why me wrote:And I have the same problem with Uncle Dale's idea. I find it all unimaginable that so many people were
involved in the fraud. And the logistics of it.
Now I am not saying that your theory couldn't hold water...I am just saying that my creative and
imaginative mind has trouble to grasp your concepts and Uncle Dale's as I put them into real lived life.
We have had this discussion before, why me -- I keep saying that the Spalding Rigdon explanatuon for the
authorship of the Book of Mormon is predictive and that by following its chain of evidence we can uncover
more, hitherto uncited supporting evidence. Each time I have challenged you to join in this search to try
and uncover such new source material, you have broken off our conversation, or changed its subject.
I am not asking you to spend long hours in dusty library back-rooms, far from your home -- or even to spend
much beyond what a couple of family nights at the movies might cost. Much of this sort of research can be
done by "mail-order," and will take up less than an hour of your weeks, each month. When you have the
experience of making new "finds" yourself, of Rigdon's 1820s activities, or related matters, you will see -- I hope.
Take, for example, the early 1846 published claim of Thurlow Weed, who had previously interacted with Joseph Smith
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/NY/miscNYSi.htm#010046 -- Mr. Weed says:
"In 1824 or 1825, he [Joseph Smith] went a vagabonding off into western Pennsylvania, where, nobody knows how,
he got possession of the manuscript of a half-deranged clergyman, with which he returned to Palmyra, where
he pretended that he was directed in a dream to a particular spot in the woods..."
How might we follow up on this potential "lead," in order to help us determine whether Weed was talking from
knowledge or from speculation? Would it not be worth our while to try and locate an earlier instance of the same
report (preferably from Weed himself) and to make attempts to compare the allegations to other reports of Joseph Smith's
early, secretive activities? If I could show you an 1830 example of the same story (or, better yet, you could find
it for yourself) in Mr. Weed's unpublished correspondence --- would that not make the "unimaginable" more real?
In the preserved record of his 1826 trial, Joseph Smith reportedly told of a westward trip he had recently taken, to the border
of PA (or beyond), to get a seer stone.
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/NY/miscNYSi.htm#010046
How might we research this allegation, in light of Mr. Weed's report?
In 1877, John P. Greene, who had operated a hotel in Batavia, NY, reported that he had encountered Joseph Smith at an early
date, and that the young fortune-teller and treasure-seeker "seemed to be thoroughly acquainted with the route
from Canandaigua to Buffalo."
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/NY ... htm#010046
How might we conduct further research to determine whether Greene ever did encounter Joseph Smith in western NY?
From the 1945 Carl M. Brewster manuscript, I have taken notes on the allegation that Joseph Smith came to Auburn twp. in
southern Geauga Co., Ohio (in company with Porter Rockwell) in about 1825 to consult with a local treasure-seeker
named Stafford, who had previously lived in Manchester twp., Ontario Co., NY.
How might we determine which members of the STafford family were actually living in that place at the time?
In an 1831 article, written from interviews conducted in and around Palmyra, NY, the traveling journalist J. G. Bennett
reported the story that treasure-seekers associated with the Mancherster Smith family had sent one of their number
westward to Ohio at an early date, to "fetch" a fellow from that state who "had much experience in money digging."
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/NY/courier.htm#083131
How might we conduct some research to see where treasure-digging was going on in Ohio during the mid-1820s?
How might we determine whether or not members of the extended Stafford family were so engaged in Ohio?
Prof. Brewster also points out early Ohio newspaper reports, saying that Joseph Smith had come to Auburn twp., Geauga Co.,
Ohio, in search of a fellow treasure-digger (or words to that effect) and that he brought with him Porter Rockwell,
whose sister was married to one of these Staffords, and who in 1830 herself moved to Auburn. twp. I have located
one of Brewster's sources:
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/OH ... htm#120968
How might we determine if an earlier article in the same newspaper gave more information about Joseph Smith being in Auburn?
A member of an early pioneer family in Auburn, George Wilber, reportedly took a school-teaching job across the
township line in Bainbridge township, (about 4 miles to the west of his home) in 1825-26, and that he there met Rigdon:
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/OH ... htm#031486
How might we determine whether Mr. Wilber actually taught at that school and whether Rigdon's cabin was next door?
George Wilber also says that Joseph Smith, Jr. was then in the area, and that Joseph Smith also met with Rigdon.
How might we determine whether this encounter was possible (Rigdon's cabin being about 6 miles west of the Staffords)
and how might we go about locating early supporting evidence to help us determine whether it was even possible for
Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon to have both been in the Auburn-Bainbridge part of Geauga Co., Ohio in 1825-26 and which
members of the Stafford family (which Richard L. Bushman identifies as money-diggers) were then living in that area?
The nursemaid for the Rigdon children, Dency Thompson Henry, reportedly witnessed what appears to have been
automatic writing in Rigdon's Bainbridge cabin:
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/NW/miscnw04.htm#090980
Her recollection evidently was that "that there was in the family what is now called a "writing medium," also several others
in adjacent places, and the Mormon Bible was written by two or three different persons by an automatic power which
they believed was inspiration direct from God."
How might we conduct research to determine if there were early reports of automatic writing going on "in adjacent places,"
such as among the Staffords in adjacent Auburn twp.? How can we verify that Miss Thompson lived with the Rigdons?
You see -- I have here presented you with a dozen possible "leads" that you yourself can attempt to follow up on. And I
assure you that there is more relevant information than I have outlined here, on events in Auburn, Bainbridge, Joseph Smith trips
to the west, the "fetching" of a treasure-seer back to Palmyra from Ohio, etc. etc. Looking on from a distance you can
say that all of these bits and pieces of history are probably phoney and that they do not at all tie together. But were you
to become involved in the search for additional historical information of this type, I think the Spalding-Rigdon-Smith
connections would become more and more "imaginable" to you with each new discovery you made.
In her 1945 Joseph Smith biography, Fawn M. Brodie asserts that Sidney Rigdon could have never confessed any involvement in
the production of the Book of Mormon, because he never lived in St. Louis. No doubt you and others have read and
accepted Brodie's words as gospel truth. But you also know that I have pointed out a witness who testifies that Rigdon
divulged exactly this sort of information to him in St. Louis, as Rigdon was on his way back to Pittsburgh, after having
been excommunicated at Nauvoo. You know that I have given contemporary Mormon published sources, saying that
Rigdon was at that very time renouncing and denouncing Mormonism in Missouri. And yet you have repeatedly said to
me that you cannot believe Rigdon ever made the confession, that he and Joseph Smith used to meet in Ohio and there worked
together on Sundays, preparing the Book of Mormon from Spalding's manuscript(s).
Here is a matter you can easily research for yourself -- and it will take little of your time or money. I challenge you
to do some follow up investigation of Mr. Jeffery and his testimony, and, if after doing that, you can sincerely say that
you believe what Fawn Brodie said was true, I will excuse you from ever having to hear of such stuff from me again:
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/PA ... htm#021384
http://solomonspalding.com/Lib/Brd1945b.htm#pg429a
Think of the benefits, why me, if you can say that you still believe Brodie, you will not have to hear me arguing that
Sidney Rigdon was writing pseudo-scriptural rhetoric as early as 1824, nor that the Rev. Lawrence Greatrake
accused him in a pamphlet published two years later, of consorting with a crystal-gazer and confidence man in Auburn
twp., Geauga Co., Ohio. That should make your life far easier, from here on out -- fully "imaginable," no?
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/1824Scot.htm#page36a
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/1836Grtk.htm
etc. etc. etc.
Dale