On this day
in 1857, Mormon guerillas, stoked by religious zeal and a deep resentment of
decades of public abuse and federal interference, murder 120 emigrants at
Mountain Meadows, Utah.
Although
historical accounts differ, the conflict with the wagon train of emigrants from
Missouri and Arkansas apparently
began when the Mormons refused to sell the train any supplies. Some of the
emigrants then began to commit minor depredations against Mormon fields, abuse
the local Paiute Indians, and taunt the Mormons with reminders of how the
Missourians had attacked and chased them out of that state during the 1830s.
Angered by the emigrants' abuse and fired by a zealous passion against the
growing tide of invading gentiles, a group of Mormons guerillas from around
Cedar City decided to take revenge. Cooperating with a group of Paiute Indians
who had already attacked the train on their own initiative, the Mormon
guerillas initially pretended to be protectors. The guerillas persuaded the
emigrants that they had convinced the Paitues to let them go if they would
surrender their arms and allow the Mormons to escort the wagon train through
the territory. But as the train again moved forward under the Mormon escort, a
guerilla leader gave a pre-arranged signal. The Mormons opened fire on the unarmed
male emigrants, while the Paiutes reportedly murdered the women. Later accounts
suggested that some Mormons had only fired in the air while others killed as
few of the emigrants as they could. But when the shooting stopped in Mountain
Meadows, 120 men and women were dead. Only 18 small children were spared.
As a direct
result of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, the U.S. government demanded a new
settlement from Brigham
Young. In 1858, the Mormons agreed to accept a continued presence of
federal troops and a Gentile governor for Utah Territory. No further
significant Mormon-Gentile violence occurred, and the Latter Day Saints were
thereafter largely left to govern themselves. But the era of complete Mormon
domination of Utah ended as a result of the tragedy that day in Mountain
Meadows.
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