Roger, you are trying to get Dan to accept as "gospel" a statement that is unsigned and not in Aron Wright's handwriting. At this point in time, you are probably correct that false memory does not cut it any longer, hence the desperate attempt on his and coach Hurlbut's part to salvage some credibility.
It's good to see you are coming around, Glenn. It's only a matter of time before you'll be advocating for S/R with Dale, MCB and I. ; )
But as has been pointed out repeatedly, not one single document has been unearthed that indicates any controversy over the matter until Hurlbut raised the issue. All such "remembrances" are ex post facto.
Nehemiah King was already dead at the time so this statement of Wright's could not be verified. But there is absolutely no corroborating witnesses or documents.
Why would you expect anything previous to that? Who would have felt the need to write anything down at that point and what reason is there to think it should have survived? That the 1833 Wright letter survived is a minor miracle.
Wright and King were close friends and colleagues, by the way. Both were Justices of the Peace.
Ironically some of the journals of LDS missionaries provide clues, but, as might be expected are not specific as to what was the cause of the resistance they were receiving in that particular area in 1832.
For example, even Matt Roper concedes that:
In 1832, Samuel Smith and Orson Hyde traveled through northeastern Ohio and western Pennsylvania. On 2 February, Hyde and the Prophet's brother preached in Perry, Ohio, to "a large congregation, principally Campbellites; much prejudiced and hard against the work and they were much stirred up to oppose and to contend."[189] Nine days later they passed through Salem, Ohio: "Found some friendly and some enemies."[190] The next day, according to Samuel Smith, they preached to a congregation: "They paid good attention; were much disappointed in the things we declared unto them for they had heard much evil concerning this sect. They [the congregation] requested us to tarry and preach again, accordingly the next evening."[191]
http://maxwellinstitute.BYU.edu/publica ... 84#_ftn129
...and...
In speaking of the "great opposition" of 1832 in the Conneaut Creek area, LDS missionary Jared Carter does not say exactly why the new members had deserted the Mormon cause, or from whence this "great opposition" first sprung. The nearest population centers in those days were New Salem, Conneaut Twp., in OH (three miles west of the Rudd farm) and East Springfield (five miles east of the Rudds). As New Salem was the closer and larger of these villages, it is likely that the "great opposition" came from there. Whatever the original source may have been, this "great opposition" seems to have been influencing the newly-minted Springfield Mormons in their renunciations of membership during the spring of 1832.
http://olivercowdery.com/hurlbut/HChron1.htm
Benjamin Winchester's pamphlet on the matter is just as credible as that statement.
You are aware of Winchester's apostasy, correct?
However, unless you can establish that the manuscript that was reported to be delivered to the printing establishment twice, and twice returned was the mythical "second" manuscript, you have no case.
Why do you keep asserting this?
All the best.