Glenn:
Not coming around at all. You misunderstood what I was saying. When Aron Wright saw the manuscript, he was faced with the truth of the matter, that what he had been led into believing was not the reality. The Nehemiah King story was convenient, because it could not be verified.
So you are now adopting "the S/R witnesses were liars" approach. I get it. It's not perfect, but it's a start. It's certainly better than trying to maintain group false memories. The problem you will run into is that more people keep joining the conspiracy, but I suppose you can simply chalk that up to widespread anti-Mormonism.
I also suppose you can consider the Nehemiah King story a convenient account considering King had recently passed away but if that were the case, Wright knew his testimony could be refuted by others. He must have realized he was taking a gamble. I think it would also be a pretty callous lie to blame your long-time recently departed friend and colleague when you are forced to come to grips with the fact that your own memory is faulty, but of course, in your reconstruction, the amiable, well respected Wright was obviously a lying anti-Mormon bent on taking Smith down regardless of the truth, so why not also think of him as being willing to use the memory of his departed friend to serve his evil design?
The "letter" survived because Hurlbut gave it to Howe, unsigned. That was no miracle.
No it didn't. If Howe had it, he would surely have printed it. Instead, he makes a general claim:
The trunk referred to by the widow, was subsequently examined, and found to contain only a single M. S. book, in Spalding's hand-writing, containing about one quire of paper. This is a romance, purporting to have been translated from the Latin, found on 24 rolls of parchment in a cave, on the banks of the Conneaut Creek, but written in modern style, and giving a fabulous account of a ship's being driven upon the American coast, while proceeding from Rome to Britain, a short time previous to the Christian era, this country then being inhabited by the Indians. This old M. S. has been shown to several of the foregoing witnesses, who recognise it as Spalding's, he having told them that he had altered his first plan of writing, by going farther back with dates, and writing in the old scripture style, in order that it might appear more ancient. They say that it bears no resemblance to the "Manuscript Found."
The fact that we now have the Wright letter is a minor miracle. Given that it was merely a draft, it was used as a receipt after it's purpose as a draft was complete. It could then easily have been discarded. But it somehow survived, ending up in the Lake family, being donated to the museum Dale mentioned about a decade after the turn of the 20th century.
But, aside from rendering the false memory charge impotent, the other main significance is that it shows that Howe was not covering anything up and that when the manuscript you and Dan claim HAD TO HAVE BEEN the one these witnesses
were actually exposed to was shown to them, they then claimed "that it bears no resemblance to the "Manuscript Found."
So not only do we now have to conclude that they all suffered from the same false memories--and as marg points out, with a 100% success ratio(!)--we now are asked to believe that even when confronted with what you and Dan
are sure was the real manuscript, they simply lied and flat out denied it! And yet in all of this, they thought they were being sincere! --or I guess that's where you and Dan now part company.
What I am saying is that there would have been an uproar when the missionaries preached in Salem if there had been any suspicion that the Book of Mormon came from Solomon's pen. It would have been picked up by the papers. Some were quick to print any controversy concerning the Mormons. They certainly did after Hurbut came through with his allegations. Henry lake spread the word into neighboring counties after he had met with Hurlbut. One of the witnesses claimed to have remarked about the Book of Mormon being like Spalding's romance after he had heard his wife read from the Book of Mormon sometime in 1832. But the first we hear of it is when Hurlbut interviewed him. He made no noise about it at the time he allegedly made the connection.
There was certainly an unspecified uproar going on that even the LDS missionaries mention in their journals. But until Howe's book was published, there would have been nothing specific for papers to pick up on other than gossip. Howe's book changed all that by putting the allegations to writing.
But I'm not sure what good you think this latest claim does for your case? If no one noticed a resemblance to the Book of Mormon until Hurlbut came along, then you're back to blaming Hurlbut for getting these charges up. Is that what you want?
The key question, Glenn, is do you believe John and Martha Spalding were telling the truth as they believed it to be, or not?
That is conceding what? The LDS missionaries ran into opposition everywhere they preached, not just in the Conneaut, Ohio area.
I deleted Dale's musings. But he has noted the Erastus Rudd was among those that did join the Church in the area. Daniel Tyler stated that much of the Spalding romance was written at Rudd's home. If that were true, Rudd obviously did not see the connection reported by the Conneaut Eight.
Here's what Dale said:
The fact remains that Erastus Rudd and Rosanna Jackson Rudd
became Mormons, while knowing that Spalding had written fiction
about the ancient Americans being the Ten Tribes of Israel. They
obviously were not much bothered by this fact. Their relative,
Abner Jackson, claimed to have known more about the story and
to know that it more closely resembled the Book of Mormon than
is explainable by sheer coincidence. Abner never became a Mormon.
All in all, I'd say that Winchester's vague quoting of an unidentified
"Mr. Jackson" does not add a single bit of knowledge to the Roman
story description published by Howe in 1834 -- and that Winchester
may well have been putting words into "Mr. Jackson's" mouth.
Yes, I have noted such. Even after his apostasy he still denied that Spalding had anything to do with the Book of Mormon. He was from the area himself. His 1840 pamphlet came after the publication of Howe's "Mormonism Unvailed", but there is one detail in his report that is not shown elsewhere, that Spalding's romance was a "small work" which accurately describes the Spalding manuscript.
Winchestor may have believed his own propaganda or he simply realized that to go against it, since he had so forcefully made it, would have damaged his own credibility.
That should be obvious. If there was never a manuscript in the printer's establishment or with Robert Patterson that matches the Book of Mormon story, there is no case. There has not even been a prima facie case for that.
Robert Patterson himself makes that case:
"R. Patterson had in his employment Silas Engles at the time a foreman printer, and general superintendent of the printing business. As he (S. E.) was an excellent scholar, as well as a good printer,
to him was entrusted the entire concerns of the office. He even decided on the propriety or otherwise of publishing manuscripts when offered -- as to their morality, scholarship, &c., &c. In this character he informed R. P. that a gentleman, from the East originally, had put into his hands a manuscript of a singular work,
chiefly in the style of our English translation of the Bible, and handed the copy to R. P., who read only a few pages, and finding nothing apparently exceptionable, he (R. P.) said to Engles, he might publish it, if the author furnished the funds or good security. He (the author) failing to comply with the terms, Mr. Engles returned the manuscript, as I supposed at that time, after it had been some weeks in his possession with other manuscripts in the office.
"This communication written and signed 2d April, 1842,
"ROBERT PATTERSON."
http://www.solomonspalding.com/docs/1842Wilm.htm#pg16b
"...a pious lie, you know, has a great deal more influence with an ignorant people than a profane one."
- Sidney Rigdon, as quoted in the Quincy Whig, June 8, 1839, vol 2 #6.