Yahoo Bot wrote:William testified before Congress to persuade Buchanan to send an army west. People died as a result; not in armed conflict but soldiers in the course of their duties. The army yielded no results, unless if you count the replacement of Brigham Young as governor. Even that is debatable, since Young clearly knew he served at the pleasure of the President.
Although William didn't himself go to Washington, D.C., he used the
status of his Kentucky follower, Isaac Sheen, to have a petition (to stop
Deseret from gaining statehood) submitted by the Kentucky congressman.
I doubt that William's efforts had much effect. Soon afterward Isaac
Sheen renounced the whole effort -- although he was no fan of Utah
Mormonism or Deseret statehood.
William warned that the Mormons would attack wagon trains passing
through Deseret, disguised as Indians -- or, blame the attacks on
the local Indians. A few years later that actually happened -- so
William's old connections with The Twelve (and with The Fifty) may
have left him in possession of a few secret plans for "Zion" in the west.
I'm not sure what William had to say about the 1857 expedition to
Utah Territory. He spent most of his later life claiming that Utah was
one big mistake, so I doubt he would have supported sending the
U.S. Army there, to do much of anything.
Probably things would have turned out better, if Deseret had become
an independent state, and the troubles of the 1850s had been
between two nations (as in the U.S. Civil War that soon followed).
But -- who can say.
I still do not comprehend Willliam's claim -- that the rights and blessings
of the biblical Joseph somehow passed down to Joseph Smith, Sr.
Any LDS scholars, familiar with D&C 86 lurking here?
UD