Times and Seasons, vii. Tithing, origin of, 192, 193; income from, 193; rule regarding, 194; Young's han- dling of the fund, 576, 577. Titus, John, chief justice of Utah Territory, 550; Mormon appeal to, 559- Townsend, Rev. Jesse, Smith as viewed by his neighbors, 106. Trail, the Mormon, 382.
Translation of the golden plates, 37, 42-46;
second copy made, 44; at Whitmer's house, 46; alleged error, 85; of the Scriptures, 68-71.
Tribune, Salt Lake, founders, 566. Trumbull, Lyman, visit to Utah, 556; use of his influence, 570; vote against Frelinghuy- sen Bill, 571.
Trustee in trust for the church, Young's se- lection, 473-
Tucker, Pomeroy, "Origin and Progress of Mormonism," viii; Smith's occupations, II; picture of Smith, 12; Rigdon's early visits to Smith, 43, 67; publication of Mor- mon Bible, 47.
Tullidge, E. W., "History of Salt Lake City," viii; land rights, 164 note, 398 note; on hand-cart tragedy, 426; on land titles, 472; attitude of the church toward the federal government, 544; in the "New Movement," 561; Young's purpose, 568; outside influ- ences, 570; view of the church character, 617.
Turner, Prof. J. B., on Mormon teachings,
Twelve Apostles, authorized, 120; at head of the church, 315; reëstablish the First Presi- dency, 330.
'Underground" escapes from the Edmunds law, 599.
Underwood of Kentucky, presents anti-Mor- mon memorial, 430.
United States Supreme Court decision, on jury law and prosecutor, 569; advance hints of, 570; regarding anti-polygamy laws, 593; regarding church property, 602. University of Nauvoo, 242; of the State of Deseret, 440.
Urim and Thummim, delivery to Smith, 32; nature of, 33; Smith deprived of, 43; how made, 94.
Utah, pioneers' trip to, 379, 391; first migra- tion and crops, 391; the following compa- nies, 392-394; first white explorers, 395, 396; early crop failures, 398, 400; early rural settlements, 403; first Mormon gov- ernment, 428; first state convention and constitution, 429; admitted as a territory, 432; Mormons forbidden to leave, 446,
447, 505 note; first territorial election, 458; Mormon election law, 467; rival courts and officers, 470; law about testimony and citations, 470; legislature sustains Young, 499; race population, 582; Utah commis- sion, 597; vetoed law of 1901, 605; ad- mitted as a state, 606-608; parties in, 606; the state constitution, 607; census, 610.
Van Buren, Pres. Martin, Smith's hostility to,
Van Dusen, I. McGee, description of endow- ment ceremony, 353.
Van Vliet, Capt. Stewart, mission to Salt Lake City, 485.
Van Zile, district attorney, trial of R. T. Ben- ton, 541; trial of Miles, 594. Vaughn, V. H., secretary and acting governor of Utah Territory, 567, 568. "Voice of Warning," 127. Vorce Herald, 325.
Wade, Ben, on the Mormons, 557; anti- polygamy bill, 591.
Waite, C. B., chief justice of Utah, 540; his offence to the Mormons and what followed,
Waite, Mrs. C. B., on Steptoe's case, 468; on Gov. Dawson's punishment, 538; biogra- phy, 450 note; examples of polygamy, 586, 587. Walker Brothers' experiences, 558, 560. Walker-Hoge incident, 245-249. Wallingford Community, treatment of, 135. "War, the last Mormon," in Illinois, 347-351. "War," the Mormon, in Utah, 476-515; the federal force, 481; instructions to the fed- eral commander, 482; Young's proclama- tion, 486; Young's letter to the federal commander, 487; Mormon plan of cam- paign, 489; burning of wagon trains, 489, 490; preparation for spring campaign, wasteful contracts, 500; causes of the back- down, 504; exodus of Mormons, 509; the terms of peace, 514; Johnston's march to Salt Lake City, 515; departure of troops from the territory, 537.
Ward, the emigration scandal, 410. Warren, Major W. B., on Hancock County commission, 337; in command in Hancock County, 343: advice to Mormons, 345; weekly reports from Nauvoo, 345. Warsaw, Ill., anti-Mormon feeling, 297; regi- ment's share in the Smiths' murder, 304; flight of inhabitants, 313; Signal's appeal to non-Mormons, 338; protest against the
"burnings," 343; appeal for new settlers, 352; Mormon real estate sales, 361. Wasp, Nauvoo, 253.
Weed, Thurlow, on Mormon Bible, 47. Weller, John B., on Robinson murder, 555. Wells, "Gen." D. H., disloyal utterances, 461; order to the Legion, 484; to the fed- eral commander, 488; his plan of cam- paign, 489; indicted for treason, 500; order from Gov. Cumming, 536; assails federal government, 543; request of Gov. Shaf- fer, 567; indicted for unlawful cohabi- tation and murder, 568, 569; refusal to testify, 594.
Wells, Gov. H. M., veto of the act of 1901, 605.
Wentworth, John, Smith's letter to, 90, 118;
presents anti-Mormon petition, 431. Wesley, John, belief in the miraculous, 129. West, C. W., governor of Utah Territory, 573. Westward movement of church, first step, 102. White, A., land at Commerce, Ill., 223. Whitmer, Christian, testimony regarding the plates, 79.
Whitmer, David, description of the transla-
tion of the plates, 42; miraculous mani- festation to, 46; on Rigdon, 75, 101; expulsion from Far West, 81; later years, 83; on Smith's ignorance, 89; Smith's method of revealing, 111; the publication of the "Book of Doctrine and Covenants," 112, 113: failure of a revelation, 113; charges against, 154; expulsion, 188; plan to make him president of the church, 328. Whitmer, Jacob, testimony regarding the plates, 79.
Whitmer, John, testimony regarding the plates, 79; failure as historian, 114; de- posed, 188; testimony against Mormon leaders, 213.
Whitmer, Peter and family, 46, 83, 85; first elder, 100.
Whitmer, Peter, Jr., ordered West, 72; testi-
mony regarding the plates, 79; arrival in Missouri, 162, 163.
Whiney, N. K., associate justice, State of Deseret, 429.
Whitney, O. F., "History of Utah," viii; on Gov. Dawson's punishment, 539. Whitsitt, Prof., against Pres. Fairchild, 68; analysis of the Mormon Bible, 92 note.
Whittlers at Nauvoo, 261.
Whitton, Bridge, connection with the Kinder- hook plates, 87.
Wight, Lyman, arrest at Far West, 199; sur- rendered at Far West, 208; commitment, 214; his church in Texas, 326. Wilcox, Phineas, disappearance in Nauvoo, 334.
Wiley, Robert, on the Kinderhook plates, 86, 87.
Williams, F. G., trial of, 154.
Willie, captain of hand-cart emigrants, 423. Wilson, C. C., chief justice Utah Territory, 567.
Wilson, Gen. R., operations in Daviess County, Mo., 210-211.
Winter, Rev. John, recollections of Rigdon, 66.
Winter Quarters, 363; settlement of, 377; re- moval to east side of the Missouri, 393. Wisconsin, recommended to the Mormons, 186; Strang's church in, 324-326. Witnesses of the golden plates, 78-86. "Wolf Hunters," Young's, 452. Woodruff, Wilford, first visit to Smith, 153; mission to England, 229; on the work there, 230; report of the conference with the Peace Commission, 513; elected presi- dent of the church, 601; manifesto about polygamy, 602-604; visits from the spirits of Smith and Young, 604.
Woods, G. L., governor of Utah Territory, 568; assertion of authority, 573.
Woods, J. W., counsel for Smith, 299. Woodward, Judge D., on Father Smith, 10. Wooton, F. H., secretary of Utah Territory, 537.
Worrell, Lieut., murder of, 336.
Young, Ann Eliza, divorce suit, 572, 573- Young, Brigham, suppression of Mother Smith's "History," vii; on Smith and the Mormon Bible, 98; refusal to reveal, 114; doctrine of Adam, 116; rebuke of O. Pratt, 117; on persecutions, 136; Smith as a storekeeper, 143; Kirtland Bank, 149; admission about Danites, 192; on tithing, 193, 194; flight to Quincy, Ill., 216; night visit to Far West, 218; president of the Twelve, 218; Smith's miraculous healing, 227; mission to England, 229; Smith's military rank, 237 note; married to Smith's widows, 275 note; original copy of the revelation about polygamy, 280; his first feeling about polygamy, 280 note; spiritual wife doctrine, 287; adopts Lee, 289; on Smith's burial place, 307; faith in Smith, 309; course after Smith's death, triumph over Rigdon, 314-318; promise about the prophet's son, 322; on Mother Smith, 323; biography, 327; joins Mormon church, 327; first two wives, 326, 327; preaching and working at his trade, 328; fidelity to Smith, 328, 329; revelation about, 329; on revela- tions, 329, 435; home missionaries sent out, 329; president of the church, 330; dishon-
esty of elders, 331; reply to Quincy com- mittee, 339; reply to Hancock County commission, 340; address to Pres. Polk, 357; on migration to the far West, 359; rebuke to counterfeiters, 360; departure from Nauvoo, 362; address to the camp, 362; arrival on the Missouri, 367; misrep- resentation to the English, 377; carpenter work, 377; his only revelation, 379; lieuten- ant general of Utah pioneers, 381; visit to Fort Laramie, 383; hears about Utah, 386; illness on the way, 389; return trip, 392; leads party across the plains, 394; first Sunday service in the valley, 396; land as- signments, 396; on further explorations, 397; selects site of Salt Lake City Temple, 397; appeal to workmen, 403; denuncia- tion of gold seekers, 407; order to Saints in Europe, 413; responsibility for hand- cart tragedy, 418, 425-427; plan for political independence, 428; governor of State of Deseret, 429; J. D. Grant's picture of, 433; his leadership in Utah, 433; spokesman of God, 434; dictatorship illustrated, 434-438; extracts from discourses, 435, 436, 437, 441, 443, 468, 475, 484, 497; denunciation of Gladdenites, 436; appropriation of a cañon, 437; on property rights, 437; to his creditors, 437; on bishops' courts and bishops, 439, 442; trustee of the church, 440; charges of profanity, stealing, etc., 441, 443; threats of punishment, 443, 444; surprising confessions, 446; warning to would-be fugitives, 446, 497; responsibility for Parrish and Aikin murders, 448-451; his "Wolf Hunters," 452; on human sacri- fice, 455, 456; first governor of Utah Terri- tory, 458; Kane's part in his selection, 459; attack on Pres. Z. Taylor, 461, 463; denunciation of Judge Brocchus, 462-466; delayed election proclamation, 464; deter- mination to be governor, 468, 475; treat- ment of Steptoe, 469; reply to Judge Stiles, 471; Mormon land conveyed to, 473; an- nounces the approach of the federal troops, 483; to keep out the troops, 484; threat to "take to the mountains," 485; proclamation to the people of Utah, 486; letter to the federal commander, 487; let- ters to Col. Alexander, 494, 495; defiance
of federal government, 497, 549; indicted for treason, 500; interview with Kane, 502; offer of provisions refused, 503; reasons for a back-down, 504; introduction of Gov. Cumming in the Tabernacle, 508; confer- ence with the Peace Commission, 512, 513; ultimatum about the troops, 514; snub to Gov. Cumming, 516; responsibility for Mountain Meadows Massacre, 527-532; proposed arrest for counterfeiting, 536, 537; authorized from Washington to raise troops, 539; nominated for governor of the State of Deseret, 540; scoff at Pres. Lincoln, 542; predicts ruin of the government, 544; denunciation of federal officers, 548; how arrest prevented, 549; interview with Col- fax, 552; interview with Lyman Trumbull, 556; opposition to Gentile merchants, 557, 558, 560; treatment of Walker Brothers, 558; connection with Z. C. M. I., 559, 560; attacked in Utah Magazine, 563; trouble with laborers, 563; interview with the prophet's sons, 563; indicted for unlawful cohabitation and murder, 568, 569; Ann Eliza's divorce suit, 572, 573; death of, 574; estimate of his character, 574-581; his wealth, 576-579; fee for divorces, 577; account with the church, 578, 579; his will, 579; list of his wives, 579, 580; his houses, 580; warning to dissatisfied wives, 584; family life, 588; view of the church's ex- tension, 617.
Young, Emmeline A., suit against Brigham's executors, 579.
Young, Joseph A., succor to hand-cart emi- grants, 423.
WITH A WORKING BIBLIOGRAPHY
By ALBERT BUSHNELL HART
Professor of History, Harvard University; author of "American History told by Contemporaries,” etc.
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– Nebraska State Journal.
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AMERICAN DIPLOMATIC QUESTIONS By JOHN B. HENDERSON, Jr.
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