
At least Craig Criddle comes up with some pretty pictures...
UD
Uncle Dale wrote:http://mormonleaks.com/library/episode-03/
At least Craig Criddle comes up with some pretty pictures...
> I like the [S-R] theory and think there might be
> something to it. Didn't one of the founders work
> in the print shop where the spaulding manuscript
> went missing?
That idea was a fiction concocted by British writers
and editors who were too distant from America to ferret
out sufficient information to fill up their newspaper
and magazine columns ---- so, they made Sidney Rigdon
out as having been the employee of a printer named
Robert Patterson. In the popular literature of the
late 1840s and early 1850s, Rigdon was mischaracterized
as having been Patterson's "journeyman printer."
In fact, the Rev. Robert Patterson was not a printer,
nor did he own a printshop, nor was Rigdon his employee.
Among other things, the young Sidney Rigdon was an
apprentice tanner -- spending at least part of his days
learning the tanning trade a few miles south of the
(then) little town of Pittsburgh.
Rev. Patterson operated a bookstore in Pittsburgh and
he occasionally gathered up enough cash to get some
text printed, so that he could sell it in his store.
His cousin (a fellow named Silas Engles) owned a press
and did some job printing for Patterson and his brother
now and then. Engles knew the young Sidney Rigdon, but
did not employ him as a printer. Rigdon was not a printer.
The book pages that Engles printed eventually got bound
together as books (in leather bindings) or pamphlets (in
paper bindings) -- and some were sold in Patterson's store.
Robert Patterson and his brother also employed a bindery
staff, which probably overlapped Engles' binders.
We could thus say that those people furnishing leather
book bindings to Engles and the Pattersons, during the
1810s and 1820s, were CONNECTED to the Pittsburgh
publishing business -- but they were not printers and
did not work in any "print-shop" run by the Pattersons.
Sidney Rigdon could thus easily refute any published
claims, identifying him as a printer or as having been
an employee of any Patterson who ran any printing shop.
Rigdon's ***CONNECTION*** with Silas Engles (and thus,
indirectly with Robert and Joseph Patterson) was as a
supplier of leather book-bindings.
> It makes sense that they then
> justified their actions for what they considered a
> "greater good"
That "greater good" idea may have come into play at a
later date -- when the Book of Mormon manuscript was
being finalized. But I seriously doubt that it was
Sidney Rigdon's motivating factor back during the 1810s
when he first ran across Spalding's unpublished story.
Rather, I suppose that Spalding's writings intrigued
the young Rigdon and he took the trouble to obtain a
copy (or a partial copy) of the interesting stuff.
At some point later on, somebody said: "Hey, this Nephite
story would work perfectly as the outline for some fake
ancient American scriptures! We could start a whole new
church, using the Nephite chronology as a sort of backbone
for our narrative pushing new doctrines and commandments!"
Maybe that person was Sidney Rigdon.
Maybe it was Joseph Smith.
Maybe they both came up with the same idea.
It really doesn't matter any more.
The Nephites are a lie... end of story.
Fence Sitter wrote:Thanks UD.
You always have such interesting stuff.
Mary wrote:Dale, thanks for this. Such an interesting area. The Disciples look like such an interesting group. The early members seem very coy about linking Sidney to knowledge of the Book of Mormon before 1830. How reliable are D Atwater's recollections?
DrW wrote:UD,
Very interesting posts. Most TBMs I know, if they know anything about Criddle at all, believe that his work has been completely discredited (because the apologists have said so).
Nice to have authoritative information that shows that the apologists have been less than accurate (and sometimes less than honest) in their attempts to refute the R-S theory (which I happen to think has a great deal of explanatory power).
Uncle Dale wrote:Uncle Dale wrote:http://mormonleaks.com/library/episode-03/
At least Craig Criddle comes up with some pretty pictures...
This topic is getting a bit of discussion at another message
board -- so I thought I'd share my comments from there:
Maybe that person was Sidney Rigdon.
Maybe it was Joseph Smith.
Maybe they both came up with the same idea.
It really doesn't matter any more.
The Nephites are a lie... end of story.
UD
DrW wrote:UD,
Nice to have authoritative information that shows that the apologists have been less than accurate (and sometimes less than honest) in their attempts to refute the R-S theory (which I happen to think has a great deal of explanatory power).