
This image is looking down from Dan Sill Hill to the Church memorial:

This image shows the monument that was rebuilt by the Church in 1999:

This is an image of the north side of the monument where the main stone engraving is:

Here is a close up of the text. It reads:
MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE
GRAVE SITE MEMORIAL
Built by and maintained by
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
out of respect for those who died and
were buried here and in the surrounding area
following the massacre of 1857.
Dedicated 11 September 1999
You will notice that if you read it carefully, the monument is to the Church, who generously built the site “out of respect…”. So the monument is, in effect, a monument to the Church for building a monument.

You can see the feelings are very real. These flowers were there when we visited. The flags are the Arkansas state flag, which was the state the Fancher party came from.

On the south side, there is another marker, but it is simply a history of monuments. This once again points to the fact that this is a monument to the Church for building monuments.

When the Church was rebuilding the monument in 1999, it turns out the bodies weren’t where they thought they were. They accidentally disinterred 29 bodies. This plaque sits on the ground on the East side and marks where they were interred:

It should be clear that at the Church site, there is no information about what happened or why. For obvious reasons, the descendants of the Fancher party and other interested parties were not happy about the monument and a second monument was created at the top of Dan Sill Hill. This site contains information about the events and a monument on which the name of all of the victims and their ages at the time of death is listed.

Here is one of the panels:

You will notice that children as young as 7 or 8 were part of the slaughter. Actually, the brethren didn’t feel comfortable killing children, so they had the Indians kill the children. The children were hacked up with hatchets. Children younger than that were spared, because, by Mormon theology, children under the age of 8 were innocent. They were sent to Mormon homes to be raised as Mormons.
The last shot is looking out North West from the hill. This is the kill site about where the fields are in the middle of the frame. Here, each male member of the Fancher party was marched under the pretense of truce each with a Mormon companion. The Mormons all had guns and when the order “Brethren, do you duty” was shouted, each Mormon murdered his prisoner. The women and children, who were loaded into wagons, were butchered in the wagons. After the shooting, Indians when up and down the lines and hatchet to death anyone who was only wounded.

The bodies were stripped naked and left to rot on the field. Later, they were buried in a shallow grave but were dug up by wolves that scattered the remains over the field.