In the
meantime, the persecution still followed the Saints and
they were threatened with extermination, their enemies
forming in companies, burning houses, plundering and
committing all kinds of crime. My father was thrown into
prison with Parley Pratt and four others at Richmond
Jail, while Joseph and Hyrum Smith, with five others,
were taken to Liberty Jail, Independence, the jail at
Richmond not being large enough to hold them all. Father
had his trial at the same time that Joseph Smith had his
mob trial at Richmond. He was told many times that if he
would burn his Mormon Bible and quit the Mormon Church,
he could go free; they said he had no business there,
but he chose to be firm to his religion. So he was held
in prison all winter, and mother had to support her
family the best she could, her provisions and everything
having been destroyed by the armies when they came. They
would even come into her yard and shoot the chickens and
kill the pigs. Mother had her house full of women and
children, in the meantime, who had been driven from
their homes by the enemy. These women wanted mother to
go into the woods to escape the mob, but she told them
"No," that if she had to die, she would die in her own
home, so they decided to stay with her.
During that
winter, my mother would visit the prison where father
was confined once every two weeks, taking him
provisions, he not having anything provided for him that
was fit to eat. The prisoners remained at Richmond Jail
until spring, when the court sat, but as no one appeared
against them, their case was continued. However, they
took a change of venue and moved to Columbia, Boone
County, Missouri.
(Mother was
present at the trial.)
In the
meantime, mother had to leave the state, driving her own
team. She went with her father's family, but she drove
her own team from Missouri, leaving father in prison.
Just before we left, she took us to the prison to let us
see our father. The jailer allowed father to step
downstairs with us and carry the baby. We left our home
and everything; we just packed up what few things we
could and came away. We never got a cent for our
property.
My mother's
father, Timothy Clark, was thrown into prison also, but
he was very old so they let him out on bail. There were
three or four hundred of the Saints who were taken
prisoners at the same time, under the pretense of being
witnesses, but they were all bailed out except those
mentioned above. Father said he was present at the time
one of the guards was bragging of the crimes he had
committed with the Mormons (it tells about this in
church history), when Joseph Smith got up and rebuked
him and commanded him not to open his head, for if he
did, some great calamity would befall him, after which
the guard did not say a word.
When the
prisoners started for Columbia, my father and Parley
Pratt were chained together, and could lay no way except
on their backs. They were bound that way for three days
before they arrived at their destination. It stormed all
the time, but they found their new quarters more
comfortable than they were at Richmond, and they had
better food to eat. The place, however, was very dusty
and full of cobwebs (it had not been used for a long
time), but the jailer had it cleaned for them. They
expected the court to sit the first of July, when they
hoped for some change.
In the
meantime, mother arrived at Quincy, Illinois with her
family, but did not remain there long. The Saints were
just purchasing what was then termed Commerce,
afterwards called Nauvoo. It was just a little town with
a few houses in it, situated on the banks of the
Mississippi. We continued our journey until we arrived
at Commerce but, after a few days, went on across the
river to the Iowa side where my grandfather and his sons
had decided to locate, seven miles west of Montrose, the
town where we landed.
My mother
looked around to find a place for herself and children
and found an old house in the middle of a corn field.
The people who had lived in it had built a new home,
which they were living in at this time. They told mother
that she was welcome to go into the old house, but they
did not think it was fit for anyone to live in as they
had stabled horses in it, and it was in a very bad
condition. After looking at the place, however, mother
decided that any place was better than to be right out
of doors, where the sun was getting so very hot. So we
unpacked our things and went to work cleaning the place
up. We turned the clapboards over there were on the
loft, swept the dust off them, laid them down again,
shoveled the manure out, whitewashed the place, and then
washed the floor (it had a slabbed floor) and moved in.
In the
meantime, my mother had gotten a letter from father,
comparing her to a star, and telling her how dark and
dismal everything seemed since his star was out of
sight. She immediately decided to go and visit him, and
be there at the trial, so she went to Nauvoo to see
Joseph Smith and tell him what she was thinking of doing
and ask his council. He laid his hands on her head and
blessed her and told her to go. He said, "Sister Phelps,
perhaps you can accomplish more than we can. We have
done our best to get those prisoners liberated, but all
our plans have failed."
She went and
engaged an old lady by the name of Stevenson to come and
stay with her children while she was gone, and made
arrangements with her brother, a young man, John Wesley
Clark, to accompany her to Columbia, it being 150 miles,
she would have to go on horseback. It rained a good deal
of the time after she and her brother had gone. Her
horse swam one river with her on it. Some men, who were
on the other side of the river, seeing her about to go
into the river, called to her, telling her not to go in
or she would be drowned as the water was so deep. But
she tucked up her feet and started in. She knew the
animal she rode was safe and she arrived on the other
side safely. These men wanted to know what her business
was that she would venture her life in that way. She
told them she was going to get her husband out of prison
(but, of course, she did not know how); they said, "Call
as you come back and tell us what luck you have."
She and her
brother arrived in Columbia, Boone County, all right,
where they found Brother Orson Pratt, Parley Pratt's
brother, who had also come to attend the trial. The
prisoners were tried again, but no one appeared against
them, so they still continued the case.
The jailer
and his wife bragged that they had had several in the
prison who had died of old age, because they would just
continue their cases and keep them in prison. They
allowed mother to stay in the prison with father, but of
course, they searched her before they allowed her to go
in. When she got in, she could stay all night, and she
and father could talk as much as they pleased. At this
time father, Parley Pratt and a Mr. Follet planned to
break jail, mother taking the news to my uncle and Orson
Pratt.
The people
were going to have a big celebration on the Fourth of
July, and when the door opened for supper, father was to
grab it and slip out. Parley Pratt was to go also and he
was not to let anything hinder him. They planned to
break jail just as the sun was going down. On the
Fourth, the prisoners took a piece of a white shirt and
cut red letters that spelled the word "Liberty," which
they fastened to the piece of white cloth, and got a
pole from the jailer and put it out of the window. This
pleased the people so that they took the prisoners some
of the public dinner.
Orson Pratt
and my uncle pretended to start for home, taking
mother's horse with them. They had three horses.
Mother's horse was for Brother Follet. They told the
jailer they were going to leave mother there to visit
with her husband longer, but in reality mother was
giving up her horse and trusting in the Lord for her
deliverance, as she knew they would be so angry with her
after the prisoners had escaped that they would either
turn her out or hold her as a prisoner. They went within
one-half miles of Columbia and secreted the horses. The
prisoners could just see a dry limb of a tree out of the
jail window where they would find the horses. The two
men were to help them on their journey when they got
there.
Before
going, my uncle gave mother strict orders not to touch
the prisoners, nor try to assist them in any way, as
that was a penitentiary act. The prisoners had to go
through the kitchen to get out of the jail, so mother
left them in the afternoon and went down to the kitchen.
They told her whatever she did, not to let the jailer
bring their supper until just as the sun was going down;
so she went down and talked with the jailer and his
wife. Just as the sun was going down he said, "Well, I
must go up and give the boys their supper." Mother said
she sat back on the bed in the kitchen and pretty soon
she could hear steps and a rumbling noise. She heard the
jailer call out and his wife rushed upstairs to where he
was (she weighed about 200 pounds.) The jailer had
father clinched, but father jumped down two pairs of
stairs, six steps each, with the jailer's wife hanging
onto one of his arms. He would get rid of her when he
jumped, but she would clinch him again when she again
reached him. She could make better progress than he
because the jailer held on to him, and in that condition
they got down to the kitchen. Here Parley Pratt and Mr.
Follet made their escape, and left father in the hands
of the jailer.
Mother said
she did not feel that father would be overpowered. She
thought she could pray if she could do nothing else. She
thought she was whispering a prayer, but they said she
hollered just as loud as her voice would let her, and
she said, "Oh! Thou God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
deliver Thy servant." Father said he felt as strong as a
giant when he heard those words. He just pushed the
jailer and his wife off as if they were babies and
cleared himself. When he got to his horse, the enemy had
retaken Brother Follet, and they had mother's horse, as
she had given up her horse to Mr. Follet. Father was so
exhausted that uncle had to help him on his horse and
put the whip in his hand, and that was the last my uncle
saw of father until they met in Quincy. It soon
commenced to storm and father had had his hat knocked
off in the struggle with the jailer, so he was
bareheaded.
The enemy
returned with Brother Follet on my mother's horse,
which, of course, was pretty plain evidence against her.
The jailer called her everything, and told her to be
gone out of his sight. She told him to get her shawl and
bonnet and she would leave. He told her to go upstairs
and get them, but she said no, for them to bring them to
her, as she knew the windows were open up there and she
thought they might throw her out of one. She had paid
her board bill and had everything square before that so
they could not say she owed them anything.
I, Mary A.
Rich, was born in 1829, in Tazewell County, Illinois,
near Peoria. My father's name was Morris Phelps, my
mother's Laura Clark. Father was born in Massachusetts
and mother in Connecticut. Both of their parents moved,
when they were children, to Ohio, and my father and
mother were married July, 1825 in Illinois, near
Chicago.
They
embraced the gospel of the Latter-day Saints in 1831,
removing to Jackson County, Missouri, the winter of
1831-32. They bought them an inheritance in Jackson
County and worked in unison with the rest of the
Latter-day Saints until they were driven from their
homes in 1833. From there they moved to Clay County,
Missouri, and in 1835, while in Clay County, Zion's Camp
came up, the Prophet Joseph coming and preaching at our
house, which was the first time I ever saw him. While
at our house, he put me on his knee and blessed me, and
I know him ever afterwards, and he always remembered me.
From here my
father was called on a mission to preach the gospel, and
left my mother with three small children to support
without any means. She taught school and practiced
obstetrics. My father went to Chicago and while there,
converted my mother's father, mother and family. They
came to Missouri to where mother was living and helped
her look after her family, while father proceeded on his
journey to Kirtland, preaching the gospel. While in
Kirtland, he worked on the temple to help get it
finished, stayed there most of the winter, and received
his washings and anointings in the Kirtland Temple.
When he
returned from his mission he bought him a home in
Caldwell County, Missouri, moved there and soon had
everything comfortable around him.
In the
meantime, the persecution still followed the Saints and
they were threatened with extermination, their enemies
forming in companies, burning houses, plundering and
committing all kinds of crime. My father was thrown
into prison with Parley Pratt and four others at
Richmond Jail, while Joseph and Hyrum Smith, with five
others, were taken to Liberty Jail, Independence, the
jail at Richmond not being large enough to hold them
all. Father had his trial at the same time that Joseph
Smith had his mob trial at Richmond. He was told many
times that if he would burn his Mormon Bible and quit
the Mormon Church, he could go free; they said he had no
business there, but he chose to be firm to his
religion. So he was held in prison all winter, and
mother had to support her family the best she could, her
provisions and everything having been destroyed by the
armies when they came. They would even come into her
yard and shoot the chickens and kill the pigs. Mother
had her house full of women and children, in the
meantime, who had been driven from their homes by the
enemy. These women wanted mother to go into the woods
to escape the mob, but she told them "No," that if she
had to die, she would die in her own home, so they
decided to stay with her.
During that
winter, my mother would visit the prison where father
was confined once every two weeks, taking him
provisions, he not having anything provided for him that
was fit to eat. The prisoners remained at Richmond Jail
until spring, when the court sat, but as no one appeared
against them, their case was continued. However, they
took a change of venue and moved to Columbia, Boone
County, Missouri. (P3) (Mother was present at the
trial.)
In the
meantime, mother had to leave the state, driving her own
team. She went with her father's family, but she drove
her own team from Missouri, leaving father in prison.
Just before we left, she took us to the prison to let us
see our father. The jailer allowed father to step
downstairs with us and carry the baby. We left our home
and everything; we just packed up what few things we
could and came away. We never got a cent for our
property.
My mother's
father, [blank] Clark, was thrown into prison also, but
he was very old so they let him out on bail. There were
three or four hundred of the Saints who were taken
prisoners at the same time, under the pretense of being
witnesses, but they were all bailed out except those
mentioned above. Father said he was present at the time
one of the guards was bragging of the crimes he had
committed with the Mormons (it tells about this in
church history), when Joseph Smith got up and rebuked
him and commanded him not to open his head, for if he
did, some great calamity would befall him, after which
the guard did not say a word.
When the
prisoners started for Columbia, my father and Parley
Pratt were chained together, and could lay no way except
on their backs. They were bound that way for three days
before they arrived at their destination. It stormed
all the time, but they found their new quarters more
comfortable than they were at Richmond, and they had
better food to eat. The place, however, was very dusty
and full of cobwebs (it had not been used for a long
time), but the jailer (P4) had it cleaned for them.
They expected the court to sit the first of July, when
they hoped for some change.
In the
meantime, mother arrived at Quincy, Illinois with her
family, but did not remain there long. The Saints were
just purchasing what was then termed Commerce,
afterwards called Nauvoo. It was just a little town
with a few houses in it, situated on the banks of the
Mississippi. We continued our journey until we arrived
at Commerce but, after a few days, went on across the
river to the Iowa side where my grandfather and his sons
had decided to locate, seven miles west of Montrose, the
town where we landed.
My mother
looked around to find a place for herself and children
and found an old house in the middle of a corn field.
The people who had lived in it had built a new home,
which they were living in at this time. They told
mother that she was welcome to go into the old house,
but they did not think it was fit for anyone to live in
as they had stabled horses in it, and it was in a very
bad condition. After looking at the place, however,
mother decided that any place was better than to be
right out of doors, where the sun was getting so very
hot. So we unpacked our things and went to work
cleaning the place up. We turned the clapboards over
there were on the loft, swept the dust off them, laid
them down again, shoveled the manure out, whitewashed
the place, and then washed the floor (it had a slabbed
floor) and moved in.
In the
meantime, my mother had gotten a letter from father,
comparing her to a star, and telling her how dark and
dismal everything (P5) seemed since his star was out of
sight. She immediately decided to go and visit him, and
be there at the trial, so she went to Nauvoo to see
Joseph Smith and tell him what she was thinking of doing
and ask his council. He laid his hands on her head and
blessed her and told her to go. He said, "Sister
Phelps, perhaps you can accomplish more than we can. We
have done our best to get those prisoners liberated, but
all our plans have failed."
She went and
engaged an old lady by the name of Stevenson to come and
stay with her children while she was gone, and made
arrangements with her brother, a young man, John Wesley
Clark, to accompany her to Columbia, it being 150 miles,
she would have to go on horseback. It rained a good
deal of the time after she and her brother had gone.
Her horse swam one river with her on it. Some men, who
were on the other side of the river, seeing her about to
go into the river, called to her, telling her not to go
in or she would be drowned as the water was so deep.
But she tucked up her feet and started in. She knew the
animal she rode was safe and she arrived on the other
side safely. These men wanted to know what her business
was that she would venture her life in that way. She
told them she was going to get her husband out of prison
(but, of course, she did not know how); they said, "Call
as you come back and tell us what luck you have."
She and her
brother arrived in Columbia, Boone County, all right,
where they found Brother Orson Pratt, Parley Pratt's
brother, who had also come to attend the trial. The
prisoners were tried again, but no one appeared against
them, so they still continued the case. (P6)
The jailer
and his wife bragged that they had had several in the
prison who had died of old age, because they would just
continue their cases and keep them in prison. They
allowed mother to stay in the prison with father, but of
course, they searched her before they allowed her to go
in. When she got in, she could stay all night, and she
and father could talk as much as they pleased. At this
time father, Parley Pratt and a Mr. Follet planned to
break jail, mother taking the news to my uncle and Orson
Pratt.
The people
were going to have a big celebration on the Fourth of
July, and when the door opened for supper, father was to
grab it and slip out. Parley Pratt was to go also and
he was not to let anything hinder him. They planned to
break jail just as the sun was going down. On the
Fourth, the prisoners took a piece of a white shirt and
cut red letters that spelled the word "Liberty," which
they fastened to the piece of white cloth, and got a
pole from the jailer and put it out of the window. This
pleased the people so that they took the prisoners some
of the public dinner.
Orson Pratt
and my uncle pretended to start for home, taking
mother's horse with them. They had three horses.
Mother's horse was for Brother Follet. They told the
jailer they were going to leave mother there to visit
with her husband longer, but in reality mother was
giving up her horse and trusting in the Lord for her
deliverance, as she knew they would be so angry with her
after the prisoners had escaped that they would either
turn her out or hold her as a prisoner. They went
within one-half miles of Columbia and (P7) secreted the
horses. The prisoners could just see a dry limb of a
tree out of the jail window where they would find the
horses. The two men were to help them on their journey
when they got there.
Before
going, my uncle gave mother strict orders not to touch
the prisoners, nor try to assist them in any way, as
that was a penitentiary act. The prisoners had to go
through the kitchen to get out of the jail, so mother
left them in the afternoon and went down to the
kitchen. They told her whatever she did, not to let the
jailer bring their supper until just as the sun was
going down; so she went down and talked with the jailer
and his wife. Just as the sun was going down he said,
"Well, I must go up and give the boys their supper."
Mother said she sat back on the bed in the kitchen and
pretty soon she could hear steps and a rumbling noise.
She heard the jailer call out and his wife rushed
upstairs to where he was (she weighed about 200
pounds.) The jailer had father clinched, but father
jumped down two pairs of stairs, six steps each, with
the jailer's wife hanging onto one of his arms. He
would get rid of her when he jumped, but she would
clinch him again when she again reached him. She could
make better progress than he because the jailer held on
to him, and in that condition they got down to the
kitchen. Here Parley Pratt and Mr. Follet made their
escape, and left father in the hands of the jailer.
Mother said
she did not feel that father would be overpowered. She
thought she could pray if she could do nothing else.
She thought (P8) she was whispering a prayer, but they
said she hollered just as loud as her voice would let
her, and she said, "Oh! Thou God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, deliver Thy servant." Father said he felt as
strong as a giant when he heard those words. He just
pushed the jailer and his wife off as if they were
babies and cleared himself. When he got to his horse,
the enemy had retaken Brother Follet, and they had
mother's horse, as she had given up her horse to Mr.
Follet. Father was so exhausted that uncle had to help
him on his horse and put the whip in his hand, and that
was the last my uncle saw of father until they met in
Quincy. It soon commenced to storm and father had had
his hat knocked off in the struggle with the jailer, so
he was bareheaded.
The enemy
returned with Brother Follet on my mother's horse,
which, of course, was pretty plain evidence against
her. The jailer called her everything, and told her to
be gone out of his sight. She told him to get her shawl
and bonnet and she would leave. He told her to go
upstairs and get them, but she said no, for them to
bring them to her, as she knew the windows were open up
there and she thought they might throw her out of one.
She had paid her board bill and had everything square
before that so they could not say she owed them
anything.
A gentleman
who had brought in some of the public dinner, seeing the
doorway crowded with men and boys, said to the jailer,
"How do you expect this lady to get out of this place?"
The jailer said he did not care how she got out. He
wanted her out of his sight, and if she did not get out
of his way before dark, he would soon put her out of the
way. This gentleman said he would see her safely out, so
he took her by the hand and led her. As they went out,
she picked up father's hat. She sat down in the
courthouse yard, and while there, two young men came and
wanted her to go to a hotel. They said they would pay
her fare, and for her not to stay there and suffer the
abuse of the jailer. But she said she felt that people
might think she was not just what she ought to be if she
went to the hotel, so she did not go.
During this
time there was a little boy who had been there and had
seen all that was going on. He ran home to his mother
and told her that the prisoners had broken jail, and
that the young man's wife was down there and the jailer
had thrown her out of doors. He said he wished it would
get dark so he would get her out of the way. The little
boy was crying as though his heart would break. His
mother told him to go out and tell his father. The
father came in and wanted to know what his boy was
worrying about, and when he found what the trouble was,
he and his wife and the little boy went down to the
courthouse, where mother was. When they saw mother, he
said to his wife, "Elizabeth, you take this lady by the
hand and take her home to our house. If her husband was
the greatest murderer in the world, we could not see
anyone in our town treated with such cruelty as this."
Mother said she thought they were true friends, and so
she got up and thanked them and told them she would go
with them. As she was going, she saw the enemy throw the
side-saddle off her horse, and put a man's saddle on it
to go after the prisoners. The gentleman and his wife,
who had thus aided her, were named Richardson.
They took
her to their home, and treated her just as kind as they
could treat a mother or daughter. They did everything
they could for her comfort. Mr. Richardson and his wife
went to the prison with her the next day and she picked
up all the little trinkets that she thought might belong
to father and took them with her. They also searched
around and found her side-saddle. Mr. Richardson was a
saddler, so he took it and fixed it up better than it
was before, and got some men to watch out for her horse
so that he could get it for her if they brought it back.
After three days, it was brought back to the livery
stable. He went and got it and took it home with him.
The horse was almost dead, they had ridden it so hard.
But with good care he soon had it in good shape again.
Mother
stayed there ten days. She never heard a word as to
whether father was dead or alive, but mother was a woman
with lots of faith and courage. When she had been there
ten days and had not heard a word, she told them she
felt as though she could stay no longer. They begged her
to stay as it was not considered safe in the country for
a woman to travel alone, on account of the Negroes. But
Mr. Richardson saw that she got uneasy and restless, so
he told her there was one thing he could do. He would
see the mail boy and find out how far he would go her
way, and if it was safe they were willing to let her go.
So arrangements were made with the mail boy for her to
travel with him. They had to travel late at night and
start out early in the morning, but she told them she
could stand it.
She had
preached Mormonism to them all the while she was there,
and she left a Book of Mormon and a hymn book with them.
She had also sung them the songs of Zion, as she was a
great hand to sing. They made her promise that if ever
there was any great calamity coming upon the state of
Missouri, that she would write to them.
She left in
the afternoon and traveled 30 miles before night. The
next morning they got up at daylight and traveled 30
miles more before breakfast. She got her breakfast at
the hotel she had stopped at when she was going up to
Columbia, at which time she had told them she was going
to get her husband out of prison. When she came back
they wanted to know what success she had had. She told
them that her husband was out of prison, but she could
not tell them whether he was dead or alive, but she
wanted some breakfast, after which she would talk to
them. She left the mail boy here. She had to go seven
miles to where her father had left some cattle when they
moved. She thought perhaps there would be someone there
who could tell her something about the whereabouts of
her husband. Arriving there, she questioned the people,
but they had heard nothing and there had been no one
after the cattle. She did not get off her horse but rode
on, although she was very hungry as she had eaten
nothing since breakfast.
Soon she
struck the bottoms of the Mississippi River. She had
been riding 50 miles and was just starting into the
woods (the timber in that country was very thick), and
she said this was the first time her courage failed her.
She had a lonesome, dismal feeling come over her, and
there was six miles yet to travel before she would reach
a hotel. She did not know what would accost her before
she got there because it was getting dark. She looked
into the woods as far as she could see and saw a man
coming up on horseback. He was a white man, and when he
came up to her he looked at her and she looked at him,
and he said, "I wonder if you are not the woman I am
looking for?" She said, "I believe you are the man I am
looking for." Then he asked what her name was. She told
him, after which he told her he was Mr. Follet's son,
and he had a note from my father saying he was safe. As
they had heard nothing from her, they feared she might
be in prison, after doing what she had done. His errand
accomplished, Mr. Follet turned around and rode on with
mother. They arrived at the hotel safely and stayed
there all night.
The next day
they got to Quincy where father was. The sisters took
her in the bedroom where father was, before he knew she
had come. He was quite sick from exposure and from being
confined in prison for eight months, during which time
he had the chills and fever, and then riding horseback
and getting so wet. He was three days and nights without
anything to eat, not daring to go to any house for food,
because his enemies were searching the country for him.
He would lay down to sleep, while his horse was eating,
using the saddle for his pillow, and tying the horse to
his feet.
After
staying in Quincy two days, they decided to start for
Nauvoo. They found that Orson Pratt and John Wesley
Clark had arrived safely in Quincy, but had walked all
the way. After a few days' travel, father and mother
arrived in Iowa, but when they got there it was not safe
for father to stay on account of the enemy. They were
afraid that he would be re-arrested at any time. His
health was broken down. He counselled with the brethren,
and they thought he needed a change. So he decided to
get up a conveyance and take mother and the baby to
Kirtland, Ohio to visit his parents. Mother had never
seen his parents.
In the
meantime, they made arrangements for my older sister to
stay with a Mr. Foot, and myself and younger sister to
stay at Mr. John Murdock's. My father was to furnish our
clothing, bedding and a cow. Father had kept Father
Murdock's little boy for seven years when he was
preaching the gospel so he wanted to do a little to
repay this kindness. Father had not charged him
anything. Father bought a carriage and a span of horses,
and after taking us to Father Murdock's he, mother, and
the baby started in August.
OH! What a
strange place it was. Brother Murdock had just married
an old maid. She was very particular and everything had
to be done just so. At just such a time, we had to have
just such an hour to eat, go to bed and get up. It
seemed like we were in prison. We never were allowed a
light to go upstairs to bed, but we would go up, get
into bed, hug each other and go to sleep the best we
could. They were very particular, however, about making
us go to meeting every Sunday, and Mr. Murdock was a
school teacher, so he let us go to school. Mrs. Murdock
was a fine seamstress and she taught me to sew. I had to
knit a half hour every evening after supper was over and
the dishes washed. She never manifested the least
affection; it was just a matter of duty with her. We
were taken very sick with the chills and fever. Both
myself and my sister were sick six weeks. Well, during
that time we had to have better care, but as soon as we
got well, we went to work again. It was a regular house
of discipline. Mr. Murdock was a very stern man. Still
they did not abuse us. But we never had the privilege of
seeing any of our relatives while we were there. It was
ten months before father and mother returned.
Father and
mother went to Kirtland, Ohio, and visited with his
father's family. He tried to teach them the gospel, but
they did not want anything to do with religion. Yet they
treated them very kindly. They stayed there most of the
winter, but early in the spring they went to Indiana. My
mother had a sister living there, and here my mother was
confined. She had a baby boy. They called him Jacob.
They stayed there a month, and then started on their
journey for home, arriving the 1st of July, 1840. They
gathered up what they had left here and there, and their
children. We were overjoyed at seeing our father and
mother again. No tongue could express our feelings at
being together again, all alive and well. I was then
almost eleven years old.
We moved to
a town 20 miles from Nauvoo called Macedonia. Here we
located and soon all our friends. Father was a
carpenter, and we soon gathered things around us and
were comfortable. We lived there about a year and a
half. These were the happiest days of our lives. Then my
mother was taken sick and died, leaving her five
children, three girls and two boys, the baby one and a
half years old, with my father heartbroken, and her
children not knowing how to manage. Father took mother's
body to Nauvoo to be buried. She was quite young when
she died, not 33 years old, but her nervous system was
broken. Joseph Smith said she had lived her life so
fast. (He and Heber C. Kimball both spoke at her funeral
services.) He said her salvation was sure, that if she
had lived until she was one hundred years old, she could
not have done any more.
It was now
that the knowledge which I had gained at Brother
Murdock's was of such a benefit to me. My little baby
brother died the next winter, and my father eventually
married again, so my home was never home any more. Still
father was always ready to give his children good
council and advice at any time, but was so poor that he
was not able to help support us.
I used to
stay with my mother's relatives who lived in Iowa a
great deal and when they and their neighbors had their
wool to spin (everybody spun wool in these days), I
could always get work. I never worked out at housework,
but I used to spin a good deal for other people, making
my home at my uncle's.
Soon after
this, my father moved to Nauvoo, partly built a
two-story frame house, and got things around him so they
could comfortably live again. But the lady he had
married was so different from my mother. Well, I guess
she did the best she could, but she had no management,
and my mother was such a fine woman to manage and keep
things going along. This made it very hard for father.
He would work on his house part of the time. He worked
on it until he got one room so they could live in it,
then he would work on the temple, which took the
greatest part of his time.
At this
time, the persecutions commenced to rage again. The
Prophet Joseph's life was threatened. He was arrested
many times, but there never was anything found against
him. Finally in 1844, he saw that he could not stand it
much longer, so he planned to leave and go to the Rocky
Mountains. But his family persuaded him not to do so, as
they thought it was cowardly to leave his church and
family. So he came back and decided to stay and let the
consequences be what they would. In the meantime,
Governor Ford had ordered his arrest.
At this time
I was 15 years old; I was almost everywhere there was
anything to be seen. I saw the Prophet when he was
standing on the frame of a building delivering his last
speech to the Nauvoo Legion.
When he
found he had to go to Carthage, he wanted a man by the
name of Rosecrantz, who was well acquainted with the
governor, to go with him. He sent word by Mr. Rosecrantz,
asking me if I would go and stay with Mr. Rosecrantz's
sick wife while he went to Carthage with him. I went to
stay with Mrs. Rosecrantz, and as they were going, they
called at the gate with their company of about 20 men,
and Joseph Smith asked me if I would bring them out a
drink of water. I took a pitcher and glass and went out
and gave them a drink. The Prophet said to me, "Lord
bless you. You shall have a disciple's reward." This was
the last time I ever saw him alive.
When they
got to Carthage, the governor put the Prophet, Hyrum
Smith, Willard Richards and John Taylor in prison. Of
course, now Mr. Rosecrantz could do no more good so he
returned home, while many of the brethren stayed to see
how things were going. I went home to father's place.
Then came the awful tragedy of his murder. When the sad
news came to Nauvoo, the Saints were all plunged in
grief, not knowing what to do.
The next day
the Nauvoo Legion went part way to Carthage to meet the
bodies. The inhabitants were all out in the streets, on
the housetops and everywhere to see if they could get
just a glimpse of him. But he was in a new wagon, which
had no cover other than green bushes which had been laid
over the top of the box. Hence, they could not see him.
As they drove around to the mansion (the Prophet's
home), the people were almost frantic to get one little
glimpse of him, but they were driven back by the
marshall. The wagon was driven inside of the back gate
and the gate was locked. No one was allowed in the yard
except the guards and the Prophet's special friends.
The traitors
were in high glee.
My father
was at the mansion all night, doing what he could to
help them. In the morning he came up early and told me
that if I would get up I could go down, as he had gotten
permission for me to see Joseph and Hyrum Smith as they
lay at their home. I went down, saw them and laid my
hand on Joseph's forehead. The blood was oozing out of
the wound in his shoulder, and the sheet that was around
him was stained with blood. Still he looked very
natural; Hyrum had been shot in the face and therefore
he did not look very natural. The funeral was held at
one o'clock that day. The Saints were all allowed to go
and view the remains after they were dressed.
My father
was still working on the temple. Every able-bodied man
was needed to work on it in order to get it completed,
so that the Saints could receive their ordinances. He
worked all the next fall and winter, during which time
the excitement grew worse. The mob burned houses and
drove the Saints from other settlements into Nauvoo.
In the
meantime, Brigham Young was appointed to lead the
Saints. The enemy issued orders for him to be arrested,
so he could not hold public meetings nor be on the
streets very much.
On January
6, 1845, after considerable deliberation, I embraced the
principal of celestial marriage. I was married to
Charles C. Rich with the full consent of his first wife,
I being his third wife. We lived in the hope of soon
moving to the Rocky Mountains, where we could enjoy the
rights and liberties of our religion.
The temple
now being almost completed, our enemies were raging. The
Saints had to guard the temple night and day to keep it
from being destroyed. Early in the fall of 1845, the
enemy came in determined to exterminate or drive the
Latter-day Saints out of the United States. Seeing there
was no other way for them, the Saints met with the
officers of the enemy and surrendered their arms, and
made a promise that they would leave the next spring.
They thought during that winter they could have their
endowments and do a great deal of work in the temple.
As soon as
possible, the temple was opened and dedicated to the
Lord. They opened it to all the worthy Saints, and gave
their endowments, sealings and ordinances to just as
many as it was possible. This only enraged the enemy
more. There were Saints working in the temple every day
except Saturdays, and a greater part of the night,
giving endowments until the first of February. During
the winter every able-bodied person was making wagons,
clothing and preparing for the journey, as they expected
to start by spring for the Rocky Mountains. On the first
of February [1846] the temple was closed and everything
was taken down. The spirit of the Lord was greatly
manifested during that winter, and we all enjoyed the
privilege of having our endowments and sealings. I
received all these blessings in the Nauvoo Temple in
common with my husband and family.
On the 12th
day of February [1846], my husband prepared two wagons
loaded with provisions, ready to start. He decided to
have me leave and take the wagons (I had two boys to
drive them) to the Iowa side to my uncle's, E. T. Clark.
Then as quickly as he could get ready, he would bring
the rest of his family and effects. He then had no feed
for his cattle. We crossed the river at Montrose and
went seven miles to my uncle's and stayed there one
week. Then my husband and his family arrived, that is,
all except one wife whom he left with her baby but a few
days old in Nauvoo with her mother. My father could not
come at that time. He had to wait until the next summer
on account of means.
We went from
my uncle's to my husband's father's, Joseph Rich. We
stayed there a week until the company was ready to leave
Sugar Creek, which was where the main company was
camped. Then we started on our journey to the Rocky
Mountains in earnest, traveling every day, more or less.
It rained and snowed and we had a terrible spring.
Finally we arrived at Mt. Pisgah, which is located on a
fork of the Grand River. Here the whole company stopped
for nearly a month. This was in April, and they decided
to have some of the Saints stay there. My husband and
family were called to stop and look after the Saints
that were left here. Father Huntington was appointed
president and Mr. Rich was his councilor, but Mr.
Huntington was very old and feeble so could not do much.
He was soon taken sick and died, leaving the whole care
of the company on my husband.
[Rich, Mary
A. Phelps, 1829-1912. Autobiography (1829-1846) by Mary
A. Phelps Rich, "The Life of Mary A. Rich," typescript,
BYU.]
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