443 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
443 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
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How Could A Prophet Believe in Moonmen?
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by Van Hale
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______________________________________________________________________
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In 1842 the following one-page article appeared in the "Young Woman's
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Journal." Its author Oliver B. Huntington wrote:
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Astronomers and philosophers have, from time almost immemorial
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until very recently, asserted that the moon was uninhabited, that
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it had no atmosphere, etc. But recent discoveries, through the
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means of powerful telescopes, have given scientists a doubt or
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two upon the old theory.
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Nearly all the great discoveries of men in the last half
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century have, in one way or another, either directly or in-
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directly, contributed to prove Joseph Smith to be a Prophet.
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As far back as 1837, I know that he said the moon was inhabited
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by men and women the same as this earth, and that they lived to a
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greater age than we do--that they live generally to near the age
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of 1000 years.
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He described the men as averaging near six feet in height,
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and dressing quite uniformly in something near the Quaker style.
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In my Patriarchal blessing, given by the father of Joseph the
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Prophet, in Kirkland, 1837, I was told that I would preach the
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gospel to the inhabitants upon the moon, even the planet you can
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now behold with your eyes. (See footnote #1.)
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Opponents of Mormonism have tried to use Huntington's striking
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assertion that Joseph Smith believed in moonmen in order to discredit
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Mormonism. "Can you respect a religious organization that will publish such
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nonsense?" they ask. (See footnote #2.) No true prophet could make a
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mistake of such magnitude.
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Admittedly, in this scientific age 1000-year-old moonmen in Quaker
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dress being visited by Mormon missionaries do sound a bit farfetched. It
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becomes important, therefore, to set Huntington's account into context.
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What is the authenticity or accuracy of the account, for example? How
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outlandish would such ideas have seemed in the nineteenth century? Then one
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might more fairly judge whether Joseph's prophetic mantle is at stake.
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The first question, of course, is what were Huntington's sources for
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his article, his own reminiscence or that of a second party? He made
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reference to two separate incidents--a statement of Joseph Smith and his own
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patriarchal blessing. These two incidents will be looked at separately.
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Most have assumed his source for the Joseph Smith statement was his own
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memory and have thus questioned its credibility because he was only 11 years
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old in 1837, and 55 years separated his recollection from the event.
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Actually Huntington was not relating his own memories but someone else's.
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The immediate source for his article was an 1881 entry in his own personal
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journal. (See footnote #3.) But that entry is part of a 10-page collection
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of reminiscenses he had acquired from several sources and which he had
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"taken some time and pains to pick up." (See footnote #4.) The description
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from Philo Dibble reads as follows:
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Inhabitants of the Moon
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The inhabitants of the moon are more of a uniform size than the
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inhabitants of the earth, being about 6 feet in height.
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They dress very much like the quaker style and are quite general
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in style, or the one fashion of dress.
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They live to be very old; coming generally, near a thousand
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years.
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This is the description of them as given by Joseph the Seer,
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and he could "See" whatever he asked the Father in the name of
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Jesus to see.
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I heard him say that "he could ask what he would ask of the
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Father in the name of Jesus and it would be granted" and I have no
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more doubt of it than I have that the mob killed him (see
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footnote #5.)
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The question must now be asked, what was Dibble's source? He did not
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indicate whether the story was his personal recollection or that of another
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party. I have found no further information on this except that Dibble was a
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collector and had expended considerable effort to collect and produce an
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exhibit about the life and death of Joseph Smith, which he presented in
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several Mormon communities. It was at one of these presentations in January
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of 1881 that Huntington acquired Joseph Smith's moonmen statement from
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Dibble. (See footnote #6.) So at best the moonmen statement is a
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sensational, late, third-hand reminiscence and, by itself, is a very poor
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source of dependable history. This and one other statement, even less
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impressive, represent the sum total of testimony that Joseph Smith ever said
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that the moon was inhabited.
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Although it has not been extablished that Joseph Smith believed in
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moonmen, several close to him did. Joseph Smith's own brother Hyrum stated
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his belief in an inhabited moon in an 1843 sermon on the "plurality of gods
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& worlds" preserved by George Laub:
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...every Star that we see is a world and is inhabited the same as
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this world is peopled. The Sun & Moon is inhabited & the Stars...
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The stars are inhabited the same as this Earth. (See footnote #7.)
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President Brigham Young stated a similar view in a sermon of 24 July
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1870.
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Who can tell us of the inhabitants of this little planet
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that shines of an evening, called the moon? When we view its
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face we may see what is termed "the man in the moon," and what
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some philosophers declare are the shadows of mountains. But these
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sayings are very vague, and amount to nothing; and when you
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inquire about the inhabitants of that sphere you find that the most
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learned are as ignorant in regard to them as the most ignorant
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of their fellows. So it is with regard to the inhabitants of the
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sun. Do you think there is any life there? No question of it; it
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was not made in vain. It was made to give light to those who dwell
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upon it, and to other planets. (See footnote #8.)
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The second interesting claim Oliver Huntington made in the 1892
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article was that his patriarchal blessing had predicted that he might preach
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the gospel on the moon. He also mentioned this blessing in a second article
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for the "Journal" in 1894. (See footnote #9.) In the first he dated the
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blessing 1837 and in the second 1836. In both he identified Church
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Patriarch Joseph Smith, Sr., as the bestower of the blessing. The following
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excerpt is undoubtedly from this blessing. It is dated 7 December 1836 at
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Kirtland, Ohio, but the record clearly shows that the blessing was given to
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Oliver by his own father, William Huntington, rather than Joseph Smith, Sr.:
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I lay my hands on thee & bless thee with a father's blessing....
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thou shalt be called to preach the gospel to this generation....
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before thou art twenty one thou wilt be called to preach the
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fullness of the gospel, thou shalt have power with God even to
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translate thyself to Heaven, & preach to the inhabitants of the
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moon or planets, if it shall be expedient.... (see footnote #10.)
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Although there is a discrepancy as to who gave Oliver the blessing,
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this is undoubtedly the same blessing mentioned in the Young Women's
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Journal. Both content and setting are similar. In his 1894 article
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Huntington recalled that he received the blessing in 1836 at a blessings
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meeting for the Huntington family at the home of William Huntington. The
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meeting was appointed and conducted by Joseph Smith, Sr. It lasted the
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entire day, with Orson Pratt recording the blessings the best he could
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and "afterwards filled up from memory of all present that which he could
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not catch from the Patriarch's lips." (See footnote #11.)
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It seems unlikely that Oliver, on two different occasions in the same
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year, would have received the same blessing from two different men. It is
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more likely that Oliver, who was 10 years old at the time, was mistaken
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about who actually performed the blessing since both men were present. Or
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perhaps both men participated in giving him the blessing. Or, although I
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believe this less likely, an error was made in recording the blessing. The
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blessing was not copied into the patriarchal blessings book for at least
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nine years, at which time it was recorded by Albert Carrington along with
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several other blessings given to other members of the Huntington family.
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Ultimately the fact of this discrepancy is far less interesting than
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the fact that such a blessing existed--a blessing which assumed the
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existence of moonmen and was given in the presence of the Patriarch,
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Apostle Orson Pratt, and the Huntington family and relatives. The
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patriarchal blessings books in the LDS archives are not open for research.
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Therefore, it is not possible at this time to determine if the idea of
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preaching to the inhabitants of the moon found in this blessing to Oliver H
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untington was common or unique.
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To me the suprising fact is that there have not been found more Mormon
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declarations of belief in an inhabited moon. Several of the earliest
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revelations, in 1830 (Moses 1) and in 1832 (D&C 76), committed Mormonism to
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a belief in many inhabited worlds. But Mormons, it appears, seldom
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speculated about which of the heavenly bodies were so inhabited. Those who
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believed in moonmen likely did so because of the prevalence of that view in
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their day rather than because they believed Joseph Smith had been inspired
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to reveal the existence of such beings. From the available sources one
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could hardly conclude that belief in an inhabited moon was general among
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Mormons of the nineteenth century, and further, to conclude that it was a
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basic position either of Joseph Smith or Mormonism is certainly false.
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In the first half of the nineteenth century scientists may have
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differed on the question of intelligent life on the moon, but such a notion
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was by no means a discredited idea. In 1822 William Herschel died. He was
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the greatest astronomer of his time; he discovered the planet Uranus in 1781
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and became official astronomer to King George III. In 1976 Patrick Moore,
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Director of the Lunar Section of the British Astronomical Association, wrote
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of William Herschel:
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As an observer it is possible that he has never been equalled,
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and between 1781 and his death, in 1822, every honour that the
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scientific world could bestow came his way. His views about life
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in the Solar System were, then, rather suprising. He thought it
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possible that there was a region below the Sun's fiery surface
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where men might live, and he regarded the existence of life on the
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Moon as "an absolute certainty."
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In 1780 Herschel, in a letter to a disbelieving astronomer, asked:
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Who can say that it is not extremely probable, nay beyond doubt,
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that there must be inhabitants on the Moon of some kind or another?
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(See footnote #12.)
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Also in 1822, the German astronomer Gruithuisen announced that he had
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discovered a lunar city with a collection of gigantic ramparts extending 23
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miles in either direction. (See footnote #13.) It was not until 1838, with
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the publication of the writings of Beer and Madler, that the scientific
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world concluded that the moon is definitely unable to support higher live
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forms. (See footnote #14.) This, however, had little immediate effect upon
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popular belief. The scientific conclusion did not become the popular
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conclusion for at least 60 years. (See footnote #16.)
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Throughout the era of belief in moonmen, no year can compare with 1835
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for interest and publicity. In that year was perpetrated the Great Lunar
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Hoax--perhaps the biggest scientific practical joke of all time.
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In 1833 the renowned astronomer John Herschel, son of William Herschel,
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set sail for the Cape of Good Hope to survey the skies of the southern
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hemisphere as his father had so thoroughly done of the northern. He
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remained there for five years until 1838. In 1835 Richard Locke, a reporter
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for the NEW YORK SUN, decided to take advantage of three facts: it was well
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known that John Herschel was on the other side of the world with a large
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telescope; interest in the moon was high; communication was slow.
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On 23 August 1835 the NEW YORK SUN published under the headline "Great
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Astronomical Discoveries Lately Made by Sir John Herschel at the Cape of
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Good Hope." The remaining five installments appeared the following five
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days. The articles were cleverly written and were widely accepted.
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Locke first described the construction and operation of Herschel's new
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telescope. John Herschel, by perfecting his father's innovations and with
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the financial backing of none other than the King of Great Britian himself,
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reported Locke, succeeded in constructing a telescope so powerful that it
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brought the surface of the moon to an "apparent proximity of about eighty
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yards." The lens was 24 feet in diameter, and "its weight was 14,826 lbs
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after being polished, and its magnifying power estimated at 42,000 times."
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It was an amalgam of two parts crown to one part flint glass "cast with
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perfect success, by Hartley && Grant Dunbarton Jan. 27, 1833....It was
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therefore presumed capable of representing objects of eighteen inches in
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diameter with perfect distinctness." Locke went on:
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Such profound secrecy has been preserved throughout the whole,
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that the present publication...is the first that even the
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scientific world of Europe have known of this grand system of
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discoveries.
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The telescope was finally ready for operation 10 January 1835.
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After his final adjustments, Herschel made a solemn pause of
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several hours, to prepare his mind to tear away the veil that
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could make him, for the time, sole depository of the wondrous
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secrets of that hitherto unseen world. Columbus discovered a
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continent, he was about to discover a globe.
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After these preliminaries, Locke told it all, with each installment more
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wondrous than the last.
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In his first glimpse Sir John saw various rock formations and then a
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precipitous shelf covered with a dark red flower, "the first organic
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production of a foreign world ever revealed to the eyes of man." He was
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then delighted by the sight of a lunar forest. He succeded in classfying 38
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species of forest trees and nearly twice that number of plants. Next he saw
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a level green plain and deep blue lake breaking in large white billows upon
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a beach of brilliant white sand. But, as yet he observed no animal life.
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The excitement mounted as the telescope was adjusted to the limit of
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its magnification. Then in the shade of the woods, he "beheld continuous
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herds of brown quadrupeds, having all the external characteristics of the
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bison" but with a "fleshy appendage over the eyes which was lifted and
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lowered by means of the ears....It immediately occurred to the acute mind of
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Dr. Herschel that this was a Providential contrivance to protect the eyes of
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the animal from the great extremes of light and darkness."
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Other animals included a gregarious, single-horned antelope, engaging
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in "all the unaccountable antics of a young lamb or kitten." On one of the
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lakes he saw a variety of water birds plunging their long necks into the
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lake. He watched for a long time hoping to catch sight of a lunar fish but
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never did. However, the most remarkable animal was the biped beaver, which
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exactly resembles the Beaver, only it has no tail, and walks always on its
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arms. Its huts are higher and better than those of many human savages, and
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from the appearance of smoke in nearly all of them, it is supposed the
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animal is scquainted with fire. Man can no longer be distinguished as the
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cooking animal!
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This, of course, was all leading to Lock's climax--the discovery of
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moonmen, which he recounted in his final article. They were winged men who
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were first observed flying. "When their attitude was erect and dignified,
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their stature [was] about four feet." They were covered with coppercolored
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hair. "They appeared to be impassioned gesticulation; and hence it was
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inferred, that they are rational beings. Others, apparently of a higher
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order, were discovered afterwards....And finally a magnificent temple for
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the worship of God, of polished sapphire, in a triangle shape, with a roof
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of gold." (See footnote #16.)
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The articles were an immediate sensation and were reprinted in many of
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the papers. Reverend Harley gave this assessment:
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When the first number appeared the New York SUN...the excitment
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aroused was intense. The paper sold saily by thousands; and when
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the articles came out as a pamphlet, twenty thousand went off at
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once. Not only in Young America, but also in Old England, France, and
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through out Europe, the wildest enthusiasm prevailed.
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(See footnote #17.)
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Patrick Moore also detailed the reception the articles received:
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The articles met with a mixed reception, but some eminent
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critics swallowed the bait hook, line and sinker. "These new dis-
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coveries are both probable and plausible," declared the NEW YORK
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TIMES, while the NEW YORKER thought that the observations "had
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created a new era in astronomy and science generally." (See
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footnote #18.)
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The NEW YORK EVANGELIST published a lengthy summary of the articles
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which was reprinted on 11 September 1835 in the PAINESVILLE TELEGRAPH
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(Ohio), a paper commonly read in the neighboring Mormon center of Kirtland.
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In Massachusetts a women's club wrote to Herschel for his views on how
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to contact these moonmen and convert them to Christianity. (See
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footnote #19.) One minister told his congregation that, on account of
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the wonderful discoveries of the present age, he lived in expectation
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of one day calling upon them for a sub-scription to buy Bibles for the
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benighted inhabitants of the moon.
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(See footnote #20.)
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On September 16 the SUN confessed its hoax. Still the articles only
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described what many firmly believed existed on the moon, and popular belief
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was undaunted by the confession which was, after all, not nearly so widely
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publicized as the original articles. The PAINESVILLE TELEGRAPH near
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Kirtland did not even carry the story of the confession.
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The following year the American theologian Dr. Timothy Dwight, in his
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book THEOLOGY, declared that "it is most rationally concluded that
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intelligent beings in great multitudes inhabit [the Moon's] lucid regions,
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being far better and happier than ourselves." (See footnote #21.)
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Belief in intelligent moon life continued for many years. (See footnote
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#22.) According to Moore, the last great advocate of intelligent life on
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the moon was W.H. Pickering, who authored a 1904 photographic atlas and
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wrote many papers about the moon. (See footnote #23.)
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Perhaps the most valuable point in all this is that the credibility of
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figures of one generation cannot be judged fairly by the standards of a
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later generation. It may be that today a person's credibility should be
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questioned if he believes in a moon civilization in need of evangelizing.
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But that would not have been the case for someone professing such a view in
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the nineteenth century.
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The other question still remains: did Joseph Smith believe in an
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inhabited moon? From the historical evidence now available the answer must
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be: Not proven. But, all things considered, the possibility, or
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probability, that he did cannot reasonably be denied. For all others of
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that era the question seems quite insignificant, especially given
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contemporary beliefs. But in the case of Joseph Smith, he claimed to be a
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prophet. Some extremists contend that his claim demands that his knowled
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ge in every area be superior to that of others in his era. If he believed
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any false notion of his day, so these critics say, his credibility must be
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doubted. Others, not so demanding of infallible incite in a prophet, would
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be more comfortable with a description of God's revelation which allowed for
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the human and the divine. As Rev. J.R. Dummelow so aptly described the
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authors of the Bible in his ONE VOLUME BIBLE COMMENTARY, so might one say of
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Joseph Smith:
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Though purified and ennobled by the influence of His Holy Spirit;
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men each with his own peculiarities of manner and disposition--
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each with his own education or want of education--each with his
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own way of looking at things--each influenced differently from
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another by the different experiences and disciplines of his
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life. Their inspiration did not involve a suspension of their
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natureal faculties; it did not even make them free from earthly
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passion; it did not make them into machines--it left them men.
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Therefore we find their knowledge sometimes no higher than
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that of their contemporaries.... (See footnote #24.)
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Dummelow's description of the author of Genesis is equally applicable:
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His scientific knowledge may be bounded by the horizon of the age
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in which he lived, but the religious truths he teaches are ir-
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refutable and eternal. (See footnote #25.)
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Certainly some critics will persist in their belief that Oliver B.
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Huntington's 1892 article has devastated both Joseph Smith and Mormonism.
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Some determined Mormons will dogmatically deny to the end that Joseph Smith
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ever, for a moment, believed in moonmen. And I suspect that some ardent
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fundamentalists will yet testify fervently that when men really do travel
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around the moon they will be greeted by an elderly Quaker-like gentleman,
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proving empirically the divine inspiration of the Prophet Joseph Smith.
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Notes
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-----
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1. YOUNG WOMEN'S JOURNAL 3:263,264.
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2. Jay Jacobson, "Three Reasons Not to Become a Mormon," p. 7.
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3. Utah State Historical Society, typescript, p. 166.
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4. Ibid. p. 160.
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5. Ibid. p. 166.
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6. Ibid. p. 161, 168.
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7. BYU STUDIES 18:177.
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8. JD 13:271.
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9. YOUNG WOMEN'S JOURNAL 5:346.
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10. Patriarchal Blessing Books, 9:294, 295.
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11. YOUNG WOMEN'S JOURNAL 5:345,346.
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12. Patrick Moore, NEW GUIDE TO THE MOON (W.W. Norton && Company, New
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York: 1976), p. 128.
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13. Ibid. p. 129.
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14. Ibid.
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15. Rev. Timothy Harley, Moon Lore (Swan Sonnenchein, London:1885),
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pp. 241,256.
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16. Moore, p. 130-131; PAINESVILLE TELEGRAPH, 11 September 1835.
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17. Harley, p. 42.
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18. Moore, p. 32.
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19. Ibid. p. 132.
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20. Harley, p. 43.
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21. Timothy Dwight, THEOLOGY, p. 91.
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22. Harley, p. 249-257.
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23. Moore, p. 133.
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24. J.R. Dummelow, ONE VOLUME BIBLE
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COMMENTARY, p. cxxxv.
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25. Ibid. p. xxx.
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DISTRIBUTED BY
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BOX 7332
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MURRAY, UT 84107
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___________________
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Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Jeff Hunter 510-935-5845
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408-363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510-527-1662
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 415-583-4102
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My Dog Bit Jesus Suzanne D'Fault 510-658-8078
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New Dork Sublime Demented Pimiento 415-566-0126
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Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
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arcane knowledge, political extremism, diverse sexuality,
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insane speculation, and wild rumours. ALL-TEXT BBS SYSTEMS.
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Full access for first-time callers. We don't want to know who you are,
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where you live, or what your phone number is. We are not Big Brother.
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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