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|Parley Chase | |Parley Chase | ||
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*That the Smith family was lazy, intemperate, worthless and addicted to lying. | *That the Smith family was "lazy," "intemperate," "worthless" and "addicted to lying." | ||
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|Willard Chase | |Willard Chase | ||
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|Henry Harris | |Henry Harris | ||
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*That the Smith family "labored very little." | |||
*That the Smith family primarily "dug for money." | |||
*The Joseph Smith, Jr. "pretended to tell fortunes." | |||
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|Lucy Harris | |Lucy Harris | ||
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|Barton Stafford | |Barton Stafford | ||
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*That Joseph Smith, Sr. was a "drunkard." | |||
*That Joseph Smith, Jr. was "addicted to intemperance." | |||
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|David Stafford | |David Stafford | ||
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*That Joseph Smith, Sr. was a "drunkard," a "liar," and a "gambler." | |||
*That the "general employment" of the Smith family was "money digging" and "fortune telling." | |||
*The Oliver Cowdery was a "worthless person" who was "not to be trusted." | |||
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|Joshua Stafford | |Joshua Stafford |
This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.
Many of Joseph Smith’s friends and neighbors signed affidavits that accused him and his family of being lazy, indolent, undependable treasure-seekers.
Many critics cite a collection of affidavits from Joseph Smith’s neighbors which claim that the Smith family possessed a number of character flaws. These affidavits were collected by “Doctor” Philastus Hurlbut,[1] who had been excommunicated from the Church on charges of "unvirtuous conduct with a young lady."[2] Hurlbut sold this material to Eber D. Howe, who published it in his anti-Mormon book Mormonism Unvailed in 1834. In addition to the Hurlbut affidavits, Mormonism Unvailed contained the first presentation of the Spalding theory of Book of Mormon origin. It is interesting to note that the Spalding theory was also based upon some of the affidavits gathered by Hurlbut. Some critics, such as Fawn Brodie, are selective in their acceptance of Hurlbut's affidavits—They readily accept affidavits that attack the character of the Smith family, yet admit that some "judicious prompting" by Hurlbut may have been involved in those affidavits that were gathered to support the Spalding theory.[3]
Howe's bias is evident throughout the book. He introduces the Smith family with the following:
Claimant | Claims | Source of information | Reliability of claimant as a source |
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Charles Anthon | |||
Thomas Campbell | |||
Joseph Capron | |||
Parley Chase |
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Willard Chase |
|
Joseph Smith, Senior. |
Third-hand. |
Matthew Clapp | |||
Lemon Copley | |||
Artemas Cunningham | |||
Matilda Davison | |||
Richard Ford | |||
Alva Hale | |||
Isaac Hale | |||
Abigail Harris | |||
Henry Harris |
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Lucy Harris | |||
Nahum Howard | |||
Peter Ingersoll | |||
Henry Lake | |||
Levi Lewis | |||
Nathaniel Lewis | |||
Sophia Lewis | |||
Hezekiah Mkune | |||
Joshua Mkune | |||
John Miller | |||
Roswell Nichols | |||
Robert Patterson | |||
W. W. Phelps | |||
Oliver Smith | |||
Barton Stafford |
| ||
David Stafford |
| ||
Joshua Stafford | |||
William Stafford | |||
G. W. Sotdard | |||
John Spalding | |||
Martha Spalding | |||
Aaron Wright |
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