1838 Mormon War | |||||||
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Part of the Mormon Wars | |||||||
"Charge of the Danites" in the 1838 Mormon War also known as the Missouri Mormon War |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Missouri non-Mormon settlers Missouri State Militia |
Missouri Mormon settlers Mormons in Missori State Militia Danites |
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Missouri Governor Lilburn Boggs | Joseph Smith had no centralized military command |
The Mormon War is a name sometimes given to the 1838 conflict which occurred between Latter-day Saints (Mormons) and their neighbors in the northwestern region of the US state of Missouri. This conflict is also sometimes referred to as the Missouri Mormon War to differentiate it from the Utah Mormon War (also known as the "Utah War") and the lesser known Illinois Mormon War.
The specific dates of the war are from August 6, 1838, (the Gallatin election battle) to November 1, 1838, when Joseph Smith surrendered at Far West. During the conflict 22 people were killed (three Mormons and one non-Mormon at Crooked River, one Mormon prisoner fatally injured while in custody, and 17 Mormons at Haun’s Mill). An unknown number of non-combatants died due to exposure and hardship as a result of being expelled from their homes in Missouri.
The conflict was preceded by the eviction of the Mormons from Jackson County, Missouri, in 1833.
All of the conflicts in the Mormon War occurred in a corridor 100 miles (160 km) to the east and northeast of Kansas City, Missouri.
As a result of the war, nearly all Mormons in Missouri, estimated at more than 10,000, were forced to leave the state. Most of these refugees settled in or near what would become the city of Nauvoo, Illinois.
Shortly after what Mormons consider to be the restoration of the gospel, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1830, Joseph Smith revealed that the Second Coming of Christ was near, that the City of Zion would be near the town of Independence in Jackson County, Missouri, and that his followers were destined to inherit the land held by the current settlers.