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Today marks 168 years since the Mountain Meadows Massacre. Following last year’s JWHA conference in St George, Utah, I drove by the 4 monuments to the tragedy. Here is an in-depth account of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, an “unspeakable tragedy” that occurred on September 11, 1857. This episode is a somber reflection on this event, along with a condemnation of political and gun violence.
Don’t miss our other Tangent Trips! https://gospeltangents.com/mormon_history/gt-trips/
Copyright © 2025
Gospel Tangents
All Rights Reserved
In 1857, Utah was considered in rebellion by President James Buchanan, who sent the U.S. Army to put down the “Mormon rebellion”. Mormons, having previously been expelled from Kirtland, Missouri, and Nauvoo, were on edge, determined not to be driven out again. Brigham Young, then a former governor, had directed Mormons not to sell supplies to immigrants because they were preparing for war. He also warned the federal government about the dangers on the immigration road if Mormons were attacked and had told Native Americans that it was “okay to steal from any immigrants”.
The victims were the Fancher- Baker party, a group of about 100-120 men, women, and children from Arkansas, traveling to California with many cattle. They were denied supplies in Utah and were in the “wrong place at the wrong time”.
The Mountain Meadows Massacre is considered the “worst chapter in LDS history”.
The monument features a wall with the names of many victims. It also has lookout points to identify the Men and Boys’ Memorial, Women & Children’s Memorial, and the immigration campsite.
Patterned after an 1859 cairn built by U.S. Army soldiers. It contains stones from the original cairn and crypts where the bones of 29 victims were reinterred in 1999, wrapped in shrouds and placed in oak ossuaries on a thin layer of Arkansas soil. A child’s skull, removed by the U.S. Army in 1879, was reinterred by relatives in 2017. The memorial was dedicated on September 11, 1999, with a statement of regret from Henry B. Eyring on September 11, 2007.
A smaller monument about two-thirds of a mile from the gravesite.
Located three-quarters of a mile beyond the men and boys’ memorial.
I also travelled to Beaver, Utah, where John D. Lee was tried. There is a historic courthouse there, although it may not be the exact building from the trials. Many of the miltia came from Parowan and Cedar City, where the “trouble started” andmany participants in the massacre were from there.
Have you seen the memorial before?
Don’t miss our other Tangent Trips! https://gospeltangents.com/mormon_history/gt-trips/
Copyright © 2025
Gospel Tangents
All Rights Reserved
By Rick BToday marks 168 years since the Mountain Meadows Massacre. Following last year’s JWHA conference in St George, Utah, I drove by the 4 monuments to the tragedy. Here is an in-depth account of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, an “unspeakable tragedy” that occurred on September 11, 1857. This episode is a somber reflection on this event, along with a condemnation of political and gun violence.
Don’t miss our other Tangent Trips! https://gospeltangents.com/mormon_history/gt-trips/
Copyright © 2025
Gospel Tangents
All Rights Reserved
In 1857, Utah was considered in rebellion by President James Buchanan, who sent the U.S. Army to put down the “Mormon rebellion”. Mormons, having previously been expelled from Kirtland, Missouri, and Nauvoo, were on edge, determined not to be driven out again. Brigham Young, then a former governor, had directed Mormons not to sell supplies to immigrants because they were preparing for war. He also warned the federal government about the dangers on the immigration road if Mormons were attacked and had told Native Americans that it was “okay to steal from any immigrants”.
The victims were the Fancher- Baker party, a group of about 100-120 men, women, and children from Arkansas, traveling to California with many cattle. They were denied supplies in Utah and were in the “wrong place at the wrong time”.
The Mountain Meadows Massacre is considered the “worst chapter in LDS history”.
The monument features a wall with the names of many victims. It also has lookout points to identify the Men and Boys’ Memorial, Women & Children’s Memorial, and the immigration campsite.
Patterned after an 1859 cairn built by U.S. Army soldiers. It contains stones from the original cairn and crypts where the bones of 29 victims were reinterred in 1999, wrapped in shrouds and placed in oak ossuaries on a thin layer of Arkansas soil. A child’s skull, removed by the U.S. Army in 1879, was reinterred by relatives in 2017. The memorial was dedicated on September 11, 1999, with a statement of regret from Henry B. Eyring on September 11, 2007.
A smaller monument about two-thirds of a mile from the gravesite.
Located three-quarters of a mile beyond the men and boys’ memorial.
I also travelled to Beaver, Utah, where John D. Lee was tried. There is a historic courthouse there, although it may not be the exact building from the trials. Many of the miltia came from Parowan and Cedar City, where the “trouble started” andmany participants in the massacre were from there.
Have you seen the memorial before?
Don’t miss our other Tangent Trips! https://gospeltangents.com/mormon_history/gt-trips/
Copyright © 2025
Gospel Tangents
All Rights Reserved