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=={{Criticism label}} | {{Resource Title|Was 19th century Utah a hotbed of violence, murder, and lawlessness?}} | ||
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Critics charge that Utah was a hotbed of violence, murder, and lawlessness, and that this can be attributed to LDS doctrine and practices. | Critics charge that Utah was a hotbed of violence, murder, and lawlessness, and that this can be attributed to LDS doctrine and practices. | ||
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=={{Conclusion label}} | == == | ||
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This is not to say that there was not some violence in frontier Utah—of course there was, given the place and time. But, as one researcher noted: | This is not to say that there was not some violence in frontier Utah—of course there was, given the place and time. But, as one researcher noted: | ||
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:the point here is not to claim that no vigilante crimes by angry Mormons protecting their interests ever occurred in territorial Utah. The point is that overattention to such activities obscures the fact that they were very rare compared to elsewhere in the West, where no concerted effort to undermine a popularly supported government was going on as in Utah [by the federal government versus the Mormons].{{ref|eliason.3}} | :the point here is not to claim that no vigilante crimes by angry Mormons protecting their interests ever occurred in territorial Utah. The point is that overattention to such activities obscures the fact that they were very rare compared to elsewhere in the West, where no concerted effort to undermine a popularly supported government was going on as in Utah [by the federal government versus the Mormons].{{ref|eliason.3}} | ||
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{{SummaryItem | {{SummaryItem | ||
|link=Utah/Crime and violence/Castration in the 1800's | |link=Utah/Crime and violence/Castration in the 1800's |
Critics charge that Utah was a hotbed of violence, murder, and lawlessness, and that this can be attributed to LDS doctrine and practices.
To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, click here
This is not to say that there was not some violence in frontier Utah—of course there was, given the place and time. But, as one researcher noted:
Brigham Young is often accused of creating a 'culture of violence' with his incendiary speeches. That accusation would be hard to prove, given the comments below. He makes reference, in 1866, to a man who exhibited the garments to some non-members. Brigham's suggestions to the audience is interesting:
There is also a man down the street who tried to exhibit the endowments to a party who was here. You will see what becomes of that man. Do not touch him. He has forfeited every right and title to eternal life; but let him alone, and you will see by and by what will become of him. His heart will ache, and so will the heart of every apostate that fights against Zion; they will destroy themselves. It is a mistaken idea that God destroys people, or that the Saints wish to destroy them. It is not so.
1866 Brigham Young 12 August 1866 SLC Bowery Journal of Discourses 11:262.; DN 15:315.
This claim is generally based on taking anti-Mormon accounts uncritically, and relying on anecdotal evidence. Winnowed to its kernel," writes historian Thomas Alexander, "Bagley's argument [like Abanes' and most other critics in this vein] rests on the proposition that Mormon Utah was a society of officially sanctioned and publicly practiced violence." But, does the data reflect this? Alexander continues:
Contemporary observers that were not writing hostile anti-Mormon polemics recognized the truth of this as well:
Legal historian D. Michael Stewart underscored this when he remarked, "extralegal violence was rare compared to that found in other frontier communities."[4]
Non-member Franklin Buck described the difference between southern Utah and his own town of Pioche, Nevada in 1871:
== Notes ==
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