wenglund wrote:
The one piece of relevant corroborating evidence is a record of an unclaimed letter in Pittsburg,
addressed to Rigdon, and dated the end of June of the very year that Spalding died in Amity, PA.
Who knows if or when Rigdon may have eventual retrieved the letter?...
Actually, as you have just cited in your previous paragraph, there were more than one such letter.
Either the letters were eventually picked up (and that is why they were no longer advertised in the letter
lists) -- or they were destroyed as unclaimed mail by the tiny Pittsburgh Post Office. Either way, the
letter lists (including one with Spalding's and Rigdon's names) show that somebody, somewhere, expected
to be able to reach Sidney Rigdon at that Pittsburgh Post Office.
We have another such letter addressed to Rigdon, in a letter list for Manchester, New York, from early 1831.
The fact that somebody expected to be able to reach Sidney Rigdon in Manchester at that time does not
prove that Rigdon ever went there -- not even Partridge's account of he and Rigdon going there proves
anything. But such evidence can become cumulative, when it opens our minds to possibilities. When we say
to ourselves "It is possible that Rigdon visited Manchester at the end of 1830," then we will generally conduct
our research differently, than if we begin by saying "It is impossible..." Our having the 1831 letter list from
the Manchester Post Office adds credibility to Partridge's statement -- just as our having the 1816 list adds
credibility to the Eichbaum statement. In each case, the enhanced credibility ought to encourage us to conduct
further, careful investigations.
For example, a Jan. 1st 1831 Palmyra newspaper quib mentions Rigdon having been there and having preached
from the Gold Bible --- the Manchester letter list was what prompted me to search out the Palmyra newspaper --
and the Palmyra newspaper mention caused me to take more seriously the later Tucker account of Rigdon having
preached the first Mormon sermon in Palmyra, before he even went to Kingdon to meet Joseph Smith.
That is what I mean by "cumulative."
I spoke with Roper on the phone for an extended time -- he did not seem much interested in asking anybody in
the Pittsburgh area to conduct any further research into Sidney Rigdon's possible presence there. I find that
reaction disappointing -- and I ask myself, how much MORE evidence will scholars like Roper have to encounter,
before they are compelled to do some research of their own?
Here are some "what-ifs" and perhaps you can tell me if any of them would provide the incentive I speak of.
1. What if Rigdon's name could be found in the records of a pre-1817 Pittsburgh lending library?
2. What if Rigdon's name could be found in the pre-1817 accounts ledger for a Pittsburgh publisher?
3. What if Rigdon's name could be found in the preserved papers of his Aunt Mary Rigdon of Amity, PA?
4. What if Rigdon's name could be found in the pre-1817 records of a Pittsburgh area tannery, as an apprentice?
5. What if Rigdon's name could be found in the pre-1817 records of the Pittsburgh Steam Paper Mill?
6. What if Rigdon's name could be found in pre-1817 legal or police records from Pittsburgh?
7. What if an account can be found, by a person who claims to have known Rigdon in Pittsburgh prior to 1817?
Would any such discovery -- or even all of the above added together -- provide sufficient incentive for a single
Mormon scholar to spend a single hour conducting research on this matter in primary source material?
If not, then we can safely assume that any new discoveries along these lines will be explained away among the
LDS scholars and apologists, as being unreliable -- because they have been published by non-Mormons. I was
told by F. Mark McKeirnan once, that he would look at nothing related by Hurlbut, Howe or Deming, no matter
how important I thought the information they supplied might be. Mark only browsed Howe in the most superficial
manner, and would not credit a word coming from any "darned old anti-Mormon."
We sometimes hear LDS/RLDS scholars pointing to Sidney Rigdon's strange 1839 letter of denial in the Quincy Whig;
but how often will the same scholars take the trouble to read on a few pages in the same 1839 newspaper, to this:
"Messrs. Editors: I saw in your last number an article signed S. Rigdon... since it has appeared,
having a personal knowledge of some of the matters to which he adverts, I deem it proper to reply...
Now, I ask the candid reader to compare the logic, the sentiment, and the spirit of the article with that
of the gospel and he will find that it gives the [lie] to Rigdon's pretence to a preacher of righteousness.
Moreover, it evinces the strongest presumptive evidence that he is guilty of the crime with which he is
charged. In addition to the presumptive evidence, we have proof of the positive kind, showing that he is
void of moral honesty. With all of his precaution to keep back the date of his residence at Pittsburgh,
he does not reach the end of his introductory paragraph, before he betrays himself and tells a palpable
falsehood, which is manifest to every reader.... Yes, Rigdon lied . -- What a Saint!"
http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/IL ... 9.htm#0629
Here is a person who claims to have "personal knowledge" Rigdon and about Rigdon's alleged activities
or connections in Pittsburgh -- and yet I have never yet seen a single Mormon acknowledge the reply --
much less suggest that it be investigated -- and even less than that, look into the "W. Patten" evidence.
This is but one small (almost insignificant) example of a historical "lead" that somebody might follow up on.
Take my 7 "what if" examples given above, and add the "what if Patton's name was there also?" idea. Would
that be enough evidence to warrant further investigation by the Mormons themselves?
Is ANY of this stuff worthy following up? The answer I have received in the RLDS Church for almost 30 years
has been ----- "No, not unless it makes us look good and our enemies look bad."
Will the Saints ever get beyond that sort of thinking, and get out ahead of the Spalding-Rigdon advocates,
with proactive investigative reporting of their own?
Dale