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Appendix 3: Willard Richards, Journal Excerpt, 23–27 June 1844

23 June 1844 • Sunday Page 19 24 June 1844 • Monday Page 20 25 June 1844 • Tuesday Page 21 26 June 1844 • Wednesday Page 28 27 June 1844 • Thursday Page 35

Source Note

Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

View Full Bio
, Journal Excerpt, 23–27 June 1844; handwriting of
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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; nineteen pages; in Willard Richards, Journal, CHL. Portions of some entries were written in pencil before they were overwritten in ink.

Historical Introduction

JS’s journal, kept by
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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, ended with the entry of 22 June 1844, just before JS left
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
, Illinois, in company with Richards,
Hyrum Smith

9 Feb. 1800–27 June 1844. Farmer, cooper. Born at Tunbridge, Orange Co., Vermont. Son of Joseph Smith Sr. and Lucy Mack. Moved to Randolph, Orange Co., 1802; back to Tunbridge, before May 1803; to Royalton, Windsor Co., Vermont, 1804; to Sharon, Windsor Co...

View Full Bio
, and
Orrin Porter Rockwell

June 1814–9 June 1878. Ferry operator, herdsman, farmer. Born in Belchertown, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts. Son of Orin Rockwell and Sarah Witt. Moved to Farmington (later in Manchester), Ontario Co., New York, 1817. Neighbor to JS. Baptized into Church of...

View Full Bio
. Richards, who remained with JS until the moment of JS’s death on 27 June, evidently left JS’s journal in Nauvoo when the four men departed for
Carthage

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
, Illinois. Richards, however, recorded in his own journal many of the events of the last five days of JS’s life. These events include JS’s arrival on the
Mississippi River

Principal U.S. river running southward from Itasca Lake, Minnesota, to Gulf of Mexico. Covered 3,160-mile course, 1839 (now about 2,350 miles). Drains about 1,100,000 square miles. Steamboat travel on Mississippi very important in 1830s and 1840s for shipping...

More Info
bank in
Iowa Territory

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803. First permanent white settlements established, ca. 1833. Organized as territory, 1838, containing all of present-day Iowa, much of present-day Minnesota, and parts of North and South Dakota. Population in...

More Info
on the morning of 23 June and his trip to Carthage, during which JS and Hyrum gave themselves up to authorities on the charge of treason. Richards’s journal also recounts JS’s activities in Carthage during the days preceding his and Hyrum’s deaths. The material Richards recorded in his own journal during this time is in the same format and style as the record he had been keeping for JS. Richards’s hasty, terse notations and precise attention to details—illustrated by his practice of recording the specific times events occurred—indicate that he continuously carried his journal with him and recorded many of the events as he witnessed them, possibly with the intention of using the record to fill in JS’s journal at a later date. Richards’s journal entries for 23–27 June 1844 provide a contemporaneous firsthand account of JS’s activities during the last five days of his life, and they are reproduced here in full.
1

For additional details on the events leading to the deaths of JS and Hyrum Smith, see Oaks and Hill, Carthage Conspiracy.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Oaks, Dallin H., and Marvin S. Hill. Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1975.

Richards first inscribed portions of these entries in pencil and then rewrote them in ink. In a few cases, while overwriting, he skipped or altered the original penciled text. The transcription here reproduces the final ink version and does not capture the slight variations in the penciled text.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    For additional details on the events leading to the deaths of JS and Hyrum Smith, see Oaks and Hill, Carthage Conspiracy.

    Oaks, Dallin H., and Marvin S. Hill. Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1975.

Page [20]

24 June 1844 • Monday
24— 6½ Am Started for
Carthage

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
4

According to William Clayton, JS and “those with him” had returned to Nauvoo around five o’clock in the evening on 23 June. Clayton also noted on 23 June that “preparations are making to get an early start in the morning.” Though JS had originally proposed to meet Ford at the mound in the afternoon on 24 June, contemporary letters indicate that by the evening of 23 June JS was instead planning to meet Ford’s posse at the mound sometime in the morning. At some point, however, the plan to meet Ford or his posse at the mound was abandoned entirely. According to the compilers of JS’s history, Ford initially agreed to escort JS to Carthage from the mound, but after talking with Wilson Law, Joseph H. Jackson, and a “Mr. Skinner,” he decided against it on the grounds that “it was an honor not given to any other citizen.” News of the governor’s refusal did not reach Nauvoo until about four o’clock in the morning. JS left Nauvoo accompanied by the seventeen other men accused of riot and by “some ten or twelve others,” including Willard Richards, Dan Jones, Henry G. Sherwood, Cyrus Wheelock, and JS’s legal counsel James Woods. (Clayton, Journal, 23 and 24 June 1844; JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Henry T. Hugins, 23 June 1844, copy; JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Joseph Wakefield, 23 June 1844, copy, JS Collection, CHL; JS, [Lee Co., Iowa Territory, or Nauvoo, IL?], to Edward Johnstone, Fort Madison, Iowa Territory, 23 June 1844, CHL; JS, “Bank of the River Mississippi,” IL, to Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, 23 June 1844, JS Collection, CHL; Vilate Murray Kimball, Nauvoo, IL, to Heber C. Kimball, Baltimore, 9 and 24 June 1844, Kimball Family Correspondence, CHL; “Awful Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:560; JS History, vol. F-1, 149, 151.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

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

Kimball Family Correspondence, 1838–1871. CHL. MS 6241.

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

10.10 mi[utes] arrived at Fellers [Albert Fellows’s] 4 mi[les] from
Carthage

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
met
Capt [James] Dunn

27 July 1800–10 Sept. 1881. Painter, chain maker, clerk, tavern keeper, military officer. Born in New Haven Co., Connecticut. Moved to Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Ohio, by 1825. Married Celia Hawley, 24 Feb. 1825, in Jefferson. Moved to Hancock Co., Illinois...

View Full Bio
with an order from
Gov [Thomas] Ford

5 Dec. 1800–3 Nov. 1850. Schoolteacher, newspaperman, lawyer, politician, judge, author. Born in Uniontown, Fayette Co., Pennsylvania. Son of Robert Ford and Elizabeth Logue Forquer. Moved to St. Louis, 1804; to New Design (later American Bottom), Randolph...

View Full Bio
— for the state arms of the Nauvoo Legi[o]n; Joseph, countesignd [countersigned] the order.
5

Dunn was accompanied by a cavalry of about sixty men. Ford’s order was addressed to JS, lieutenant general of the Nauvoo Legion, Jonathan Dunham, acting major general of the legion, and “all Commissioned and Non Commisioned Officers and privates of the Nauvoo Legion.” JS and the others were “ordered and directed to deliver to Col James E. Dunn” the arms that had earlier been supplied to the Nauvoo Legion by the state. In the extant portion of the order, “three peices of Cannon, with the carriages and other appendages” are mentioned specifically. Ford later wrote that he learned of the cannons through Wilson Law. Ford also wrote that he demanded the state arms “because the legion was illegally used in the destruction of the press, and in enforcing martial law in the city, in open resistance to legal process, and the posse comitatus” and because of “the great prejudice and excitement which the possession of these arms by the Mormons had always kindled in the minds of the people.” On the back of Ford’s order, JS directed Dunham and the others “to comply strictly and without delay with the within order of Gov. Thomas Ford—Commander in chief.” (“Awful Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:560; “Statement of Facts,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:563; Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, to JS et al., 24 June 1844, CHL; Ford, History of Illinois, 336; JS, “Prairie 4 miles W Carthage,” IL, to Jonathan Dunham, Nauvoo, IL, 24 June 1844, appended to Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, to JS et al., 24 June 1844, JS Collection, CHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

Ford, Thomas. A History of Illinois, from Its Commencement as a State in 1818 to 1847. Containing a Full Account of the Black Hawk War, the Rise, Progress, and Fall of Mormonism, the Alton and Lovejoy Riots, and Other Important and Interesting Events. Chicago: S. C. Griggs; New York: Ivison and Phinney, 1854.

& retur[ne]d with all the com[pany]— to
N[auvoo]

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
Got the arms
6

At the time he countersigned the order, JS wrote the governor that he would return with Dunn to Nauvoo to ensure that Ford’s order was carried out “properly and without trouble to the state.” William Clayton, who noted that JS and his party returned to Nauvoo at Dunn’s request, wrote that upon arriving in Nauvoo at two thirty in the afternoon, JS “immediately issued orders to have the State arms Collected and taken to the Masonic Hall without delay.” According to Clayton, “Many of the brethren looked upon this as another preparation for a Missouri massacre” and “very unwillingly gave up the arms.” Ford later wrote that the three cannons and 220 (of an expected 250) small arms were surrendered. (JS, “Four Miles West Carthage,” IL, to Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, 24 June 1844, JS Collection, CHL; Clayton, Journal, 24 June 1844; Message of the Governor of the State of Illinois, 10–11.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

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

Message of the Governor of the State of Illinois, in Relation to the Disturbances in Hancock County, December, 21, 1844. Springfield, IL: Walters and Weber, 1844.

& moved to
Carth[a]ge

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
same day starting from
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
ab[o]ut 6.
7

William Clayton wrote that before leaving Nauvoo, JS “rode down home to bid his family farewell. He appeared to feel solemn & though[t]ful and from expressions made to several individuals, he expects nothing but to be massacred. This he expressed before he returned from over the river but their appearing no alternative but he must either give himself up or the City be massacred by a lawless mob under the sanction of the Governor.” A later account quotes JS as saying, “I am going like a lamb to the slaughter; but I am calm as a summer’s morning; I have a conscience void of offense towards God, and towards all men—I shall die innocent, and it shall yet be said of me, he was murdered in cold blood.” (Clayton, Journal, 24 June 1844; Doctrine and Covenants 111:4, 1844 ed. [D&C 135:4].)


Comprehensive Works Cited

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

& arriv[in]g at
Carthage

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
about 15–12 night.— at fell[o]ws 4 mi[les] west of
Carthage

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
8

Fellows later recalled that JS and his party “stop[p]ed about half an hour” and “took supper principally of provisions brought with them but little conversation occurred.” (Albert G. Fellows, “Historical Item 24 June 1844,” 30 Nov. 1854, Historian’s Office, JS History Documents, ca. 1839–1860, CHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Historian’s Office. Joseph Smith History Documents, 1839–1860. CHL. CR 100 396.

——
Capt Dunn

27 July 1800–10 Sept. 1881. Painter, chain maker, clerk, tavern keeper, military officer. Born in New Haven Co., Connecticut. Moved to Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Ohio, by 1825. Married Celia Hawley, 24 Feb. 1825, in Jefferson. Moved to Hancock Co., Illinois...

View Full Bio
— with his Co[mpany] of Dragoons arrivd & escorted us into
Carth[a]ge

Located eighteen miles southeast of Nauvoo. Settled 1831. Designated Hancock Co. seat, Mar. 1833. Incorporated as town, 27 Feb. 1837. Population in 1839 about 300. Population in 1844 about 400. Site of acute opposition to Latter-day Saints, early 1840s. Site...

More Info
9

JS and his party spent the night at Artois Hamilton’s hotel in Carthage. Cyrus Wheelock later recalled that as they passed the public square, members of the Carthage Greys and other militia units threatened and taunted them. The crowd dispersed, Wheelock reported, after Ford called from a window that he would have JS “pass before the troops upon the Square” in the morning. (Clayton, Journal, 24 June 1844; “Awful Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:560; Cyrus Wheelock, London, England, to George A. Smith, 29 Dec. 1854, JS History Documents, ca. 1839–1860, CHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

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

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Historian’s Office. Joseph Smith History Documents, 1839–1860. CHL. CR 100 396.

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Document Information

Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Appendix 3: Willard Richards, Journal Excerpt, 23–27 June 1844
ID #
7059
Total Pages
19
Print Volume Location
JSP, J3:303–330
Handwriting on This Page
  • William Clayton

Footnotes

  1. [4]

    According to William Clayton, JS and “those with him” had returned to Nauvoo around five o’clock in the evening on 23 June. Clayton also noted on 23 June that “preparations are making to get an early start in the morning.” Though JS had originally proposed to meet Ford at the mound in the afternoon on 24 June, contemporary letters indicate that by the evening of 23 June JS was instead planning to meet Ford’s posse at the mound sometime in the morning. At some point, however, the plan to meet Ford or his posse at the mound was abandoned entirely. According to the compilers of JS’s history, Ford initially agreed to escort JS to Carthage from the mound, but after talking with Wilson Law, Joseph H. Jackson, and a “Mr. Skinner,” he decided against it on the grounds that “it was an honor not given to any other citizen.” News of the governor’s refusal did not reach Nauvoo until about four o’clock in the morning. JS left Nauvoo accompanied by the seventeen other men accused of riot and by “some ten or twelve others,” including Willard Richards, Dan Jones, Henry G. Sherwood, Cyrus Wheelock, and JS’s legal counsel James Woods. (Clayton, Journal, 23 and 24 June 1844; JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Henry T. Hugins, 23 June 1844, copy; JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Joseph Wakefield, 23 June 1844, copy, JS Collection, CHL; JS, [Lee Co., Iowa Territory, or Nauvoo, IL?], to Edward Johnstone, Fort Madison, Iowa Territory, 23 June 1844, CHL; JS, “Bank of the River Mississippi,” IL, to Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, 23 June 1844, JS Collection, CHL; Vilate Murray Kimball, Nauvoo, IL, to Heber C. Kimball, Baltimore, 9 and 24 June 1844, Kimball Family Correspondence, CHL; “Awful Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:560; JS History, vol. F-1, 149, 151.)

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

    Kimball Family Correspondence, 1838–1871. CHL. MS 6241.

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

  2. [5]

    Dunn was accompanied by a cavalry of about sixty men. Ford’s order was addressed to JS, lieutenant general of the Nauvoo Legion, Jonathan Dunham, acting major general of the legion, and “all Commissioned and Non Commisioned Officers and privates of the Nauvoo Legion.” JS and the others were “ordered and directed to deliver to Col James E. Dunn” the arms that had earlier been supplied to the Nauvoo Legion by the state. In the extant portion of the order, “three peices of Cannon, with the carriages and other appendages” are mentioned specifically. Ford later wrote that he learned of the cannons through Wilson Law. Ford also wrote that he demanded the state arms “because the legion was illegally used in the destruction of the press, and in enforcing martial law in the city, in open resistance to legal process, and the posse comitatus” and because of “the great prejudice and excitement which the possession of these arms by the Mormons had always kindled in the minds of the people.” On the back of Ford’s order, JS directed Dunham and the others “to comply strictly and without delay with the within order of Gov. Thomas Ford—Commander in chief.” (“Awful Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:560; “Statement of Facts,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:563; Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, to JS et al., 24 June 1844, CHL; Ford, History of Illinois, 336; JS, “Prairie 4 miles W Carthage,” IL, to Jonathan Dunham, Nauvoo, IL, 24 June 1844, appended to Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, to JS et al., 24 June 1844, JS Collection, CHL.)

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

    Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

    Ford, Thomas. A History of Illinois, from Its Commencement as a State in 1818 to 1847. Containing a Full Account of the Black Hawk War, the Rise, Progress, and Fall of Mormonism, the Alton and Lovejoy Riots, and Other Important and Interesting Events. Chicago: S. C. Griggs; New York: Ivison and Phinney, 1854.

  3. [6]

    At the time he countersigned the order, JS wrote the governor that he would return with Dunn to Nauvoo to ensure that Ford’s order was carried out “properly and without trouble to the state.” William Clayton, who noted that JS and his party returned to Nauvoo at Dunn’s request, wrote that upon arriving in Nauvoo at two thirty in the afternoon, JS “immediately issued orders to have the State arms Collected and taken to the Masonic Hall without delay.” According to Clayton, “Many of the brethren looked upon this as another preparation for a Missouri massacre” and “very unwillingly gave up the arms.” Ford later wrote that the three cannons and 220 (of an expected 250) small arms were surrendered. (JS, “Four Miles West Carthage,” IL, to Thomas Ford, Carthage, IL, 24 June 1844, JS Collection, CHL; Clayton, Journal, 24 June 1844; Message of the Governor of the State of Illinois, 10–11.)

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

    Message of the Governor of the State of Illinois, in Relation to the Disturbances in Hancock County, December, 21, 1844. Springfield, IL: Walters and Weber, 1844.

  4. [7]

    William Clayton wrote that before leaving Nauvoo, JS “rode down home to bid his family farewell. He appeared to feel solemn & though[t]ful and from expressions made to several individuals, he expects nothing but to be massacred. This he expressed before he returned from over the river but their appearing no alternative but he must either give himself up or the City be massacred by a lawless mob under the sanction of the Governor.” A later account quotes JS as saying, “I am going like a lamb to the slaughter; but I am calm as a summer’s morning; I have a conscience void of offense towards God, and towards all men—I shall die innocent, and it shall yet be said of me, he was murdered in cold blood.” (Clayton, Journal, 24 June 1844; Doctrine and Covenants 111:4, 1844 ed. [D&C 135:4].)

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

  5. [8]

    Fellows later recalled that JS and his party “stop[p]ed about half an hour” and “took supper principally of provisions brought with them but little conversation occurred.” (Albert G. Fellows, “Historical Item 24 June 1844,” 30 Nov. 1854, Historian’s Office, JS History Documents, ca. 1839–1860, CHL.)

    Historian’s Office. Joseph Smith History Documents, 1839–1860. CHL. CR 100 396.

  6. [9]

    JS and his party spent the night at Artois Hamilton’s hotel in Carthage. Cyrus Wheelock later recalled that as they passed the public square, members of the Carthage Greys and other militia units threatened and taunted them. The crowd dispersed, Wheelock reported, after Ford called from a window that he would have JS “pass before the troops upon the Square” in the morning. (Clayton, Journal, 24 June 1844; “Awful Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith,” Times and Seasons, 1 July 1844, 5:560; Cyrus Wheelock, London, England, to George A. Smith, 29 Dec. 1854, JS History Documents, ca. 1839–1860, CHL.)

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

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

    Historian’s Office. Joseph Smith History Documents, 1839–1860. CHL. CR 100 396.

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