Church History
Mormon-Missouri War of 1838


“Mormon-Missouri War of 1838,” Church History Topics

“Mormon-Missouri War of 1838”

Mormon-Missouri War of 1838

The Mormon-Missouri War (also called the Mormon War or the Missouri War) was an armed conflict between the Latter-day Saints and other citizens of northern Missouri in the fall of 1838. The conflict expanded to involve state officials, including the governor, and resulted in the incarceration of Joseph Smith and the forced expulsion of the Saints from Missouri.

Religious, political, and social differences between Latter-day Saints and Missourians gave rise to tension from the earliest arrival of Latter-day Saints in Jackson County, Missouri, in 1831.1 Vigilante threats and mob attacks forced the Saints from the county in 1833. They relocated to neighboring counties to the north, where they continued to face hostility. In 1836, the state created Caldwell County exclusively for the settlement of the Saints, and opponents of the Church objected to any Latter-day Saint settlement outside this new county. But the Saints sought to exercise their constitutional right by establishing settlements in neighboring Carroll and Daviess Counties. By the time Joseph Smith left Ohio for the Latter-day Saint settlement of Far West, Missouri, in the summer of 1838, opposition to the Church’s presence in Missouri had reached a critical point.2

On July 4, 1838, Sidney Rigdon warned that the Saints would no longer tolerate persecution or the denial of their rights as citizens of the United States. If mobs gathered, he thundered in a widely publicized oration, “it shall be between us and them a war of extermination.” At the same time, he vowed that the Saints would not be the aggressors: “We will infringe on the rights of no people; but shall stand for our own until death.”3 During this period, some Latter-day Saint men organized a vigilante group known as the Danites, who pledged to defend the Saints against further violence. Rumors of Danite activity persuaded some Missourians that the Saints threatened violence against neighbors.4

On Election Day that year, the residents of Carroll County voted for the Saints to leave the county. In nearby Daviess County, when voters prevented Latter-day Saints from entering the polls, a fight broke out. Fearing they would be expelled from the county by a local peace officer, Latter-day Saints asked him to sign a statement of impartiality. The officer later complained he had been intimidated into signing, and Joseph Smith and Lyman Wight were ordered to answer the complaint in court. The two refused the order until the court could assure their safety. Upset over perceived lawlessness, mobs again assembled against the Saints.

The Saints appealed to the government for protection, and some troops came to keep the peace. But a diplomatic resolution was interrupted when a mob destroyed a Latter-day Saint settlement at De Witt, Carroll County, forcing the Saints there to flee for their lives. The governor of Missouri, Lilburn W. Boggs, responded to a plea for help by saying the Saints and the Missourians must fight their own battles. As reports of mobs burning Church members’ homes in other counties mounted, the Saints decided to fight back.

Armed fighting lasted two weeks. In mid-October, Latter-day Saints raided and burned homes and stores in Gallatin and Millport. At Crooked River, Saints and Missouri militiamen skirmished, resulting in the deaths of one Missourian and two Church members, including Apostle David W. Patten. In the wake of these outbursts, Governor Boggs, who had previously supported antagonists of the Church in Jackson County, issued what came to be known as the “extermination order,” which authorized the state militia to drive the Saints from the state or exterminate them if necessary.5 The most horrific event of the war came a few days later on October 30, when a group of armed Missourians opened fire on Saints at Hawn’s Mill, killing and brutally dismembering 17 men and boys.6

Skirmish between Missouri and Mormon militiamen at Crooked River

C. C. A. Christensen (1831–1912), The Battle of Crooked River, c. 1878, tempera on muslin, 78 x 114 inches. Brigham Young University Museum of Art, gift of the grandchildren of C. C. A. Christensen, 1970.

Painting depicting the skirmish between the Saints and Missouri militiamen at Crooked River.

The militia, under the command of Major General Samuel D. Lucas, laid siege to Far West on October 31. Lucas arrested Joseph Smith and a few other Latter-day Saint leaders and ordered their execution for the next day. Another general named Alexander Doniphan challenged the order, and Joseph and several others were incarcerated and ordered to stand trial on charges of treason and murder. Meanwhile, the main body of Latter-day Saints sought refuge in the neighboring state of Illinois.7

The Mormon-Missouri War marked the end of the Church’s early presence in Missouri. Joseph Smith’s vision of building a “Zion” community of righteous Saints became tied less to a geographical place and more to wherever Church members should gather.8 The war also resulted in the defection of important leaders. Thomas B. Marsh, Orson Hyde, and William W. Phelps each left the Church and returned years later, but leaders like John Corrill and George Hinkle never returned.9 After languishing in a cold, cramped jail during the winter of 1838–39, Joseph Smith, his brother Hyrum, and several others escaped with the help of a sympathetic guard while en route to another venue. Although difficult, the prison ordeal proved redemptive to Joseph, as profound revelations were given to him during his incarceration.10