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Launch me Salt Lake City › South-East Collection Title: The mysteries of Mormonism : a full exposure of its secret practices and hidden crimes / by an apostles wife ; fully illustrated Collection/Other Creator Trumble, Alfred Collection Created New York : Published by Richard K. Fox, proprietor Police gazette, c. 1882 Follow @SenateandHouse Analysis : Espionage, Malfeasance, Subversion, and Terror

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MORMONS: POLYGAMY, 1883. The Great Sin of the Century


MORMONS: POLYGAMY, 1883. The Great Sin of the Century.





Uncle Sam has difficulties enforcing the Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1882, which declared polygamy a felony and revoked the polygamists right to vote. Cartoon from an American newspaper of 1883.





The early (19th century) Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was oftentimes charged with crimes from lewd cohabitation to murder and assassinations.





The United States vs. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Federal Polygamy and Murder Charges Are Brought Against Brigham Young, Head of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1871)

Posted on 



Newspaper title:
Maine weekly state press
Date Original;
20 Nov 1871
Date Original: 


Search: 1871-11-20
Page Number: p. 5
Column 5
Size 3 ½ col. in. Publisher Original, Portland, Maine : N.A. Foster & Co.Title: 


The U.S. Court in Utah. Summary: Brigham Young and two other men have been charged for lewd and lascivious cohabitation. Young, and a number of other Latter-day Saint men have also been charged with murder. The court is engaged in a hearing on whether or not to overturn the murder charges against several Mormon men. Subject: Young, Brigham, 1801–1877—Trials, litigation, etc.
Polygamy—Cases—Utah
Trials (Murder)—Utah


Publisher: Digital Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University




The Up-to-date Father Goose


TitleUp-To-Date Father Goose
DescriptionJoseph Smith, Head of the Mormon Church, sits in a shoe labelled Polygamy crawling with children. The caption reads "There was an old man who lived in a shoe, He had so many children he didn't know what to do, He couldn't keep count - they just grew and grew- And before he hardly knew it, he had forty-two." Joseph F. Smith, President of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints, was the leader of the Mormon's in Utah, and claimed to oppose the practice of Polygamy. However, he had 42 children, and had previously had multiple wives. The issue had come to a head because of the election of Reed Smoot as senator from Utah, and concerns that he supported Polygamy.
SubjectPolygamy
Mormons -- United States
Smith, Joseph F., 1838-1918
Smith, Joseph
ArtistBartholomew, Charles Lewis 'Bart', 1869-1949
Date1904-03-08





Scalped on the Plains : Incidents in Mormon History : Image is from the Library of Congress






About this Item
Title:
Scalped on the plains incidents in Mormon history.

Summary:
Photograph shows two men, one wearing military uniform and holding reins of horse, kneeling next to a dead man's body. The dead body which has been scalped with a scalping knife, a hatchet, or another extremely sharp object or weapon, belongs to a deceased Mormon man. The backstory of the incident is unknown.

Contributor Names
Soule, William S. (William Stinson), 1836-1908, photographer
Created / Published
1868.

Subject Headings
- Mormons--History--Kansas--Fort Dodge--1860-1870
- Scalping--Kansas--Fort Dodge--1860-1870
- Dead persons--Kansas--Fort Dodge--1860-1870
Two (U.S.) soldiers kneeling over the dead body of a Mormon man who has been scalped on the plains somewhere in the United States of America, possibly in the Utah Territory (19th century).

Polygamists in striped prison uniforms including the politician George Q. Cannon


Polygamists in striped prison uniforms, including George Q. Cannon (center with cane), William Gimbert Saunders (second from right), and William Morley Black (right of Cannon with white beard). These men were also known as "Prisoners of Conscience." The men holding the prisoners in custody are likely jailers who are employed by the United States federal government.
Photo Number P0450n02
Keywords Utah; Mormons and Latter-Day Saints; Mormon History; Polygamy; Men; Portraits; Prison and prisoners; Jail
Subject Cannon, George Q. (George Quayle), 1827-1901--Photographs
Additional Information See Manuscript Accn 1224
Collection Number and Name P0450 George Q. Cannon Photograph Collection
Collection Name George Q. Cannon
Textual Date April 5, 1886





Item found on the University of Utah's digital library.






(Tribune file photo) Mormon (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Polygamists while incarcerated at the territorial prison in Salt Lake City.

Image found on the Salt Lake City Tribune Newspaper's Website. Circa 1880s.

Title: The balls are rolling - clear the track ---Creator(s): N. Currier (Firm),

Date Created/Published: N.Y. : For sale [by Nathaniel Currier] at no. 2 Spruce St., [1856]






Medium: 1 print on wove paper : lithograph ; image 29 x 40 cm.


Summary: A Republican boast, showing Fillmore (left) and Buchanan crushed by an electoral flood of giant balls inscribed with the names of northern and western states. Strewn on the ground around Fillmore and Buchanan are papers, "Border Ruffianism," "Kansas Bogus Laws," "Polygamy & Slavery," etc.--charges associated with the previous Democratic administration's handling of Kansas and the Mormon question. Here Buchanan is pressed beneath the "Cincinnati Platform" of the Democratic convention, while Fillmore holds two documents, the "Fugitive Slave Bill" (a measure he supported and stringently enforced while President) and an "Albany Speech." At the upper right is an eagle holding a banderole with Republican candidates' names "Fremont" and "Dayton." He clutches a bundled fasces with the words "Union," "Liberty," and "Constitution" on it. In the sky at right appears a rainbow with the party's motto: "Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Men & Fremont." At right a view into the distance shows a burning town in Kansas, fled by women and children. In the distance are the Rocky Mountains, a railroad train bound for California, and the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The giant balls may be intended to recall the giant ball of Locofocoism used to the derision of the Democrats in Whig cartoons of the 1840 presidential campaign. (See, for example, "The Almighty Lever," no. 1840-8.) Decidedly supportive of Fremont, the cartoon is the exception for Nathaniel Currier, who issued many harshly anti-Republican satires during the 1856 campaign. Currier seems more often to have sided with American party candidate Millard Fillmore. (Library of Congress)