On 15 July 1842, JS participated in a meeting held in , Illinois, that addressed ’s relationship with , wife of , and rumors that and of , Iowa Territory, intended to raise a mob against the Latter-day Saints in Nauvoo. After Orson Pratt returned from a mission to in the summer of 1841, he heard troubling allegations about Sarah. One rumor, which Bennett publicly asserted in the 15 July 1842 issue of the Sangamo Journal, was that while Orson was in England, JS had proposed marriage to Sarah. A second rumor circulating among Nauvoo members told a different story, claiming that Sarah had engaged in an affair with Bennett while her husband was in England. It is unclear when Orson learned about these allegations, but by mid-July, he was disconsolate. On 14 July, he wrote a letter declaring that he was “a ruined man!” If JS had proposed marriage to Sarah, Orson wrote, he had “been deceived for 12 years past—my hopes are blasted & gone as it were in a moment.” If the charges about Sarah and Bennett were true, “then my family are ruined forever.” Orson concluded, “My sorrows are greater than I can bear! Where I am henceforth it matters not.” The next morning, he disappeared from Nauvoo. Fearing from the language of the letter and Orson’s disappearance that he was suicidal, JS sent men to look for the apostle, but they did not find him before the meeting commenced.
According to the account in JS’s journal, the public meeting of 15 July 1842 was held in “the .” An newspaper reported that JS spoke “in front of the .” In the morning session of the meeting, JS spoke about ’s misconduct, as well as the alleged relationship Bennett had with . The afternoon session dealt with charges that brothers and were raising a mob against the Saints. The Kilbournes had been vocal critics of JS and the church, writing letters to the editors of newspapers in and Illinois accusing the Saints of theft and JS of land fraud. In May 1842, David also wrote a letter to governor communicating his strong suspicion that JS was behind the attempted assassination of ex-governor . JS may not have been aware of this letter, but on 24 June 1842, he wrote Illinois governor that he feared Bennett was in a conspiracy with the Kilbournes to kidnap him and extradite him to Missouri. Edward Kilbourne was present at the 15 July meeting and answered questions JS asked about such a conspiracy.
recorded an account of the meeting in the journal he was keeping for JS in the Book of the Law of the Lord. At the conclusion of the entry, Clayton mentioned that returned the evening of 15 July, suggesting that the entry was not recorded at least until that night or the following day. It may have not been recorded until 22 July, when Clayton apparently inscribed additional journal entries.
John C. Bennett, Carthage, IL, 2 July 1842, Letter to the Editor, Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2]. Although Sarah Pratt did not deny the allegation at the time, Joseph Smith III said that he visited Sarah late in her life and she denied that JS ever proposed anything inappropriate to her. Another source stated that Sarah still insisted in the late nineteenth century that JS had proposed to her. (Mary Audentia Smith Anderson, “The Memoirs of President Joseph Smith,” Saints’ Herald, 22 Jan. 1935, 109; Von Wymetal, Joseph Smith the Prophet, 60–63.)
Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.
Saints’ Herald. Independence, MO. 1860–.
Von Wymetal, Wilhelm [W. Wyl, pseud.]. Joseph Smith the Prophet: His Family and His Friends; A Study Based on Facts and Documents. Salt Lake City: Tribune Printing and Publishing, 1886.
See, for example, “Testimony of Mrs. Goddard,” in Affidavits and Certificates [Nauvoo, IL: 1842], copy at CHL.
Affidavits and Certificates, Disproving the Statements and Affidavits Contained in John C. Bennett’s Letters. Nauvoo Aug. 31, 1842. [Nauvoo, IL: 1842]. Copy at CHL.
Since Bennett’s letter was not published until the 15 July issue of the Sangamo Journal, it is likely that Orson Pratt had not seen it by 15 July, suggesting that Sarah may have been the one who informed him of JS’s alleged proposal.
JS, Journal, 15 July 1842. The Warsaw Signal reported that Pratt’s disappearance was sudden and that JS sent “about 500 persons” to look for him. (News Item, Warsaw [IL] Signal, 16 July 1842, [2].)
David Kilbourne and Edward Kilbourne, “Latter-Day-ism, No. 1,” Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot (Burlington), 30 Sept. 1841, [1]; David Kilbourne and Edward Kilbourne, “Latter-Day-ism, No. 2,” Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot, 7 Oct. 1841, [2]; David Kilbourne and Edward Kilbourne, “Latter-Day-ism, No. 3,” Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot, 14 Oct. 1841, [3]; David Kilbourne and Edward Kilbourne, “Latter-Day-ism,” Warsaw (IL) Signal, 6 Oct. 1841, [2]–[3].
Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot. Burlington, IA. 1839–1851.
a Mob upon us, and as Mr was then present he would have the privilege of either admitting or denying it. Question by “Who did tell that I and my brother were conspiring to bring a mob upon you” Answer by Joseph “He told me and he told [blank] Allred and s & others”. Q by “Where did he say we were going to bring a mob from”. Ans. by Joseph. “From ”. then arose and said, “I was conversing with my this morning and he said he had never seen since he had us before him last year for conspiracy. I have only seen him twice since last fall, I saw <him> once then. I was going to about 2 weeks ago. The Boat I was on stopped at the upper Landing place and I came ashore a little while. The first person I saw was ; we entered into conversation, but there was no mention made of mobs. I have not seen him since. I always regarded the same as I regard you (Joseph) and thought you were pretty well matched. If any one says that I have conspired to bring a Mob upon you it is false”. The meeting was then peaceably dismissed. [p. 128]
JS had informed Governor Carlin on 24 June 1842 that “strong evidence exists that Bennett and David and Edward Kilbourn have posted Bills in Galena[, Illinois,] calling upon the people to hold meetings and have themselves in readiness at a moments warning to assemble and come here and mob us out of the place and try to Kidnap me.” JS stated that he had received the information from “a Gentleman” who “had seen those hand Bills posted in Galena.” (Letter to Thomas Carlin, 24 June 1842.)
When Bennett was serving as mayor of Nauvoo, David and Edward Kilbourne were brought before the mayor’s court sometime before 20 September 1841 on a charge of conspiring “to unlawfully procure an indictment.” The charge stemmed from the Kilbournes’ attempt to capture a group of individuals they alleged were robbing their store in Montrose. The charge was not sustained, and the Kilbournes were discharged. (David Kilbourne and Edward Kilbourne, “Latter-Day-ism, No. 1,” Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot [Burlington], 30 Sept. 1841, [1].)
Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot. Burlington, IA. 1839–1851.