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Origin
of the Spaulding Manuscript
In 1885, while visiting in Hawaii, Oberlin College President
James H. Fairchild met with L.L. Rice, an old friend and an anti-slavery
advocate. While reviewing his materials for some anti-slavery materials
to donate to Oberlin College, Rice discovered a manuscript written
by Solomon Spaulding. The Spaulding Manuscript, also referred to
as the “Manuscript Story” or “Manuscript Found,” was
given to Fairchild and placed in the Oberlin College Library. It
remained in the Library until it was transferred to the Oberlin College
Archives in 1977.
Solomon Spaulding (1761-1816) wrote the “Manuscript Story” or
Manuscript Found” in 1812 while living in New Salem (now Conneaut),
Ohio. Spaulding wrote a fictional account of a group of Romans (A.D.
306-337) whose ship was blown off course and landed in what is now
the northeastern United States. The story contains accounts of the
natives that the Romans encountered. The manuscript was never published.
After Spaulding’s death in Amity, Pennsylvania, in 1816, the
manuscript was placed in a family trunk that was stored at the home
of Jerome Clark in Hatwick, New York. Philastus Hurlbut, an elder
of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who had fallen
out of favor with the Church, acquired the manuscript in attempt
to discredit the Mormon faith. Although Hulburt discovered that the
manuscript did not contain passages relating to the Book of Mormon,
he continued to work on his book entitled Mormonism Unvailed until
his friends persuaded him that he could not publish the book. Hulburt
agreed to sell the manuscript of the book Mormonism Unvailed to Mr.
E.D. Howe of Painesville, Ohio. Howe was not impressed with “Manuscript
Found,” but he did publish Mormonism Unvailed, in which he
made the case that the Spaulding Manuscript was used by Sidney Rigdon
to influence Joseph Smith, the author of the Book of Mormon. In the
1839, Howe sold his newspaper The Painseville Telegraph to L.L. Rice,
the owner and editor of several anti-slavery newspapers in Northern
Ohio. Eventually, Rice moved to Honolulu, Hawaii.
The Spaulding Manuscript and the Book of Mormon
The origin of the Book of Mormon has divided critics into two
camps. One group believes that Joseph Smith wrote the book without
divine
assistance. Smith’s detractors claim that he had help or that
he copied passages from other documents or manuscripts.
Although Philastus Hurlbut did not discover a link between the
Spaulding Manuscript and the Book of Mormon, his attempt to undermine
Joseph
Smith and the teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints set in motion the ongoing argument about the origins of
the Mormon faith. The book Mormonism Unvailed, begun by Hurlbut
and published
by E.B. Howe, supported the theory that Sidney Rigdon, a former
preacher, used the Spaulding Manuscript to influence the work
of Joseph Smith.
Another theory states that the Joseph Smith, Sr. family had ties
to Solomon Spaudling because the Smith family and Ruben Spaulding,
an uncle of Spaulding, lived in the same town of Sharon, Vermont.
Other critics argue that the there are similarities in the
story line, writing style, and word combination in Book of Mormon
and
the Spaulding Manuscript.
The questions relating to the origin of the Book of Mormon
and its relationship to the Spaulding Manuscript has attracted
many
visitors
to the Oberlin College Archives to view the work of Solomon
Spaulding.
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