LDS-tied events to bisect in Arkansas

Conference on Pratt, camp for massacre kin set for April 21

Published: Saturday, April 14, 2007 12:10 a.m. MDT
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Latter-day Saints familiar with early church leader Parley P. Pratt may find it ironic that a conference exploring his life will take place in Arkansas the same day that descendants of those killed in the Mountain Meadows Massacre gather in a different part of that state.

Both events come in the days preceding release of a feature film about the massacre, "September Dawn," which is set to open in theaters May 4.

A scholarly conference on "Religion and Reaction: The Life, Times and Legacy of Parley Parker Pratt," is scheduled Saturday, April 21, at the Convention Center in Fort Smith, Ark., featuring a variety of historians and scholars exploring the details of Pratt's life and ministry.

An early apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Pratt was killed near Van Buren, Ark., in May 1857, by a small Arkansas band antagonistic toward his teachings. A wagon train left Harrison, Ark., in April 1857, bound for California, but was ambushed in southern Utah, where 120 men, women and children were killed by LDS militiamen and Paiute Indians on Sept. 11, 1857.

Historians have debated about the role that Pratt's murder played in fanning the hysteria that resulted in what is known as the Mountain Meadows Massacre.

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Descendants of massacre victims have formed an association in Arkansas that memorializes the victims annually. They have scheduled a two-day encampment April 21 and 22 near Harrison, Ark., at the site where the wagon train gathered for their trip. Organizers say participants will learn about their ancestors' preparation for the journey, what they took with them and how they planned their route.

Because 2007 is the 150th anniversary of both Pratt's murder and the massacre in southern Utah, the events are designed to help illuminate the history of what occurred.

Greg Armstrong, a foreign language faculty member at the University of Arkansas-Fort Smith, said he began thinking about organizing a scholarly conference in 2004, and when history and tourism sponsors were found, the idea began to take shape. He said few residents of western Arkansas know anything about Pratt, but most know something about the massacre.

Yet the timing of the event on the same weekend that descendants of massacre victims are gathering is simply coincidental, he said, noting the conference was scheduled around the availability of Jan Shipps as the keynote speaker. Shipps is considered to be the premier non-LDS scholar of Mormon history.

Armstrong said the scholarly conference will feature an invited presentation by historian Richard Turley focusing on Pratt and the massacre. Turley, director of the LDS Family and Church History Department, has worked for several years with two co-authors to produce a book about the massacre to be published by Oxford University Press. No definitive date has been set for its release, but it is believed to be in the final stages of production.

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