“The scene was too horrible and sickening for language to describe. Human skeletons, disjointed bones, ghastly skulls and the hair of women were scattered in frightful profusion over a distance of two miles.” This was the account of a traveler passing through Mountain Meadows, in the Utah Territory, in 1859, two years after the worst massacre of American civilians in nineteenth century .
The 1850’s were a tumultuous time for the Mormon settlers, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in the western territories. Under the leadership of prophet Brigham Young, whom some called the “Mormon Moses”, they had escaped the persecution of the “American Gentiles”. It was in Utah that they had decided to make their stand, and they were now in a declared war against the United States of America.
In the autumn of 1857 the Fancher-Baker party, a wagon train of over 140 Arkansan men, women and children was making its way across the Utah Territory on its way to California. By all accounts it was one of the richest and best equipped wagon trains of the era, with nearly 1,000 head of cattle and several horses. The journey west had been a long one, though, and when the party reached the Salt Lake City area, its supplies ran low.
There were many children in the Fancher-Baker party. Five year-old Kit Carson Fancher and his twenty-two month old sister Tryphania were the youngest of Captain Alexander “Piney” Fancher’s nine children. As it would turn out, their infancy would be what saved their lives.
Word reached the outlying Mormon settlements that the wealthy wagon train would soon be passing through. The Mormons knew that the Fancher-Baker party would need to water its cattle and horses at Mountain Meadows, a relatively unprotected area. That is where they planned for their ambush to take place. A group of 50 men, led by local Mormon militia leaders Isaac C. Haight and John D. Lee disguised themselves as Paiute tribesmen, and set off to the hills surrounding the meadow.
In the early morning of September 7, 1857, the Mormons began to shooting at the unsuspecting Gentiles as they regrouped by the stream that ran through the meadow. Seven men in Fancher-Baker party were killed and sixteen were wounded in this first siege, but the survivors were able to quickly circle the wagons and arm themselves. They sunk the wagon wheels deep into the ground and chained them together creating a barrier. The party was able to hold off their attackers, but after four days they had no access to food or fresh water, and their ammunition was running low.
On September 11th, two Mormon militiamen approached the besieged emigrants with a white flag. They told the wagon train leaders that they had negotiated with the Indians, and that the Indians would allow them safe passage out of the valley under Mormon protection in exchange for all of their livestock. Accepting this, the emigrants were lead out of their fortification.
When the Americans left their enclosure, a signal was given and every male member of the Fancher-Baker was executed by the Mormon militia member standing by his side. The women and children were then raped and slaughtered. According to Mormon teachings, children under six years of age were considered “Innocent Blood”, and eighteen young children, including Kit and Trypahnia Fancher, were spared.
The bodies of the victims were gathered together, looted for valuables, and then left to rot on the open ground or in shallow graves. The cattle and wagon train supplies were taken to the Latter Day Saints tithing house and auctioned off. The eighteen children were taken by local Mormon families.
Two years later the children, with the exception of one girl who lived out her life amongst the Mormons, were reclaimed by the United States Army and reunited with their families. The Mormons demanded compensation for the time that the slaughter victims’ children were under their care.
Kit, who had been called “Charley” by the Mormons, and his sister Tryphania were raised by their cousin Hampton Bynum Fancher and his family in Osage, Arkansas. Five years old at the time of the massacre, he was quoted by Army investigators as saying “The men who killed my father were Indians, but when they washed their faces they were white men.”
Christopher “Kit” Carson Fancher died at only twenty years of age in the home of his cousin Hampton Fancher, and was buried in the historic Fancher-Sietz Cemetery in Osage.
Dude, I loved the story and connection. I need to read the last one, interestingly enough last week I was on a hunting trip in the Ozarks :-) Keep the great stories coming. Marty
ReplyDeleteMarty, catching the The Weekly Dash hot off the presses! Got any pics from the trip? Penguin hunting is only a couple of days away!
ReplyDeleteFrom Jeff (on Facebook):
ReplyDeleteThanks Adam!
Initial feedback: The link in your email is broken. At first I thought it must be so grizzly that your account got closed! :-)
I did look at http:theweeklydash.blogspot.com It's an amazing story and fantastic to find such a thing in one's geneology. The "good old days" could be pretty brutal. It's a story that one might expect to read happening in Afghanistan or Darfur, not in 19th century America.
Regards,
Jeff
"It's a damn poor mind that can only think of one way to spell a word." -- Andrew Jackson
Oops! Thank you, Jeff. I have since corrected the link on the email in question. I really appreciate you taking the time to find the site, despite the broken link.
ReplyDeleteI agree with your comment. I think that the history that we learn in school, or that our culture teaches us, is a pretty sanitized version.
Thanks for your window into our genealogical past. The Fancher name sounded familiar and then I made the connection at the end with your liniage. - Tom Loveday
ReplyDeleteTom, i didn't know about our link to the Fanchers until recently. It is still a common name in Arkansas, and the family is very involved in Mountain Meadows Massacre remembrances.
ReplyDeleteFrom Don (email):
ReplyDeleteAdam, awesome column dealing with the mormon massacre btw!
See ya!
Don
Jillian wrote (on Facebook):
ReplyDelete"Didn't realize you were writing a family biography. Very cool!"
Thanks Jillian - I'm doing it more as a collection of interesting non-fiction short stories. Everybody has these stories in their family history. The tricky part is finding them! Thanks so much for checking it out.
Pauline wrote (on Facebook):
ReplyDeleteI have seen the story of this attack on PBS, "The Mormons". You are right it is disturbing, but human history tends to be disturbing and enlightening in equal parts. I am intrigued that you have access to personal family history from this timeframe. You might say I am jealous because if it weren't for census , tax/land records and wills I would have nothing. I guess it helps that my farmer ancestors did not read or write.
Pauline: I couldn't agree with you more about the disturbing/enlightening nature of human history. As for your ancestry it is truly amazing how much you can piece together from census, tax/land records and wills. Without farmers their would be no civilization and no writing (the early alphabets were developed for agricultural accounting). I hope you continue to read The Weekly Dash. If you do you will see that
these stories turn up where you least expect them.
By the way, the mamaseekinginspiration post is from Sarah Conway. As you can see, my blogging has been much less frequent than yours already.
ReplyDeleteNot sure if it went through or not, so re-posting.
ReplyDeleteFascinating story about one of the westward pilgrimages, which I’ve always found interesting. I keep wondering if you have the most amazing lineage around, or if everyone’s past includes tales so striking.
Sarah: Thanks so much for checking out the blog, and for your words of encouragement. I am constantly amazed at how many incredible stories there are. I think that every family has them. You have 2 parents, 4 grandparents , 8 great grandparents, etc. There has to be some good stories out there somewhere. The trick is finding them!
ReplyDeleteI feel like I see you (and Ben!) everyday on FB. Say hi to everyone for me.
Adam, great article. Very informative and stimulating part of history. Johnny corcoran
ReplyDeleteThanks, Johnny C. (Check out Brooke's interview of Johnny on Reptilian Rantings. Now there's a guy with stories!)
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, Sarah, 3 months is too long to go between posts!
I read about the Mountain Meadows Massacre in "Under the banner of heaven" by Jon Krakauer. Now I can tie it into my family genealogy. I'm looking forward to the next, great story.
ReplyDeleteDan Loveday
Dan: I put a link to the new Krakauer book on Pat Tillman in the list of recommendations. I have not read this one yet, but I have been thoroughly impressed by all of his other books. (Some day maybe I will write books like that).
ReplyDeleteI also put up a link to the 1859 US Army Special Report on the Mountain Meadows Massacre. It is very gripping.
From Brooke (She posted the comment under "The Nation Could Scarcely Have Lived" but was referring to this post) what a horrifying story! i love that you have the report on here as well!
ReplyDeletegreat job!....b
Thanks for the feedback Brooke. Learning about a historical event, especially one as horrific as this one, that I had not known about before gives me goosebumps. Seeing the primary source material, even if it is something as clerical as a draft card or a census record is thrilling - the 1860 census shows the children Kit and Tryphania living with their cousin and notes that they are"Survivors of the M Meadows Massacre, UT". It is even more chilling when the source material is a detailed narrative, like Maj. Carleton's report.
Great story Adam! Can't believe that was done in the name of a church
ReplyDeleteTo Tim: Thanks for reading it. Every religion, every denomination, every atheist philosophy has committed atrocities in the name of God or, of some higher principle. If these people didn't believe they were doing these horrific things because they were fulfilling God's will, how else could they justify it to themselves. In these times of religious conflict, I think its especially important to remember that terrible things were being done close to home in our not to distant past.
ReplyDeleteI got in touch with Kathy Fancher through Facebook. She and her friend Allison are on the Board of the Mountain Meadows Association. Below is the message that she wrote me:
ReplyDelete"Another interesting person is Captain James Lynch. He brought the surviving children back to Arkansas and later married Sarah Dunlap, one of the surviving children who was crippled and blind from the massacre. A true love story!
Allison and I also serve on the Board of Directors of the Mountain Meadows Association. http://www.mtn-meadows-assoc.com/
There will be a hearing in Washington in November for National Landmark Status and we can use all the letter writers we can!
When I was a little girl, my Dad took us on a trip to the Redwood Forest before he left for Viet Nam. In a little gift shop, there was a book called "The Fancher Train". It is historical fiction but it is one of my most treasured items. That is how we first became aware of the massacre."
Mountain Meadows Association
www.mtn-meadows-assoc.com
Mountain Meadows Massacre. Records, history, monuments, information and links on the September 11, 1857 Massacre at Mountain Meadows of more than 120 Arkansas emigrants while traveling through Utah on their way to California. Largest collection of records and information on the Mountain Meadows Mass...
The Fancher website address is
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~fancher/