
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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It is clear, though, that the Church did not seek to hide the potentially damaging letter or its text. | It is clear, though, that the Church did not seek to hide the potentially damaging letter or its text. | ||
− | Mark Hofmann gave anonymous tips to the media, | + | Mark Hofmann gave anonymous tips to the media,<ref>''Los Angeles Times'' (13 June 1985) Part 1: 3.</ref>informing them that the Church had a hidden "Oliver Cowdery History" in their vaults.<ref>Dawn Tracy, “Hofmann Told Others He Was Shown Secret LDS History,” ''Salt Lake Tribune'' (17 Oct. 1986) :C-13.</ref> This claim was repeated uncritically. The Church denied having such a document.<ref>Church Public Communications Department, ''No Oliver Cowdery History Found'', News Release (16 Oct. 1986): 3–4. The whole document is quoted extensively in {{Ensign|author=Anonymous|article=[http://www.lds.org/ensign/1986/12/news-of-the-church?lang=eng News of the Church: Rumor Concerning Early Oliver Cowdery History Refuted by Church Researchers]|date=December 1986|start=71|end=72}}</ref> It is, of course, virtually impossible to prove such a negative—how could the Church prove it didn't have something or didn't destroy it? |
− | Ironically, some modern critics continue to spread Hofmann's lies about his forgeries after he has confessed them. And, a retired CES teacher, [[Book_of_Mormon_and_the_Golden_Pot|Grant Palmer]], published a book whose explanation of the Book of Mormon's origin derived from material in Hofmann's forgery, twenty years after it was shown to be a fraud.{{ | + | Ironically, some modern critics continue to spread Hofmann's lies about his forgeries after he has confessed them. And, a retired CES teacher, [[Book_of_Mormon_and_the_Golden_Pot|Grant Palmer]], published a book whose explanation of the Book of Mormon's origin derived from material in Hofmann's forgery, twenty years after it was shown to be a fraud.<ref>{{FR-15-2-16}}</ref> |
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:'You have to have it,' Jacobs insisted of the letter. | :'You have to have it,' Jacobs insisted of the letter. | ||
:'No, I don't have to have it,' Schmidt replied. 'No such thing.' | :'No, I don't have to have it,' Schmidt replied. 'No such thing.' | ||
− | :Later, Hofmann tried his own hand at offering it to the Historical Department through Schmidt. Hofmann left the document with Schmidt, who took it in to his supervisor, Earl Olson. 'He and I read it carefully,' Olson recalled. 'Remarked that it did not ring true, and that it bore too much resemblance to the story in Howe's 'Mormonism Unveiled' [sic; the actual title is ''Mormonism Unvailed'']. We invited Elder Durham to sit down with us and read it, then brought out Howe's book and compared the stories. This was reported to Pres. Hinckley. It was decided that we should not purchase the letter....{{ | + | :Later, Hofmann tried his own hand at offering it to the Historical Department through Schmidt. Hofmann left the document with Schmidt, who took it in to his supervisor, Earl Olson. 'He and I read it carefully,' Olson recalled. 'Remarked that it did not ring true, and that it bore too much resemblance to the story in Howe's 'Mormonism Unveiled' [sic; the actual title is ''Mormonism Unvailed'']. We invited Elder Durham to sit down with us and read it, then brought out Howe's book and compared the stories. This was reported to Pres. Hinckley. It was decided that we should not purchase the letter....<ref>{{Victims1|start=81, 83}}</ref> |
This is a strange series of events if the Church or its leaders were determined to suppress or hide the letter, or somehow impair its study. | This is a strange series of events if the Church or its leaders were determined to suppress or hide the letter, or somehow impair its study. | ||
Note that President Gordon B. Hinckley first saw the Salamander Letter on this date, but refused its purchase. He wrote soon thereafter: | Note that President Gordon B. Hinckley first saw the Salamander Letter on this date, but refused its purchase. He wrote soon thereafter: | ||
− | :We have nothing to hide. Our enemies will try to make much of this letter, but any fair-minded individual who will read it in terms of the time it was written and the language of the day will not see it as detrimental to the history of those events connected with the restoration of the gospel. | + | :We have nothing to hide. Our enemies will try to make much of this letter, but any fair-minded individual who will read it in terms of the time it was written and the language of the day will not see it as detrimental to the history of those events connected with the restoration of the gospel.<ref>Gordon B. Hinckley Journal, 10 February 1984.</ref> |
Thus, President Hinckley was aware that the letter could be used as a weapon against the Church, but he did not move to buy it, and did nothing to prevent it passing into other hands. | Thus, President Hinckley was aware that the letter could be used as a weapon against the Church, but he did not move to buy it, and did nothing to prevent it passing into other hands. | ||
===6 January 1984=== | ===6 January 1984=== | ||
− | Steven F. Christensen purchases Salamander Letter from Hofmann for $40,000. | + | Steven F. Christensen purchases Salamander Letter from Hofmann for $40,000.<ref>Turley, ''Victims'', 83.</ref> |
===7 March 1984=== | ===7 March 1984=== | ||
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:It is true that I am the owner of a letter written by Martin Harris to William W. Phelps, dated October 23, 1830. "While it is hoped that the letter is authentic, professional tests have not yet been performed on the document. Before I will release transcripts or photographs of the document to the public, I wish to first determine the document's historicity as much as possible. I have therefore sought the help and advice of competent historians to assist me in determining the reliability of the contents of the letter. | :It is true that I am the owner of a letter written by Martin Harris to William W. Phelps, dated October 23, 1830. "While it is hoped that the letter is authentic, professional tests have not yet been performed on the document. Before I will release transcripts or photographs of the document to the public, I wish to first determine the document's historicity as much as possible. I have therefore sought the help and advice of competent historians to assist me in determining the reliability of the contents of the letter. | ||
− | :Until the above referenced research and tests have further progressed, I do not feel at liberty to share the full contents of the letter. It is unfortunate that publicity of the document has preceded its historical authentication. This has lead to some cases of misstatement as well as numerous phrases being taken out of context.{{ | + | :Until the above referenced research and tests have further progressed, I do not feel at liberty to share the full contents of the letter. It is unfortunate that publicity of the document has preceded its historical authentication. This has lead to some cases of misstatement as well as numerous phrases being taken out of context.<ref>{{Sunstone1|author=Cecelia Warner|article=The "Martin Harris Letter": Fact, Fiction. . . Fate|num=50|date=January 1985}}</ref> |
===12 April 1985=== | ===12 April 1985=== | ||
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===28 April 1985=== | ===28 April 1985=== | ||
The ''Church News'' published the full text of the Salamander Letter. The First Presidency included a statement, quoting President Hinckley: | The ''Church News'' published the full text of the Salamander Letter. The First Presidency included a statement, quoting President Hinckley: | ||
− | :No one, of course, can be certain that Martin Harris wrote the document. However, at this point we accept the judgment of the examiner that there is no indication that it is a forgery. This does not preclude the possibility that it may have been forged at a time when the Church had many enemies. It is, however, an interesting document of the times. | + | :No one, of course, can be certain that Martin Harris wrote the document. However, at this point we accept the judgment of the examiner that there is no indication that it is a forgery. This does not preclude the possibility that it may have been forged at a time when the Church had many enemies. It is, however, an interesting document of the times.#<ref>''Church News'', 28 April 1985.</ref> |
===23 June 1985=== | ===23 June 1985=== | ||
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:Marvelous and enduring love and loyalty of the kind shown by these two men do not come from an experience with a "salamander" as we generally interpret that word. | :Marvelous and enduring love and loyalty of the kind shown by these two men do not come from an experience with a "salamander" as we generally interpret that word. | ||
− | :Would these two men have so endured, so declared their testimonies, and so lived out their lives in faith had there been any doubt about the way in which the Book of Mormon plates were received from the hands of Moroni and translated by the gift and power of God?{{ | + | :Would these two men have so endured, so declared their testimonies, and so lived out their lives in faith had there been any doubt about the way in which the Book of Mormon plates were received from the hands of Moroni and translated by the gift and power of God?<ref>{{Ensign1|author=Gordon B. Hinckley|article=[http://www.lds.org/ensign/1985/09/keep-the-faith?lang=eng First Presidency Message: Keep the Faith]|date=September 1985|start=3}}</ref> |
===16 August 1985=== | ===16 August 1985=== | ||
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:The contents of most media stories are dictated not by what is necessary to a full understanding of the subject but by what information is currently available and can be communicated within the limitations of time and space. | :The contents of most media stories are dictated not by what is necessary to a full understanding of the subject but by what information is currently available and can be communicated within the limitations of time and space. | ||
− | :As a result, the news media are particularly susceptible to conveying erroneous information about facts, including historical developments that are based on what I have called scientific uncertainties. This susceptibility obviously applies to newly discovered documents whose authenticity turns on an evaluation of handwriting, paper, ink, and so on. Readers should be skeptical about the authenticity of such documents, especially when there is uncertainty where they were found or who had custody of them for 150 years. Newly found historically important documents can be extremely valuable, so there is a powerful incentive for those who own them to advocate and support their authenticity. The recent spectacular fraud involving the so-called Hitler diaries reminds us of this, and should convince us to be cautious. | + | :As a result, the news media are particularly susceptible to conveying erroneous information about facts, including historical developments that are based on what I have called scientific uncertainties. This susceptibility obviously applies to newly discovered documents whose authenticity turns on an evaluation of handwriting, paper, ink, and so on. Readers should be skeptical about the authenticity of such documents, especially when there is uncertainty where they were found or who had custody of them for 150 years. Newly found historically important documents can be extremely valuable, so there is a powerful incentive for those who own them to advocate and support their authenticity. The recent spectacular fraud involving the so-called Hitler diaries reminds us of this, and should convince us to be cautious.<ref>Dallin H. Oaks, Address to CES teachers, 16 August 1985.</ref> |
===15 October 1985=== | ===15 October 1985=== | ||
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===16 October 1986=== | ===16 October 1986=== | ||
− | After an exhaustive search of its holdings and archives, the Church denies possessing an "Oliver Cowdery history." (It would be learned the next day that Hofmann was the source of the rumor that such a history existed.) | + | After an exhaustive search of its holdings and archives, the Church denies possessing an "Oliver Cowdery history." (It would be learned the next day that Hofmann was the source of the rumor that such a history existed.)<ref>Dawn Tracy, “Hofmann Told Others He Was Shown Secret LDS History,” ''Salt Lake Tribune'' (17 Oct. 1986): C-13; see the belated admission of this connection, despite repeatedly using the claims about the Cowdery history without revealing its source in “Tried to Kill Self, Mormon Artifacts Dealer Says,” ''Los Angeles Times'' (1 Aug. 1987): 29.</ref> |
===31 July 1987=== | ===31 July 1987=== | ||
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After Hofmann's lies and murders were revealed, President Hinckley said: | After Hofmann's lies and murders were revealed, President Hinckley said: | ||
− | :I frankly admit that Hofmann tricked us. He also tricked experts from New York to Utah, however. We bought those documents only after the assurance that they were genuine. And when we released documents to the press, we stated that we had no way of knowing for sure if they were authentic. I am not ashamed to admit that we were victimized. It is not the first time the Church has found itself in such a position. Joseph Smith was victimized again and again. The Savior was victimized. I am sorry to say that sometimes it happens. | + | :I frankly admit that Hofmann tricked us. He also tricked experts from New York to Utah, however. We bought those documents only after the assurance that they were genuine. And when we released documents to the press, we stated that we had no way of knowing for sure if they were authentic. I am not ashamed to admit that we were victimized. It is not the first time the Church has found itself in such a position. Joseph Smith was victimized again and again. The Savior was victimized. I am sorry to say that sometimes it happens.<ref>Interview with Gordon B. Hinckley, 18 October 1995.</ref> |
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{{FurtherReading}} | {{FurtherReading}} |
Did the Church acquire Mark Hofmann's "Salamander letter" with the intent of suppressing it, or "hiding history?" Why didn't Church leaders discern the forgery before they acquired the document?
To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, [[../CriticalSources|click here]]
Some of you may remember hearing about a man named Mark Hofmann, now serving a prison sentence in Utah for murder. He was an expert forger of historical documents. Some of these were tied to U.S. history, but several related to Church history. One was a purported letter from Martin Harris to W. W. Phelps reporting that Joseph Smith found the gold plates led by a spirit who “transfigured himself from a white salamander in the bottom of the hole” where the plates were. Another was a supposed transcript of a blessing given by the Prophet to his son Joseph Smith III in 1844 declaring his son to be his rightful successor as head of the Church. [20]Some left the Church when these documents were publicized saying it was clear that Joseph Smith’s testimony concerning his visions was false or that they could no longer consider The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints the true Church. Not long afterward these and other documents were shown to be forgeries. I wondered, do those who were so troubled believe again now, and when other questions arise, as they always do, will they leave again? In matters of faith, a spiritual witness is essential if one is to avoid being “tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive.” [21] With a Spirit-derived assurance in place, you can go forward in the Lord’s work and continue deepening your relationship with your Heavenly Father while pursuing or awaiting answers. If you determine to sit still, paralyzed until every question is answered and every whisper of doubt resolved, you will never move because in this life there will always be some issue pending or something yet unexplained.
Some think it strange that a prophet could have been deceived. President Hinckley's public statements make it clear that he was not entirely convinced of the document's provenance, but provisionally accepted the judgment of the experts. (For a discussion of the decision to promptly make the document public when owned by the Church by an author who declared the document a forgery early on, see Rhett S. James, "Writing History Must Not Be an Act of Magic (Review of Early Mormonism and the Magic World View, revised and enlarged edition, by D. Michael Quinn)," FARMS Review of Books 12/2 (2000): 395–414. [{{{url}}} off-site].)
However, one should not be surprised if a prophet is deceived. The LDS do not believe their prophets to be infallible.
The Lord made it clear to Joseph Smith that a prophet is not granted to know all the designs of those who seek to destroy the Church:
The LDS doctrine of agency requires that those who plot evil be allowed a certain latitude, though (as President Hinckley prophetically noted) permanent harm to the Lord's work will not be permitted.
It is clear, though, that the Church did not seek to hide the potentially damaging letter or its text.
Mark Hofmann gave anonymous tips to the media,[1]informing them that the Church had a hidden "Oliver Cowdery History" in their vaults.[2] This claim was repeated uncritically. The Church denied having such a document.[3] It is, of course, virtually impossible to prove such a negative—how could the Church prove it didn't have something or didn't destroy it?
Ironically, some modern critics continue to spread Hofmann's lies about his forgeries after he has confessed them. And, a retired CES teacher, Grant Palmer, published a book whose explanation of the Book of Mormon's origin derived from material in Hofmann's forgery, twenty years after it was shown to be a fraud.[4]
The historical record is clear that the Church did nothing to hide the Hofmann "Salamander Letter," even though to some it appeared to pose problems for the Church's story of its origins.
Hofmann tried to persuade both President Hinckley and the Church Historical Department to purchase the "Salamander Letter." Both declined:
This is a strange series of events if the Church or its leaders were determined to suppress or hide the letter, or somehow impair its study.
Note that President Gordon B. Hinckley first saw the Salamander Letter on this date, but refused its purchase. He wrote soon thereafter:
Thus, President Hinckley was aware that the letter could be used as a weapon against the Church, but he did not move to buy it, and did nothing to prevent it passing into other hands.
Steven F. Christensen purchases Salamander Letter from Hofmann for $40,000.[7]
Christensen issues a press release:
Steven F. Christensen, who had purchased the Salamander Letter from Hofmann on 6 January 1984, donated it to the Church. President Hinckley accepted the donation.
The Church News published the full text of the Salamander Letter. The First Presidency included a statement, quoting President Hinckley:
President Hinckley, at a Young Adult fireside broadcast from Temple Square, spoke about Martin Harris and others mentioned in the Salamander Letter:
Elder Dallin H. Oaks spoke to the issues raised by the documents (as yet unknown as forgeries):
Two Hofmann bombs murder Steven Christensen and Kathy Sheets.
Hofmann injures himself with one of his own bombs.
After an exhaustive search of its holdings and archives, the Church denies possessing an "Oliver Cowdery history." (It would be learned the next day that Hofmann was the source of the rumor that such a history existed.)[12]
The Church released a statement to the media after Hofmann's confession and interview with prosecutors.
Elder Dallin H. Oaks gives an address at BYU on the Hofmann episode and the media and scholarly community's behavior.
The Church publishes a list of forged documents that had been referenced in the Ensign so that readers would not refer to them in error.
After Hofmann's lies and murders were revealed, President Hinckley said:
Notes
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