Aiken massacre | |
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Location | Nephi area of the Sevier River; Willow Creek, Mona; and Warm Creek Hot Springs area of Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, United States[1]: 471–472, 474 |
Coordinates | 39°24′33″N 112°03′01″W / 39.4093°N 112.0504°W |
Date | November 25 and 28, 1857 |
Target | |
Attack type | False imprisonment then mass lynching |
Deaths | 5 |
Perpetrators | Brigham Young, Porter Rockwell, Wild Bill Hickman, Jacob G. Bigler, Sylvanus Collett, John S. Lott, John R. Murdock, and George Dalton[1]: 469–470, 474 |
Motive |
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The Aiken massacre was an 1857 lynching in central Utah of five Californian travelers reportedly at the orders of top leaders in Mormonism's largest denomination, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[2][3][4] The victims were apprehended on trumped up charges of spying, imprisoned, then murdered, though two escaped with injuries, but were killed two days later.[1]: 471–472 [5][6] This occurred two months after the Mountain Meadows massacre and was part of the impetus for the Utah War (1857–1858).[1]: 457 [7]
In 1877 Porter Rockwell and Wild Bill Hickman were indicted for the massacre.[8][9] In his confession, Hickman stated that after Bucklin ("Buck") had escaped the murder attempt that territory governor and top church president Brigham Young ordered him to finish the job.[2][10]: 278 [11] According to historian John G. Turner it is likely Young was involved in the death of four of the party members, along with a trader Richard Yates a month before.[3] The Aiken massacre's name comes from the brothers Thomas and John Aiken of the group who were killed.[1]: 457 [12]
[The Aiken massacre] exposes the condition that led to the Mountain Meadows massacre and Brigham Young's autocratic leadership. ... The Aiken party murders, ordered by Mormon leaders ... are also a haunting reminder of the fear and desperation millenialist Mormons felt, and the absolute power Brigham Young exerted over the lives of all who entered the territory. ... In his confession, Mormon gunman William A. Hickman matter-of-factly described [how] Brigham Young called him to his office about that time and said: 'The boys have made a bad job of trying to put [Horace Bucklin] out of the way.' It was up to the feared Mormon executioner, Young allegedly said, 'to get him out of the way, and use him up.'
Given [Homer] Brown's comment it seems probable that [Brigham] Young sanctioned their [the Aiken party's] deaths. ... William Hickman later claimed to have shot [Horace Bucklin] at Young's behest .... In addition to his likely complicity in the deaths of four members of the Aiken party, Young sanctioned the murder of Richard Yates, a trader ....