The Americanization of Utah For Statehood
Did not have chance to read through, but of course this is for your review.
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THE "AMERICANIZATION" OF UTAH FOR STATEHOOD PREFACE CHAPTER SEVEN On the Underground CHAPTER EIGHT The Underground and the Visible Church Gustive O. Larson THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY San Marino, California THE "AMERICANIZATION" OF UTAH FOR STATEHOOD by Gustive O. Larson When President Cleveland issued the proclamation of January 4, 1896, admitting Utah as our forty-fifth state, the event marked for Utah the end of al long, turbulent territorial experience. In the eyes of the federal government the Mormon theocracy violated the doctrine of church-state separation: the Mormons, on the other hand, believed that the Constitution upheld their right to religious freedom, and refused to abandon their beliefs, even for the coveted prize of statehood. The issue was further confused by that second of the "twin relics of barbarism," polygamy. Gentile politicians and merchants were eager for a share in Utah's political and economic spoils, a share that would be denied them so long as Utah remained under the domination of the Mormon church. The polygamy issue was made to order for their purposes, and under the guise of moral reform they enlisted federal support in a campaign to "Americanize" Utah, as the author puts it. The Mormons responded to this pressure with various forms of passive resistance, disappearing into the underground to avoid arrest and imprisonment as polygamists, or serving out their sentences only to return home as martyr-heroes, unshaken in their faith. No less impressive was the steadfastness of the Mormon women, the great majority of whom held firm in their beliefs during these difficult years. The impasse could not, however, last indefinitely. It became increasingly evident that some accommodation of the Kingdom of God to the world around it -- and of that world to the Mormons -- must take place. The tireless work of the Mormon leadership, with the support of influential Gentile friends, finally produced terms that were acceptable to both sides, and the long-held dream of statehood became reality. Professor Larson tells the story of these decades with clarity and conviction making use of Mormon publications such as the Deseret News as well as a number of unpublished letters and diaries. The result is a vivid narrative, and a timely one. "We have a right to survive: we have a duty to survive. It would be to the profit of the nation that we should survive," wrote Mormon leader George Q. Cannon. The year was 1887, but he could have been speaking today for any minority group claiming the right to make its contribution to society uninterrupted by intolerance and bigotry. "No other historian has told the story of this conflict so well and with such documentation." Ray Allen Billington. Gustive O. Larson was born in Salt Lake City and graduated from the University of Utah. He was Mission President for the L. D. S. Church in Sweden during the thirties, and later became Director of an L. D. S. Institute of Religion. He is now Associate Professor of History at Brigham Young University. Among his published works is the Outline History of Utah and the Mormons; he is also a frequent contributor to the Utah Historical Quarterly. [vii] PREFACE Echoes of the War between the States rumbled in Utah's mountains in the 1870's and 1880's. Polygamy, designated as the second "twin relic of barbarism," served as a battle cry in the sound of which church and state joined in a bitter power struggle. The prolonged controversy presented Utah as an exception in America's more or less successful territorial process by which her neighbors qualified for admission to the Union. The states' rights issue, which persisted in the Mormon territory beyond the Civil War, was complicated not only by the practice of polygamy, but by a political "Kingdom of God" concept which, while blocking Utah's admission to the Union, sustained the Latter-day Saints in their four-decade resistance to carpetbag government. In their view, God had charged them with responsibility not only to restore the Church of Christ upon the earth but literally to establish a political kingdom controlled by the priesthood and destined ultimately to embrace all nations. To this end the Mormon leaders labored mightily to retain political control of their expanding community in the Great Basin until statehood would vouchsafe it permanently. The Gentile minority on the other hand, enjoying protection and political recognition through federal jurisdiction over the territory, refused to surrender this advantage, which would be lost in statehood. During the conflict the Mormon majority petitioned Congress repeatedly for admission to the Union. Each time, while the minority resisted their efforts, the federal government answered that the price of statehood was abandonment of plural marriage, and separation of church and state in Utah politics. In the meantime, Congress multiplied antipolygamy legislation, which federal officials tried to enforce in Utah. It was largely southern states Reconstruction applied to the Utah situation. Resistance developed until a judicial cru-[viii]sade drove the polygamist Church leaders underground. These two words -- "crusade" and "underground" -- popularly employed to describe the offensive campaign of the federal government to suppress plural marriage and the Mormon defensive response through passive resistance, dominated the Utah scene until the issuance of the Manifesto in 1890. But while wiping plural marriage from the national scene might have satisfied the expectations of the reformers, the moral issue served only as a battle cry for the crusaders in the fight for political dominance. Locally it became a struggle between the Mormon majority and the Gentile minority for political control in Utah Territory, and nationally it involved efforts of the federal government to "Americanize" Utah socially, economically, and politically in preparation for admission to the Union. Generally, the "Radical Republicans," fresh from their victory over the South, were inclined to drive relentlessly toward their objective while the states' rights Democrats applied the brakes. Beyond any moral issue, both parties eyed the territory in terms of potential political advantage. So, while the Mormon-Gentile battle raged in the shadows of the Wasatch mountains, national politics was shaping Utah's destiny in Washington. To cover both, it has been necessary to bring together both federal and territorial records. Considerable research and writing has been done on Utah's half-century struggle for statehood and the federal government's efforts to bring the territory into conformity with the national standards. Richard D. Poll's extensive research on the political aspect of Utah's territorial history has been condensed in "The Political Reconstruction of Utah Territory," appearing in the Pacific Historical Review; Leonard J. Arrington, in his Great Basin Kingdom, has emphasized the economic phase of the conflict. The gist of Orma Linford's doctoral dissertation on "The Mormons and the Law" has appeared in Utah Law Review. Howard R. Lamar's The Far Southwest, 1846-1912; A Territorial History has presented effectively the issues involved; Klaus [ix] Hansen's studies of the Mormon Kingdom of God concept have appeared in his Quest for Empire, and Stewart L. Grow has presented an analysis of "The Development of Political Parties in Utah" in the Western Political Quarterly. A more recent publication suggesting a new approach to the study of frontier America is The Frontier Re-examined, edited by John Francis McDermott; particularly pertinent to the present volume is a chapter therein by Oliver W. Holmes entitled "Territorial Government and the Records of Its Administration." Unpublished studies include Stewart L. Grow's doctoral dissertation on the Utah Commission and Thomas G. Alexander's "The Federal Frontier: Interior Department Financial Policy in Idaho, Utah, and Arizona." The church-state power struggle in Utah was an ideological conflict in which the Mormons sought to establish an independent theocracy within the boundaries of the American democratic nation. In The "Americanization" of Utah for Statehood the writer attempts to explain the motivating forces involved. The term "Americanization" as employed by the writer does not imply moral reformation of a people whose standards were generally high, nor a call for allegiance to the United States constitution, which the Saints held in special reverence. Rather, it was a demand for undivided loyalty to the United States government, for the acceptance of the country's democratic processes under the Constitution, including the separation of church and state. It was a call for the maintaining of the practice as well as the form of the divided powers of government, the elective processes, and the establishment of free public schools. In other words, it involved abandonment of certain political, economic, and social peculiarities, including plural marriage, which became the battle cry under which the nation fought the states' rights issue during the years following the Civil War. From untapped sources in private, church, state, and national archives, the author has drawn upon original manuscripts and documents to add flesh and blood to the more formal accounts extant and to lend an intimate touch to [x] the struggle which only personal journals, diaries, and letters can give. The first two chapters of the book are introductory, providing in brief outline a background for the church-state struggle in the 1870's and 1880's. The writer is indebted to the National Archives and the Library of Congress for access to many documents and manuscripts; also to the Church Historian's Office of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and to the Utah State Historical Society. Brigham Young University Library, as well as the University of Utah, Henry E. Huntington, and Bancroft libraries have cooperated in making significant manuscripts available. Some Brigham Young letters from the William Robertson Coe Collection at Yale University Library and a Mormon journal from Princeton University Library merely suggest the wide range of available materials. Permission to quote from some journals privately held is appreciated. All these collectively have made possible a more intimate presentation of respective points of view and personal motivations involved in the protracted Mormon-Gentile clash. Extensive quotations have been extracted therefrom to reflect the views of those within "the Kingdom" and those outside as they battled for political control. Appreciation is extended to the staffs of the above-mentioned institutions for their willing assistance in research. Chad Flake, in charge of Special Collections at the Brigham Young University, has been very helpful, as have my colleagues in the history department through encouragement and pertinent suggestions. The services of typists are remembered with appreciation, including my wife who also cooperated in research. My indebtedness to the publishers is gratefully acknowledged with special mention of editor Betty Leigh Merrell and her staff for bringing the publication to fruition. Responsibility for the finished product rests with the writer however, and he presents it herewith in the hope that it will not only add to historical knowledge but will promote understanding and appreciation of our Western heritage. Gustive O. Larson Provo, Utah July 24, 1970 TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER ONE The Political Kingdom of God .........................................1 CHAPTER TWO Plural Marriage Among the Mormons ...................................37 CHAPTER THREE Passive Resistance ..................................................61 CHAPTER FOUR Launching the Crusade ...............................................91 CHAPTER FIVE Cohabs vs. Deputies ................................................115 CHAPTER SIX At the Edge of War .................................................139 CHAPTER SEVEN On the Underground .................................................155 CHAPTER EIGHT The Underground and the Visible Church .............................165 CHAPTER NINE The "Pen" Community ................................................183 CHAPTER TEN The Price of Statehood .............................................207 CHAPTER ELEVEN Hopeful Signs ......................................................223 CHAPTER TWELVE The Manifesto ......................................................243 CHAPTER THIRTEEN Denouement .........................................................265 CHAPTER FOURTEEN Statehood ..........................................................283 BIBLIOGRAPHY .............................................................305 ILLUSTRATIONS following pages 98, 184, and 254. [155] CHAPTER SEVEN On the Underground When President John Taylor went on the "underground" on February 1, 1885, he took the headquarters of the Mormon Church with him. During the next two and a half years spiritual encouragement and official direction in all Church affairs emanated from hiding places known only to a few trusted individuals. Some of these served as messengers, guards, and personal attendants to the President and his counselor, George Q. Cannon. Included in the little group which disappeared that winter evening was, in addition to the two Church leaders, an able and trusted secretary in the person of L. John Nuttall, who had long served President Taylor in that capacity. There was also Charles H. Wilcken, coachman and guard, and Samuel Bateman, who joined the group later in similar capacity. Other trusted men served in various localities as the hideout shifted from place to place in and near Salt Lake City as safety dictated. The personnel of the administrative corps was well selected to assure concealment and safety while in performance of its manifold duties. Wilcken was a veteran of the German army who had been decorated with the Iron Cross for bravery on the battlefield. He had come to Utah with General Albert Sidney Johnston's invading army in 1858 only to attach himself to Brigham Young as his devoted protector. Following Young's death, his allegiance shifted to George Q. Cannon, whom he was now pleased to serve, together with the President. H. C. Bartell and his alert, deaf-mute wife lived in the basement apartment of the Church Historian's office, where extra guest rooms were available. One of these rooms was occupied for a time by the Church Historian's secretary, John W. Whitaker, whose duties included admitting, at all hours of the night, polygamous fugitives dodging the U.S. deputy marshals. Mr. Whit-[156]aker's journal is particularly valuable in disclosing the operations of the Church in the open as it functioned through the office of Church Historian Franklin D. Richards. Samuel Bateman was a powerfully built man who had led the first platoon under Captain Lot Smith in the guerrilla action against the invading U.S. Army in 1857. Later he had accompanied Brigham Young on his tours throughout the territory and served on the Salt Lake City police force. All of these stalwart men could be counted on to protect the president with their lives if necessary. Two of them, Secretary Nuttall and Samuel Bateman, were also polygamists and high on the wanted lists of the U.S. marshal. There was daily, or to be more accurate, nightly communication between underground "headquarters" and the various church administrative centers, including the President's office, the Tithing office, the Gardo House, and particularly the Historian's office where Apostle Franklin D. Richards served as representative of the "visible church." Council meetings were held sporadically by the high Church officials in various places. Some of these were arranged by George Q. Cannon, who moved about more freely than the president. "In the evening I got a team from the tithing office," wrote A. H. Cannon on May 13, 1885, "and took Bros. Erastus Snow, H. J. Grant and William Budge to Father's farm where we met Pres. Taylor, Father, John Nuttall and Chas. Wilcken. It was nearly midnight before these brethren completed their business." On June 3 he wrote, "In the evening I took Mr. Salmon [a local police officer] to the farm with me and in a short time six other policemen came and stationed themselves at various places around the farm house to look out for intruders. At 9:30 o'clock Pres. Taylor, Father and nine of the Twelve assembled at the farm where a council meeting was held which lasted until midnight when we all dispersed and went to our various places of abode. I was around with the police all evening and did not reach home until almost 2 o'clock in the morning. It would not have been healthy for deputy marshals to have attempted a raid on the farm this evening." [157] The following day another meeting was held at the Cannon farm with similar police protection. (1) So effectively did the underground system operate that, with the exception of Lorenzo Snow's capture and George Q. Cannon's arrest in Nevada en route to Mexico, no high Church officials fell into the net of the U.S. marshal. As already noted, Cannon, by jumping his exorbitant bail, was soon back with his chief on the underground, where he remained until under more propitious circumstances he gave himself up to the federal authorities and served a short prison sentence. Contributing to the effectiveness of the President's concealment, as he moved from place to place, was the loyalty of the Saints, who felt a personal responsibility for his safety. Although hordes of deputy marshals swarmed the city and surrounding communities, spying, raiding, threatening, and tempting with bribes, there was little danger that the man whom the Saints regarded as their modern prophet would be betrayed. Private diaries kept by men closely associated with the underground processes give daily accounts of the problems and labors of the closely knit group and their confidential relations with frequent official visitors. Only incidentally do clues to their whereabouts flash through, and that usually with reference to some past location. Current locations are listed by such names as "safe retreat," "Do," or "Halfway House." Also in some of the journals it was common procedure to designate individuals by initials such as GQC, HCB, or CHW. Journals contributing most to our present account include those of L. John Nuttall, Samuel Bateman, and John M. Whitaker. The president and his associates had to move from place to place very frequently. At this particular time [no date given] President Taylor was stopping out at Cottonwood. Breakfast was just prepared under the trees in a grove near the home of his brother (William Taylor-Aunt Jane). They had just arose from morn-[158]ing prayer when President Taylor arose and said, "Charlie [Wilcken, the coachman], hitch up the horses as quickly as possible, I feel that the deputies will be here within twenty minutes." The brethren hastened away to more secure safety and within twenty minutes, here comes a number of deputy marshalls. Someone had informed the deputies of the whereabouts of the President, but the Lord inspired him to move in time.(2) L. John Nuttall, who was with the President during the entire underground period, reflected similar confidence in providential care in a revealing letter dated April 20, 1886. "It is really wonderful how we have been protected as we have not been 10 miles from the City, since we left now over 14 months."(3) In his journal dated September 10, 1889, he disclosed where the President went when he retired from public view on the night of February 1, 1885. "Bp. Samuel Bennion of North Jordan Ward died last night. I would have been pleased to see him for he and wife were very kind to Pres. Taylor & Party as theres [sic] was the first house we stopped at when we went out on the underground."(4) Upon revisiting another of the early hideouts, Nuttall allowed his diary to disclose its location. July 3, 1889 at 5:30 p.m., President Joseph F. Smith . . . and myself with Bro. Chas. H. Wilcken as driver, started for Wasatch -- the church quarry in Little Cottonwood Canyon. After a pleasant trip, we arrived at 8:30. Thursday, July 4, 1889. This is a beautiful morning, I walked around the place and found it much improved to what it was when I was here before with Pres. Taylors party."(5) |
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[159] It is possible that the paper mill at the mouth of Big Cottonwood Canyon also served as a temporary hideout for the exiles; at least it was raided by the deputies in the hope of locating them there. Samuel Bateman sheds some light on locations of the underground operations in his journal, the available part of which begins in August 1886. His repeated reference to "Do" as the residences occupied is clarified editorially in a footnote as being the homes of William White and John W. Wooley in Bountiful and later the home of Thomas F. Rouche in Kaysville. Contemporary correspondence, particularly that of L. John Nuttall with his son Leonard and with Daniel H. Wells, presiding over the British Mission, also discloses much, not only of the doings at the underground headquarters but of progress of the crusade raging outside. Several of these letters are headed "Safe Retreat" with no further clue as to location. Excerpts from one of his revealing reports to Wells, dated May 19, 1885, follows: I feel very grateful that you are thus privileged and have your liberty in attending to the labors of the ministry.... Others of the brethren who labored with you are non est. . . . The Spirit is plainly manifested that these brethren should keep out of the hands of the enemy, for the present at least. That we have been able to do so is very remarkable and a striking evidence of the care the Lord has had over us.... Elder B. Young and M. Thatcher are now in Mexico waiting upon the National authorities in the interest of our people who are desirous of locating in Chihuahua or Sonora in Northern Mexico. Bros. WW -- LS, and JT are comfortably situated. Bros. ES, FDF, AC, FML, JH, Sr., HGG, and JWT are around considerably among the people and who have not yet been interfered with.(6) Two months later Nuttall penned another letter from "Safe Retreat," this time to his son in England: July 30, 1885. We are among kind friends who do everything possible to make us comfortable. We are [160] well fed, well clothed and well housed. We have the presence and assistance of the spirit of the Lord.... Our affairs in Mexico for opening settlements for our people, are quite satisfactory at present. . . . . When the United States find they have not got us in a corner, and cannot prey upon us, they may see that the business of crushing out Mormonism is not likely to be successful as they had anticipated.(7) When Nuttall wrote Daniel Wells again nearly a year later, he could relate many happenings of interest to the ex-mayor of Salt Lake City. There was the shifting of Church leaders in their underground assignments, some even to Mexico, where escape colonies were being established; judicial sentencing and releasing of cohabs from the "Pen" was maintaining a steady turnover in prison population, which currently included one of the Twelve in connection with the important segregation test case. Following dismissal of their predecessors, there was now a new governor and a new U.S. marshal, and there was much speculation as to what their course would be. A letter from Nuttall dated April 20, 1886, pictured to his friend on the underground in England the way things appeared at that time to a Mormon on the underground in Utah: Notwithstanding the vigorous attempt of our enemies to bring the Presidency and brethren into bondage, they have so far signally failed. Pres. Taylor has not enjoyed as good health for years as he has whilst we have been from home and with the exception of a few brief spells he has been able to perform his labors as effectually as though he was in the office at the City all the time.... Pres. Cleveland has expressed himself to Bro. [John T.] Caine as not being in favor of persecution and the harsh and severe execution of the law. Judge Zane by his intemperate speech in the opera house his shown himself a bitter partisan and should be removed. . . . We do not know much about Mr. Dyer, the new marshall, but look for him to be an improvement on Marshall Ireland who has shown him-[161]self to be a facile tool in the hands of stronger men. The Tribune ring have virtually controlled his every movement and exercised every power belonging to the Marshall's office.... Brother Woodruff is in this neighborhood but is in concealment as also is brother Thatcher in the North. Bros. E. Snow and George Teasdale with the Saints in Chihuahua. A piece of land has been purchased there for settlement....(8) The arrival in Utah of Governor Caleb W. West and U.S. Marshal Frank Dyer on May 5 and June 17, respectively, was viewed optimistically by the Mormons. With some justification they felt that these Cleveland appointees might prove less exacting in their discharge of official duties. Their hopes were partially realized when the new governor extended conditional offers of amnesty to the cohabs serving terms in the penitentiary. But when these offers were respectfully declined as previously noted, he issued a stern proclamation on July 16 that the Edmunds Law must be obeyed."(9) The Gardo House was raided on September 23 by the new marshal and a squad of deputies in search of Presidents Taylor and Cannon. This was followed by a similar raid on the Historian's office on November 4. Then, in response to tips from informers, they extended their operations northward into Centerville and Bountiful. In the meantime, Samuel Bateman had joined the president's underground party, and his available diary, beginning August 26, 1886, discloses the party's whereabouts and some of its activities."(10) Bateman's services as guard, coachman, and personal attendant to the President kept him generally engaged during the night, leaving most of the daylight hours free. His diary, therefore, includes little with reference to the President's official transactions, but records leisure activities such as reading, pitching quoits, and playing checkers in monot-[162]onous succession. He delighted in recording "played checkers with the boss [President Taylor] and beat him" or "pitching quoits -- the boss and I beat them bad." Their opponents were usually the other attendants, but frequently they included underground visitors such as A. M. Cannon, George Reynolds, or James Jack, trusted friends and Church officials close to the presidency. At other times Bateman, a resourceful jack-of-all-trades, speaks of doing odd jobs around the place of residence such as plowing, harvesting or making repairs. Reports of fishing and hunting also appeared frequently in the journal. Regular Sunday services were held, and the privilege of conducting the meeting was rotated; "fast day" on Thursday was also observed.(11) No daily report was complete without "I [or someone else] went with the mail." These horse-and-carriage journeys to the city with the "ingoing" mail were always at night, and the return trip with the "outgoing" mail was accomplished before daylight. Frequently George Q. Cannon or others accompanied the mail carriers as passengers to make hasty contacts at the Church offices or to remain in the city for a day or two to conduct necessary business. Sometimes they risked visits with their families. From August 1886, when Bateman's available diary begins, until November 22, the hideout was in Bountiful, a driving distance of about twelve miles from the Church offices. From there the round trip could be made easily under cover of darkness. The following excerpts from Bateman's diary omit much of the repetitious material referred to above. Aug. 26 (1886) All day at Do, reading, pitching quoits, D. R. Bateman came to where we were at night. Pratt and Burt came. They thought the Deps [deputy U.S. marshals] were on our track. Sept. 2 At Do all day. Held fast [day] meeting. I was presiding, had a good meeting. 11 were present. [163] CHW [Charles H. Wilkins] on guard L. Pratt went with the mail, I was standing guard. 4 All day at Do, reading, pitching quoits, at half past three I went on guard, at about four, two shots were fired. This was the signal that the Deps were coming; this was from the picked guard out on the road. All were asleep. I woke all in the house, the president and the rest of our party got dressed and got out of the way. It proved to be a false report. It was our team coming from town, Bro. Levi Pratt driving it. November 1 President John Taylor's birthday. He is 78 years old. Looks strong. I went out hunting early this morning. At night we were all invited over to Loren C. Wooley's & Supper. . . . C. H. Wilkin went with the mail. G. Q. Cannon went with him. 5 All day at Do. Reading. . . . President's wife, Mary came to see him. At night C.H.W. went with the mail, took Sister Mary home. 8 ...H.B.B. came about 5 o'clock. Sister Margaret the President's wife, came to see him about 11 o'clock at night. CHW went out with G. Q. Cannon and took the mail. Came back and took Margaret home. 22 All day at Do. Got up to guard at half past 4 a.m. Snowing at 10 o'clock. . . . Packing up our things. At night left Brother Wooley's. He went with us, went to Bro. T. F. Rouche. Got there a little after 10 o'clock. G.Q. Cannon and C.H.W. came a little after 12 o'clock. The President had now moved to Kaysville, which proved to be his last hideout. The driving distance between the two church headquarters had doubled. Now the nocturnal journeys became either one-way ventures, or involved two conveyances leaving simultaneously from Salt Lake and Kaysville to meet at a halfway house to exchange ingoing and outgoing mail bags. This latter arrangement also accommodated passengers. |
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Chapter 7 Footnotes (1) Abraham H. Cannon journal, in BYU Library, Special Collections. (2) John M. Whitaker journal no. 2, Jan. 1883 -- May 1886; original in Univ. of Utah Library, copy in Huntington Library, San Marino, Calif. (3) L. John Nuttall to Daniel H. Wells, Apr. 20, 1886. Letter Press Book, box 4, bk. 4. BYU Library, Special Collections. (4) The Nuttall journals (1859-1904) are located in BYU Library. Special Collections; copy in Huntington Library. (5) Nuttall journal (1887-1901), 3:28. (6) L. John Nuttall Letter Press Books, box 4, bk 3, pp. 328-334. (7) Ibid. (8) L. John Nuttall Letter Press Books, box 4, bk. 4, p. 75. (9) RG 48, Territorial Papers, L.R. 1880-96, box 211, no. 56, NA. (10) Samuel Bateman journal, Aug. 1886 to 1909, BYU Library, Special Collections. (11) Until 1897 the Latter-day Saints observed as a "fast day" the first Thursday of each month, on which a religious service was held and fast donations were contributed for use of the poor. In 1897 the days was shifted to the first Sunday in each month. [165] CHAPTER EIGHT The Underground and the Visible Church The "Temple block" in Salt Lake City included the square lying north and west from the intersection of Main and Brigham (South Temple) streets. Here in the 1880's was located the already famous Mormon Tabernacle and the controversial Endowment House, where plural marriages were performed. Workshops and construction equipment surrounded the unfinished walls of the Temple. Huge blocks of granite lay in their shadows, ready for shaping to complete the sacred structure. The square lying across from Main Street directly east of the Temple block was one of bustling activity. The main street entrance led into the tithing yard, which was edged on the north by stables and on the south by the tithing storehouse. Here wagons moved in and out, loaded with tithes which were being paid in kind. This consisted of agricultural products including livestock, to be temporarily enclosed until merged with the Church herds on the range. Here also entered scores of wagons and carriages of "conference visitors" who lacked relatives or close friends to host them during their stay in the Mormon mecca. The north side of the square afforded ample room for care of their teams, while their wagons provided sleeping quarters. The south half of the square facing South Temple Street contained the Deseret store and Tithing office on the Main Street corner. Then eastward were the Lion House, the President's office, and finally the Beehive House on the State Street corner. These last three were built by Brigham Young for his families, including his office in the center. Directly across South Temple Street facing the Beehive House was the Gardo House, home of President Taylor, and next to it directly across from the President's office was the Church Historian's office. [166] By the vote of the April 1879 General Conference, $5,000 had been spent to remodel Brigham Young's beautiful mansion, known as the Amelia Palace, into a suitable residence for President John Taylor. The President with his wives moved into the renamed Gardo House the last of December 1881 and showed his appreciation with a public reception on January 2, 1882. The two thousand people who responded to an open invitation and toured the palatial residence could best appreciate the turn of events which shortly robbed the president's wives of its comforts and exiled him to the discomforts of "underground" living. In an effort to comply with the Edmunds Law, he arranged for each of his wives to live in a separate modest home, and as the crusade closed in on him, he disappeared to avoid arrest. But the Gardo House was by no means vacated. It was left in charge of Samuel Sudbury as custodian, and the president's widowed sister, Agnes Schwartz, as matron. John M. Whitaker, who courted the President's daughter there, complained, "It was rare that Ida and I could be alone because of the many girls and women at the Gardo House. . . . Young women, wives of polygamists, whose husbands were either in the Penitentiary or hiding outside the confines of the United States; others would risk coming there to see their wives and others for consultation." He continued: The Gardo House was a rendezvous where the brethren and sisters on the Underground would often come in the night to meet their loved ones. Among such was President of the Salt Lake Stake, Angus M. Cannon, and his counselor, Charles W. Penrose, going under the name of Dr. Williams and also Editor of the Deseret News. It was in this famous building that he wrote many of his Editorials for the Deseret News. . . . Samuel Sudbury, a mysterious man, was custodian of the Gardo House and was ever alert for the approach of Marshalls [sic] and Deputies searching for polygamists. It was the rule that the Gardo House was to be closed at 10 P.M. without exception, and no stranger was permitted after that hour.... [167] Sister Agnes Schwartz . . . often stood at the front door of the Gardo House and refused entrance to the U.S. Marshall, until he showed his warrant to enter.(1) The President's plural family, after moving into separate homes, continued under the watchful eyes of the deputies. Whitaker's diaries reveal his personal concern through observations that the wives and children were "hounded and watched," that the children dared not appear in public for fear of arrest, and that families had to dress so as to hide their identity. In this, he said, they did so well that their closest friends sometimes failed to recognize them. He might have added that fictitious names protected the children of prominent church leaders from becoming innocent sources of information for inquisitive deputies and reward hunters. A surviving son of one of the Church Presidency relates that he never knew his real name during childhood. The young Whitaker who complained about lack of privacy while courting President Taylor's daughter in the Gardo House had ample opportunity for keeping an eye on the place from his window in the Historian's office. Here, as scribe and secretary to the Church Historian Franklin D. Richards, he felt the heartbeat of the Church as it struggled to survive the federal crusade. Richards' office was the executive end of the underground channel which led from the unseen Presidency. In the words of his biographer, "Of those who remained at liberty and were not being sought by the Federal authorities, Franklin D. Richards was the leading Church official. He was referred to as the `visible head of the Church' and directed its affairs under the advice and [168] instruction, so far as possible, of the exiled Presidency."(2) Referring to his activity in Richards' office, Whitaker recorded, At this time, 1886, practically all the official outside work of the Church was transacted at the Historian office and across the street, at the President's office, where Elder James Jack had charge of the finances of the Church under the direction of the First Presidency, and at times, the officials of the Church in hiding would come in secret to transact such business as they could. . . . Many secret matters to the First Presidency, and others to sacred were written in person by Apostle F. D. Richards, so as to preserve the hiding places and secret matters confined strictly to only a few.... May 11, 1886: I continued my labor at the office taking dictation from Bro. F. D. Richards, reporting sermons and blessings, court proceedings and making reports, documents and letters to the Governor, and state officials and congressman delegate John T. Caine, trying to preserve our rights and constitutional liberties. Pressing at the time was the question of "escape" colonization. Whitaker continued, The General Authorities of the Church are sending out leading brethren to Mexico, Moses Thatcher, Wilford Woodruff; John Henry Smith, Francis M. Lyman and President John Morgan of the First Council of Seventy to Salt River Valley, Montana [?] and other uninhabited places, -- John W. Taylor and Matthias Cowley to the Northwest Canada, also uninhabited, to see if lands may be purchased and our polygamists and families sent out of the confines of the United States. Among familiar figures at the Historian's and President's offices were Assistant Historian John Jacques, Church Attorney Franklin S. Richards, Church Treasurer James Jack, and Utah's Delegate to Congress, John T. Caine. Others included a few regular employees and occasional church officials who moved stealthily in and out as safety from capture permitted. [169] Until his marriage, which took him to a private residence, John Whitaker continued to live at the Church Historian's headquarters. On account of the precarious conditions existing regarding polygamists, [I] was induced to board in one of the basement rooms, where I could let in at night, other men being wanted for polygamy and the General Authorities of the church as they came from other hideouts, and in this way became very intimate with all the General Authorities, and others who came to see Apostle Franklin D. Richards, who was the only one of the General Authorities of the Church not living with his plural wives. And I had to do many secret errands, take the monthly allowances to his wives and to others, keep a daily record of events, shield many a friend hiding away from deputies. On June 17, 1886, he recorded, Tonight about midnight, I heard nocks [sic] on my door in the basement of the Historian Office. I thought they came from deputies because they are around everywhere in search for the UNDERGROUND runways [sic], and after a while, finding out they were not deputies, I opened the doors and lo, there stood Apostles John Henry Smith and Heber J. Grant anxious to get away from the deputies who had been following them. I led them to a place of safety and they were glad. |
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Three months later, September 6, he recorded a "miraculous" escape of Apostles Wilford Woodruff and Erastus Snow from the Historian's office when the building was surrounded by twenty deputies headed by Marshal Frank Dyer. It fell to Mr. Richards' lot to preside at most of the general conferences of the Church held during the underground. As already noted, these conferences were shifted from Salt Lake City to areas less threatened with interruption by U.S. deputy marshals. In April and October of 1885 they were convened in Logan, in April of 1886 in Provo and in October in Coalville, in April of 1887 in Provo again, and the following October back to Salt Lake City. [170] The First Presidency participated in the first Logan and Provo meetings through "general epistles" which were read to the congregations. The conferences served to bolster the faith of the harassed Saints and in 1887 bore witness to continued solidarity in opposition to any surrender to the government. In April of that year, Mr. Richards, to counteract growing rumors to the contrary, presented and won support for a resolution expressing love and "undiminished confidence" in the absentee Presidency.(3) In the meantime young Whitaker had overcome problems of formality presented by the underground and had married President Taylor's daughter Ida. His contact with the Gardo House and relationship with the Taylor family brought certain advantages, including use of the President's buggy and high-spirited black team. Returning with some of the family from Centerville one evening, he unwittingly crossed the underground trail. We arrived at Beck's Hot Springs and there overtook a carriage that thought we were deputy marshalls after them -- the carriage ahead of us turned off abruptly to the west out of the road and we came on to Salt Lake. Finding that we were not deputies, they came back on the main road and followed us to the city. Next morning when I went to the office, here comes Charles Wilcken, the driver of that carriage and told me he was bringing George Q. Cannon to the City on special business, and he thought we were deputy marshalls. And he said to me, `President Cannon said if we were deputies he [Wilcken] was to shoot both horses, for [171] he was not going to be taken by deputies if he could help it.(4) April and May passed, and still young Whitaker was not informed as to the location of his father-in-law's underground station. On June 27 he wrote: As Brother Sudbury found I was going north toward Centerville, he warned me it was rather dangerous for the President's buggy to be going in that direction, as the deputies would surely follow it to find out where President Taylor was hiding.... But he also told me that President Taylor is very sick and I had better be careful so as not to give the Deputies any clues as to where he might be.... And so after this, for the present anyway, I will refrain from going there again until things quiet down somewhat.(5) The two-story adobe farm house of the Thomas F. Rouche family located on the outskirts of the Kaysville settlement provided tolerable living quarters for President Taylor and his underground associates after November 22, 1886. Surrounded by shade trees, it blended comfortably into the farmstead with its commodious outbuildings, including a barn, granary, and corral. Facing eastward, it looked across a mile of farm land to the village and the mountains rising above it. Twice a day the exiles could hear the whistle of the Utah Central steam locomotive as it shuttled its string of cars back and forth across the rails connecting Salt Lake City and Ogden. In the rear of the house stood a modest cottage which had served as the original domicile of the pioneer settlers, and a mile to the west marshes edging Great Salt Lake teemed with water fowl. Proud to serve as hosts to such distinguished guests as the Presidency of the Church, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Rouche and family, including a daughter and several sons, assumed the burden willingly and entered with enthusiasm upon a course of passive resistance to the government. While [172] the women made necessary dining and sleeping adjustments indoors, the men accepted guard duty and coachman service outside. Their services were expanded to enlist trusted neighbors, who were assigned to watch the highways and warn of approaching danger. Undercover contact with the church offices in Salt Lake City continued from the new location despite the doubled driving distance. The usual procedure of exchanging mail and passengers at a halfway house in Bountiful was varied by through trips of about twenty-six miles into the city and stopovers until darkness would again cover their return journey. While the seventy-eight-year-old President did not risk these nocturnal journeys himself, his younger counselor, George Q. Cannon, passed regularly by team between the two Mormon headquarters. Less often the President's secretary, L. John Nuttall, was a passenger in these horse-drawn carriages driven by Charles H. Wilcken, Samuel Bateman, or the Rouche sons. Samuel Bateman's diary,(6) which recorded the underground move from Bountiful to Kaysville on November 22, 1886, continued to disclose the movements of the Church leaders while they remained in hiding in Kaysville: Nov. 23. All day at Rouches reading, fixing up our things. Nov. 24. (same) at night I went with the mail. Met D.R.B. at Brother Wooley's with our mail, we changed. I got back at 12 o'clock.(7) Nov. 27. Went with mail. G.Q.C. went with me. Met Abram Cannon and J. E. Taylor. Dec. 1. Fast meeting. Wooley presiding..... C.H.W. got back at 2 o'clock A.M. Cannon came with him. So the diary marks off the days of December in routine order. George Q. Cannon continued his visits to the Salt Lake offices and usually stayed over at least one day to [173] return with the mail carrier the following night. Lesser Church officials, in the confidence of "the Brethren," frequently came with the underground "night express" to consult with President Taylor. Christmas and New Year's came and were recorded as follows: Dec. 24. At night George Q. Cannon and A. M. Cannon went to the city and took the mail. Dec. 25. Had a good Christmas dinner, the President carved the turkey. Bro. Cannon and H. C. Birrell [sic] were at home. At night I went with the mail to the half-way house. Bro. L. J. Nuttall went with me. He met his wife there and little boy .... Dec. 26.... at night C. H. Wilcken went to the half-way house for Bros. G. Q. Cannon and L. J. Nuttall. On January 11, 1887, he noted "G. Q. Cannon was 60 years old today." Then on the nineteenth he recorded an incident of momentary excitement: I went to the half-way house with mail and to bring G. Q. Cannon back. . . . Met him at hot springs. A. M. Cannon, Alfred Solomon, the Marshal [City] and Mack at the tithing yard. They went right on, I turned round and followed them, hailed them but they would not stop, and drove faster. . . . They thought it was the deps. I drove passed them again. By this time they had loaded there [sic] guns. I got ahead of them and got them between me and the fence and stopped them. Then they found out who I was. Then we had a big laugh. They had heard that 10 deps. had gone north and they had prepared themselves to defend G. Q. Cannon. They were bringing him to the half-way house. The appearance on the underground in February of Church Attorney Franklin S. Richards, H. B. Clawson, and Charles Penrose suggested early stirrings of the political activity that was to come to a boil in the following months. Feb. 5. I took G. Q. Cannon to half-way house to meet Franklin S. Richards who had just returned from Washington. We were there half day. (Left Cannon at half way house and took F. S. Richards to city) -- went home to family. [174] Feb. 7. . . . went to the President's office.... There was great rejoicing over the reversing of the Snow case. Jacob R. and I then went on home. Got there at 2 o'clock A.M. Found all well and rejoiced over the good news we had brought. February 15. Jacob to city on horseback with important letter... at night the President, G. Q. Cannon, L. J. Nuttall, C. H. Wilken and myself went to Bro. Barnes. Met F. S. Richards, Bro. Penrose, H. B. Clawson; William Rouche. Rode on horseback to pilot us. . . . Jacob brought the brethren from the city and took them back. Feb. 22. All day at Do. Jacob returned with the mail on the UCRR [Utah Central Railroad]. |
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On February 27 came the news of Sophia Taylor's death: Sunday, President Taylor received a letter this morning that his wife Sophia died at 6 o'clock a.m. It made us all feel sorrowful, more especially on his account for he could not go to see her in her sickness and could not see her after she was dead for fear of being arrested as there were men watching the house most of the time.... At night C.H.W. took G. Q. Cannon to the City. Bro. Wooley went in the afternoon to the city with a special telegram to he sent to Washington. There was constant risk of capture in this hide-and-seek game they were playing with the deputy marshals. On the night of March 4, President Cannon was driven to the city as usual but directed Bateman to take him to the Cannon farm on the outskirts of the city. The home visit was cut short, however, when he was informed that "spotters" had been seen in the vicinity. So they drove back to the President's office -- the carefully guarded rendezvous of the Church leaders. Bateman then spent April 5 at the home of Mrs. Andrew Burt, widow of the late city marshal under whom he had served on the police force. Here close friends, including one of his wives, came to visit and keep him informed on affairs of the day. He recorded: At night went to the President's office. Ate supper with George Q. Cannon and wife, Bros. Lorenzo Snow [recently released from prison], Franklin Richards, Wil-[175]liams, George Rumell, then GQC and I started for our exile home. Got in two hours drive 26 miles. All well glad to see us back. On the sixteenth he wrote: L. W. Wooley came on the 13th with a message to us that the Marshall [sic] has put men to watch our buggy. At night Jacob went with the mail on the U.C.R.R. A month later he recorded: "At night James [Malin, who had come to replace C. H. Wilcken temporarily as driver and remained with the company until the President's death] went to the half-way house with the mail on horseback to bring our new buggy for one horse." Again on the seventeenth of May, "Bro. Wooley came with a letter about 3 o'clock P.M. containing news that the deps were calculating to make a general raid from Bountiful to Kaysville. I had Bro. Rouche see that the guards put out promptly at night." Sunday, April 10, Bateman casually noted that the President wasn't feeling well. He repeated on the eighteenth, "The President is sick this morning, taken sick in the night," and on the twentieth, "The President is sick again." However the church leader's illness was not taken seriously, for the next day he pitched a game of quoits. Bateman took him for a ride on the night of May 15, but on Sunday, the twenty-second, he wrote, "Had our meeting, the President wasn't present." Reference to quoits was repeated twice more, on June 6 and 13, after which President Taylor's growing illness confined him indoors. From the middle of June, Bateman's diary deals increasingly with the President's declining health. As late June days became memories, nocturnal conveyances passed increasingly over the dusty roads, with President Cannon spending more and more time in Salt Lake City. There was not only the multiplicity of church affairs to attend to, but a sixth effort to obtain statehood for Utah was in the making, with the planning taking place [176] and directives issuing from the hide-away in Kaysville and the underground rendezvous in Salt Lake City. The Bateman diary is supplemented by that of the secretary L. John Nuttall,(8) which casts light on the proceedings in the various meetings between "the brethren." He joins with Bateman on June 25, 1887, in a daily report of the President's condition as seen from a more intimate angle. June 25. Pres. Taylor arose early and was out of his room by 7 o'clock and sat up until after 8 o'clock and then laid down and afterwards arose and took a very little food. He kept his room all the day ....Brother James Malin came out this evening and brought Dr. Anderson with him. They arrived about 12 o'clock and reported that Elder John W. Taylor was coming out but he had missed his way. 26. Sunday. Pres. George Q. Cannon sent out a letter with our mail explaining why Dr. Anderson and Elder John W. Taylor were coming out. It appears that the President's family had heard of his being sick and they desired that the doctor and some member of the family should come and see him. . . . After breakfast they conversed together for some two hours on the President's condition, etc. after which he took a rest. He appeared quite cheerful in his mind and conversation. 30. Thursday. Pres. Taylor is much weaker this morning, he refused to take his usual bath. He does not partake of any nourishment, excepting a little wine and a glass of beer occasionally. As he continued to fail, the President sent for his sons, with whom he conversed at some length on July 3. A week later he suffered a decided change for the worse, and when his two wives, Mary O. and Maggy, were brought out to see him, he scarcely recognized them. President Cannon had the guard around the Rouche home doubled by adding a daytime watch to the usual night vigil. The patient lapsed more and more often into periods of unconsciousness, and [177] on July 14 the doctor announced that the end was near. Taylor seemed, however, to recognize the unexpected presence of his counselor, Joseph F. Smith, who had arrived from Hawaii after two years' absence. He passed away quietly on the evening of July 25. Arrangements were made for Joseph A. Taylor to come from the city to take care of the body. It was conveyed to Salt Lake the following midnight in a special car secretly supplied by the Utah Central railroad. The Kaysville hide-out was broken up, with Presidents Cannon and Smith going to Salt Lake to make necessary announcements and funeral arrangements. Last to leave was Samuel Bateman, who recorded: I started for the city 20 minutes past 8 o'clock. It was a hard task for me to part with Bro. Rouche and family for we had been there 8 months and four days and had been treated very kindly. . . . I called to see Bro. Taylor, one of our guards. I thanked him and the other brethren for their kindness in being so diligent in guarding the servants of the Lord and I had made arrangements with Bro. Rouche to pay them for their services and I told Bro. Taylor to dismiss the guards under his charge at 1 o'clock a.m. as all would be out of the way by that hour. The corpse was taken to the Gardo House, and funeral services in the Tabernacle were set for noon on Friday, July 29. The scattered Church leaders were informed by telegraph of the President's demise, and general information about funeral arrangements was sent abroad through the stake presidents and the Deseret News. While the remains of the departed Church leader were carried from the Gardo House to the Tabernacle at 7:00 A.M. on the twenty-ninth for viewing by long lines of mourners, the remaining Church officials secluded themselves in the President's office to arrange the program for the funeral services. Secretary Nuttall arrived in Salt Lake City to meet with them at 5:00 A.M. In addition to Presidents Cannon and Smith, Wilford Woodruff appeared from his southern Utah underground, and Daniel H. Wells arrived, [178] having recently returned from England. The latter decided to attend the funeral rites. So while Wells, Heber J. Grant, and Lorenzo Snow risked attendance at the services in the Tabernacle, the others, who had spent the last two and a half years in intimate association with their leader, waited in the President's office. Nuttall wrote: We all saw the funeral procession pass the office. There was 1 hearse, 7 bands of music and hand carriages, 43 carriages, 31 buggies, 19 wagons and one cart. Total vehicles 107. . . . For details of Funeral services see this evenings `Deseret News.' |
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Not only the Deseret News, but the Salt Lake Tribune had much to say about the passing of the Mormon leader. Characteristically, the latter sounded off-key in the community chorus of lamentations and eulogies. The irreverence of its first comments on July 26 emphasized its "outside" position. The co-op flag was an object of interest all day yesterday, for many expected to see it half-masted at any moment as a notice that John Taylor was dead. There was a discredited report in the morning that he had died in the night, though whether in the city or outside no clue was given. . . . A prominent ex-Mormon said Taylor would probably be dead twelve hours before public notice would be given, as that time would be taken by the big guns of the church for a sort of pow-wow over the dead body. That the President was lying in this city he believed. . . . At the Marshal's office, however, it was believed Taylor was somewhere in the direction of St. George.(9) Later that same day subscribers to the Deseret News read the official announcement of the President's demise, together with a public eulogy written by George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith. Once more the Latter-day Saints are called upon to mourn the death of their leader -- the man who has held the keys of the Kingdom of God upon the earth. [179]. . . In communicating this sad intelligence to the church, over which he has so worthily presided for nearly ten years, we are filled with emotion too deep for utterance . . . few men have ever lived who have manifested such integrity and such unflinching moral and physical courage as our beloved President who has gone from us. The title of "Champion of Liberty," which he received in Nauvoo, was always felt to be most appropriate for him to bear. . . . By the miraculous power of God, President Taylor escaped death which the assassins of Carthage Jail designed for him. His blood was then mingled with the blood of the martyred prophet and patriarch. He has stood since then as the living martyr for the truth. But today he occupies the place of double martyr. President Taylor has been killed by the cruelty of those officials who have, in this Territory, misrepresented the Government of the United States.(10) The following day the Tribune came to the defense of the federal officials who, it held, were conscientiously discharging their responsibilities in the line of duty. George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith seized upon the opportunity presented by the death of a worn-out old man to grossly slander some gentlemen whose only crime has been their efforts to perform their official duties under their oaths. They charged John Taylor's death to the persecution of Federal officials. There has not been one moment during the past two and a half years that John Taylor could not have shaken all fear of Federal officials by simply appearing before the District Court and promising to henceforth obey the laws.(11) Thus simply it appeared to the crusader mind which, from outside the Kingdom, could scarcely sense the grip of religious conviction which motivated the Mormons. To the Latter-day Saints, John Taylor was not acting in self-interest when he went into hiding. [180] In taking this step [said the News] he did so more to preserve peace and to remove all possible cause for excitement than from any desire for personal safety. He perceived that there was a determination on the part of men holding official positions here to raise an issue, and, if possible, involve the Latter-day Saints in serious trouble. He was determined that, to far as he was concerned, he would furnish no pretext for trouble, but would do everything in his power to prevent the people over whom he presided from being involved in difficulty.(12) So, with the passing of John Taylor, those of the Kingdom and those outside walked the same streets side by side in two different worlds. In the Gentile mind the Mormon leader was a fugitive from justice,(13) defying the laws of the United States; to the Latter-day Saints he was loyal to a divine commission, in which course death marked him as a martyr. There had been much speculation, both in and out of the Church, as to President Taylor's successor. The answer was not long delayed. Following the funeral services George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith, counselors to the departed President, met with five of the Twelve Apostles. It was agreed that the two counselors would continue to preside over the Church until the entire Council of the Twelve could convene. This body met on August 3, when Cannon and Smith were reinstated in their respective places in the Quorum. Wilford Woodruff, President of that body by right of seniority, issued, with Quorum consent, an address "To the Saints throughout the world." It conveyed an account of the death of President Taylor and announced the responsibility of the Apostles' Quorum to preside over the Church for the time being. Thus Woodruff assumed leadership which eighteen months later was crystallized through formation of the Church Presidency composed of himself, Cannon, and Smith. |
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[181] Meanwhile the crusade continued, with the Church leaders at the head of the wanted list. Samuel Bateman's diary continues: Aug. 2. I got up at quarter to 4 o'clock a.m. On guard at the Cannon farm to a quarter to 8 o'clock. A covered wagon came to take GQC, JFS, and myself to the city. Had in the wagon for a disguise a bundle of hay, 3 or 4 artesian well pipes, plow handles sticking out behind, a chicken coop on behind with some chickens in. We got in and pulled the cover down in front and were driven to the tithing yard. G. Q. Cannon and J. F. Smith got out at the President's barn and went through the Lion House into the President's office. Then he drove me down to the city hall yard. I got out and went into the barn. CHW and DRB got the way clear and told me to start. . . . I got to Sister Burts all right.... 5 Friday. I went to the tithing yard and then to the President's office . . . got a single horse and buggy . . . got Bro. Cannon and went to the Cannon farm to stay all night. So the game of cohabs versus deputies continued, with the participants playing closer in. Local police officers apparently remained aloof, but there was little doubt in the minds of the federal officers that they covertly lent assistance to the underground. The drivers' services came to include relaxing night tours and delivery of the wanted officials to the theater, or even to carefully screened social events. Bateman sheds some light on these activities, about which information would have been welcomed by the deputies. Aug. 16. C.H.W. and I took President Woodruff and President Cannon out riding. 19. Friday. At night I went to the Presidents office. Then went and got the single horse and buggy and took President Woodruff down to his farm. Went to see his flowing well.... I then took President Woodruff to the President's office. The year of change in Church leadership gave way to 1888, which was to see more cohabs sent to the penitentiary [182] than in any other year. But somehow the principals kept free of the legal snare until a more friendly judiciary coaxed some of them to surrender voluntarily. Meanwhile they made the best of a difficult situation. Bateman wrote on February 3, 1888: At night DR brought our team and I drove to the farm and got the President and wife and took them to Pres. Cannon's. Some of the undergrounders with some others that could be trusted were going to have a dance at President Cannons school house. There were some 30 of the brethren and quite a number of the sisters. Amongst the prominent ones that were there were President Woodruff, President Cannon, President J. F. Smith, President Wells, Apostle Lyman, Apostle J. H. Smith, Apostle Grant, Apostle Richards, Bro. Penrose, Bro. Rouche and wife, Bro. John Wooley & wife and daughter, Amy, from Centerville. The Presidency spoke to us encouraging words. We had a splendid dance, the music furnished by Bro. Beesley, calling done by Joseph E. Taylor and Samuel Bateman. At 10 o'clock President Cannon's family passed around sandwiches, pie and cake and lemonade. We all enjoyed ourselves.... The dance was dismissed at 12 o'clock midnight. I then took President and wife back to the farm. Chapter 8 Footnotes (1) Whitaker journal no. 3, folder no. 4, May 1886 -- Sept. 1887. The daily journals of John M. Whitaker, consisting of shorthand notes and typescript of the same, have been acquired by the Univ. of Utah Library from Edison T. Whitaker. Copies of the transcript contained in manila folders are also located in the Huntington Library, San Marino. Calif. The quotations from Whitaker in this chapter are from the Huntington copies of journals no. 2 (Jan. 1883 -- May 1886) and no. 3 (May 1886 -- Sept. 1887). Since the journals are inadequately dated and much duplication occurs, specific dating of citations is not always attempted. (2) Franklin L. West, Life of Franklin D. Richards (Salt Lake City, 1924), pp. 199-200. (3) B. H. Roberts, Life of John Taylor (Salt Lake City, 1892), p. 406. The resolution read in part: "In view of recent occurrences and the assaults which have been made upon the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, I move that we, the officers and members of the Church in conference assembled, express to our faithful brethren who preside over us, and to the world at large, by our vote, our undiminished confidence in and love for them. "That inasmuch as President John Taylor is our Prophet, Seer and Revelator chosen of the Lord, we do express to him in this manner, our love and respect for him and unite in saying that we have viewed with admiration the steadfastness, integrity and valor which he has displayed in the cause of God." (4) Whitaker journal no. 3, folder 4, pp. 14-15, n.d. (5) Ibid., p. 42, June 27, 1887. (6) MS in BYU Library. (7) Henceforth, unless the mail drivers made a one-way nocturnal trip between Kaysville and Salt Lake City, they met at a "halfway house" and exchanged mail. (8) The L. John Nuttall journal (1859-1904) quoted in the following pages is located in BYU Library, Special Collections; copy in Huntington Library. (9) Salt Lake Tribune, July 26, 1887, p. 4. (10) Deseret News, July 26, 1887. p. 2. (11) Salt Lake Tribune, July 28, 1887, p. 2. (12) Deseret News, July 26, 1887, p. 2. (13) So referred to in Salt Lake Tribune, July 27, 1887. |