Item Detail
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8923
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10
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0
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English
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The Haun's Mill Massacre
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BYU Studies
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Autumn 1972
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13
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62-67
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"Jacob Haun's mill was one of several scattered along Shoal Creek. For about a year it had been the home of fifteen to twenty families of the Saints, and other Church members in the area used it for grinding their grain. It had also become a stopping place for those migrating to Caldwell County from Kirtland. Although few Saints had settled in Livingstone County or Carroll County to the east, and although the mill was inside Caldwell County, it was close to the borders and threatened to become a center for the Mormon population that might spill over into gentile territory. This article attempts to recount the events, known as the Haun's Mill Massacre, which took place here on that horrible October day in 1838, even though those events may be beyond our understanding." [Publisher's abstract]
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Alexander William Doniphan and the 1838 Mormon War in Missouri
Blood of the Prophets : Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows
In Sacred Loneliness: The Documents
Mormon Enigma : Emma Hale Smith
Mormon Land Rights in Caldwell and Daviess Counties and the Mormon Conflict of 1838 : New Findings and New Understandings
National Culture, Personality, and Theocracy in the Early Mormon Culture of Violence
Search for Asylum : The Mormons Petition the Kentucky Governor, 1845
The Haun's Mill Massacre and the Extermination Order of Missouri Governor Lilburn W. Boggs
The Last Months of Mormonism in Missouri : The Albert Perry Rockwood Journal
The Millenarian World of Early Mormonism