1858 December 30 Letter to Horace S. Eldredge

Title

1858 December 30 Letter to Horace S. Eldredge

Description

Brigham advises against sending mail through regular channels to avoid letters being intercepted and held by the Postmaster. He expresses strong feelings about slander and animosity from local civil officers. Letter includes some financial details as well as updates on military presence and Buchanan's railroad plans.

Type

Correspondence

Sender

Brigham Young

Recipient

Horace S. Eldredge

Date

1858 December 30

Location

Great Salt Lake City

Number of Pages

6

Subject

Mail
Military
Railroad
Printing
Financial Matters

Item sets

President's Office,
Great Salt Lake City  Dec. 30th. 1858.

Horace S. Eldridge Esqr.

Dear Brother:

We received a note from Brother Coward announcing your safe arrival at St Louis and departure to Chicago.  he also stated that you would write by the next mail but we have not received it.  We would most emphatically remind you of former instructions to trust nothing of moment to that channel, for if you do, you may rest assured it goes into the hands of our enemies instead of ours.

The imported Post master still holds sway and nothing can be got from the office until the Hurt, Burr, Craig and Dotson clique, have rummaged to their hearts content.  I wish you would ascertain if you can how many copies of the Missouri Republican containing the Presidents Message were sent to this Territory by the Express and to whom directed.  The Valley Tan managed to monopolize every copy sent or at least keep them under its own thumb, so that even Governor Cumming could not get a copy, until after that paper had issued it.

The Members of the Legislative Assembly refused to receive the message through that channel, not feeling to patronize such a dirty, filthy, slanderous sheet, of this and other matters I have written more fully to Brother Cannon, whose letter you will probably see.  If it comes to your hands first you are at liberty to open and read it and be sure either to take or send, by some private conveyance to him and not trust our letters in the Mails at all.  We suppose that the mail party consider the Express coming through in eleven days from St Joe quiet a brilliant affair but we think if our Express Company had been let alone until this time it would have beaten that by a great odds, especially if Congress had bucked it up with two hundred <thousand> dollars a year for carrying the mails as they do now; To say the least this Express was very exclusive in its favors when it could not afford a single citizen and not even Governor Cumming a copy of the message.  I have no doubt but the butterfield company will beat them but their being able to come through with the express does not prove their ability to carry the mails within time as there is no news of the last two which were due last week and the week before and those which have come lately arrived some week or ten days after their schedule time.

President Buchanan inclines to the southern route for a Rail road  I trust that it will be so located, it doubtless combines greater advantages in many respects especially in the winter season.  He also treats pretty extensively upon Utah affairs but his investigations do not go behind the writ but takes it up after the troops which he had sent to use us up had actually come into the Territory.  Well he must have "his say" just now we will have ours when the whole subject comes up for investigation, On the whole we consider the message quite favorable as much so as we could expect.

His recommendation of extending the land laws pre-emption right &c. to us is quite suggestive and we trust will pave the way to many other things, the greatest of which is our admission, or at least an enabling act.

The Courts or court I should say as thus far we have had but one for which we are truly thankful is simply making an ass of itself as every body else will do who strikes against Israel, Mr Sinclair at an early day after his arrival in the Territory placed himself under the influence of Burr, Craig, Hurt, who with Kirk Anderson and others of like stripe have since continued his boon companions, he is more-over a notorious drunkard and appears as though he could not endure to sit in Court outside of an hour without "going to liquor"

The civil officers of the Territory are rather notorious for this propensity, even Wilson it has leaked out is fond of the ardent, though it is thought his wife holds him in check; but in the world this is no disqualification for office, and we have so completely learned their ways that if we have any important business to transact with any of them apart we will find them generally the most capable of attending to it before the ninth hour, and in the day not at all safe after the tenth.  The Governor though not by any means an exception to this rule is more compes mentus while under the influence of liquor then the most of the others, and although naturally tyrannical and oppressive in his nature, still we do not wish to exchange him at present, for fear we might get a worse one, he is not as yet like many if not all of the other civil officers a "bitter foe" to this people at least he has not so proven himself and I trust that Mr. Wilson may not turn out one either though of late he has appeared to drink into the spirit of our enemies.

If the Troops should leave we think it will very essentially alter the tone and feeling of all and quite a different atmosphere will doubtless prevail, but the Deputy Quarter master Genl. Mr. Crosman has advertised for proposals for 180,000 bushel of grain for animals to be delivered for the use of the Army in the months of August, September, and October 1859, this would indicate that the Army were not going to leave in the spring, which we trust they may.  It is the most perfect absurdity to keep them here and if we should be afflicted either with drouth, crickets, grasshoppers or anything else another year so as to cause a failure of our crops and the Government should not provide for their wants outside of the Territory it would leave the troops in a very precarious condition.  It is as much as a bargain that a collision can be avoided now and if they should undertake to coerce grain when there was a scarcity nothing could prevent one.  So if Mr. Buchanan wishes to avoid any such contingencies or timely avert any direful calamity which might befall his army it would be wisdom at least for him to embrace the earliest opportunity to remove them to some place where supplies are more easy of access, and not subject to so much expense and uncertainty in furnishing.  This is a consideration which I think might be used in certain quarters to produce the desired effect of the early exit from our mountain home.

We send these letters by John Y. Green who is going east.

I have paid Daniel Spencer $193.64/100 in full of his credit on your books which please credit Trustee in Trust.  We wish you to send 50 lb of antimony to mix with old type metal to harden it for recasting.

Enclosed you will please find some additional bills including Feramorz Little's which please fill.  we send the duplicate by Henry Lawrence to California who will mail them with all this months correspondence <directed> to you at St Louis, My Nephew John Y. Green will not probably leave before this 15th of this month, we expect to send some more means to you, but do not know at present precisely how much

We observe that Wright & Co of New York have reprinted the Book of Mormon we trust now that it will go into more general circulation.  We have often been unable to get it even into the Book Stores for sale but we presume that now it will be hawked about the streets by every seller of new publications.  We shall not at present prosecute them for invading our interests in the copyright, believing it will do us more good than harm.

I remain as ever, Your Brother in the Gospel.

Brigham Young