Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Carthage

This morning we left for Carthage Jail.  I liked this painting in the visitor's center.  It shows how much of the Nauvoo temple was built when Joseph and Hyrum went to Carthage.  Too bad they never were able to see it finished.  They definitely knew they would be killed.  Five days before he died Joseph Smith told Stephen Markham, "if I and Hyrum were ever taken again we should be massacred or I was not a prophet of God."
Joseph and Hyrum were falsely imprisoned for treason.  They had put Nauvoo under Marshall Law in order to protect the Saints.  This is the reason they were charged with treason, which makes no sense. It was the first time anyone had been charged with treason by the state and not the federal government.  There was no bail for treason.  The jailers at Carthage were incredibly nice.  They invited Joseph and his friends to eat with their family.  They felt that the downstairs jail cell was not safe, so they gave the men their bedroom.
Family dining room at Carthage  
Bullet hole that killed Hyrum
Floor of the bedroom jail
Mike, Jorja, Maysen, Stockton
This is the window Joseph fell from
Stephanie, Jorja, Preston, Mike, Maysen, Stockton
Joseph fell from this second story window
Joseph had asked Governor Ford to stay in town.  He felt he would be safe if the governor was in town.  Instead the governor went to Nauvoo. He was even fed by Emma while he was there.  My dad found a book written by Governon Thomas Ford titled History of Illinois (1818-1847) He wrote this in the book: At the death of the prophet, fourteen years after the Mormon Church was organized, the Mormons in all the world numbered about two hundred thousand souls; a number equal, perhaps to the number of Christians, when the Christian Church was of the same age.  It is to be feared that, in course of a century, some gifted man like Paul...may command a hearing...and make the name of the martyred Joseph Smith ring as loud, and stir the souls of men as much, as the mighty name of Christ itself.  Sharon, Palmyra, Kirtland, Far West, Nauvoo, and the Carthage Jail, may become holy and venerable names, places of classic interest, in another age; like Jerusalem, the Garden of Gethsemane, the Mount of Olives, and Mount Calvary to the Christian.  And in that event, the author of this history feels degraded by the reflection, that the humble governor of an obscure State, who would otherwise be forgotten in a few years, stands a fair chance, like Pilate and Herod, by their official connection with the true religion, of being dragged down to posterity with an immortal name, hitched on to the memory of a miserable impostor.
Preston kept knocking of the statue of Joseph and Hyrum because he said it sounded hollow....except the hat.
Preston
Stockton and Preston humored me and recreated the statue of Joseph and Hyrum.  Two sets of brothers.
Preston & Stockton
Preston had an easier time keeping
a straight face than Stockton did.
I had them smile for this one
Preston wanted to do the pictures again holding
a book and a hat, just like the statue.
Stockton is so nice to him.
Preston kept his pose even after I took the book and hat and Stockton left.  I picked him up and pretend I was taking the statue with me.  He stayed stiff as he could until we got back to the motorhome.  He was laughing pretty hard though.
Preston Statue
This is the inn the mobsters celebrated
at after they killed Joseph and Hyrum
The Warsaw Signal that printed hateful things about the Mormons
We drove to Quincy and learned how in contrast to Warsaw, Quincy was friendly to the mormons.  Quincy was a town with a population of a couple of thousand.  There were probably seven thousand mormon refugees.  The town housed them through the winter.  It was Mayor Wood's idea.  Many more people would have died without the people of Quincy's help.  My dad says that the only town that didn't get touched by the civil war along the Mississippi River was Quincy Illinois.  There is a monument to the people of Quincy down by the river.  You can barely see the tip poking up.  We didn't go down there because it was raining like crazy!
We stopped at the Mark Twain museum in Hannibal.
Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn
Memorial that was never completed because of the cost
Preston white washing the fence
Preston convincing Jorja she wants to paint the fence
Jorja
Preston thought this sign was so funny
Sketch by Norman Rockwell
Painting by Norman Rockwell
Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher
We then drove to Adam-ondi-Ahman.  That was a fun place to be.  It is so beautiful.  The only thing that would have been better was if there hadn't been so many bees.  They weren't really bees, but there was this weird bug thing that was everywhere.  Mostly they bothered Stockton.
Maysen
Maysen & Mike
My dad teaching my kids
Preston & Jorja enjoyed the rabbits
Stockton, Stephanie, Maysen, Jorja, Mike, Preston
Pondering the past & future events that took place/will take place here
Stockton, Jorja, Mike, Preston, Stephanie, Maysen
My instagram post
The kids had a lot more fun with Mike's posts.  Notice Stockton starting to sneeze and then sneezing. Maysen is giving herself a high five.
Dad, Stephanie, Stockton, Jorja, Maysen, Preston
Dad, Stephanie, Stockton, Jorja, Maysen
Jorja had my camera for a bit.  Here are three of the pictures she took.
Stockton
Dad
Stephanie
Jorja
We drove to a different part of Adam-ondi-Ahman.  It is called Tower Hill.  It was really pretty.
The trees were so cool
Mike, Preston and I walked down to them
Mike
Preston taken a panorama picture
Maysen, Mike, Stephanie, Jorja, Preston, Stockton
With my dad added in
Dad
When we got back to the car we noticed a deformity on our motorhome.  Boo!  We think it happened when we were leaving Hannibal.  Mike guesses it was a street sign that we were parked near. Dang it!
Court house in Gallatin where Mormon's weren't allowed to vote
Preston & Stockton

No comments:

Post a Comment