Letter from Don Carlos Smith and William Smith, 6 March 1839
Source Note
, Letter with postscript by , , Adams Co., IL, to JS and , , Clay Co., MO, 6 Mar. 1839. Featured version copied [between 29 May and 30 Oct. 1839] in JS Letterbook 2, pp. 38–39; handwriting of ; JS Collection, CHL. For more complete source information, see the source note for JS Letterbook 2.
Historical Introduction
On 6 March 1839, wrote to his brothers JS and , who remained imprisoned in , Missouri, to inform them of the well-being of their family members. Small groups of the extended Smith family had departed , Missouri, for throughout the previous winter. , who feared being arrested because of his participation in the skirmish at on 25 October 1838, hurriedly departed before the state militia occupied Far West on 1 November. He soon settled in , Illinois, and his wife, , and their children followed him later. left for Illinois sometime in December 1838 or January 1839. On 7 February 1839, and her children left Far West, arriving about a week later in Illinois. The largest group of the Smiths comprised , , several of their children—, , Don Carlos Smith, and —and their children’s families. The group departed Far West in mid-February and arrived in Quincy later that month. Hyrum Smith’s wife, , apparently left Far West in a separate party in mid-February with her newborn son, named Joseph F., and Hyrum’s five children from his first marriage: Lovina, John, Hyrum, Jerusha, and Sarah. They likewise arrived in Quincy later that month.
In late February or early March 1839, church leaders in decided to send a batch of correspondence and other documents to JS concerning land purchases and other matters. Family members of the prisoners were invited to write letters to be included in the packet. In his letter, related news of the various branches of the Smith family, in particular the health of , who had contracted a “severe cold” in late 1838. Because she had been essentially bedridden since that time, she relied heavily on her sister and family friend Hannah Grinnels to care for her and ’s children. After Don Carlos concluded the letter, his brother William Smith appended a brief note explaining why he had not visited JS and Hyrum in and expressing his wishes for their liberation.
, the chosen to carry the letters to , left on 10 March 1839 and arrived in on the evening of 19 March. JS expressed gratitude for ’s letter when composing a general epistle to the church on 20 March 1839. Don Carlos’s original letter, which is apparently not extant, was copied into JS Letterbook 2 by sometime between 29 May and 30 October 1839.
Mary Fielding Smith, Commerce, IL, to Joseph Fielding, June 1839, in Tullidge, Women of Mormondom, 256; Thompson, Autobiographical Sketch, 5; Hyrum Smith, Liberty, MO, to Hannah Grinnels et al., 16 Mar. 1839, Hyrum Smith, Papers, BYU; O’Driscoll, Hyrum Smith, 177–178n7.
Tullidge, Edward W. The Women of Mormondom. New York: Tullidge and Crandall, 1877.
Thompson, Mercy Rachel Fielding. Autobiographical Sketch, 1880. CHL. MS 4580.
Smith, Hyrum. Papers, ca. 1832–1844. BYU.
O'Driscoll, Jeffrey S. Hyrum Smith: A Life of Integrity. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2003.
Rogers, Statement, [1], CHL; Hyrum Smith, Liberty, MO, to Mary Fielding Smith, Quincy, IL, 19 Mar. 1839, Mary Fielding Smith, Collection, CHL; see also Historical Introduction to Letter from Edward Partridge, 5 Mar. 1839.
Rogers, David W. Statement, [not before 1846]. CHL.
Smith, Mary Fielding. Collection, ca. 1832–1848. CHL. MS 2779.
Mulholland copied his own 29 May 1839 letter to Edward Partridge on page 15 of JS Letterbook 2, making that the earliest likely copying date for documents he subsequently copied but that had dates preceding 29 May.
Having an opportunity to send a line to you, I do not feel disposed to let it slip unnoticed. ’s family have all arrived in this , except you two, And could I but see your faces, this side of the , and know and realize that you had been delivered from your enemies, it would certainly light up a new gleam of hope in our bosoms; nothing could be more satisfactory, nothing could give us more joy.
and Children are well, they live three miles from here, and have a tolerable good place. ’s children and mother Grinolds [Hannah Grinnels] are living at present with ; they are all well, has not got her health yet, but I think it increases slowly. She lives in the house with old Father Dixon, likewise and family; they are probably a half mile from ’s; we are trying to get a house, and to get the family together, we shall do the best we can for them, and that which we consider to be most in concordance with ’s feelings. One thing I would say (not however to the disrespect of ) which is that this, the family would do better without her than with her; which I am confident you will regulate when you come. One reason for so saying, is that I do not think that she is a suitable person to govern the family. and stood their journey remarkably, they are in tolerable health, ’s has been sick ever since they arrived, has removed 40 miles from here, but is here now, and says he is anxious to have you liberated, and see you enjoy liberty once more. My family is well, my health has not been good for about two weeks, and for 2 or 3 days the toothache has been my tormentor. It all originated from a severe cold.
Dear Brethren, we just heard that the says that he is a going to set you all at liberty; I hope it’s true, other letters that you will probably recieve, will give you information concerning the warm feeling of the people here towards us, After writing these hurried lines in misery I close by leaving the Blessings of God with you— and praying for your health, prosperity and restitution to liberty. This from a true friend and brother.
J, Smith Jr, .
& Joseph,— I should have called down to to have seen you, had it not have been for the multiplicity of business that was on my hands & again I thought perhaps that the people might think [p. 38]
Asbury, Henry. Reminiscences of Quincy, Illinois, Containing Historical Events, Anecdotes, Matters concerning Old Settlers and Old Times, Etc. Quincy, IL: D. Wilcox and Sons, 1882.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Upon their arrival in Quincy, Hyrum Smith’s family was evidently separated between two households, with Hyrum’s five children from his deceased wife, Jerusha Barden Smith, staying with their Smith grandparents in the home of Archibald Williams. Family friend Hannah Grinnels was also living at Williams’s residence and likely cared for the children. Mary Fielding Smith, Joseph F., and Thompson stayed with a Father Dixon, probably Charles Dixon. The separation was partly logistical, because Mary probably needed to remain with her sister, who had been caring for Mary and Joseph F., and there likely was insufficient room for everyone in the Williams’s residence. Don Carlos also alluded to undisclosed difficulties regarding family dynamics that likely contributed to the separation. (Hyrum Smith, Liberty, MO, to Hannah Grinnels et al., 16 Mar. 1839, Hyrum Smith, Papers, BYU; Thompson, Autobiographical Sketch, 3, 5; Dixon, History of Charles Dixon, 16, 60; see also Letter from Don Carlos and Agnes Coolbrith Smith, 11 Apr. 1839; and Esplin, “Hyrum Smith,” 122–163.)
Smith, Hyrum. Papers, ca. 1832–1844. BYU.
Thompson, Mercy Rachel Fielding. Autobiographical Sketch, 1880. CHL. MS 4580.
Dixon, James D., comp. History of Charles Dixon, One of the Early English Settlers of Sackville, N. B. Sackville, New Brunswick: By the author, 1891.
Esplin, Ronald K. “Hyrum Smith.” In United by Faith: The Joseph Sr. and Lucy Mack Smith Family, edited by Kyle R. Walker, 122–163. American Fork, UT: Covenant Communications, 2006.
Mary Fielding Smith later noted that “many false reports” circulated among the Saints in Illinois regarding the prisoners’ release from jail. (Mary Fielding Smith, [Quincy, IL], to Hyrum Smith, 11 Apr. 1839, Mary Fielding Smith, Collection, CHL.)
Smith, Mary Fielding. Collection, ca. 1832–1848. CHL. MS 2779.