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Deleted "using seer stones". While historical evidence points that this is probably the case, this is not a universal Latter Day Saint belief which is what this sentence leads you to believe, and Smith himself said otherwise. Nor is it relevant to the article.
Purported discovery: Specified ambiguous sentence. Smith did not recover the plates in 1823, but 1827. Added that they were written in Reformed Egyptian, which is relevant. Replaced weasel word 'claimed' with neutral 'said'.WP:CLAIM
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On April 16, 1843, Robert Wiley, a merchant living in [[Kinderhook, Illinois|Kinderhook]], began to dig a deep shaft in the center of an Indian mound near the village. It was reported in the ''[[Quincy Newspapers|Quincy Whig]]'' that the reason for Wiley's sudden interest in archaeology was that he had dreamed for three nights in a row that there was treasure buried beneath the mound.<ref name=whig>{{cite news |url= http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/IL/whig1843.htm#0503 |title= Singular Discovery &ndash; Material for another Mormon Book |author= Bartlett & Sullivan |work= [[Quincy Newspapers|Quincy Whig]] |date= May 3, 1843 |accessdate= 2008-11-29 }}</ref> At first, he undertook the excavation alone, and reached a depth of about ten feet (3 m)<ref name=times/> before he abandoned the work, finding it too laborious an undertaking. On April 23, he returned with a group of ten or twelve companions to assist him. They soon reached a bed of limestone, apparently charred by fire. Another two feet (60&nbsp;cm) down, they discovered human bones, also charred, and "six plates of brass of a bell shape, each having a hole near the small end, and a ring through them all, and clasped with two clasps". A member of the excavation team, W. P. Harris, took the plates home, washed them, and treated them with [[sulphuric acid]]. Once they were clean, they were found to be covered in strange characters resembling [[hieroglyphics]].<ref name=times>{{cite news |url= http://www.centerplace.org/history/ts/v4n12.htm |title= To the Editor of the Times and Seasons |author= Harris, W.P. |work= [[Times and Seasons]] |date= May 1, 1843 |accessdate= 30 August 2012 }}</ref>
On April 16, 1843, Robert Wiley, a merchant living in [[Kinderhook, Illinois|Kinderhook]], began to dig a deep shaft in the center of an Indian mound near the village. It was reported in the ''[[Quincy Newspapers|Quincy Whig]]'' that the reason for Wiley's sudden interest in archaeology was that he had dreamed for three nights in a row that there was treasure buried beneath the mound.<ref name=whig>{{cite news |url= http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/IL/whig1843.htm#0503 |title= Singular Discovery &ndash; Material for another Mormon Book |author= Bartlett & Sullivan |work= [[Quincy Newspapers|Quincy Whig]] |date= May 3, 1843 |accessdate= 2008-11-29 }}</ref> At first, he undertook the excavation alone, and reached a depth of about ten feet (3 m)<ref name=times/> before he abandoned the work, finding it too laborious an undertaking. On April 23, he returned with a group of ten or twelve companions to assist him. They soon reached a bed of limestone, apparently charred by fire. Another two feet (60&nbsp;cm) down, they discovered human bones, also charred, and "six plates of brass of a bell shape, each having a hole near the small end, and a ring through them all, and clasped with two clasps". A member of the excavation team, W. P. Harris, took the plates home, washed them, and treated them with [[sulphuric acid]]. Once they were clean, they were found to be covered in strange characters resembling [[hieroglyphics]].<ref name=times>{{cite news |url= http://www.centerplace.org/history/ts/v4n12.htm |title= To the Editor of the Times and Seasons |author= Harris, W.P. |work= [[Times and Seasons]] |date= May 1, 1843 |accessdate= 30 August 2012 }}</ref>


The plates were briefly exhibited in the city, and then sent on to [[Joseph Smith]], the founder of the nascent [[Latter Day Saint movement]]. Twenty years earlier, on September 22, 1823, Smith claimed to have uncovered a set of [[golden plates]], and, according to Latter Day Saint belief, translated them into the [[Book of Mormon]]. The finders of the Kinderhook plates, and the general public, were keen to know if Smith would be able to decipher the symbols on the Kinderhook plates as well.<ref name=whig/> The ''[[Times and Seasons]]'', a Latter-Day Saint publication, claimed that the existence of the Kinderhook plates lent further credibility to the authenticity of the Book of Mormon.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.centerplace.org/history/ts/v4n12.htm |title= Ancient Records |work= [[Times and Seasons]] |date= 1 May 1843 |accessdate= 30 August 2012 }}</ref> [[Parley Pratt]] wrote that the plates contained Egyptian engravings and "the genealogy of one of the ancient [[Jaredites]] back to Ham the son of Noah."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wright|first1=Mark Alan|title=Approaching Antiquity: Joseph Smith and the Ancient World|publisher=Religious Studies Center, BYU|date=2015|location=Provo, Utah|isbn=9780842529662|page=133}}</ref>
The plates were briefly exhibited in the city, and then sent on to [[Joseph Smith]], the founder of the nascent [[Latter Day Saint movement]]. Smith had previously said that on September 22, 1823, an angel led him to a set of buried [[golden plates]] written in [[Reformed Egyptian]], from which he said he translated into the [[Book of Mormon]]. The finders of the Kinderhook plates, and the general public, were keen to know if Smith would be able to decipher the symbols on the Kinderhook plates as well.<ref name=whig/> The ''[[Times and Seasons]]'', a Latter-Day Saint publication, claimed that the existence of the Kinderhook plates lent further credibility to the authenticity of the Book of Mormon.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.centerplace.org/history/ts/v4n12.htm |title= Ancient Records |work= [[Times and Seasons]] |date= 1 May 1843 |accessdate= 30 August 2012 }}</ref> [[Parley Pratt]] wrote that the plates contained Egyptian engravings and "the genealogy of one of the ancient [[Jaredites]] back to Ham the son of Noah."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wright|first1=Mark Alan|title=Approaching Antiquity: Joseph Smith and the Ancient World|publisher=Religious Studies Center, BYU|date=2015|location=Provo, Utah|isbn=9780842529662|page=133}}</ref>


==Smith's response==
==Smith's response==

Revision as of 15:42, 25 January 2020

Front and back of four of the six Kinderhook plates are shown in these facsimiles, which appeared in 1909 in History of the Church, vol. 5, pp. 374–75.

The Kinderhook plates were a set of six small, bell-shaped pieces of brass with strange engravings which were claimed to have been discovered in 1843 at an Indian mound near Kinderhook, Illinois.

According to Wilbur Fugate in 1879,[1] the plates were carefully forged by himself and two other men from Kinderhook, named, Bridge Whitten and Robert Wiley, who were testing the validity of the claims made by Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, at that time headquartered in Nauvoo, Illinois. According to Latter Day Saint belief, the Book of Mormon was originally translated by Smith, from a record engraved in the language of reform Egyptian on golden plates about ancient Judeo-Semitic inhabitants of the Americas.

Purported discovery

On April 16, 1843, Robert Wiley, a merchant living in Kinderhook, began to dig a deep shaft in the center of an Indian mound near the village. It was reported in the Quincy Whig that the reason for Wiley's sudden interest in archaeology was that he had dreamed for three nights in a row that there was treasure buried beneath the mound.[2] At first, he undertook the excavation alone, and reached a depth of about ten feet (3 m)[3] before he abandoned the work, finding it too laborious an undertaking. On April 23, he returned with a group of ten or twelve companions to assist him. They soon reached a bed of limestone, apparently charred by fire. Another two feet (60 cm) down, they discovered human bones, also charred, and "six plates of brass of a bell shape, each having a hole near the small end, and a ring through them all, and clasped with two clasps". A member of the excavation team, W. P. Harris, took the plates home, washed them, and treated them with sulphuric acid. Once they were clean, they were found to be covered in strange characters resembling hieroglyphics.[3]

The plates were briefly exhibited in the city, and then sent on to Joseph Smith, the founder of the nascent Latter Day Saint movement. Smith had previously said that on September 22, 1823, an angel led him to a set of buried golden plates written in Reformed Egyptian, from which he said he translated into the Book of Mormon. The finders of the Kinderhook plates, and the general public, were keen to know if Smith would be able to decipher the symbols on the Kinderhook plates as well.[2] The Times and Seasons, a Latter-Day Saint publication, claimed that the existence of the Kinderhook plates lent further credibility to the authenticity of the Book of Mormon.[4] Parley Pratt wrote that the plates contained Egyptian engravings and "the genealogy of one of the ancient Jaredites back to Ham the son of Noah."[5]

Smith's response

Broadside of facsimile of all six plates published June 24th 1843 in the Nauvoo Neighbor.[6]

Smith's private secretary, William Clayton, recorded that upon receiving the plates, Smith sent for his "Hebrew Bible & Lexicon",[7] suggesting that he was going to attempt to translate the plates by conventional means, rather than by use of a seer stone or direct revelation.[8] On 1 May, Clayton wrote in his journal:[9]

I have seen 6 brass plates ... covered with ancient characters of language containing from 30 to 40 on each side of the plates. Prest J. [Joseph Smith] has translated a portion and says they contain the history of the person with whom they were found and he was a descendant of Ham through the loins of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and that he received his kingdom from the ruler of heaven and earth.

Joseph Smith planned to translate the plates in their entirety. The editors of the Nauvoo Neighbor (apostles John Taylor and Wilford Woodruff), promised in a June 1843 article that "The contents of the plates, together with a Fac-simile of the same, will be published in the 'Times and Seasons,' as soon as the translation is completed." [10]

The History of the Church also states Smith said the following:[11]

I have translated a portion of [the plates] and find they contain the history of the person with whom they were found. He was a descendant of Ham, through the loins of Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and that he received his kingdom from the ruler of heaven and earth.

Stanley B. Kimball says the statement found in History of the Church could have been an altered version of William Clayton's statement, placing Smith in the first person.[12] Diane Wirth, writing in Review of Books on the Book of Mormon (2:210), states: "A first-person narrative was apparently a common practice of this time period when a biographical work was being compiled. Since such words were never penned by the Prophet, they cannot be uncritically accepted as his words or his opinion".[13]

A number of translation documents were created in 1835 in connection with the translation of the Book of Abraham, one of which is called the Grammar and Alphabet of the Egyptian Language (GAEL). There is evidence that this document was used in deciphering the Kinderhook Plates.[14] In a May 7, 1843 letter to a friend apostle Parley P. Pratt wrote, "A large number of Citizens have seen them and compared the characters with those on the Egyptian papyrus which is now in this city."[15] A sympathetic letter also dated May 7, 1843, published in the New York Herald for May 30, 1843, presents further evidence:

The plates are evidently brass, and are covered on both sides with hyerogliphics. They were brought up and shown to Joseph Smith. He compared them, in my presence, with his Egyptian Alphabet…and they are evidently the same characters. He therefore will be able to decipher them ... You may expect something very remarkable pretty soon.[16]

A prominent character from one of the plates matches well with a character in the Grammar and Alphabet of the Egyptian Language (GAEL), and the translation of that character in the GAEL compares with the description given by William Clayton.

Kinderhook Plate character[17] Egyptian Language character [18]
William Clayton Description Egyptian Language character translation
...he was a descendant of Ham,
through the loins of Pharaoh, King of Egypt,
and that he received his kingdom through
the ruler of heaven and earth.
...honor by birth,
kingly power by the line of Pharoah.
possession by birth one who riegns upon his throne universally—
possessor of heaven and earth, and of the blessings of the earth.

Rediscovery, analysis, and classification as a hoax

The Kinderhook plates were presumed lost, but for decades The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) published facsimiles of them in its official History of the Church. In 1920, one of the plates came into the possession of the Chicago Historical Society (now the Chicago History Museum).[12] In 1966, this remaining plate was tested at Brigham Young University. The inscriptions matched facsimiles of the plate published contemporaneously, but the question remained whether this was an original Kinderhook plate, or a later copy.

Though there was little evidence of whether the Kinderhook Plates were ancient or a contemporary fabrication, some within the LDS Church believed them to be genuine. The September 1962 Improvement Era, an official magazine of the church, ran an article by Welby W. Ricks stating that the Kinderhook plates were genuine.[19] In 1979, apostle Mark E. Petersen wrote a book called Those Gold Plates!. In the first chapter, Peterson describes various ancient cultures that have written records on metal plates. Then Peterson claims: "There are the Kinderhook plates, too, found in America and now in the possession of the Chicago Historical Society. Controversy has surrounded these plates and their engravings, but most experts agree they are of ancient vintage."[20]

In 1980, Professor D. Lynn Johnson of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern University examined the remaining plate. He used microscopy and various scanning devices and determined that the tolerances and composition of its metal proved entirely consistent with the facilities available in a 19th-century blacksmith shop and, more importantly, found traces of nitrogen in what were clearly nitric acid-etched grooves. This matches what was stated in an 1879 letter to James T. Cobb, in which Wilbur Fugate confesses to the hoax: "Wiley and I made the hieroglyphics by making impressions on beeswax and filling them with acid and putting it on the plates. When they were finished we put them together with rust made of nitric acid, old iron and lead, and bound them with a piece of hoop iron, covering them completely with rust". According to Fugate, Wiley had planted the plates at the bottom of the hole he had dug in the mound, before fetching a group of others to witness the discovery.[21]

In addition, Johnson discovered evidence that this particular plate was among those examined by early Mormons, including Smith, and not a later copy. One of the features of the plate was the presence of small dents in the surface caused by a hexagonally-shaped tool. Johnson noticed that one of these dents had inadvertently been interpreted in the facsimile as a stroke in one of the characters. If the plate owned by the Chicago Historical Society had been a copy made from the facsimiles in History of the Church, that stroke in that character would have been etched, like the rest of the characters. He concluded that this plate was one that Smith examined, that it was not of ancient origin, and that it was in fact etched with acid, not engraved.[12]

In 1981, the official magazine of the LDS Church ran an article stating that the plates were a hoax, and asserted that there was no proof that Smith made any attempt to translate the plates: "There is no evidence that the Prophet Joseph Smith ever took up the matter with the Lord, as he did when working with the Book of Mormon and the Book of Abraham".[12]

See also

Template:Wikipedia books

Notes

  1. ^ McKeever, Bill; Shafovaloff, Aaron. "Fooling the Prophet with the Kinderhook Plates". MRM.org. Mormonism Research Ministry. Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  2. ^ a b Bartlett & Sullivan (May 3, 1843). "Singular Discovery – Material for another Mormon Book". Quincy Whig. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
  3. ^ a b Harris, W.P. (May 1, 1843). "To the Editor of the Times and Seasons". Times and Seasons. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
  4. ^ "Ancient Records". Times and Seasons. 1 May 1843. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
  5. ^ Wright, Mark Alan (2015). Approaching Antiquity: Joseph Smith and the Ancient World. Provo, Utah: Religious Studies Center, BYU. p. 133. ISBN 9780842529662.
  6. ^ Text can be read at http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/IL/kndrfac2.jpg
  7. ^ Smith, Joseph (1843), Diary, LDS Church Archives
  8. ^ Ashurst-McGee, Mark (2003), "A One-sided View of Mormon Origins", The FARMS Review, 15 (2): 320, retrieved 2015-01-19
  9. ^ Tanner, Jerald; Tanner, Sandra. "The Kinderhook Plates: Excerpt from Answering Mormon Scholars Vol 2". Retrieved 2008-11-29.
  10. ^ The Nauvoo Neighbor, Special Broadside June 24th, 1843. http://www.sidneyrigdon.com/dbroadhu/IL/kndrfac2.jpg
  11. ^ History of the Church, Vol. 5, p. 372.
  12. ^ a b c d Kimball, Stanley B (August 1981), Kinderhook Plates Brought to Joseph Smith Appear to Be a Nineteenth-Century Hoax, Ensign, pp. 66–74, retrieved 2011-03-01
  13. ^ Diane E. Wirth (1990). "[Review of] Are the Mormon Scriptures Reliable?". Review of Books on the Book of Mormon. 2 (1). FARMS: 210. Retrieved 2015-01-19.
  14. ^ https://rsc.byu.edu/archived/no-weapon-shall-prosper/did-joseph-smith-translate-kinderhook-plates#_edn14
  15. ^ Parley P. Pratt and Orson Pratt to John Van Cott, May 7, 1843, Church History Library, Salt Lake City. See the documentary edition of this letter: Brian M. Hauglid, “Come & Help Build the Temple & City”: Parley P. and Orson Pratt’s May 1843 Letter to John Van Cott,” Mormon Historical Studies 11, no. 1 (Spring 2011). Also https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/1981/08/kinderhook-plates-brought-to-joseph-smith-appear-to-be-a-nineteenth-century-hoax?lang=eng
  16. ^ New York Herald, May 30th 1843 page 2 column 3 https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030313/1843-05-30/ed-1/seq-2/
  17. ^ For discussion see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQ1eoW7-q9k&t=1289s
  18. ^ "Grammar and Alphabet of the Egyptian Language, circa July–circa November 1835," p. 4, The Joseph Smith Papers, accessed July 13, 2019, https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/grammar-and-alphabet-of-the-egyptian-language-circa-july-circa-november-1835/10
  19. ^ Ricks, Welby W. (September 1962), "The Kinderhook Plates", Improvement Era, 65 (09): 636–637, 656–660
  20. ^ Petersen, Mark E. (1979). Those Gold Plates!. Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft. p. 3. ISBN 0-88494-364-X.
  21. ^ Welby W. Ricks "The Kinderhook Plates", cited in An Insider's View of Mormon Origins by Grant H. Palmer.

Further reading