and give them guns and
ammunition to hunt and kill game with, and would also help the Indians against their enemies when
they went into war.
This talk pleased the Indians, and they agreed
to all that I asked them to do.
I saw that my friend Smith was a little
nervous and fearful of the Indians, notwithstanding their promises of friendship. To relieve him of
his anxiety I hitched up and started on our way, as soon as I could do so without rousing the
suspicions of the Indians.
We had ridden along about a mile or so when
General Smith said,
"Those are savage looking fellows. I
think they would make it lively for an emigrant train if one should come this way."
I said I thought they would attack any train
that would come in their way. Then the General was in a deep study for some time, when he said,
"Suppose an emigrant train should come
along through this southern country, making threats against our people and bragging of the part they
took in helping kill our Prophets, what do you think the brethren would do with them? Would they be
permitted to go their way, or would the brethren pitch into them and give them a good
drubbing?"
I reflected a few moments, and then said,
"You know the brethren are now under the
influence of the late reformation, and are still red-hot for the gospel. The
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brethren believe the government wishes to destroy them. I really believe that any train of
emigrants that may come through here will be attacked, and. probably all destroyed. I am sure they
would be wiped out if they had been making threats again our people. Unless emigrants have a pass
from Brigham Young, or some one in authority, they will certainly never get safely through this
country."
My reply pleased him very much, and he laughed
heartily, and then said,
"Do you really believe the brethren would
make it lively for such a train?"
I said, "Yes, sir, I know they will,
unless they are protected by a pass, and I wish to inform you that unless you want every train
captured that comes through here, you must inform Governor Young that if he wants emigrants to
pass, without being molested, he must send orders to that effect to Colonel Wm. H. Dame or Major
Isaac C. Haight, so that they can give passes to the emigrants, for their passes will insure
safety, but nothing else will, except the positive orders of Governor Young, as the people are
all bitter against the Gentiles, and full of religious zeal, and anxious to avenge the blood of the
Prophets."
The only reply he made was to the effect that
on his way down from Salt Lake City he had had a long talk with Major Haight on the same subject,
and that Haight had assured him, and given him to understand, that emigrants who came along without
a pass from Governor Young could not escape from the Territory.
We then rode along in silence for some
distance, when he again turned to me and said,
"Brother Lee, I am satisfied that the
brethren are under the full influence of the reformation, and I believe they will do just as you say
they will with the wicked emigrants that come through the country making threats and abusing our
people."
I repeated my views to him, but at much
greater length, giving my reasons in full for thinking that Governor Young should give orders to
protect all the emigrants that he did not wish destroyed. I went into a full statement of the wrongs
of our people, and told him that the people were under the blaze of the reformation, full of wild
fire and fanaticism, and that to shed the blood of those who would dare to speak against
the Mormon Church or its leaders, they would consider doing the

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will of God, and that the people would do it as willingly and cheerfully as they would any other
duty. That the apostle Paul, when he started forth to persecute the followers of Christ, was not any
more sincere than every Mormon was then, who lived in Southern Utah.
My words served to cheer up the General very
much; he was greatly delighted, and said,
"I am glad to hear so good an account of
our people. God will bless them for all that they do to build up His Kingdom in the last days."
General Smith did not say one word to me or
intimate to me, that he wished any emigrants to pass in safety through the Territory. But
he led me to believe then, as I believe now, that he did want, and expected every emigrant to be
killed that undertook to pass through the Territory while we were at war with the Government. I
thought it was his mission to prepare the people for the bloody work.
I have always believed, since that day, that
General George A. Smith was then visiting Southern Utah to prepare the people for the work of
exterminating Captain Fancher's train of emigrants, and I now believe that he was sent for that
purpose by the direct command of Brigham Young.
I have been told by Joseph Wood, Thomas T.
Willis, and many others, that they heard George A. Smith preach at Cedar City during that trip, and
that he told the people of Cedar City that the emigrant's were coming, and he told them that they
must not sell that company any grain or provisions of any kind, for they were a mob of
villains and outlaws, and the enemies of God and the Mormon people.
Sidney Littlefield, of Panguitch, has told me
that he was knowing to the fact of Colonel Wm. H. Dame sending orders from Parowan to Maj. Haight,
at Cedar City, to exterminate the Francher [sic] outfit, and to kill every emigrant without
fail. Littlefield then lived at Parowan, and Dame was the Presiding Bishop. Dame still has all the
wives he wants, and is a great friend of Brigham Young.
The knowledge of how George A. Smith felt
toward the emigrants, and his telling me that he had a long talk with Haight on the subject, made me
certain that it was the wish of the Church authorities that Francher [sic] and his train
should be wiped out, and knowing all this, I did not doubt then, and I do not
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doubt it now, either, that Haight was acting by full authority from the Church leaders, and that
the orders he gave to me were just the orders that he had been directed to give, when he ordered me
to raise the Indians and have them attack the emigrants.
I acted through the whole matter in a way that
I considered it my religious duty to act, and if what I did was a crime, it was a crime of the
Mormon Church, and not a crime for which I feel individually responsible.
I must here state that Klingensmith was not in
Cedar City that Sunday night. Haight said he had sent Klingensmith and others over towards Pinto,
and around there, to stir up the Indians and force them to attack the emigrants.
On my way from Cedar City to my home at
Harmony, I came up with a large band of Indians under Moquetas and Big Bill, two Cedar City Chiefs;
they were in their war paint, and fully equipped for battle. They halted when I came up and said
they had had a big talk with Haight, Higby and Klingensmith, and had got orders from them to follow
up the emigrants and kill them all, and take their property as the spoil of their enemies.
These Indians wanted me to go with them and
command their forces. I told them that I could not go with them that evening, that I had orders from
Haight, the big Captain, to send other Indians on the war-path to help them kill the
emigrants, and that I must attend to that first; that I wanted them to go on near where the
emigrants were and camp until the other Indians joined them; that I would meet them the next day and
lead them.
This satisfied them, but they wanted me to
send my little Indian boy, Clem, with them. After some time I consented to let Clem go with them,
and I returned home.
When I got home I told Carl Shirts what the
orders were that Haight had sent to him. Carl was naturally cowardly and was not willing to go, but
I told him the orders must be obeyed. He then started off that night, or early next morning, to stir
up the Indians of the South, and lead them against the emigrants. The emigrants were then camped at
Mountain Meadows.
The Indians did not obey my instructions. They
met, several hundred strong, at the Meadows, and attacked the emigrants Tuesday morning, just before
daylight, and at the first fire, as I afterwards learned, they killed seven and wounded sixteen of
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the emigrants. The latter fought bravely, and repulsed the Indians, killing some of them and
breaking the knees of two war chiefs, who afterwards died.
The news of the battle was carried all over
the country by Indian runners, and the excitement was great in all the small settlements. I was
notified of what had taken place, early Tuesday morning, by an Indian who came to my house and gave
me a full account of all that had been done. The Indian said it was the wish of all the Indians that
I should lead them, and that I must go back with him to the camp.
I started at once, and by taking the Indian
trail over the mountain, I reached the camp in about twelve miles from Harmony. To go round by the
wagon road it would have been between forty and fifty miles.
When I reached the camp I found the Indians in
a frenzy of excitement. They threatened to kill me unless I agreed to lead them against the
emigrants, and help them kill them. They also said they had been told that they could kill the
emigrants without danger to themselves, but they had lost some of their braves, and others were
wounded, and unless they could kill all the "Mericats," as they called them, they
would declare war against the Mormons and kill every one in the settlements.
I did as well as I could under the
circumstances. I was the only white man there, with a wild and excited band of several hundred
Indians. I tried to persuade them that all would be well, that I was their friend and would see that
they bad their revenge, if I found out that they were entitled to revenge.
My talk only served to increase their
excitement, and being afraid that they would kill me if I undertook to leave them, and I would not
lead them against the emigrants, so I told them that I would go south and meet their friends, and
hurry them up to help them. I intended to put a stop to the carnage if I had the power, for I
believed that the emigrants had been sufficiently punished for what they had done, and I felt then,
and always have felt that such wholesale murdering was wrong.
At first the Indians would not consent for me
to leave them, but they finally said I might go and meet their friends.
I then got on my horse and left the Meadows,
and went south.
I had gone about sixteen miles, when I met
Carl Shirts with about one hundred Indians, and a number of Mormons from the southern settlements.
They were going to the scene of the con-
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flict. How they learned of the emigrants being at the Meadows I never knew, but they did know it,
and were there fully armed, and determined to obey orders.
Amongst those that I remember to have met
there, were Samuel Knight, Oscar Hamblin, William Young, Carl Shirts, Harrison Pearce, James Pearce,
John W. Clark, William Slade, Sr., James Matthews, Dudley Leavitt, William Hawley, (now a resident
of Fillmore, Utah Territory,) William Slade, Jr., and two others whose names I have forgotten. I
think they were George W. Adair and John Hawley. I know they were at the Meadows at the time of the
massacre, and I think I met them that night south of the Meadows, with Samuel Knight and the others.
The whites camped there that night with me,
but most of the Indians rushed on to their friends at the camp on the Meadows.
I reported to the whites all that had taken
place at the Meadows, but none of them were surprised in the least. They all seemed to know that the
attack was to be made, and all about it. I spent one of the most miserable nights there that I ever
passed in my life. I spent much of the night in tears and at prayer. I wrestled with God for wisdom
to guide me. I asked for some sign, some evidence that would satisfy me that my mission was of
Heaven, but I got no satisfaction from my God.
In the morning we all agreed to go on together
to Mountain Meadows, and camp there, and then send a messenger to Haight, giving him full
instructions of what had been done, and to ask him for further instructions. We knew that the
original plan was for the Indians to do all the work, and the whites to do nothing, only to stay
back and plan for them, and encourage them to do the work. Now we knew the Indians could not do the
work, and we were in a sad fix.
I did not then know that a messenger had been
sent to Brigham Young for instructions. Haight had not mentioned it to me. I now think that James
Haslem was sent to Brigham Young, as a sharp play on the part of the authorities to protect
themselves, if trouble ever grew out of the matter.
We went to the Meadows and camped at the
springs, about half a mile from the emigrant camp. There was a larger number of Indians there then,
fully three hundred, and I think as many as four hundred of them. The two Chiefs who were shot in
the knee were in a bad fix. The Indians had killed a number of the emigrants' horses, and about
sixty or seventy head
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of cattle were lying dead on the Meadows, which the Indians bad killed for spite and revenge.
Our company killed a small beef for dinner,
and after eating a hearty meal of it we held a council and decided to send a messenger to Haight. I
said to the messenger, who was either Edwards or Adair, (I cannot now remember which it was),
"Tell Haight, for my sake, for the people's sake, for God's sake, send me help to protect and
save these emigrants, and pacify the Indians."
The messenger started for Cedar City, from our
camp on the Meadows, about 2 o'clock P. M.
We all staid [sic] on the field, and I tried
to quiet and pacify the Indians, by telling them that I had sent to Haight, the Big Captain, for
orders, and when he sent his order I would know what to do. This appeared to satisfy the Indians,
for said they,
"The Big Captain will send you word to
kill all the Mericats."
Along toward evening the Indians again
attacked the emigrants. This was Wednesday. I heard the report of their guns, and the screams of the
women and children in the corral.
This was more than I could stand. So I ran
with William Young and John Mangum, to where the Indians were, to stop the fight. While on the way
to them they fired a volley, and three balls from their guns cut my clothing. One ball went through
my hat and cut my hair on the side of my head. One ball went through my shirt and leaded my
shoulder, the other cut my pants across my bowels. I thought this was rather warm work, but I kept
on until I reached the place where the Indians were in force. When I got to them, I told them the
Great Spirit would be mad at them if they killed the women and children. I talked to them some time,
and cried with sorrow when I saw that I could not pacify the savages.
When the Indians saw me in tears, they called
me "Yaw Guts," which in the Indian language means "cry
baby," and to this day they call me by that name, and consider me a coward.
Oscar Hamblin was a fine interpreter, and he
came to my aid and helped me to induce the Indians to stop the attack. By his help we got the
Indians to agree to be quiet until word was returned from Haight. (I do not know now but what the
messenger started for Cedar City, after this night attack, but I was so worried and perplexed at
that time, and so much has hap-
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pened to distract my thoughts since then, that my mind is not clear on that subject.)
On Thursday, about noon, several men came to
us from Cedar City. I cannot remember the order in which all of the people came to the Meadows, but
I do recollect that at this time and in this company Joel White, William C. Stewart, Benjamin
Arthur, Alexander Wilden, Charles Hopkins and ---- Tate, came to us at the camp at the Springs.
These men said but little, but every man seemed to know just what he was there for. As our messenger
had gone for further orders, we moved our camp about, four hundred yards further up the valley on to
a hill, where we made camp as long as we staid [sic] there.
I
soon learned that the whites were as wicked at heart as the Indians, for every little while during
that day I saw white men. taking aim and shooting at the emigrants' wagons. They said they were
doing it to keep in practice and to help pass off the time.
I remember one man that was shooting, that
rather amused me, for he was shooting at a mark over a quarter of a mile off, and his gun would not
carry a ball two hundred yards. That man was Alexander Wilden. He took pains to fix up a seat under
the shade of a tree, where he continued to load and shoot until he got tired. Many of the others
acted just as wild and foolish as Wilden did.
The wagons were corraled [sic] after the
Indians had made the first attack. On the second day after our arrival the emigrants drew their
wagons near each other and chained the wheels one to the other. While they were doing this there was
no shooting going on. Their camp was about one hundred yards above and north of the spring. They
generally got their water from the spring at night.
Thursday morning I saw two men start from the
corral with buckets, and run to the spring and fill their buckets with water, and go back again. The
bullets flew around them thick and fast, but they got into their corral in safety.
The Indians had agreed to keep quiet until
orders returned from Haight, but they did not keep their word. They made a determined attack on the
train on Thursday morning about daylight. At this attack the Clara Indians had one brave killed and
three wounded. This so enraged that band that they left for
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home that day and drove off quite a number of cattle with them. During the day I said to John
Mangum,
"I will cross over the valley and go up
on the other side, on the hills to the west of the corral, and take a look at the situation."
I did go. As I was crossing the valley I was
seen by the emigrants, and as soon as they saw that I was a white man they ran up a white flag
in the middle of their corral, or camp. They 'then sent two little boys from the camp to talk to me,
but I could not talk to them at that time, for I did not know what orders Haight would send back to
me, and until I did know his orders I did not know how to act. I hid, to keep away from the
children. They came to the place where they had last seen me and hunted all around for me, but being
unable to find me, they turned and went back to the camp in safety.
While the boys were looking for me several
Indians came to me and asked for ammunition with which to kill them. I told them they must not hurt
the children--that if they did I would kill the first one that made the attempt to injure them. By
this act I was able to save the boys.
It is all false that has been told about
little girls being dressed in white and sent out to me. There never was anything of the kind done.
I staid [sic] on the west side of the valley
for about two hours, looking down into the emigrant camp, and feeling all the torture of mind that
it is possible for a man to suffer who feels merciful, and yet knows, as I then knew, what was in
store for that unfortunate company if the Indians were successful in their bloody designs.
While I was standing on the hill looking down
into the corral, I saw two men leave the corral and go outside to cut some wood; the Indians and
whites kept up a steady fire on them all the time, but they paid no attention to danger, and kept
right along at their work until they had it done, and then they went back into camp. The men all
acted so bravely that it was impossible to keep from respecting them.
After staying there and looking down into the
camp until I was nearly dead from grief, I returned to the company at camp. I was worn out with
trouble and grief; I was nearly wild waiting for word from the authorities at Cedar City. I prayed
for
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word to come that would enable me to save that band of suffering people, but no such word came.
It never was to come.
On Thursday evening, John M. Higbee, Major of
the Iron Militia, and Philip K. Smith, as he is called generally, but whose name is Klingensmith,
Bishop of Cedar City, came to our camp with two or three wagons, and a number of men all well armed.
I can remember the following as a portion of the men who came to take part in the work of death
which was so soon to follow, viz.: John M. Higbee, Major and commander of the Iron Militia, and also
first counselor to Isaac C. Haight; Philip Klingensmith, Bishop of Cedar City; Ira Allen, of the
High Council; Robert Wiley, of the High Council; Richard Harrison, of Pinto, also a member of the
High Council; Samuel McMurdy, one of the Counselors of Klingensmith; Charles Hopkins, of the City
Council of Cedar City; Samuel Pollock; Daniel McFarland, a son-in-law of Isaac C. Haight, and acting
as Adjutant under Major Higbee; John Ure, of the City Council; George Hunter, of the City Council;
and I honestly believe that John McFarland, now an attorney-at-law at St. George, Utah, was there--I
am not positive that he was, but my best impression is that he was there: Samuel Jukes; Nephi
Johnson, with a number of Indians under his command; Irvin Jacobs; John Jacobs; E. Curtis, a Captain
of Ten; Thomas Cartwright of the City Council and High Council; William Bateman, who afterwards
carried the flag of truce to the emigrant camp; Anthony Stratton; A. Loveridge; Joseph Clews; Jabez
Durfey; Columbus Freeman, and some others whose names I cannot remember. I know that our total force
was fifty-four whites and over three hundred Indians.
As soon as these persons gathered around the
camp, I demanded of Major Higbee what orders he had brought. I then stated fully all that had
happened at the Meadows, so that every person might understand the situation.
Major Higbee reported as follows: "It is
the orders of the President, that all the emigrants must be put out of the way. President
Haight has counseled with Colonel Dame, or has had orders from him to put all of the emigrants out
of the way; none who are old enough to talk are to be spared."
He then went on and said substantially that
the emigrants had come through the country as our enemies, and as the enemies of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints. That they
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had no pass from any one in authority to permit them to leave the Territory. That none but
friends were permitted to leave the Territory, and that as these were our sworn enemies, they must
be killed. That they were nothing but a portion of Johnston's army. That if they were allowed to go
on to California, they would raise the war cloud in the West, and bring certain destruction upon all
the settlements in Utah. That the only safety for the people was in the utter destruction of the
whole rascally lot.
I then told them that God would have to change
my heart before I could consent to such a wicked thing as the wholesale killing of that people. I
attempted to reason with Higbee and the brethren. I told them how strongly the emigrants were
fortified, and how wicked it was to kill the women and children. I was ordered to be silent. Higbee
said I was resisting authority.
He then said, "Brother Lee is afraid of
shedding innocent blood. Why, brethren, there is not a drop of innocent blood in that entire camp of
Gentile outlaws; they are set of cut-throats, robbers and assassins; they are a part of the people
who drove the Saints from Missouri, and who aided to shed the blood of our Prophets, Joseph and
Hyrum, and it is our orders from all in authority, to get the emigrants from their stronghold, and
help the Indians kill them."
I then said that Joseph Smith had told us
never to betray any one. That we could not get the emigrants out of their corral unless we used
treachery, and I was opposed to that.
I was interrupted by Higbee, Klingensmith and
Hopkins, who said it was the orders of President Isaac C. Haight to us, and that Haight had his
orders from Colonel Dame and the authorities at Parowan, and that all in authority were of one mind,
and that they had been sent by the Council at Cedar City to the Meadows to counsel and direct the
way and manner that the company of emigrants should be disposed of.
The men then in council, I must here state,
now knelt down in a prayer circle and prayed, invoking the Spirit of God to direct them how to act
in the matter.
After prayer, Major Higbee said, "Here
are the orders," and handed me a paper from Haight. It was in substance that it was the orders
of Haight to decoy the emigrants from their position, and kill all of them that could talk.
This order was in
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writing. Higbee handed it to me and I read it, and dropped it on the ground, saying,
"I cannot do this."
The substance of the orders were that the
emigrants should be decoyed from their strong-hold, and all exterminated, so that no one
would be left to tell the tale, and then the authorities could say it was done by the Indians.
The words decoy and exterminate
were used in that message or order, and these orders came to us as the orders from the Council at
Cedar City, and as the orders of our military superior, that we were bound to obey. The order was
signed by Haight, as commander of the troops at Cedar City.
Haight told me the next day after the
massacre, while on the Meadows, that he got his orders from Colonel Dame.
I then left the Council, and went away to
myself, and bowed myself in prayer before God, and asked Him to overrule the decision of that
Council. I shed many bitter tears, and my tortured soul was wrung nearly from the body by my great
suffering. I will here say, calling upon Heaven, angels, and the spirits of just men to witness what
I say, that if I could then have had a thousand worlds to command, I would have given them freely to
save that company from death.
While in bitter anguish, lamenting the sad
condition of myself and others, Charles Hopkins, a man that I had great confidence in, came to me
from the Council, and tried to comfort me by saying that he believed it was all right, for the
brethren in the Priesthood were all united in the thing, and it would not be well for me to
oppose them.
I told him the Lord must change my heart
before I could ever do such an act willingly. I will further state that there was a reign of terror
in Utah, at that time, and many a man had been put out of the way, on short notice, for
disobedience, and I had made some narrow escapes.
At the earnest solicitation of Brother
Hopkins, I returned with him to the Council. When I got back, the Council again prayed for aid. The
Council was called The City Counselors, the Church or High Counselors; and all in authority,
together with the private citizens, then formed a circle, and kneeling down, so that elbows would
touch each other, several of the brethren prayed for Divine instructions.
After prayer, Major Higbee said, "I have
the evidence of God's
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approval of our mission. It is God's will that we carry out our instructions to the letter."
I said, "My God! this is more than I can
do. I must and do refuse to take part in this matter."
Higbee then said to me, "Brother Lee, I
am ordered by President Haight to inform you that you shall receive a crown of Celestial glory for
your faithfulness, and your eternal joy shall be complete." I was much shaken by this offer,
for I had full faith in the power of the Priesthood to bestow such rewards and blessings, but I was
anxious to save the people. I then proposed that we give the Indians all of the stock of the
emigrants, except sufficient to haul their wagons, and let them go. To this proposition all the
leading men objected. No man there raised his voice or hand to favor the saving of life, except
myself.
The meeting was then addressed by some one in
authority, I do not remember who it was. He spoke in about this language: "Brethren, we have
been sent here to perform a duty. It is a duty that we owe to God, and to our Church and people. The
orders of those in authority are that all the emigrants must die. Our leaders speak with inspired
tongues, and their orders come from the God of Heaven. We have no right to question what they have
commanded us to do; it is our duty to obey. If we wished to act as some of our weak-kneed brethren
desire us to do, it would be impossible; the thing has gone too far to allow us to stop now. The
emigrants know that we have aided the Indians, and if we let them go they will bring certain
destruction upon us. It is a fact that on Wednesday night, two of the emigrants got out of camp and
started back to Cedar City for assistance to withstand the Indian attacks; they had reached
Richards' Springs when they met William C. Stewart, Joel White and Benjamin Arthur, three of our
brethren from Cedar City. The men stated their business to the brethren, and as their horses were
drinking at the Spring, Brother Stewart, feeling unusually full of zeal for the glory of
God and the upbuilding of the Kingdom of God on earth, shot and killed one of the emigrants, a young
man by the name of Aden. When Aden fell from his horse, Joel White shot and wounded the other
Gentile; but he unfortunately got away, and returned to his camp and reported that the Mormons were
helping the Indians in all that they were doing against the emigrants. Now the emigrants will report
these facts in California if we let them go. We must kill them
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all, and our orders are to get them out by treachery if no other thing can be done to get them
into our power."
Many of the brethren spoke in the same way,
all arguing that the orders must be carried out.
I was then told the plan of action had been
agreed upon, and it was this: The emigrants were to be decoyed from their strong-hold under a
promise of protection. Brother William Bateman was to carry a flag of truce and demand a parley, and
then I was to go and arrange the terms of the surrender. I was to demand that all the children who
were so young they could not talk should be put into a wagon, and the wounded were also to be put
into a wagon. Then all the arms and ammunition of the emigrants should be put into a wagon, and I
was to agree that the Mormons would protect the emigrants from the Indians and conduct them to Cedar
City in safety, where they should be protected until an opportunity came for sending them to
California.
It was agreed that when I had made the full
agreement and treaty, as the brethren called it, the wagons should start for Hamblin's Ranch with
the arms, the wounded and the children. The women were to march on foot and follow the wagons in
single file; the men were to follow behind the women, they also to march in single file. Major John
M. Higbee was to stand with his militia company about two hundred yards from the camp, and stand in
double file, open order, with about twenty feet space between the files, so that the wagons could
pass between them. The drivers were to keep right along, and not stop at the troops. The women were
not to stop there, but to follow the wagons. The troops were to halt the men for a few minutes,
until the women were some distance ahead, out into the cedars, where the Indians were hid in ambush.
Then the march was to be resumed, the troops to form in single file, each soldier to walk by an
emigrant, and on the right-hand side of his man, and the soldier was to carry his gun on his left
arm, ready for instant use. The march was to continue until the wagons had passed beyond the ambush
of the Indians, and until the women were right in the midst of the Indians. Higbee was then to give
the orders and words, "Do Your Duty." At this the troops were to shoot down the men; the
Indians were to kill all of the women and larger children, and the drivers of the wagons and I were
to kill the wounded and sick men that were in the wagons. Two
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men were to be placed on horses nearby, to overtake and kill any of the emigrants that might
escape from the first assault. The Indians were to kill the women and large children, so that it
would be certain that no Mormon would be guilty of shedding innocent blood--if it should
happen that there was any innocent blood in the company that were to die. Our leading men said that
there was no innocent blood in the whole company.
The Council broke up a little after daylight
on Friday morning. All the horses, except two for the men to ride to overtake those who might
escape, and one for Dan McFarland to ride as Adjutant, so that he could carry orders from one part
of the field to another, were turned out on the range. Then breakfast was eaten, and the brethren
prepared for the work in hand.
I was now satisfied that it was the wish of
all of the Mormon priesthood to have the thing done. One reason for thinking so was that it was in
keeping with the teachings of the leaders, and as Utah was then at war with the United States we
believed all the Gentiles were to be killed as a war measure, and that the Mormons, as God's chosen
people, were to hold and inhabit the earth and rule and govern the globe. Another, and one of my
strongest reasons for believing that the leaders wished the thing done, was on account of the talk
that I had with George A. Smith, which I have given in full in this statement. I was satisfied that
Smith had passed the emigrants while on his way from Salt Lake City, and I then knew this was the
train that he meant when he spoke of a train that would make threats and illtreat our
people, etc.
The people were in the full blaze of the
reformation and anxious to do some act that would add to their reputation as zealous Churchmen.
I therefore, taking all things into
consideration, and believing, as I then did, that my superiors were inspired men, who could
not go wrong in any matter relating to the Church or the duty of its members, concluded to be
obedient to the wishes of those in authority. I took up my cross and prepared to do my duty.
Soon after breakfast Major Higbee ordered the
two Indian interpreters, Carl Shirts and Nephi Johnson, to inform the Indians of the plan of
operations, and to place the Indians in ambush, so that they could not be seen by the emigrants
until the work of death should commence.
This was done in order to make the emigrants
believe that we
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had sent the Indians away, and that we were acting honestly and in good faith, when we agreed to
protect them from the savages.
The orders were obeyed, and in five minutes
not an Indian could be seen on the. whole Meadows. They secreted themselves and lay still as logs of
wood, until the order was given for them to rush out and kill the women.
Major Higbee then called all the people to
order, and directed me to explain the whole plan to them. I did so, explaining just how every person
was expected to act during the whole performance.
Major Higbee then gave the order for his men
to advance. They marched to the spot agreed upon, and halted there. William Bateman was then
selected to carry a flag of truce to the emigrants and demand their surrender, and I was ordered to
go and make the treaty after some one had replied to our flag of truce. (The emigrants had kept a
white flag flying in their camp ever since they saw me cross the valley.)
Bateman took a white flag and started for the
emigrant camp. When he got about half way to the corral, he was met by one of the emigrants, that I
afterwards learned was named Hamilton. They talked some time, but I never knew what was said between
them.
Brother Bateman returned to the command and
said that the emigrants would accept our terms, and surrender as we required them to do.
I was then ordered by Major Higbee to go to
the corral and negotiate the treaty, and superintend the whole matter. I was again ordered to be
certain and get all the arms and ammunition into the wagons. Also to put the children and the sick
and wounded in the wagons, as had been agreed upon in council. Then Major Higbee said to me:
"Brother Lee, we expect you to faithfully
carry out all the instructions that have been given you by our council."
Samuel McMurdy and Samuel Knight were then
ordered to drive their teams and follow me to the corral to haul off the children, arms, etc.
The troops formed in two lines, as had been
agreed upon, and were standing in that way with arms at rest, when I left them.
I walked ahead of the wagons up to the corral.
When I reached there I met Mr. Hamilton on the outside of the camp.
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He loosened the chains from some of their wagons, and moved one wagon out of the way, so that our
teams could drive inside of the corral and into their camp. It was then noon, or a little after.
I found that the emigrants were strongly
fortified; their wagons were chained to each other in a circle. In the centre [sic] was a rifle-pit,
large enough to contain the entire company. This had served to shield them from the constant fire of
their enemy, which had been poured into them from both sides of the valley, from a rocky range that
served as a breastwork for their assailants. The valley at this point was not more than five hundred
yards wide, and the emigrants had their camp near the center of the valley. On the east and west
there was a low range of rugged, rocky mountains, affording a splendid place for the protection of
the Indians and Mormons, and leaving them in comparative safety while they fired upon the emigrants.
The valley at this place runs nearly due north and south.
When I entered the corral, I found the
emigrants engaged in burying two men of note among them, who had died but a short time before from
the effect of wounds received by them from the Indians at the time of the first attack on Tuesday
morning. They wrapped the bodies up in buffalo robes, and buried them in a grave inside the corral.
I was then told by some of the men that seven men were killed and seventeen others were wounded at
the first attack made by the Indians, and that three of the wounded men had since died, making ten
of their number killed during the siege.
As I entered the fortifications, men, women
and children gathered around me in wild consternation. Some felt that the time of their happy
deliverance had come, while others, though in deep distress, and all in tears, looked upon me with
doubt, distrust and terror. My feelings at this time may be imagined (but I doubt the power of man
being equal to even imagine how wretched I felt.) No language can describe my feelings. My position
was painful, trying and awful; my brain seemed to be on fire; my nerves were for a moment unstrung;
humanity was overpowered, as I thought of the cruel, unmanly part that I was acting. Tears of bitter
anguish fell in streams from my eyes; my tongue refused its office; my faculties were dormant,
stupefied and deadened by grief. I wished that the earth would open and swallow me where I stood.
God knows my suffering
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was great. I cannot describe my feelings. I knew that I was acting a cruel part and doing a
damnable deed. Yet my faith in the godliness of my leaders was such that it forced me to think that
I was not sufficiently spiritual to act the important part I was commanded to perform. My hesitation
was only momentary. Then feeling that duty compelled obedience to orders, I laid aside my
weakness and my humanity, and became an instrument in the hands of my superiors and my leaders. I
delivered my message and told the people that they must put their arms in the wagon, so as not to
arouse the animosity of the Indians. I ordered the children and wounded, some clothing and the arms,
to be put into the wagons. Their guns were mostly Kentucky rifles of the muzzle-loading style. Their
ammunition was about all gone--I do not think there were twenty loads left in their whole camp. If
the emigrants had had a good supply of ammunition they never would have surrendered, and I do not
think we could have captured them without great loss, for they were brave men and very resolute and
determined.
Just as the wagons were loaded, Dan McFarland
came riding into the corral and said that Major Higbee had ordered great haste to be made, for he
was afraid that the Indians would return and renew the attack before he could get the emigrants to a
place of safety.
I hurried up the people and started the wagons
off towards Cedar City. As we went out of the corral I ordered the wagons to turn to the left, so as
to leave the troops to the right of us. Dan McFarland rode before the women and led them right up to
the troops, where they still stood in open order as I left them. The women and larger children were
walking ahead, as directed, and the men following them. The foremost man was about fifty yards
behind the hindmost woman.
The women and children were hurried right on
by the troops. When the men came up they cheered the soldiers as if they believed that they were
acting honestly. Higbee then gave the orders for his men to form in single file and take their
places as ordered before, that is, at the right of the emigrants.
I saw this much, but about this time our
wagons passed out of sight of the troops, over the hill. I had disobeyed orders in part by turning
off as I did, for I was anxious to be out of sight of the bloody deed that I knew was to follow. I
knew that I

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had much to do yet that was of a cruel and unnatural character. It was my duty, with the two
drivers, to kill the sick and wounded who were in the wagons, and to do so when we heard the guns of
the troops fire. I was walking between the wagons; the horses were going in a fast walk, and we were
fully half a mile from Major Higbee and his men, when we heard the firing. As we heard the guns, I
ordered a halt and we proceeded to do our part.
I here pause in the recital of this horrid
story of man's inhumanity, and ask myself the question, Is it honest in me, and can I clear my
conscience before my God, if I screen myself while I accuse others? No, never! Heaven forbid that I
should put a burden upon others' shoulders, that I am unwilling to bear my just portion of. I am not
a traitor to my people, nor to my former friends and comrades who were with me on that dark day when
the work of death was carried on in God's name, by a lot of deluded and religious fanatics. It is my
duty to tell facts as they exist, and I will do so.
I have said that all of the small children
were put into the wagons; that was wrong, for one little child, about six months old, was carried in
its father's arms, and it was killed by the same bullet that entered its father's breast; it was
shot through the head. I was told by Haight afterwards, that the child was killed by accident, but I
cannot say whether that is a fact or not. I saw it lying dead when I returned to the place of
slaughter.
When we had got out of sight, as I said
before, and just as we were coming into the main road, I heard a volley of guns at the place where I
knew the troops and emigrants were. Our teams were then going at a fast walk. I first heard one gun,
then a volley at once followed.
McMurdy and Knight stopped their teams at
once, for they were ordered by Higbee, the same as I was, to help kill all the sick and wounded who
were in the wagons, and to do it as soon as they heard the guns of the troops. McMurdy was in front;
his wagon was mostly loaded with the arms and small children. McMurdy and Knight got out of their
wagons; each one had a rifle. McMurdy went up to Knight's wagon, where the sick and wounded were,
and raising his rifle to his shoulder, said: "0 Lord, my God, receive their spirits, it is
for thy Kingdom that I do this." He then shot a man who was lying with his head on another
man's breast; the ball killed both men.
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I also went up to the wagon, intending to
do my part of the killing. I drew my pistol and cocked it, but somehow it went off prematurely, and
I shot McMurdy across the thigh, my Pistol ball cutting his buck-skin pants. McMurdy turned to me
and said:
"Brother Lee, keep cool, you are excited;
you came very near killing me. Keep cool, there is no reason for being excited."
Knight then shot a man with his rifle; he shot
the man in the head. Knight also brained a boy that was about fourteen years old. The boy came
running up to our wagons, and Knight struck him on the head with the butt end of his gun, and
crushed his skull. By this time many Indians reached our wagons, and all of the sick and wounded
were killed almost instantly. I saw an Indian from Cedar City, called Joe, run up to the wagon and
catch a man by the hair, and raise his head up and look into his face; the man shut his eyes, and
Joe shot him in the head. The Indians then examined all of the wounded in the wagons, and all of the
bodies, to see if any were alive, and all that showed signs of life were at once shot through the
head. I did not kill any one there, but it was an accident that kept me from it, for I fully
intended to do my part of the killing, but by the time I got over the excitement of coming so near
killing McMurdy, the whole of the killing of the wounded was done. There is no truth in the
statement of Nephi Johnson, where he says I cut a man's throat.
Just after the wounded were all killed I saw a
girl, some ten or eleven years old, running towards us, from the direction where the troops had
attacked the main body of emigrants; she was covered with blood. An Indian shot her before she got
within sixty yards of us. That was the last person that I saw killed on that occasion.
About this time an Indian rushed to the front
wagon, and grabbed a little boy, and was going to kill him. The lad got away from the Indian and ran
to me, and caught me by the knees; and begged me to save him, and not let the Indian kill him. The
Indian had hurt the little fellow's chin on the wagon bed, when he first caught hold of him. I told
the Indian to let the boy alone. I took the child up in my arms, and put him back in the wagon, and
saved his life. This little boy said his name was Charley Fancher, and that his father was Captain
of
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the train. He was a bright boy. I afterwards adopted him, and gave him to Caroline. She kept him
until Dr. Forney took all the children East. I believe that William Sloan, alias Idaho Bill, is the
same boy.
After all the parties were dead, I ordered
Knight to drive out on one side, and throw out the dead bodies. He did so, and threw them out of his
wagon at a place about one hundred yards from the road, and then came back to where I was standing.
I then ordered Knight and McMurdy to take the children that were saved alive, (sixteen was the
number, some say seventeen, I say sixteen,) and drive on to Hamblin's ranch. They did as I ordered
them to do. Before the wagons started, Nephi Johnson came up in company with the Indians that were
under his command, and Carl Shirts I think came up too, but I know that I then considered that Carl
Shirts was a coward, and I afterwards made him suffer for being a coward. Several white men came up
too, but I cannot tell their names, as I have forgotten who they were.
Knight lied when he said I went to the ranch
and ordered him to go to the field with his team. I never knew anything of his team, or heard of it,
until he came with a load of armed men in his wagon, on the evening of Thursday. If any one ordered
him to go to the Meadows, it was Higbee. Every witness that claims that he went to the Meadows
without knowing what he was going to do, has lied, for they all knew, as well as Haight or any one
else did, and they all voted, every man of them, in the Council, on Friday morning, a little before
daylight, to kill all the emigrants.
After the wagons, with the children, had
started for Hamblin's ranch, I turned and walked back to where the brethren were. Nephi Johnson lies
when he says he was on horse-back, and met me, or that I gave him orders to go to guard the wagons.
He is a perjured wretch, and has sworn to every thing he could to injure me. God knows what I did do
was bad enough, but he has lied to suit the leaders of the Church, who want me out of the way.
While going back, to the brethren, I passed
the bodies of several women. In one place I saw six or seven bodies near each other; they were
stripped perfectly naked, and all of their clothing was torn from their bodies by the Indians.
I walked along the line where the emigrants
had been killed,
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and saw many bodies lying dead and naked on the field, near by where the women lay. I saw ten
children; they had been killed close to each other; they were from ten to sixteen years of age. The
bodies of the women and children were scattered along the ground for quite a distance before I came
to where the men were killed.
I do not know how many were killed, but I
thought then that there were some fifteen women, about ten children, and about forty men killed, but
the statement of others that I have since talked with about the massacre, makes me think there were
fully one hundred and ten killed that day on the Mountain Meadows, and the ten who had died in the
corral, and young Aden killed by Stewart at Richards' Springs, would make the total number one
hundred and twenty-one.
When I reached the place where the dead men
lay, I was told how the orders had been obeyed. Major Higbee said, "The boys have acted
admirably, they took good aim, and all of the d--d Gentiles but two or three fell at the first
fire."
He said that three or four got away some
distance, but the men on horses soon overtook them and cut their throats. Higbee said the Indians
did their part of the work well, that it did not take over a minute to finish up when they got
fairly started. I found that the first orders had been carried out to the letter.
Three of the emigrants did get away, but the
Indians were put on their trail and they overtook and killed them before they reached the
settlements in California. But it would take more time than I have to spare to give the details of
their chase and capture. I may do so in my writings hereafter, but not now.
I found Major Higbee, Klingensmith. and most
of the brethren standing near by where the largest number of the dead men lay. When I went up to the
brethren, Major Higbee said,
"We must now examine the bodies for
valuables."
I said I did not wish to do any such work.
Higbee then said, "Well, you hold my hat
and I will examine the bodies, and put what valuables I get into the hat."
The bodies were all searched by Higbee,
Klingensmith and Wm. C. Stewart. I did hold the hat a while, but I soon got so sick that I had to
give it to some other person, as I was unable to stand for a few minutes. The search resulted in
getting a little money and a few watches, but there was not much money. Higbee and Klingensmith kept
the property, I suppose, for I
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never knew what became of it, unless they did keep it. I think they kept it all.
After the dead were searched, as I have just
said, the brethren were called up, and Higbee and Klingensmith, as well as myself, made speeches,
and ordered the people to keep the matter ,a secret from the entire world. Not to tell
their wives, or their most intimate friends, and we pledged ourselves to keep everything relating to
the affair a secret during life. We also took the most binding oaths to stand by each other, and to
always insist that the massacre was committed by Indians alone. This was the advice of Brigham Young
too, as I will show hereafter.
The men were mostly ordered to camp there on
the field for that night, but Higbee and Klingensmith went with me to Hamblin's ranch, where we got
something to eat, and staid [sic] there all night. I was nearly dead for rest and sleep; in fact I
had rested but little since the Saturday night before. I took my saddle-blanket and spread it on the
ground soon after I had eaten my supper, and lay down on the saddle-blanket, using my saddle for a
pillow, and slept soundly until next morning.
I was awakened in the morning by loud talking
between Isaac C. Haight and William H. Dame. They were very much excited, and quarreling with each
other. I got up at once, but was unable to hear what they were quarreling about, for they cooled
down as soon as they saw that others were paying attention to them.
I soon learned that Col. Dame, Judge Lewis of
Parowan, and Isaac C. Haight, with several others, had arrived at the Hamblin ranch in the night,
but I do not know what time they got there.
After breakfast we all went back in a body to
the Meadows, to bury the dead and take care of the property that was left there.
When we reached the Meadows we all rode up to
that part of the field where the women were lying dead. The bodies of men, women and children had
been stripped entirely naked, making the scene one of the most loathsome and ghastly that can be
imagined.
Knowing that Dame and Haight had quarreled at
Hamblin's that morning, I wanted to know how they would act in sight of the dead, who lay there as
the result of their orders. I was
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greatly interested to know what Dame had to say, so I kept close to them, without appearing to be
watching them.
Colonel Dame was silent for some time. He
looked all over the field, and was quite pale, and looked uneasy and frightened. I thought then that
he was just finding out the difference between giving and executing orders for wholesale killing. He
spoke to Haight, and said:
"I must report this matter to the
authorities."
"How will you report it?" said
Haight.
Dame said, "I will report it just as it
is."
"Yes, I suppose so, and implicate
yourself with the rest?" said Haight.
"No," said Dame. "I will not
implicate myself for I had nothing to do with it."
Haight then said, "That will not do, for
you know a d--d sight better. You ordered it done. Nothing has been done except by your orders, and
it is too late in the day for you to order things done and then go back on it, and go back on the
men who have carried out your orders. You cannot sow pig on me, and I will be d--d if I
will stand it. You are as much to blame as any one, and you know that we have done nothing except
what you ordered done. I know that I have obeyed orders, and by G-d I will not be lied on."
Colonel Dame was much excited. He choked up,
and would have gone away, but he knew Haight was a man of determination, and would not stand any
foolishness.
As soon as Colonel Dame could collect himself,
he said:
"I did not think there were so many
of them, or I would not have had anything to do with it."
I thought it was now time for me to chip in,
so I said:
"Brethren, what is the trouble between
you? It will not do for our chief men to disagree."
Haight stepped up to my side, a little in
front of me, and facing Colonel Dame. He was very mad, and said:
"The trouble is just this: Colonel Dame counseled
and ordered me to do this thing, and now he wants to back out, and go back on me, and by G-d,
he shall not do it. He shall not lay it all on me. He cannot do it. He must not try to do
it. I will blow him to h--l before he shall lay it all on me. He has got to stand up to
what he did, like a little man. He knows he ordered it, done, and I dare him to deny it."
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Colonel Dame was perfectly cowed. He did
not offer to deny it again, but said:
"Isaac, I did not know there were so many
of them."
"That makes no difference," said
Haight, "you ordered me to do it, and you have got to stand up for your orders."
I thought it was now time to stop the fuss,
for many of the young brethren were coming around. So I said:
"Brethren, this is no place to talk over
such a matter. You will agree when you get where you can be quiet, and talk it over."
Haight said, "There is no more to say,
for he knows he ordered it done, and he has got to stand by it."
That ended the trouble between them, and I
never heard of Colonel Dame denying the giving of the orders any more, until after the Church
authorities concluded to offer me up for the sins of the Church.
We then went along the field, and passed by
where the brethren were at work covering up the bodies. They piled the dead bodies up in heaps, in
little gullies, and threw dirt over them. The bodies were only lightly covered, for the ground was
hard, and the brethren did not have sufficient tools to dig with. I suppose it is true that the
first rain washed the bodies all out again, but I never went back to examine whether it did or not.
We then went along the field to where the
corral and camp had been, to where the wagons were standing. We found that the Indians had carried
off all of the wagon covers, and the clothing, and the provisions, and had emptied the feathers out
of the feather-beds, and carried off all the ticks.
After the dead were covered up or buried (but
it was not much of a burial,) the brethren were called together, and a council was held at the
emigrant camp. All the leading men made speeches; Colonel Dame, President Haight. Klingensmith, John
M. Higbee, Hopkins and myself. The speeches were first--Thanks to God for delivering our enemies
into our hands; next, thanking the brethren for their zeal in God's cause; and then the necessity of
always saying the Indians did it alone, and that the Mormons had nothing to do with it. The most of
the speeches, however, were in the shape of exhortations and commands to keep the whole matter
secret from every one but Brigham Young. It was voted unanimously that any man who should divulge
the secret, or tell who was present, or do any-
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thing that would lead to a discovery of the truth, should suffer death.
The brethren then all took a most solemn oath,
binding themselves under the most dreadful and awful penalties, to keep the whole matter secret from
every human being, as long as they should live. No man was to know the facts. The brethren were
sworn not to talk of it among themselves, and each one swore to help kill all who proved to be
traitors to the Church or people in this matter.
It was then agreed that Brigham Young should
be informed of the whole matter, by some one to be selected by the Church Council, after the
brethren had returned home.
It was also voted to turn all the property
over to Klingensmith, as Bishop of the Church at Cedar City, and he was to take care of the property
for the benefit of the Church, until Brigham Young was notified, and should give further orders what
to do with it.
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This page posted by SDA on July 6, 2003
Last updated on November 04, 2005