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Council of Fifty, Minutes, March 1844–January 1846; Volume 3, 6 May 1845–13 January 1846

6 May 1845 • Tuesday, continued Page 1 10 May 1845 • Saturday Page 4 9 September 1845 • Tuesday Page 13 30 September 1845 • Tuesday Page 33 4 October 1845 • Saturday Page 42 11 January 1846 • Sunday Page 85 13 January 1846 • Tuesday Page 109

Source Note

See source note under Council of Fifty, Minutes, March 1844–January 1846; Volume 1, 10 March 1844–1 March 1845.

Historical Introduction

See historical introduction under Council of Fifty, Minutes, March 1844–January 1846; Volume 1, 10 March 1844–1 March 1845.

Page [45]

maintainance of the Laws in all cases.
Yours &c
JB. Backenstos

8 Oct. 1811–25 Sept. 1857. Merchant, sheriff, soldier, politician, land speculator. Born at Lower Paxton, Dauphin Co., Pennsylvania. Son of Jacob Backenstos and Margaretha Theis. Member of Lutheran Reformed Church. Married Sarah Lavina Lee, niece of Robert...

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.
P.S.
All’s. well.— I expect to go or be taken to
Quincey

Located on high limestone bluffs east of Mississippi River, about forty-five miles south of Nauvoo. Settled 1821. Adams Co. seat, 1825. Incorporated as town, 1834. Received city charter, 1840. Population in 1835 about 800; in 1840 about 2,300; and in 1845...

More Info
for trial in a day or two
82

Backenstos was accused of complicity in the killing of Franklin A. Worrell. On 16 September 1845 Backenstos had been accosted on the road by a party of anti-Mormons that included Worrell. The armed mob pursued Backenstos for nearly two miles before he came across Mormons Orrin Porter Rockwell and John Redden and requested their help. As the mob neared the sheriff and his new deputies and refused the sheriff’s command to halt, Rockwell fired a single shot that struck Worrell in the chest and killed him. Worrell’s death further incensed anti-Mormon passions. The Warsaw Signal proclaimed him “One of Our Best Men” and swore revenge, warning that “his death has kindled and will kindle a flame that can never be quenched until every Mormon has left the vicinity.” After Hardin arrived at Carthage on 28 September, Backenstos offered to surrender and face “an investigation of any & every thing that may be charged against me by any of the Mob or any one else.” As he anticipated in this note to Young, Backenstos was apparently taken to Quincy on 7 October to answer charges relating to Worrell’s death; he was eventually released on bail. He was later indicted by the Hancock County Circuit Court, but when the case came to trial on 27 October, Backenstos obtained a change of venue to Peoria County, where he was tried and acquitted. (Clayton, Journal, 16–17 Sept. 1845; Jacob B. Backenstos, Proclamation No. 2 [Nauvoo, IL: 16 Sept. 1845], copy at BYU; “Murder of One of Our Best Men,” Warsaw [IL] Signal, 17 Sept. 1845, [2], italics in original; Jacob B. Backenstos, Carthage, IL, to John J. Hardin, 29 Sept. 1845, Hardin Family Papers, Chicago History Museum; Joseph L. Heywood, Nauvoo, IL, to Serepta M. Blodgett Heywood, Quincy, IL, 6 Oct. 1845, Joseph L. Heywood Collection, CHL; Clayton, Journal, 12 and 27 Oct. 1845; 10 Dec. 1845; Hancock Co., IL, Circuit Court Records, 1829–1897, vol. D, pp. 369, 374, microfilm 947,496, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.

Backenstos, Jacob B. Proclamation No. 2. [Nauvoo, IL]: 16 Sept. 1845. Copy at BYU.

Warsaw Signal. Warsaw, IL. 1841–1853.

Hardin Family Papers, 1733–1943. Chicago History Museum.

Heywood, Joseph L. Collection, 1839–1912. CHL.

U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.

83

The original copy of this letter is apparently not extant. The letter was later published twice by the Warsaw Signal—first as a broadside and again on 15 October—as well as by the Nauvoo Neighbor on 29 October 1845. (To the Anti-Mormon Citizens of Hancock and the Surrounding Counties [Warsaw, IL: Oct. 1845]; John J. Hardin et al., “Camp Carthage,” IL, to “the President and High Council,” 3 Oct. 1845, in Warsaw [IL] Signal, 15 Oct. 1845, [1]; and in Nauvoo Neighbor, 29 Oct. 1845, [1].)


Comprehensive Works Cited

To the Anti-Mormon Citizens of Hancock County and the Surrounding Counties. Warsaw, IL: Oct. 1845. Copy available in Warsaw Signal, microfilm (New York: New York Public Library, 1952), copy at CHL.

Warsaw Signal. Warsaw, IL. 1841–1853.

Nauvoo Neighbor. Nauvoo, IL. 1843–1845.

Camp Carthage Oct 3rd. 1845
To the
first President

1 June 1801–29 Aug. 1877. Carpenter, painter, glazier, colonizer. Born at Whitingham, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of John Young and Abigail (Nabby) Howe. Brought up in Methodist household; later joined Methodist church. Moved to Sherburne, Chenango Co., New...

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& High Council of the church of Latter Day Saints.
Since our conference with you on yesterday we have arrived at this place & have held free conversations with the Anti Mormons of this place and other surrounding counties.
We have read to them your statement made to us on the 1st. inst.
84

Following their interview with Young and other church leaders on 1 October, Hardin and his party requested that Young “submit the facts & intentions stated to us . . . to writing In order that we may lay them before the Governor & people of the State.” Young’s written response enclosed a copy of his 24 September statement to a committee from Quincy, Illinois, which declared the Saints’ intention “to leave this county next spring, for some point so remote, that there will not need to be a difficulty with the people and ourselves.” Young further reported to Hardin that since this earlier proclamation, arrangements had been made for at least ten companies of one hundred families each to leave in the spring; he also reiterated the Mormons’ objective to sell their property in Nauvoo and the surrounding area as soon as possible. “If all these testimonies are not sufficient to satisfy any people that we are in earnest,” Young closed, “we will soon give them a sign that cannot be mistaken, we will leave them!” (John J. Hardin et al. to “the First President and Council of the Church,” Nauvoo, IL, 1 Oct. 1845, Hardin Family Papers, Chicago History Museum; Whereas a council of the authorities [Nauvoo, IL: 24 Sept, 1845], copy at BYU; Brigham Young, Nauvoo, IL, to John J. Hardin et al., Hancock Co., IL, 1 Oct. 1845, Hardin Family Papers, Chicago History Museum, underlining in original.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Hardin Family Papers, 1733–1943. Chicago History Museum.

Whereas a council of the authorities. Nauvoo, IL: 24 Sept. 1845. Copy at BYU.

We have informed them that you [p. [45]]
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Source Note

Document Transcript

Page [45]

Document Information

Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Council of Fifty, Minutes, March 1844–January 1846; Volume 3, 6 May 1845–13 January 1846
ID #
11603
Total Pages
387
Print Volume Location
Handwriting on This Page
  • William Clayton

Footnotes

  1. [82]

    Backenstos was accused of complicity in the killing of Franklin A. Worrell. On 16 September 1845 Backenstos had been accosted on the road by a party of anti-Mormons that included Worrell. The armed mob pursued Backenstos for nearly two miles before he came across Mormons Orrin Porter Rockwell and John Redden and requested their help. As the mob neared the sheriff and his new deputies and refused the sheriff’s command to halt, Rockwell fired a single shot that struck Worrell in the chest and killed him. Worrell’s death further incensed anti-Mormon passions. The Warsaw Signal proclaimed him “One of Our Best Men” and swore revenge, warning that “his death has kindled and will kindle a flame that can never be quenched until every Mormon has left the vicinity.” After Hardin arrived at Carthage on 28 September, Backenstos offered to surrender and face “an investigation of any & every thing that may be charged against me by any of the Mob or any one else.” As he anticipated in this note to Young, Backenstos was apparently taken to Quincy on 7 October to answer charges relating to Worrell’s death; he was eventually released on bail. He was later indicted by the Hancock County Circuit Court, but when the case came to trial on 27 October, Backenstos obtained a change of venue to Peoria County, where he was tried and acquitted. (Clayton, Journal, 16–17 Sept. 1845; Jacob B. Backenstos, Proclamation No. 2 [Nauvoo, IL: 16 Sept. 1845], copy at BYU; “Murder of One of Our Best Men,” Warsaw [IL] Signal, 17 Sept. 1845, [2], italics in original; Jacob B. Backenstos, Carthage, IL, to John J. Hardin, 29 Sept. 1845, Hardin Family Papers, Chicago History Museum; Joseph L. Heywood, Nauvoo, IL, to Serepta M. Blodgett Heywood, Quincy, IL, 6 Oct. 1845, Joseph L. Heywood Collection, CHL; Clayton, Journal, 12 and 27 Oct. 1845; 10 Dec. 1845; Hancock Co., IL, Circuit Court Records, 1829–1897, vol. D, pp. 369, 374, microfilm 947,496, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)

    Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.

    Backenstos, Jacob B. Proclamation No. 2. [Nauvoo, IL]: 16 Sept. 1845. Copy at BYU.

    Warsaw Signal. Warsaw, IL. 1841–1853.

    Hardin Family Papers, 1733–1943. Chicago History Museum.

    Heywood, Joseph L. Collection, 1839–1912. CHL.

    U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.

  2. [83]

    The original copy of this letter is apparently not extant. The letter was later published twice by the Warsaw Signal—first as a broadside and again on 15 October—as well as by the Nauvoo Neighbor on 29 October 1845. (To the Anti-Mormon Citizens of Hancock and the Surrounding Counties [Warsaw, IL: Oct. 1845]; John J. Hardin et al., “Camp Carthage,” IL, to “the President and High Council,” 3 Oct. 1845, in Warsaw [IL] Signal, 15 Oct. 1845, [1]; and in Nauvoo Neighbor, 29 Oct. 1845, [1].)

    To the Anti-Mormon Citizens of Hancock County and the Surrounding Counties. Warsaw, IL: Oct. 1845. Copy available in Warsaw Signal, microfilm (New York: New York Public Library, 1952), copy at CHL.

    Warsaw Signal. Warsaw, IL. 1841–1853.

    Nauvoo Neighbor. Nauvoo, IL. 1843–1845.

  3. [84]

    Following their interview with Young and other church leaders on 1 October, Hardin and his party requested that Young “submit the facts & intentions stated to us . . . to writing In order that we may lay them before the Governor & people of the State.” Young’s written response enclosed a copy of his 24 September statement to a committee from Quincy, Illinois, which declared the Saints’ intention “to leave this county next spring, for some point so remote, that there will not need to be a difficulty with the people and ourselves.” Young further reported to Hardin that since this earlier proclamation, arrangements had been made for at least ten companies of one hundred families each to leave in the spring; he also reiterated the Mormons’ objective to sell their property in Nauvoo and the surrounding area as soon as possible. “If all these testimonies are not sufficient to satisfy any people that we are in earnest,” Young closed, “we will soon give them a sign that cannot be mistaken, we will leave them!” (John J. Hardin et al. to “the First President and Council of the Church,” Nauvoo, IL, 1 Oct. 1845, Hardin Family Papers, Chicago History Museum; Whereas a council of the authorities [Nauvoo, IL: 24 Sept, 1845], copy at BYU; Brigham Young, Nauvoo, IL, to John J. Hardin et al., Hancock Co., IL, 1 Oct. 1845, Hardin Family Papers, Chicago History Museum, underlining in original.)

    Hardin Family Papers, 1733–1943. Chicago History Museum.

    Whereas a council of the authorities. Nauvoo, IL: 24 Sept. 1845. Copy at BYU.

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