Roger wrote:...
The significance is that Rigdon's name appears on the notice and that Rigdon was picking up mail at the Pittsburgh post office as early as 1816, as Eichbaum claimed.
...
Three supporting facts:
1. Rigdon's son said that Sidney had preached in Pittsburgh
before the family's 1822 relocation to that (then) small city.
2. Rigdon's relatives said that Sidney "returned" to Pittsburgh
when he moved there in 1822 -- showing that he had been
in Pittsburgh prior to 1822.
3. When Apostle John E. Page interviewed Robert Patterson, Sr.
in 1842, Patterson mentioned that Rigdon was not connected
with the bookselling business until after 1816. In other words,
Rigdon's connection evidently came after the firm was split
up in 1818 and J.H. Lambdin was running the business, apart
from Patterson's control.
No it wasn't. Rigdon and Lambdin had been friends before she married Lambdin and Rigdon had moved on before then as well. Lambdin was dead at the time of the interview. She could not testify to what she didn't know. Lucky break for Rigdon.
Lambdin's wife would have had an opportunity to meet Sidney
during the period that he was a preacher in Pittsburgh --
before he moved out of town near the end of 1825. However,
if Mr. Lambdin never brought Sidney home for Sunday dinner,
or some other social occasion, there was no particular reason
that Mrs. Lambdin SHOULD have ever met Sidney Rigdon.
Rigdon's connection with the Pittsburgh bookselling business
would have been after its break-up in 1818 and before Sidney
moved out of Pittsburgh in 1825. We have two bits of testimony
showing that Sidney was selling leather book-bindings to the
printing firm run by Silas Engles during this period. Lambdin and
Engles had been associated before the publishing firm broke up
and Lambdin had been a partner in his own printing business
with Mr. Butler prior to 1825.
It is therefore possible that the "journeyman tanner," Sidney
Rigdon, was also selling leather book-bindings to Mr. Lambdin,
in 1823-25. By then Lambdin was out of the publishing business,
but was operating a book and stationery store. He may have
needed leather sheets to bind up some unbound volumes left
over from his defunct printing business -- or to make blank
page journals -- or, perhaps to do custom binding of sets
of pamphlets, almanacs, etc.
If "journeyman tanner" Sidney Rigdon was occasionally
supplying leather book-bindings to BOTH Silas Engles AND
J.H. Lambdin in 1823-25, that fact would explain why
Rev. Patterson had reported Sidney's connection with the
Pittsburgh book-selling business occurred after 1816.
If J.H. Lambdin's wife (who had moved to Pittsburgh from
out-of-town) was a Presbyterian (like her husband), she
would have had no occasion to hear the fallen Baptist
Elder (and journeyman tanner) Sidney Rigdon preaching
his Campbellite doctrines in 1823-25. Mrs. Lambdin may have
been vaguely aware that the local Baptists were all stirred
up and broken into factions -- but it is entirely possible
that she was uninterested in such religious news and
never bothered to find out the details. She may never had
any reason to ask her husband, "is the leader of these
troublesome Campbellites somebody you know?"
My guess is that Rigdon's "connection" with what was left
of the old Patterson book and stationery business during
1823-25 may have been marginal and occasional, and that
he was not an intimate friend of J.H. Lambdin by then.
My question is ----> Was young Sidney Rigdon bringing
leather book-bindings into Pittsburgh BEFORE 1816, when
he had not yet advanced from an apprentice to journeyman?
Unfortunately we know nothing about Sidney's apprenticeship
in the leather tanning and finishing trade. It probably was
accomplished part-time, while he was still a farmboy on his
father's farm outside of Pittsburgh.
UD