Mormon History
Appeal to the Green Mountain Boys - 1844
Warsaw Message – January 17, 1844
General Joseph Smith's
Appeal to
the Green Mountain Boys.
I was born in Sharon, Vermont, in 1805, --
where the first quarter of my life grew with the growth & strengthened with the
strength of that "first-born" State of the "United Thirteen." From the old
"French War" to the final consummation of American Independence, my fathers,
heart to heart, and shoulder to shoulder, with the noble fathers of our liberty,
fought and bled; and with the most of that venerable band of patriots, they have
gone to rest, -- bequeathing a glorious country, with all her inherent rights,
to millions of posterity. Like other honest citizens, I not only (when manhood
came,) sought my own peace, prosperity, and happiness, but also the peace,
prosperity, and happiness of my friends; and, with all the rights and realm
before me, and the revelations of Jesus Christ to guide me into all truth, I had
good reasons to enter into the blessings and privileges of an American citizen;
-- the rights of a Green Mountain Boy, unmolested, and enjoy life and religion
according to the most virtuous and enlightened customs, rules, and etiquette of
the nineteenth century. But, to the disgrace of the United States, it is not so.
These rights and privileges, together with a large amount of property, have been
wrested from me, and thousands of my friends, by lawless mobs in Missouri,
supported by Executive authority; and the crime of plundering our property; and
the unconstitutional and barbarous act of our expulsion; and even the inhumanity
of murdering men, women, and children, have received the pass word of
"justifiable" by legislative enactments, and the horrid deeds, doleful and
disgraceful as they are, have been paid for by government.
In vain have we sought for redress of grievances and a restoration to our rights
in the Courts and Legislature of Missouri. In vain have we sought for our rights
and the remuneration for our property in the Halls of Congress, and at the hands
of the President. The only consolation yet experienced from these highest
tribunals and mercy seats of our bleeding country is, that our cause
is just, but the government has no power to redress us.
Our arms were forcibly taken from us by those Missouri marauders; and, in spite
of every effort to have them returned, the State of Missouri still retains them;
and the United States militia law, with this fact before the government, still
compels us to military duty; and, for a lack of said arms, the law forces us
to pay fines. As Shakespeare would say; "thereby hangs a tale."
Several hundred thousand dollars worth of land in Missouri was purchased at the
U.S. Land Offices in that district of country: and the money without doubt, has
been appropriated to strengthen the army and navy, or increase the power and
glory of the nation in some other way; and notwithstanding Missouri has robbed
and mobbed me and twelve or fifteen thousand innocent inhabitants murdered, and
hundreds expelled, the residue, at the point of the bayonet, without law,
contrary to the express language of the Constitution of the United States, and
every State in the Union; and contrary to the custom and usage of civilized
nations; and especially one holding up the motto: "The asylum of the
oppressed;" yet the comfort we receive to raise our wounded bodies, and
invigorate our troubled spirits, on account of such immense sacrifices of life,
property, patience, and right; and as an equivalent for the enormous taxes we
are compelled to pay to support the functionaries in a dignified manner, after
we have petitioned and pleaded with tears and been showed like a caravan of
foreign animals for the peculiar gratification of connoisseurs in humanity, that
flare along in public life, like lamps upon lamp-posts, because they are better
calculated for the schemes of the night than for the scenes of the day, is as
President Van Buren said, your cause is just, but the government has no power
to redress you!
No wonder, after the Pharisee's prayer, the Publican smote his breast and said,
Lord be merciful to me a sinner! What must the manacled nations think of
freemen's rights in the land of liberty?
Were I a Chaldean I would exclaim: Keed' nauh to-maroon lehoam elauhayaugh
deyshemayaugh veh aur kau lau gnaubadoo, yabadoo ma-ar'guauoomen tehoat
shemayaugh alah. (Thus shall we say unto them: The gods that have not made the
heavens and the earth, they shall perish from the earth, and from under these
heavens.)
An Egyptian: Sa e eh-ni: (What other persons are these?) A Grecian: Diabolas
basseleuei: (The Devil reigns.) A Frenchman: Messieurs sans Dieu, (Gentkemen
without Go.) A Turk: Ain shems: (The fountain of light.) A german: sie sind
unferstandig. (What consumate ignorance!) A Syrian: Zaubok. (Sacrifice!) A
Spaniard: Il sabio muda conscio, il nescio ne. (A wise man reflects, a fool does
not.) A Samaritian: Saunau! (O Stranger!) An Italian: O tempa! oh diffidanza! (O
the times! O the diffidence!) A Hebrew: Ajtaij aol raicu (Thou God seest me.) A
Dane: Hvnd tidende! (What tidings!) A Saxon: Hwaet riht! (What right!) A Swede:
Hvad skilla: (What skill!) A Polander: Nav-yen-wheo bah poa na Jesus Christus:
(Blessed be the name of Jesus Christ.) A Western Indian: She-mo-kah She-mo keh
ough-nepgab. (The white man, O the white man, he very uncertain.) A Roman:
Procul, o procul este profani! (Be off, be off ye profane!) But as I am I will
only add: when the wicked rule the people mourn.
Now, therefore, having failed in every attempt to obtain satisfaction at the
tribunals where all men seek for it, according to the rules of right: -- I am
compelled to appeal to the honor and patriotism of my native State: to the
clemency and valor of "Green Mountain Boys;" for, throughout the various periods
of the world, whenever a nation, kingdom, state, family, or individual has
received an insult or an injury from a superior force, (unless satisfaction was
made,) it has been the custom to call in the aid of friends to assist in
obtaining redress. For proof we have only to refer to the recovery of Lot and
his effects by Abraham, in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah; or to turn to the
relief afforded by France and Holland for the achievement of the independence of
these United States. Without bringing up the great bulk of historical facts,
rules, laws, decrees, and treaties, and bible records, by which nations have
been governed, to show that mutual alliance for the general benefit of mankind,
to retaliate and repel foreign aggressions; to punish and prevent home wrongs,
when the conservators of justice and the laws have failed to afford a remedy,
are not only common and in the highest sense justifiable and wise, but they are
also poorer expedients to promote the enjoyment of equal rights, the pursuit of
happiness, the preservation of life, and the benefit of posterity.
With all these facts before me, and a pure desire to ameliorate the condition of
the poor and unfortunate among men, and, if possible, to entice all men from
evil to good, and with firm reliance that God will reward the just, I have been
stimulated to call upon my native State, for a "union of all honest men;" and to
appeal to the valor of the "Green Mountain Boys" by all honorable methods &
means to assist me in obtaining justice from Missouri: not only for the property
she has stolen and confiscated, the murders she has committed among my friends,
and for our expulsion from the State, but also to humble and chastise, or abase
her for the disgrace she has brought upon constitutional liberty, until she
atones for her sins.
I appeal also to the fraternity of brethren, who are bound by kindred ties, to
assist a brother in distress, in all cases where it can be done according to the
rules of order, to extend the boon of benevolence and protection, in avenging
the Lord of his enemies, as if a Solomon, a Hiram, a St. John, or a Washington
raised his hands before a wondering world, and exclaimed: -- "My life for
his!" Light, liberty, and virtue forever!
I bring this appeal before my native State, for the solemn reason that an injury
has been done, and crimes have been committed, which a sovereign State, of the
Federal compact, one of the great family of "E pluribus unum," refuses to
compensate, by consent of parties, rules of law, customs of nations, or in any
other way. I bring it also, because the national Government has fallen short of
affording the necessary relief as before stated, for want of power, leaving a
large body of her own free citizens, whose wealth went freely into her treasury
for lands, and whose gold and silver for taxes, still fills the pockets of her
dignitaries "in ermine and lace," defrauded, robbed, moved, plundered, ravished,
driven, exiled, and banished from the "Independent Republic of Missouri!"
And in the appeal let me say; raise your towers, pile your monuments to the
skies; build your steam frigates; spread yourselves far and wide, and open the
iron eyes of your bulwarks by sea and land; and let the towering church steeples
marshal the country like the "dreadful splendor" of an army with bayonets: but
remember the destruction of Pharaoh and his hosts; remember the handwriting upon
the wall, mene, mene, teke, upharsin; remember the angels visit to
Sennacherib and the 185,000 Assyrians; remember the end of the Jews and
Jerusalem, and remember the Lord Almighty will avenge the blood of his Saints
that now crimsons the skirts of Missouri! Shall wisdom cry aloud, and her speech
not be heard?
Has the majesty of American liberty sunk into such vile servitude and
oppression, that justice has fled? Have the glory and influence of a Washington,
an Adams, a Jefferson, a Lafayette, and a host of others, forever departed, --
and the wrath of a Cain, a Judas, and a Nero whirled forth in the heraldry of
hell, to sprinkle our garments with blood; and lighten the darkness of midnight
with the blaze of our dwellings? Where is the patriotism of '76? Where is the
virtue of our forefathers? and where is the sacred honor of freemen?
Must we, because we believe in the fulness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ; the
administration of angels, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, like the prophets
and apostles of old, -- must we be mobbed with impunity -- be exiled from our
habitations and property without remedy; murdered without mercy, -- and
government find the weapons, and pay the vagabonds for doing the jobs, and give
them the plunder into the bargain? Must we, because we believe in enjoying the
constitutional privilege and right of worshiping Almighty God according to the
dictates of our own consciences; and because we believe in repentance, and
baptism for the remission of sins; the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on
of hands; the resurrection of the dead; the millennium; the day of judgment; and
the Book of Mormon as the history of the aborigines of this continent, -- must
we be expelled from the institutions of our country, the rights of citizenship,
and the graves of our friends and brethren, and the government lock the gate of
humanity, and shut the door of redress against us? -- If so, farewell freedom;
adieu to personal safety, and let the red hot wrath of an offended God purify
the nation of such sinks of corruption! For that realm is hurrying to ruin where
vice has the power to expel virtue.
My Father, who stood several times in the battles of the American Revolution,
till his companions in arms, had been shot dead, at his feet, was forced from
his home in Far West, Missouri, by those civilized, or satanized savages, in the
dreary season of winter, to seek a shelter in another State; and the
vicissitudes and sufferings consequent to his flight brought his honored grey
head to the grave, a few months after. And my youngest brother also, in the
vigor and bloom of youth, from his great exposure and fatigue in endeavoring to
assist his parents on their journey, (I and my brother Hyrum being in chains, in
dungeons -- where they tried to feed us on human flesh -- in Missouri,) was
likewise so debilitated that he found a premature grave shortly after my father.
And my mother, too, though she yet lingers among us, from her extreme exposure
in that dreadful tragedy, was filled with rheumatic affections and other
diseases, which leave her no enjoyment of health. She is sinking in grief and
pain, broken-hearted, from Missouri persecution.
O death! wilt thou not give to every honest man, a heated dart to sting those
wretches while they pollute the land? and O grave! wilt thou not open the trap
door to the pit of ungodly men, that they may stumble in?
I appeal to the Green Mountain Boys of my native State, to rise in the majesty
of virtuous freemen, and by all honorable means help bring Missouri to the bar
of justice. If there is one whisper from the spirit of an Ethen Allen, or a
gleam from the shade of a Gen. Stark, let it mingle with our sense of honor and
fire our bosoms for the cause of suffering innocence, -- for the reputation of
our disgraced country, and for the glory of God; and may all the earth bear me
witness, if Missouri, blood-stained Missouri, -- escapes the due merit of her
crimes, the vengeance she so justly deserves -- that Vermont is a hypocrite --
a coward -- and this nation the hot bed of political demagogues!
I make this appeal to the sons of liberty of my native State for help to
frustrate the wicked design of sinful men; I make it to hush the violence of
mobs; I make it to cope with the unhallowed influence of wicked men in high
places; I make it to resent the insult and injury made to an innocent,
unoffending people, by a lawless ruffian State; I make it to show our nation's
escutcheon; I make it to show presidents, governors, and rulers, prudence; I
make it to fill honorable men with discretion; I make it to teach senators
wisdom; I make it to learn judges justice; I make it to point clergymen to the
path of virtue; and I make it to turn the hearts of this nation to the truth and
realities of pure and undefiled religion, that they may escape the perdition of
ungodly men; and Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is my Great Counsellor.
Wherefore let the rich and the learned, the wise and the noble, the poor and the
needy; the bond and the free, both black and white, take heed to their ways, and
cleave to the knowledge of God; and execute justice and judgment upon the earth
in righteousness; and prepare to meet the judge of the quick and the dead, for
the hour of his coming is nigh.
And I must go on as the herald of grace,
Till the wide-spreading conflict is over.
And burst thro' the curtains of tyrannic night.
Yes, I must go on to gather our race,
Till the high blazing flames of Jehovah
Illumines the globe as a triumph of right.
As a friend of equal rights to all men, and a messenger of the everlasting
gospel of Jesus Christ,
I have the honor to be,
Your devoted servant,
JOSEPH SMITH.
Nauvoo, Ill., Dec., 1843.
The Appeal to the Green Mountain Boys; For aid to assist in "licking" the
Missourians, made by Joe Smith a month or two ago -- will be found in another
column. No doubt but all the Ethan Allens and Gen. Starks in the State of
Vermont will soon be "on their winding way," to assist their esteemed brother!
To show our great learning, after the fashion of the "Appeal," -- were we a
Vermonter, we would say: Boowoo waugh! Josephi. -- (You can't come it Josey!)
Were we a Turk, we would say: Noah shah Mahomet. (You can't act Mahomet.) Or a
Western Indian, we would yell: Che-mo-ko-mon, Jo-Smith-e-kuk hah ug! (White man,
Joe Smith, very unsartin.) But as we are, we shall only say: Some men are fools
by nature; and others are fools for lucre.