Letter from Wilford Woodruff and Jonathan H. Hale, 18 September 1837
Source Note
and , Letter, Vinalhaven, Fox Islands, Hancock Co., ME, to JS and “the Church of Latter Day Saints,” , Geauga Co., OH, 18 Sept. 1837. Featured version published in “To Joseph Smith Jr. and the Church of Latter Day Saints,” Elders’ Journal of the Church of Latter Day Saints, Oct. 1837, 1–3. For more complete source information, see the source note for Elders’ Journal, Oct. 1837.
Historical Introduction
On 31 May 1837, , , and , all members of the of the , departed , Ohio, to preach in “the eastern country.” Over the next three and a half months, the men proselytized in communities in , , , , New Hampshire, and . Then in late August, Woodruff and Hale made their way to the , an archipelago off the coast of southern Maine, where they preached, , and eventually established a small of the . On 18 September 1837, the pair sent a letter to JS and the church reporting on their travels and missionary efforts. The letter was published in the October 1837 issue of the Elders’ Journal.
, , and set off for their eastern mission amid social and economic turmoil in and two weeks before and others departed on a mission to . In a reminiscent account published two decades later, Woodruff recalled that he had “felt impressed to go out upon a mission; the Spirit was upon me, and lead me to go to ; it was a country I had never visited. I named my feelings upon the subject to Kimball, and others; they encouraged me to go.” Woodruff’s desire to preach in the Fox Islands may have been related to an blessing given to him by in January 1837, in which Woodruff was told that he would preach “to the inhabitants upon the Islands of the Sea.” Woodruff recounted that he handpicked Hale to accompany him. Unlike Woodruff, Hale—who was baptized in 1834 and had presided over a branch of the church in Dover, New Hampshire—had firsthand knowledge of the Fox Islands.
The missionaries’ indirect course to was likely influenced by their desire to preach to and visit with family members scattered throughout the region. As they trekked across in early June, for example, stopped in his former home of Richland, where he reunited with his two older brothers, Azmon and Thompson. While preaching near his childhood home in Farmington, Connecticut, Woodruff visited his younger sister, Eunice, and his father, Aphek; he also baptized members of his extended family. In July, and Woodruff preached near Hale’s childhood home of Bradford, Massachusetts, where Hale visited with members of his extended family; was also from the area and visited family there. Phebe Carter Woodruff, who had married Wilford in April 1837, joined the missionaries in Bradford as well, and in early August she accompanied her husband to her hometown of Scarborough, Maine, where Woodruff preached and spent two weeks becoming acquainted with his new bride’s family.
The letter to JS and the church briefly summarized the missionaries’ three-month journey to , but most of the communication was devoted to and ’s activities on the . Rising from southern Maine’s Penobscot Bay, the Fox Island archipelago—comprising two larger islands and dozens of smaller islets—is situated twelve miles off the coast of Rockland. North Fox Island, known today as North Haven, exhibits a relatively flat topography that during the mid-1830s was sparsely wooded and largely dominated by open pastures and farmland. Characterized by its granite-covered hills, rocky shoreline, and woods of pine, fir, and spruce, South Fox Island (or Vinalhaven today) was not as suitable for agriculture; early nineteenth-century residents of this island instead made a living through logging, shipbuilding, and fishing. During Woodruff and Hale’s time there, the islands were collectively known as Vinalhaven Township.
On 18 August, and departed Scarborough, Maine, “for the purpose of visiting the Islands of the Sea.” After obtaining passage on a small sloop that launched from Owls Head, near Rockland, on 19 August, they arrived on the north island at two o’clock the next morning. Later that day, the two men attended a Sunday service at the island’s lone Baptist church, where they became acquainted with the minister, Gideon Newton. Newton initially welcomed the two preachers into his home and allowed them to use the meetinghouse to preach their message. Woodruff and Hale preached in various locations during their first two weeks on the north island, including in the Baptist meetinghouse, local schoolhouses, and private residences, and they apparently gained influence among the local inhabitants. As the island’s residents began to embrace their message, however, Newton’s attitude toward Woodruff and Hale soured. According to the missionaries’ journals, the minister’s congregation shrunk substantially by late August, and he organized a campaign to stem the Mormon preachers’ influence in the islands. In early September, Newton enlisted the help of the south island’s Methodist minister, a Mr. Douglass, to, as Woodruff put it, “come over and help him put down ‘Mormonism.’” Newton later traveled to the mainland to recruit two more ministers to aid in that endeavor. In a letter printed in a local Baptist publication, Newton recounted that the ministers then held a series of revival meetings on the north island, during which some of the residents “who stood aloof from hearing the Mormons” eventually “obtained a hope” and were baptized into the Baptist congregation.
Despite this opposition, and continued to preach and baptize on both the north and the south island. The men addressed a large congregation on the north island in early September, after which Justus Eames and his wife, Betsy, became the first residents of Vinalhaven to be baptized into the church. On 4 September, the two missionaries boarded a sailboat, crossed the narrow channel separating the two largest islands, and preached to an attentive crowd in one of the local schoolhouses. Woodruff and Hale preached to audiences on the south island for five days before returning to the north island. According to their journals, the pair had preached twenty-five sermons on the by 10 September. In response to the impassioned speech that the Methodist preacher Douglass gave on the north island on 11 September, Woodruff prepared and delivered a two-and-a-half-hour sermon at the Baptist church, attended by a large congregation of people from both islands. In just over one week, 10–17 September, Woodruff and Hale led six more of the islands’ residents “into the waters of Baptism.”
Holmes traveled with Woodruff and Hale as far as Connecticut before joining another companion to preach in a different region. He later rejoined Woodruff and Hale near his hometown of Rowley, Massachusetts. (Alexander, Things in Heaven and Earth, 57–58, 66; Woodruff, Journal, 23 July 1837.)
Alexander, Thomas G. Things in Heaven and Earth: The Life and Times of Wilford Woodruff, a Mormon Prophet. Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1991.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
An entry in Hale’s journal briefly refers to a trip he made to the Fox Islands in September 1834 to purchase a “vessel load of sheep.” (Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 3.)
Hale, Jonathan H. Reminiscences and Journals, 1837–1840. CHL.
Woodruff had been largely estranged from his brother Azmon since he left New York to participate in the Camp of Israel expedition in 1834. Azmon had been baptized but left the church shortly after Wilford departed for Missouri. The brothers exchanged letters in the years to follow, but Wilford’s enthusiasm for and devotion to his new faith appears to have only widened the gulf between them. When he arrived in Richland around 4 June 1837, he noted in his journal that he “found sumthing of a colness manifest toward me and my brethren because of our religion from my Brothers household especially from Elizabeth my Brothers wife.” Though Wilford was invited to eat with Azmon and his family, he was not invited to stay with them, so he boarded with a former neighbor. (Alexander, Things in Heaven and Earth, 32–33, 56–57; Woodruff, Journal, 31 Dec. 1833 and 4 June 1837.)
Alexander, Thomas G. Things in Heaven and Earth: The Life and Times of Wilford Woodruff, a Mormon Prophet. Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1991.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
In the nine days he preached near Bradford (today part of Groveland and Haverhill) in July, Hale met with his sisters, his mother, his cousins, and the family of his wife, Olive Boynton Hale. Hale’s journal entries do not indicate whether any of them joined the church during the 1837 mission. (Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 23–25.)
Hale, Jonathan H. Reminiscences and Journals, 1837–1840. CHL.
Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 25–27. On 13 April 1837 in Kirtland, Frederick G. Williams married Woodruff and Phebe Carter, a twenty-eight-year-old convert. (Woodruff, Journal, 13 Apr. 1837; Crocheron, Representative Women of Deseret, 35–36.)
Hale, Jonathan H. Reminiscences and Journals, 1837–1840. CHL.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Crocheron, Augusta Joyce. Representative Women of Deseret, a Book of Biographical Sketches, to Accompany the Picture Bearing the Same Title. Salt Lake City: J. C. Graham, 1884.
Brief Historical Sketch of the Town of Vinalhaven, 12–13, 28; Coolidge and Mansfield, History and Description of New England, 236, 334.
A Brief Historical Sketch of the Town of Vinalhaven, from Its Earliest Known Settlement: Prepared by Order of the Town on the Occasion of Its One Hundredth Anniversary. Rockland, ME: By the authors, 1889.
Coolidge, A. J., and J. B. Mansfield. A History and Description of New England, General and Local. Vol. 1, Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Boston: Austin J. Coolidge, 1859.
Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 28–29; Woodruff, Journal, 18 Aug. 1837. Hale observed that “the people on the North Island are mostly Baptist Calvinist order the south island are mostly Methodist.” (Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 29.)
Hale, Jonathan H. Reminiscences and Journals, 1837–1840. CHL.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Woodruff, Journal, 20 Aug.–3 Sept. 1837; Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 28–35. In a letter printed in Zion’s Advocate, Newton stated, “The novelty of their [Woodruff and Hale’s] sentiments led many to hear them.” (Gideon Newton, “Revivals,” Zion’s Advocate, 25 Oct. 1837, 170.)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Hale, Jonathan H. Reminiscences and Journals, 1837–1840. CHL.
Woodruff, Journal, 27 Aug. 1837. In an 1880s account of the mission, Woodruff observed that Newton attended a dozen of their meetings before he “made up his mind, contrary to the dictation of the Spirit of God to him, to reject the testimony, and come out against me.” (Woodruff, Leaves from My Journal, 33.)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Woodruff, Wilford. Leaves from My Journal, Third Book of the Faith-Promoting Series. Salt Lake City: Juvenile Instructor Office, 1882.
Woodruff, Journal, 19 Sept. 1837. One of the ministers was Reverend Amariah Kalloch, the first pastor of First Baptist Church in Rockland, Maine. (Eaton, History of Thomaston, Rockland, and South Thomaston, Maine, 374–375.)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Eaton, Cyrus. History of Thomaston, Rockland, and South Thomaston, Maine, from Their First Exploration, A. D. 1605; with Family Genealogies. Vol. 1. Hallowell: Masters Smith, 1865.
Gideon Newton, “Revivals,” Zion’s Advocate, 25 Oct. 1837, 170. In a 20 November 1837 letter to Don Carlos Smith, Woodruff countered Newton’s account of the revival meetings, asserting that the Baptist minister gained only two converts: “his own son and daughter.” (Wilford Woodruff, Vinalhaven, ME, to Don Carlos Smith, Kirtland, OH, 20 Nov. 1837, in Elders’ Journal,Nov. 1837, 17–19.)
Zion’s Advocate. Portland, ME. 1828–1920.
Elders’ Journal of the Church of Latter Day Saints. Kirtland, OH, Oct.–Nov. 1837; Far West, MO, July–Aug. 1838.
The six other converts were Ebenezer Eames, Melannar Eames, Cyrus Sterrett, Phebe Sterrett, Abigail Farnham, and Eliza Luce. On 1 October, Woodruff and Hale organized the first branch of the church in Vinalhaven, comprising twelve members. (Woodruff, Journal, 10, 12, and 17 Sept. 1837; 1 Oct. 1837; Hale, Reminiscences and Journal, 35, 37, 40–42.)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Hale, Jonathan H. Reminiscences and Journals, 1837–1840. CHL.
he closed his meeting we arose and rectified some of his wide mistakes in his presence before the congregation, and informed the people if they would meet next Sabbath at the meeting house we would answer every objection that had been presented against the book of Mormon and our principles during the meeting. And last Sabbath we met a congregation of several hundred at the meeting house, assembled together from the different Islands, and we arose in their midst, and redeemed our pledge by answering every objection that had been brought against the book of Mormon, or our principles.— After meeting we repaired to the water and again administered the of . The Baptist priest is no less busy than his Methodist brother, for while one is in the pulpit declaring to the people, that the principles of the book of Mormon are saping the very foundation of our churches and holy religion; the other is gone over to the main land calling upon his Baptist brethren, saying come over and help us lest we fall. But cursed is man that trusteth in man or maketh flesh his arm saith the Lord God. O ye priests of Baal your cry is in vain, the God of Israel has set his hand the second time to recover his people. The stone has began to roll, and will soon become a mountain and fill the whole earth. The Lord is calling his out of the wilderness, with her gifts and graces and restoring her judges as at the first. God hath chosen the weak things of this world to confound the wise, and with them he will rend your kingdoms, that the wisdom of your wise men may perish, and the understanding of your prudent men may be hid. The cry of the Saints is ascending into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth for Ephraim.— The horns of Joseph are begining to push the people together. The of the Lamb of God are bearing the of his kingdom on the shores of Europe. Yea and the mighty Captains of the ships at sea, are receiving the gospel of Jesus Christ; and enjoying its power, and the call of many from distant Islands, has already entered our ears; O come and preach to us, we have sent a book of Mormon over the billows of the great deep, to teach those that are at sea. And the word and work are propelled by the arm of JEHOVAH. And the weapon that is formed against shall soon be broken. And he that raises his puny arm against it, is fighting against God and shall soon mourn because of his loss. We say these things are true as God liveth, and the Spirit beareth record and the record is true, and vengeance will be speedily executed upon an evil work in these last days, therefore, O Babylon thy fall is sure.
Although we have not baptized but few on these Islands, yet there is hundreds believing and many are almost ready to enter into the kingdom, the calls are numerous from the neighboring Islands, and also from the main land, for us to come and preach unto them, and tell them words whereby they may be saved from the pending judgments that await the world. There are fifteen or twenty neighboring Islands that are inhabited, some of them contain a population of several thousand. And while the fields are white, we view the harvest great in this country: and the laborers few. And while we are faithfully laboring day and night for the salvation of his people; we ask an interest in your prayers, O ye Saints of the most high God. O ye of Israel will ye not go forth into the vineyard and help wind up the scene of this generation which sits in darkness and in the shadow of death. O ye ministers of our God, if we altogether hold our peace at this time, shall we not suffer loss when the Lord raises up deliverance unto Israel. But for Zion’s sake let us not hold our peace, and for Jerusalem’s sake let us not rest until the light thereof go forth as brightness and salvation as a lamp that burneth.
That we all may keep the patience and faith of the Saints and see that no man take our crown, is the prayer of your brethren in the Lord Jesus.
In November 1837, Woodruff spent a day and a half on the nearby Isle au Haut (sometimes referred to as Isle of Holt), population 315. There he preached and sold a copy of the Book of Mormon. (Woodruff, Journal, 15 Nov. 1837; 1830 U.S. Census, Isle au Haut, Hancock Co., ME.)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Census (U.S.) / U.S. Bureau of the Census. Population Schedules. Microfilm. FHL.
Apart from Vinalhaven’s approximately 1,800 residents, over 6,000 people lived on the numerous islands of Penobscot, Jericho, Blue Hill, and Frenchman bays. In 1830, the most populous islands, in order, were Mount Desert Island, Deer Isle, the north and south islands of Vinalhaven, Islesboro Island, Isle au Haut, and Swans Island. (1830 U.S. Census, Hancock Co. and Waldo Co., ME.)
Census (U.S.) / U.S. Bureau of the Census. Population Schedules. Microfilm. FHL.