ANOTHER LOOK AT ISRAEL DAMMAN
by James R. Nix
A talk given
during the Ellen G. White Summit held at Avondale College, Cooranbong, N.S.W.,
Australia, February 2-5, 2004
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I still remember my surprise
at reading the account of the trial of Israel Damman (Dammon,
or Damon) in Atkinson, Maine,
as reported in the March 7, 1845,
Piscataquis Farmer newspaper, and reprinted in Spectrum magazine
in August, 1987. What’s
all this about, I recall wondering. I
didn’t care at all about Israel Damman, the person
actually on trial, or even about Dorinda Baker,
someone I had never heard of before. My
questions revolved around Ellen Harmon (White), and to a lesser extent James
White. What were they doing there in
the midst of all that noise and confusion?
And why was Ellen lying on the floor during a vision?–that’s certainly
not how I pictured her from the artist’s paintings I had seen in various of
our denomination’s publications. Although
the discussion by several Adventist historians that followed the account of
the trial in Spectrum answered some of my questions, what still remained was a radically different view
of at least part of Ellen White’s earliest ministry than I then knew anything
about, and one that certainly did not fit my comfort zone.
Although I cannot stand
here today and tell you that I have totally resolved every question that
one might raise about Damman and what happened in
Atkinson, Maine, I can say that after having spent considerable time reading
and rereading the newspaper account of his trial, plus having looked at other
information regarding that same time period, I believe that I now have a much
better understanding of the circumstances surrounding those long ago
happenings.
Before looking in detail
at some of the points raised during the trial, let me give a brief overview of
Israel Damman’s life.
He was born in 1811
and died in 1886. A Free Will Baptist-turned-Millerite preacher,
Damman associated briefly after 1844 with Ellen
Harmon and James White in Maine.
Later, Damman was an Advent Christian minister. According to Isaac Welcome, Damman was remembered as “one of the most noisy and
unaccountable of men” whose preaching was “especially conspicuous by shouting
and jumping.” In 1838 he married Lydia Rich;
they had at least three children.
Damman’s
first recorded contact with Ellen and James was at Exeter, Maine, in early
February, 1845 Apparently, based upon Ellen’s vision of the
“Bridegroom” given her there, Damman accepted the
unfolding Shut Door understanding.
From Exeter,
James and Ellen traveled with Damman to Atkinson. There on Saturday night, February 15, 1845, at a meeting held in the
home of James Ayer, Jr.,
Damman was arrested.
A newspaper account of the subsequent trial reported on the activities
of various ones that evening, including James and Ellen,
though Damman was the only person actually being
tried.
Despite attempts to
locate the original court transcripts, the only account found to date is from
the March 7, 1845, Piscatacquis Farmer. The reporter stated he had “abridged . .
.[the] testimony” having “omitted . . . the most unimportant part, . . . but
[had] endeavored in no case to misrepresent” any witness.
Damman
was charged with being “a vagrant and idle person, . . . going about . . . town . . . begging: .
. .a common railer, or brawler, neglecting his
calling, or employment, misspending his earnings, and . . . not provid[ing] for the support of
himself [or] family.” By all accounts, the
Saturday night meeting was a noisy one. The stated purpose for the gathering was so
that Ellen Harmon and Dorinda Baker, another
visionary, could share their visions.
Despite not being on trial, the activities of Ellen, James,
and Dorinda all engendered considerable discussion by
both prosecution and defense witnesses. Damman, during his
own self-defense as summarized in the newspaper, did not mention any of the
three.
Dorinda
was known to several defense witnesses, though none previously knew Ellen. Despite that, several testified to their
belief in both women’s visions. One prosecution witness
appeared particularly
hostile to Ellen, stating that she was called “Imitation of Christ,” something
denied by all defense witnesses who spoke to the issue.
Differences also occurred regarding descriptions of Dorinda’s activities that evening. Part of the time she was in a back room of
the house making a “noise.” Some claimed that men were in the room with her,
including James White, though such charges were strongly denied by the defense
witnesses. It was later confirmed that
others rather than James went into the bedroom to assist Dorinda
during her “exercise.” The one agreement among the witnesses
pertained to what Ellen did that night.
All stated that while in vision she lay quietly on the floor, except
when she sat up to relate the vision.
Dorinda’s
main message was to a man she claimed thought badly of her. In contrast, Ellen’s comments all had a sense
of urgency to them.
Due to the group’s belief that Jesus would return within days,
it was reported that Ellen urged several to be baptized that night rather than
risk going to “hell,”
a word possibly used by the reporter to summarize Ellen’s comments since
nowhere else in her writings does she use such strong language. Interestingly, despite being in the midst of
all the extreme fanatical activities that evening, not once was either Ellen or
James shown to be actually involved.
Of interest are the
contrasting accounts given by the newspaper reporter and Ellen White regarding Damman’s arrest that evening. The newspaper account reported that twice the
sheriff sent for reinforcements in order to extricate Damman
from the meeting. In contrast, Ellen White later recalled that
despite twelve reinforcements, the sheriff could not free Damman
until God’s power released him. Despite these unresolved differences, in Spiritual
Gifts, book two, five witnesses attested to the accuracy of Ellen White’s
account regarding Damman’s arrest. At court, apparently his conviction was
eventually overturned.
Soon after returning to Portland,
James and Ellen, along with Israel Damman and others,
met at the home of Stockbridge Howland in Topsham. There Damman was
involved with the healing of Howland’s daughter, Frances, from rheumatic fever.
The
April 3, 1845, issue of The
Morning Watch, a Millerite paper, warned Adventists against “Israel Dammon, and John Moody, two married men, and Miss DORINDA
BAKER” who were traveling together to different places “teaching disgusting
extravagances.” Reference was made to
the fact that “Dammon[‘s] . . .trial in Maine has
been reported in all the papers.”
About the same time Damman was again arrested regarding two other noisy
meetings held in Garland. Apparently neither Ellen nor James were
present, though Dorinda was mentioned in one
warrant. However, she was not listed as
appearing before the justice of the peace the following day.
Later that year, Ellen and James met Damman
in Garland. Ellen would recall that there she had to
oppose Damman’s fanaticism. As a result, he rejected her testimonies and
became her “enemy.” Among other things, Damman believed both that Christ had returned and the dead
had been raised spiritually. Damman also
reportedly carried for years a grudge toward James White over a letter White
wrote Damman that the latter thought too strong. Also
involved in the misunderstanding was White’s followup
letter.
The last time Ellen and
James appear to have traveled with Damman, Joseph
Bates was also present. Miraculously,
the borrowed “partly broken colt” James was driving stood completely still the
entire time Ellen was in vision, despite James’ several attempts to make it
proceed. The precise date of this story is unknown,
though apparently it was after the Whites were married. That seems late, however, given Ellen’s own
comments regarding her interactions with Damman.
In the mid-1870s Sundaykeeping adventists launched
several attacks against Ellen White. In
one, Damman
claimed that in vision years earlier she had seen him “crowned in the kingdom
of God,” but later she saw him
“lost.” Although acknowledging having seen him and
others on the pathway toward the kingdom, Ellen White recalled having cautioned them “not . . . [to] become
exalted, lest they lose the crowns it was their privilege to gain.”
Thus ends my brief biography of Israel Damman. Let’s now look more carefully at some of the
details surrounding that long-ago Saturday night in Atkinson, and the trial
that followed two days later. The
context for that evening included the passing of the time on October 22, 1844, when Christ did
not return as expected by the Millerite Adventists, followed a few weeks later
by Ellen Harmon-White’s first vision sometime in December, 1844. After sharing her vision with the Advent
band in Portland,
a little later–toward the end of January, 1845, Ellen rode in an open sleigh
with her brother-in-law, Samuel Foss, the approximately 30 miles (45 km) out to
her sister and brother-in-law’s home in Poland, Maine. While there, Ellen took nearly two hours to
share her vision,
probably in the home of John Megquier.
Returning to Portland,
within days Ellen was off again. In vision
she had been instructed to share what she had been shown. The first opportunity that presented itself
was when William Jordan and his sister invited Ellen to travel with them to
Orrington in eastern Maine. Mr. Jordan
needed to return a horse to its owner, a young Adventist minister named James
White. Apparently Ellen then joined James and a few
others who traveled from Orrington to Garland
and then on to Exeter, holding
meetings in each place as they traveled.
As previously noted, it was in Exeter
where Damman lived,and
that Ellen Harmon and James White first met him.
While at Exeter
Ellen had her second major vision; it was on the Bridegroom. As already mentioned, it was this vision that
confirmed Damman, as well as James and Ellen in their
growing understanding of the meaning of what had happened in 1844. It was also here in Exeter
that Ellen recalled having to first denounce some fanatics.
What kinds of fanaticism
did Ellen and James face, not just in Exeter,
but also elsewhere in Maine
during the months that followed? Since
this is not a paper about fanaticism per se, I will not detour very
far. But from Ellen’s perspective
“fanaticism” would have included not working, creeping and crawling, undue
familiarity between men and women, mesmerism, mixed foot washing between men
and women, foot kissing, false visionaries, touching hot stoves to prove you
would not be burned, etc. Several
prosecution witnesses at Damman’s trial also included
as part of fanaticism all foot washing, the Holy Kiss, rebaptism, and
shouting as part of worship.
Since creeping and
crawling were mentioned by several witnesses, let me briefly describe it. As part of sincerely attempting to follow
Christ’s instructions that His followers should become as little children,
in the wake of the October 22 disappointment, a number of Millerite adventists in Maine
rather than walking, began creeping everywhere they went. Accounts have come to us from a bit later in
1845 regarding some in Paris, Maine,
who participated in this form of fanaticism.
Cyprian Stevens crept in front of a stagecoach full of passengers. The horses became frightened, almost
upsetting the coach. The driver became
so angered that he “handed the lines to a man that sat beside him, jumped down with
his whip, and gave Bro. Stevens the full benefit of it. One eye was badly swollen and his whole face
was bruised as well as his body.”
On another occasion, a
Bro. Lunt was creeping on the bridge in the same
village. “One man by the name of Townsend
grabbed him by the hair of his head, threw him over the railing of the bridge,
intending to throw him on the rocks in the deep water.” He was saved by the writer of the letter, a
teenager at the time, who “caught Townsend, by the coat tail, saying, Let him
alone, he means right, and it is none of your business whether he walks or
creeps.”
When visiting Paris
during the summer of 1845, Ellen was asked if she felt it was their duty to
creep. She told them most assuredly that
it was not. As soon as she had quit
speaking, an elderly brother who was present said,
If man
was made to walk erect,
The
serpent made to crawl,
Why imitate the odious thing
That
introduced the fall?
Besides creeping, there
were also false visionaries. Let me
share just one incident from this time regarding a practical way that Ellen
dealt with getting a false visionary to come out of vision. Many years after the event, she recalled her
advice,
“Get a
pitcher of cold water, good cold water, and throw it right in her face, that
will bring her out of it the quickest of anything you can do.”
Before the water could
even be brought, the visionary
had come out of her vision!
The question naturally
arises why Ellen and James would even be meeting with, and attempting to
minister to, people with such strange, fanatical views. The fact is that these were the only ones
among the former Millerites who still placed any validity in the October 22, 1844, date. Additionally, it would be sometime later in
1845 before God actually sent Ellen to a place to oppose fanaticism.
From Exeter, the group
moved on to Atkinson where the meeting and subsequent arrest of Israel Damman took place late Saturday night, or very early Sunday
morning, February 15/16, 1845.
At this point, there are
several ways one could proceed in terms of analyzing the events of that evening
and the subsequent trial. We could
review the descriptions of those events as given by Ellen White’s critics. In all candor, there are enough Web sites out
there already doing that, for me to do it also would just be a waste of time!
Likewise, I have found
fascinating a study of the comparisons between Ellen Harmon and Dorinda Baker that evening, including their actions and
visions. Several witnesses said they
accepted the visions of both women as being from God. However, there appear to me to be some very
obvious differences between both women that evening; I could be tempted to
summarize what I see as being those parallels and differences. However, I don’t think that is precisely what
is being expected of me in this presentation.
Instead, I want to give
an alternate viewpoint about that evening’s happenings regarding Israel Damman by taking another look at what the newspaper
reporter does, and does not, say in his account of the trial. It is unfortunate that the full court
transcript has not been found. Without
it, we will never know for sure what all was actually said by the various
witnesses. I say that because the longer
one reads and rereads what is stated in the Piscataquis Farmer, the more
intrigued and frustrated you become as you realize how much is really missing.
For instance, at least one critical web site quotes an article by William F.
Sprague who cites a letter written by James D. Brown recalling James Stuart Holmes,
the first lawyer in Piscataquis County,
and the attorney who represented Israel Damman during
his trial. According to Brown’s
recollections, at Damman’s trial Holmes argued
“eloquent[ly] . . . . for religious freedom and
toleration, and the right of every person to worship God according to the
dictates of his own conscience. . . .” In the newspaper reporter’s account of the
trial there is not so much as a single hint of such an argument having been
made by Holmes.
Another reason for
expressing my concern regarding the newspaper reporter’s record of the trial as
we have it is that if my admittedly very limited experience with reporters is
any indicator of what happens in the news reporting world, what all of us read
in the papers, or hear on the radio and television, is at best only an
approximation of what actually occurred.
Having said that, I do not in any way impugn the honesty or integrity of
that long ago newspaper reporter. But it
is worth remembering what he said in his opening comments to any of the
witnesses who read what he had written:
“I have abridged your testimony as much as possible, and have omitted
much of the most unimportant part. . . . but [I] have endeavored in no case to
misrepresent you.” He continued by
saying to the readers of his report
“that much of the testimony was drawn out by questions and I have
omitted the questions in all cases where it could be dispensed with and shorten
the work. To all, I offer it as an
imperfect and impartial report. In
consequence of my total inexperience, being but a laboring man. . . ” he
concluded by saying that his only reason for preparing the report was because
of the numerous requests to do so that he had received.
Recalling the actual
purpose for the trial may also help us better understand why certain questions
were asked, and others apparently were not.
Damman was arrested because he was accused of
not working, thus risking becoming the responsibility of the town to
support. Given the laws of Maine
back then that each town was responsible for its indigent, some of the citizens
of Atkinson did not want to take that risk with Damman. The fact that both prosecution and defense
witnesses agreed that Damman urged people not to work
did not help his case at all. Granted, Damman believed the Lord was coming within days or weeks at
best,
so in his view they had plenty to live on until the end of the world. In fact, one prosecution witness even
testified that Damman had said that “if God did not
come then we must all go to work together.” But that kind of small detail was overlooked
by the court.
It also needs to be
recalled that it was Israel Damman who was on trial,
not Ellen Harmon, James White, nor Dorinda
Baker. In fact, there is no evidence
that Ellen, James, or Dorinda were even present
during the trial.
With that general
background, let’s start by looking at several things regarding that
evening. At the outset, I acknowledge
being an apologist for Ellen White.
However, having said that, I think there is sufficient cause based upon
a reasonable interpretation of the available evidence, so that credible
alternate conclusions can be reached regarding a variety of the
charges/accusations raised against Ellen White by her critics.
My first observation has
to do with the general impression one receives when initially reading the
account in the newspaper that everything that evening was total bedlam. Today’s
Adventist reader can’t help but wonder how Ellen and James must have felt
surrounded by such noise and commotion.
In all candor, what went on that evening probably did not sound all that
strange to Ellen. Her family were
Methodists, sometimes called “shouting Methodists.” She would later recall an incident from about
this time that involved her mother in Portland.
“[One]
afternoon an officer was sent to visit us, while some of our neighbors raised
their windows to hear the result. Father
was away to his work, and mother stepped to the door. He told her that complaints had reached him
that we disturbed the peace of the neighborhood by noisy praying, and sometimes
praying in the night, and he was requested to attend to the matter. Mother answered that we prayed morning and
night, and sometimes at noon, and
should continue to do so. . . . He said
that he had no objection to prayer, and if there were more of it in the
neighborhood, it would make them better.
‘But,’ said he, ‘they complain of your praying in the night.’ He was told that if any of the family were
sick, or were in distress of mind in the night, it was our custom to call upon
GOD for help, and we found relief. He
was referred to our near neighbor who used strong drink. His voice was often heard cursing and
blaspheming God. Why did not the
neighbors send you to him, to still the disturbance he causes in the
neighborhood? He serves his master, we
serve the LORD our GOD. His curses and
blasphemy seem not to disturb the neighbors while the voice of prayer greatly
troubles them. ‘Well,’ said the officer,
‘what shall I tell them that you will do?’
My mother replied, ‘Serve God, let the consequences be what they
may.’ The officer left, and we had no
further trouble from that quarter.”
Emphasizing reports
about that evening’s noise obviously played into the hands of those at the
trial who were against Damman. And by all accounts, it apparently was a
noisy meeting,
though at least one witness testified that most meetings he attended were
louder than was Damman’s that Saturday night!
What is
easily overlooked is that apparently it wasn’t noisy all the time. Prosecution witness, William C. Crosby, Esq.
testified, They would at times all be talking at once, halloing
at the top of their voices. . . . After
the cessation of the noise, Dammon got up and was
more coherent.
(Emphasis supplied.)
Another prosecution
witness testified that with everyone sitting around on the floor, leaning on
each other, “it did not have the appearance of a religious meeting.” However, under cross examination, that same
witness admitted that he saw “nothing like licentiousness–there was exhortation
and prayer. . . .”
And Loton
Lambert, by far the most hostile of the prosecution witnesses, testified,
They were singing when I
arrived–after singing they sat down on the floor–Dammon
said a sister had a vision to relate–a woman on the floor then related her
vision.
Although Ellen is not
named here, from the context it seems most likely that she is the one Lambert
was describing. Other witnesses
expressly stated that the meeting was being held that evening so that she could
relate her vision.
Here is one of the times
when I could wish for a more complete account of that evening’s meetings. Although one would never guess it from the
abbreviated account we have to read, Ellen may well have taken quite some time
telling her first vision received the previous December. As noted, when in Poland
about the end of January, it took her two hours to relate her vision. Now in Atkinson, if she added anything
regarding her recent Bridegroom vision given her just a few days previously in Exeter,
she might have talked even longer. Of
course I realize this is arguing from silence.
But the reason she had undertaken this trip was to share her vision. And at least two of the witnesses testified
that giving her the opportunity to share her vision was the purpose for the
meeting that Saturday night.
If one allows for the
possibility that Ellen spent considerable time–or even some time–that evening
sharing her first vision–assuring them that the bright light of the Midnight
Cry was still valid, and would shine as light on the pathway as the people of
God were traveling on the narrow path toward the holy city of God, then some of
the other things that also happened that evening become more understandable.
After the passing of the
time in 1844, reluctantly those terribly disappointed Millerite Adventists came
to give up their faith that anything significant had happened on October
22. Ellen herself would later recall
that by the time she received her first vision in December, she, too, had given
up her faith in October 22. It was her
first vision that reconfirmed for her the validity of their Midnight Cry
experience.
Given this background,
we can now possibly understand two otherwise unclear statements made by
witnesses. Prosecution witness, William
C. Crosby stated, “After the visionist called them
up, she told them they doubted. Her
object seemed to be to convince them they must not doubt.” Likewise, Loton
Lambert, the most hostile of the prosecution witnesses, testified, “The vision
woman called Joel Doore, said he had doubted.”
Since no other context
is given, one can only wonder what it was that Ellen was concerned about them
doubting. That it was not regarding the
validity of her vision seems clear from statements made by several witnesses
who unequivocally affirmed their belief that Ellen’s visions were from God. In fact, Joel Doore
himself was one of those who specifically declared his belief that Ellen’s visions were “genuine.” Given that Doore
already believed in the immediate return of Christ, plus the validity of
Ellen’s visions, then the possibility of his doubting the continuing
significance of October 22 makes perfect sense. That’s what Ellen was traveling
around trying to encourage people to maintain their belief in–that something
really had happened on October 22.
Belief that God was
still in their movement, coupled with their belief that Christ would still come
at any time, possibly explains their sense of urgency for baptism. After all,
if there was any chance of losing eternal life, that certainly must not
happen. Although we do not have any
written counsel from Ellen White from this time about her views on rebaptism,
later she did provide counsel regarding it. However, we do know that James White mentions
in one place that he rebaptized his wife,
though the circumstance of his doing so are unknown. It has been speculated that it was after they
both accepted the seventh-day Sabbath in 1846. Although it is specifically stated that Ellen
did not participate in either of the two baptisms that took place that Saturday
night in Atkinson,
it may well be that her own rebaptism happened around this same time as a
testimony to her own on-going faith in the validity of the October 22
event. I say that because I am not aware
of any rebaptisms being recorded around the time that she and James accepted
the Sabbath. But if this trial report is
to be believed, she urged several to be baptized that evening in Atkinson. James White does say that when he rebaptized her, only that it was “at an early period of her
experience.” This would be about as early in her
experience as one could get!
As one reads the
newspaper reporter’s account of the trial, you are struck with the fact that
several times witnesses are quoted as testifying that Ellen urged people not to
“go to hell,” or said that if they were not baptized that night they would “go
to hell.” Since nowhere else in Ellen White’s writings
do we find her using similar language,
it is curious if she actually did so that evening. In fact, it is highly unlikely that she did
given that by this time she had given up belief in an eternally burning hell. That not all Millerites believed as she did
is clear from the records. And most
certainly many of the witnesses, including probably the newspaper reporter
himself, believed in an eternally burning hell.
Interestingly, the reporter does quote one witness who testified that
she had urged another man not to be lost.
Defense witness James Ayer, Jr. recalled Ellen saying to Joel Doore “that she was distressed on his account–was afrad he would loose his soul” (both sic.). Given this single example of other softer
wording being used by Ellen that evening, it is easy to see how similar
statements by other witnesses could have been misinterpreted by the reporter as
meaning that she thought they would go straight to hell. Probably we will never know for sure what
Ellen White said that evening, but her strong statements as reported in the newspaper
are certainly inconsistent with everything else we know from her life. Concern over people losing their souls is
much more consistent with everything else we know about Ellen White.
Another thing that
probably strikes most Adventists when first reading the account of the meeting
at Atkinson is that Ellen White was described as having been lying on the floor
while in vision. At least one witness
recalled that part of the time James White sat holding her head while she was
in vision. I know that when I first read
this account, I found the description of Ellen’s position while in vision to be
totally opposite of what I imagined.
Thanks to the artists who have depicted her occasionally while in
vision, in my imagination I saw her up and walking around, or possibly standing
holding a Bible, etc.,–all things that on occasion she did while in
vision. But I certainly did not picture
her sitting in a chair,
or lying on the floor in a house,
or on the platform in a church. However, the more I have read, the more I
realize that more often than not, she probably was lying down while in
vision. In fact, Martha Amadon, daughter of John Byington,
our first General Conference president, as well as being our first Adventist
church school teacher, and who possibly saw Ellen White in more visions than
anyone else besides James White, specifically recalled Mrs. White’s “position
in vision [as] being a recumbent one”.
Another thing that I
assume strikes most Adventists is the fact that some testified that Ellen was
said to have been called “Imitation of Christ.”
I recall when I first read the account years ago, although several of
the defense witnesses denied having ever heard her called that, and were
certain that she was not, it was only after I took time to read carefully the
newspaper account that I came to realize that it was only one witness–Loton Lambert, the most hostile of the prosecution
witnesses, who claimed she was called “Imitation of Christ.” Because the names
of all the witnesses are new to today’s reader, it’s very easy to get them confused
without going through them carefully. It
might also be helpful to recall that Lambert was the only witness who was told
by James Ayer, Jr., the person in whose house the meeting was held that night,
that if he disturbed the meeting, he would have to leave. It is obvious from both Ayers’ testimony, as
well as Lambert’s that he (Lambert) was viewed as a potential disturber that
evening. In fact, Lambert even testified
that he had not come to disturb the meeting that evening. That his testimony as a prosecution witness
could be considered as hostile to Damman and the
others who were there that evening, I think even Lambert would agree to.
As I have read and
reread the newspaper account of the trial, I have wondered if with all the
noise reported that evening, possibly Lambert may have heard Damman, or someone else, refer to Ellen’s “vision of
Christ.” Or maybe Lambert thought Damman said that Ellen urged people to “imitate Christ.” What I am suggesting is that Lambert may
have quite honestly mistakenly thought
that he had heard Ellen called “Imitation of Christ.” Obviously, we will never
know what caused him to say what he said, but we do know that everyone else who
specifically is quoted as speaking to the topic denied that Ellen was ever called
“Imitation of Christ” that evening.
Rather than claim Lambert was lying, as the critics rush to do regarding
Ellen White, I would prefer to think that he misheard what had been said.
Before moving to
consideration of the most obvious difference between the newspaper account and
Ellen White’s recollections, that of the arrest of Israel Damman,
let me comment briefly on something interesting that shows up in the testimony
of four of the defense witnesses. I am
specifically referring to the understanding of the witnesses regarding the Shut
Door. At this time, many former
Millerites, including William Miller himself, held to a total shut door for the
conversion of sinners (Miller would change his mind the following month). As is well known, Ellen White categorically
denied that she was ever shown in vision that the door of mercy was totally
shut thus preventing the conversion of any more sinners. Critics like to pounce on her denial
statements by trying to prove that she was shown a total shut door in
vision. What insights, if any, do we
find among the testimony of several of the witnesses?
While most of the
witnesses agreed that Damman opposed the churches, it
is interesting that several specifically differentiated between the churches
themselves and individual members within the churches. James Ayer, Jr., in whose house the meeting
was held stated that Damman believed that “there were
members of the churches he referred to instead of the whole.” Isley Osborne
testified regarding Damman’s view: “He believes there
is good, bad, and indifferent in all churches. . . .” Joel Doore
testified, “Elder Dammon said there was [sic.] bad
characters in the churches; I did not understand him to say all.” Jacob Mason acknowledged that “Brother Dammon said the churches were of that description–said they
were lyers [sic.], rogues, &c. I did not understand him to include all, but
individuals.”
Whether their
understanding of Damman’s position is totally
accurate is somewhat unclear. I say that
because under reexamination, in a two sentence summary of Joel Doore’s testimony, he is reported to have said, “I have
heard brother Dammon preach that the day of grace was
over for sinners. Respondent said ‘that
is my belief.’” Also, the very abbreviated summary of Israel
Damman’s self-defense states, “He argued that the day
of grace had gone by, that the believers were reduced; but that there was too
many yet, and that the end of the world would come within a week.”
Although it is possible
that Damman himself may actually have believed in an
extreme Shut Door, several witnesses did not understand that to be his
position. And since the two accounts
(Joel Doore, Jr., and Elder Damman’s
self defense) are so abbreviated, it is quite possible that the nuances
regarding the door of mercy not being shut for those who had not rejected
light, could most likely have been missed, or at least misunderstood, by the
newspaper reporter. The significant
point is that in the testimony of all the defense witnesses who spoke to the issue,
not one of them understood that Damman believed the
door of mercy was totally shut. It is
only in the two very abbreviated statements that you find something else being
suggested, and at least in the case of Joel Doore,
his brief statement under reexamination contradicts his earlier more expansive
testimony regarding what he understood to be Damman’s
belief.
So for me, I find it
significant that among this group, none of those disappointed Millerites said
anything that indicated they believed the door of mercy was totally shut. Given that Ellen Harmon was there to share
her vision, apparently nothing she said that evening convinced them that the
door of mercy was totally shut either.
In fact, when looking at what was actually testified regarding her, you
find her urging people not to doubt, to be baptized that evening–in short there
was a sense of urgency about her messages that would hardly seem likely if she
had been shown in vision that the door of mercy had been totally shut.
Or to put it even more
clearly, if Ellen White’s first vision taught an extreme Shut Door as her
critics claim, then she must have misunderstood it also. She would not have been present at that
Saturday night meeting in Atkinson with people there who were not believers if
her vision had taught an extreme Shut Door.
Obviously, her first vision did not teach the Shut Door, which is
exactly what she always maintained to be the case.
One other interesting
insight emerges from the testimony. A
short time after this event, Ellen’s critics would start making a big issue
over their claim that James White manipulated her visions, and unless he were
present, she could not have a vision (despite the fact that he was not present
at the time of her first vision in December, 1844.) I find a statement made by Joel Doore under cross examination to be of interest. He testified, “I did not tell any person
yesterday that it was necessary to have any one in the room with her to bring
out her trances.” Since none of the other witnesses are quoted
as having addressed the issue, we do not know their beliefs on the matter. But at least Doore
did not think that Ellen Harmon’s visions resulted from anyone else’s
manipulation.
Now let’s turn to the
most apparent contradiction between Ellen White’s recollections and the
testimony of the sheriff as briefly summarized in the newspaper account: the arrest of Damman
by the sheriff. In her most complete
account of the arrest written in 1860 in Spiritual Gifts, bk. 2, pps 40-41, she says that while she was speaking two men
looked into the window. Seeing Damman, they rushed past her to him. She went on to recall,
“The
Spirit of the Lord rested upon him, and his strength was taken from him, and he
fell to the floor helpless. The officer
cried out, ‘In the name of the State of Maine,
lay hold of this man.’ Two seized his
arms, and two his feet, and attempted to drag him from the room. They would move him a few inches only, and
then rush out of the house. The power of
GOD was in that room, and the servants of GOD with their countenances lighted
up with his glory, made no resistance.
The efforts to take Elder D. were often repeated with the same
effect. The men could not endure the
power of GOD, and it was a relief to them to rush out of the house. Their number increased to twelve, still Elder
D. was held by the power of GOD about forty minutes, and not all the strength
of those men could move him from the floor where he lay helpless. At the same moment we all felt that Eld. D. must go; that GOD had manifested his power for his
glory. . . and those men took him up as easily as they would take up a child,
and carried him out.”
In contrast, the
sheriff’s obviously summarized recollections read very differently:
“When I
went to arrest prisoner, they shut the door against me. Finding I could not gain access to him
without, I burst open the door. I went
to the prisoner and took him by the hand and told him my business. A number of women jumped on him–he clung to
them, and they to him. So great was the
resistance, that I with three assistants, could not get him out. I remained in the house and sent for help;
after they arrived we made a second attempt with the same result–I again sent
for more help–after they arrived we overpowered them and got him out door in
custody. We were resisted by both men
and women. Can’t describe the place–it
was one continued shout.”
These are two obviously
very different descriptions of the same event.
I said earlier in my talk that I don’t have total answers pertaining to
every single thing that happened with the Israel Damman
incident. This, without question, is my
largest unresolved contradiction. But
having admitted that, let’s look at some of the details that may prove of
interest. We’ll start by listing some
similarities between the two accounts:
1.
Both agree that it was only Damman
who was arrested that night, and noone else.
2.
Both agree that initially it was four men who tried
unsuccessfully to remove Damman.
3.
Both agree that there were multiple efforts to remove Damman. (Ellen White says he could not be moved due to the
power of God; the Sheriff, because so many were holding Damman
down.)
4.
Both agree that the entire time of the arrest took
considerable time (Ellen White says forty minutes; Moulton says twice he sent
for reinforcements–which would have taken awhile for them to respond in that
pre-cell phone era.}
5.
Albeit for different reasons, both agree that people in
the arresting party had to leave the room during the time of the arrest (Ellen
White stated it was due to the power of God, though one can assume that since
she agrees that reinforcements came, given that there were then no cell phones,
she presumably would have agreed that those reinforcements were sent for; the
sheriff only describes having to send for reinforcements.)
The apparent
dissimilarities are, I think, readily apparent, but they could be summarized as
follows:
1.
EGW: “While I was speaking, two men looked into the
window.”; Sheriff: “They shut the door against me. . . . I burst open the door.”
(A dissimilarity though not necessarily a contradiction.)
2.
EGW: “Two [arresting men] . . . attempted to drag him [Damman] a few inches only, and then rush out of the house”;
Sheriff: “I went to the prisoner and took him by the hand and told him my business.”
3.
EGW: “The power of God was in that room, and the
servants of God with their countenances lighted up with his glory, made no resistence.”; Sheriff: “A number of women jumped on him [Damman]–he clung to them, and they to him.”
4.
EGW: “The men could not endure the power of GOD, and it
was a relief to them to rush out of the house.
Their number increased to twelve, still Eld.
D. was held by the power of God about forty minutes, and not all the strength
of those men could move him from the floor where he lay helpless.”; Sheriff:
“So great was the resistence, that I could not get
him out.”
5.
EGW: “At the same moment we all felt that Eld. D. must go; that GOD had manifested his power for his
glory, and that the name of the LORD would be further glorified in suffering
him to be taken from our midst. And
those men took him up as easily as they would take up a child, and carried him
out.”; Sheriff: “I again sent for more help–after they arrived we overpowered
them and got him [Damman] out door in custody.”
For Ellen White, God was clearly at work
supernaturally during the whole arrest.
Obviously, nothing even remotely approaching that is described by the
arresting officer. It’s again at a time
like this that we could wish for the entire court transcript! Was the sheriff cross-examined by the defense
attorney? If so, nothing was included in
the newspaper report. How did the other
witnesses view Damman’s arrest? Not one other comment regarding the arrest is
included in the entire published account of the trial. Even if one denies any supernatural element,
the fact that twice the sheriff had to send for reinforcements would, I think
even to the casual reader, be of sufficient reason to think that in the actual
court transcript someone else must have said something regarding the
arrest. What we have from the sheriff is
not only unusually brief, but as I just said,
what he describes is of sufficient interest to cause one to wonder if at
least one or two of the other witnesses might have spoken concerning the arrest. Of course, there is always the possibility
that even if some of the witnesses had wanted to speak to the issue, unless
directly asked by one of the attorneys to do so, the person might have been
ruled out of order. Without the complete
court transcript, we’ll never know the sheriff’s full testimony, including
whether he was cross-examined, or if any of the other witnesses were asked to
address this issue.
One reason I cannot help
but wonder if other witnesses may have actually spoken about the arrest is
because included in one witness’s testimony is a curious statement. No context is given for it in the newspaper
reporter’s summary. But could it
possibly refer to circumstances surrounding the arrest of Damman? We’ll never know conclusively, but it does
provide us with a tantalizing question.
Here is the statement made by Deacon James Rowe that intrigues me:
“Damman stood up in the floor and said, I am going to stand
here–and while I stand here, they can’t hurt you, neither men nor devils can’t (sic.)
hurt you.”
Does this one brief
statement attributed by Rowe to Damman pertain to
when Damman and the group realized that the sheriff
had come to arrest him? Or even more to
the point, could it possibly refer to when the sheriff says he broke down the
door to gain entry? Could Damman have made this statement then? And if so, does Damman’s
statement reflect that in his view also, something supernatural was going on
that night? Was it mere bravado, or was
there something more behind the statement, something that Ellen White also
reflected in her recollection of the arrest?
Again, we will probably never know.
But it is intriguing to ponder as the statement certainly does not seem
to fit in with anything else in James Rowe’s testimony.
One thing, however, is
absolutely certain, Ellen White never wavered in her belief that something
supernatural was involved with Damman’s arrest. As late as 1906 in an interview with her
secretary, Clarence Crisler, Mrs. White still
recalled basically the same circumstances regarding Damman’s
arrest as she had described in 1860.
“They
tried to get this Damman, and they could not get
him. There he lay on the floor three
quarters of an hour. ‘In the name of the
state of Maine, we ask you to
take hold of this man.’ Then they would
rush up and grab hold of him, and they would all begin to sing, ‘We left old
mystic Babylon, to sound the
Jubilee.’ And their hands would slip off
and they would start up. Now said I,
they came up to him and began to take hold of him, they did not want me in the
room, they want me to go out of the room, they said it was I that was keeping
him. I stepped right out of the room,
and I said, Elder Damman, the Lord will have you go
with these men to this trialk (sic.) and he did. He went to that trial.”
In another interview
from about the same time, Ellen White recalled,
“When
they came into the meeting to take him, he was kneeling down. They took hold of his hands and feet and
tried to lift him up to take him out of the roo[m]. But they could [n]ot
do this. . . . They would draw him a few stewps
(sic.), but as soon as they took their hands off him, he would slide back into
the same place. They tried for two hours
to take him out of t[h]e room, but without avail. Then we all felt that it would be for the
glory of God for him to be taken out.”
“There
were twelve men in all who came to take him. . . .
So, is there any way
that we can reconcile these two accounts?
Probably not totally. How then
might we look at the two accounts? A couple
of suggestions come to mind
First, we might try to
understand things from Ellen White’s possible perspective. Even if we were to grant to the critic that
everything happened exactly as summarized by the sheriff, would that
necessarily mean, as the critic is wont to claim, that Ellen White was lying,
or trying to claim more for things than the situation warranted? I think not.
Given Ellen White’s spiritual frame of mind at the time, having just
gone through the time leading up to when she expected Jesus to return–the
happiest year of her life, as she would recall it,
and then even more recently having been given a vision by God, doubtless her
perspective on events would be very different from that of the sheriff, or of
any of the other witnesses.
Why do I say this? Let me give just a couple of examples of
incidents Ellen White recalled from her life prior to 1845. Young Ellen was converted at the Methodist
camp meeting held at Buxton, Maine,
probably in 1841. For her, that event
changed everything. She would recall,
“During
the meeting, clouds and rain prevailed a greater part of the time and my
feelings had been in harmony with the weather.
Now the sun shone bright and clear and flooded the earth with light and
warmth. . . .
“It
seemed to me that every one must be at peace/with God and animated by his
Spirit. Everything my eyes rested upon
seemed to have undergone a change. The
trees were more beautiful, and the birds sang sweeter than ever before; they
seemed to be praising the Creator in their songs. I did not care to talk, for fear this
happiness might pass away, and I should lose the previous evidence of Jesus’
love for me.
“As we
neared our home in Portland, we
passed men at work upon the street. They
were conversing upon ordinary topics with each other, but my ears were deaf to
everything but the praise of God, and their words came to me as grateful thanks
and glad hosannas. Turning to my mother,
I said: ‘Why, these men are all praising God and they haven’t been to
the camp-meeting.’ I did not then
understand why the tears gathered in my mother’s eyes, and a tender smile lit
up her face, as she listened to my simple words, that recalled a similar
experience of her own.”
Likewise, once when she
and her older brother Robert were young Millerites, Ellen recalled her
brother’s face being lit up when he spoke. Did others also see it? There is no way of knowing. Even in her account of Damman’s
arrest, she recalled that the “countenances of the servants of GOD lighted up
with his glory.” Again, did others that night see what she
saw? Since none testified to the point,
at least as recorded in the newspaper summary, we will never know. However, it is interesting that many years
later, when J. N. Andrews was called to be our first official missionary, his
face was also recalled by J. O. Corliss as having
shone with a pronounced brightness:
“A camp meeting was
appointed to convene a short distance from Battle Creek,
in the summer of 1874, just prior to the departure of our first missionary to a
foreign field, and Elder Andrews was present.
When the expansion of the message was dwelt upon, and notice was given
that he would soon leave for Europe, a change came over
the meeting, and Elder Andrews, who had never before appeared so solemn, at
once seemed altered in appearance. His
face shone with . . . pronounced brightness . . . .
“I had
never before witnessed a sight so heavenly, nor have I seen anything equaling
it since that time. . . .”
Were either Ellen White
or J. O. Corliss lying with what they said? No.
Did anyone else see what they saw?
We’ll never know. But viewing the
arrest through Ellen White’s eyes is one valid possibility. Everything that happened that night she saw
from a spiritual perspective.
Another way to look at
the differences in the two accounts is not to try to offer any explanation, but
rather just simply recognize that supernatural occurrences will be viewed
differently by believers and non-believers.
The Bible offers numerous examples of events that believers take as
supernatural, while others either deny the historicity of, or at least offer
other explanations for. Everything from
the biblical account of creation, to Noah’s worldwide flood, and the
resurrection of Christ, not to mention all the lesser miracles in the Bible,
are accepted on faith by the believer, but are downplayed, or denied, by
others. Joshua and the sun standing
still; Jericho’s falling walls; Hezekiah and his backward moving sundial, Jonah
and his large fish; and on and on–these are all stories that the committed
Christian accepts as true because the prophet recorded them as facts, while
others view the same events entirely differently, providing for them
naturalistic explanations, or denying the accounts completely.
But it is not just
biblical events that have differing viewpoints regarding them. In the life and experience of Ellen White an
example comes to mind of an historical event that she saw as being
supernatural, but neither a congressional committee, nor actual eyewitnesses, could
totally explain regarding what had actually caused it. I am referring to the ending of the first major battle in the American Civil War,
the Battle of Manassas. A total rout of
the Union forces occurred on the
afternoon of July 21, 1861. About two weeks later, on August 3, 1861, at Roosevelt,
NY, Ellen White was shown the reason for
that rout.
“I saw
a view of the disastrous battle of Manassas, Virginia.
. . . The Southern army had everything in their favor and were prepared for a
dreadful contest. The Northern army was
moving on with triumph, not doubting but that they would be victorious. Many were reckless and marched forward
boastingly, as though victory were already theirs. . . . They did not expect so
fierce an encounter. . . . The dead and dying were on every side. Both the North and the South suffered
severely. . . . Just then an angel descended and waved his hand backward. Instantly there was confusion in the
ranks. It appeared to the Northern men
that their troops were retreating, when it was not so in reality, and a
precipitate retreat commenced. . . .
“The
sudden falling back of the Northern troops is a mystery to all. They know not that God’s hand was in the
matter.”
Let’s look first at the
report by a Confederate eyewitness regarding what he saw that afternoon:
“Now
the most extraordinary spectacle I have ever witnessed took place. I had been gazing at the numerous well-formed
lines as they moved forward to the attack, some fifteen or twenty thousand
strong in full view, and for some reason had turned my head in another
direction for a moment, when someone exclaimed, pointing to the battle field,
‘Look! Look!’ I looked, and what a change had taken place
in an instant. Where those well-dressed,
well-defined lines, with clear spaces between, had been steadily pressing
forward, the whole field was a confused swarm of men, like bees, running away
as fast as their legs could carry them, with all order and organization
abandoned.”
As visitors tour the
battlefield today, the following description is what you find on the next to
last explanatory sign on the walking tour:
“Charge on Griffin’s
Guns – Raw Recruits: The 33rd VA Infantry
“The Virginians were
waiting, tense here at Wood’s edge–their first time under bombardment. Shells from Rickett’s
battery exploded in the boughs overhead and plowed up the ground in front. When the two Union cannon rolled into
position on top of the rise only 100 yards (approx. 100 m) away, Col. A. C.
Cummings gave the order to charge.
Better to get his men moving, the colonel figured, before they panicked
and before the Union guns could do more damage.”
Continuing on toward the
last sign on the battlefield walking tour, you pass a small sign that says:
“You
are about to follow in the
footsteps
of the charging
Confederates. If the two cannon
had
turned and used
canister
at this range, they would
have
shredded the
regiment. For some reason the
artillery
did not fire,
as if
the Virginians were invisible.”
Finally you come to the
last descriptive sign on the battlefield.
It state:
“Point
Blank Volley – An Officer’s Error?
“In clear view of
artillerymen here, Confederates lined up at the fence and trees across the open
field. These two cannon and supporting
infantry could have stopped the Rebels cold, yet the four hundred charging
Virginians were able to fire a musket volley at such close range that they
virtually wiped out the Union gun crews.
Congressional inquiries failed to clear up the mystery: how did the Confederates manage to get that
close?. . . .”
And the full scale route
already described would soon commence.
That pretty well summarizes the differences: Ellen White said it was one
angel that caused all the confusion; the best explanation our National Park Service
can offer is that it seemed “as if the Virginians were invisible.” In summary, there are certain events that
believers are going to see one way, despite claims to the contrary by
non-believers.
However one views it,
the account of that long ago evening in Atkinson remains of interest to
Adventists. As I said at the outset,
doubtless not all questions regarding what actually happened that evening will
ever be resolved. In fact, nearly
thirty years afterward, Ellen White recalled the impact that fanaticism had on
the fledgling Adventist movement,
“We
acknowledge to our grief that there was fanaticism in the State of Maine,
and that this fanaticism sprung up in different places in different states. . .
. A fearful stain was brought upon the cause of God which would cleave to the
name of Adventist like the leprosy.
Satan triumphed, for this reproach would cause many precious souls to
fear to have any connection with Adventists.”
But I think that Dr.
Herbert E. Douglass in his book has summarized the Damman
event well,
“Did
the Seventh-day Adventist
Church begin amidst shouting,
crawling, hugging, allegorizers of the Second
Advent? Definitely not. No one at Atkinson was a Sabbath keeper, not
even Ellen Harmon. No one that night
understood the role of Jesus as High Priest.
No one in Dammon’s circle had the slightest
concept of the Great Controversy Theme and its implications for them. The Dammon
gathering was made up of disappointed Millerites who had not abandoned the
Biblical doctrine of the Advent, even though they were groping their way
through theological fog.
“Using
the plan He had followed since our first parents left the Garden of Eden …,
God gently started with the few who had not discarded their 1844
experience. Ever so patiently He led the
few who would listen away from their many errors, such as Sunday sacredness,
the extreme shut-door, ‘no-work’ conviction, and emotional excesses in
worship. Without the teaching, guiding
intervention of the Spirit of prophecy working through Ellen White, clearly the
Adventist witness of the 1840s would have been far different.”
Spelled variously: Damman,
Dammon, or Damon.
Spectrum, vol.17, no. 5, [Aug. 1987],
29-36.
Ancestry.Com: “Israel
Damon.”
The World’s Crisis, Nov. 24, 1886, 90.
Ibid., Dec. 15, 1886, 102.
Wellcome, Isaac, History
of the Second Advent Message and Mission, Doctrine and People, Yarmouth,
ME, 1874, p. 350; The World’s Crisis, December 15, 1886, 102.
Wellcome, Ibid.;
see also G. H. Wallace, “Memories of Israel Damman,” The
World’s Crisis, January 24, 1904, 14; and Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough, August 24, 1874, Letter 2, 1874, 7.
Ancestry.Com:
“Israel
Damon.”
U.S. Federal Census; 1850, Penobscot County, Corinna Township, Maine, 65; U. S. Federal Census, 1860,
Piscataquis County, Sangerville, Maine, 929.
Israel
Dammon, “Letter from Bro. Dammon,”
The Jubilee Standard, June 5,
1844, 104.
Israel Dammon,
“Letter from Bro. Dammon,” The Jubilee Standard,
June 5, 1844, 104; Ellen G. White to Joseph Bates, July 13, 1847, Letter 3,
1847; Merlin Burt, The Historical Background, Interconnected Development,
and Integration of the Doctrines of the Sanctuary, the Sabbath, and Ellen G.
White’s Role in Sabbatarian Adventism from 1844 to
1849, Ph.D. diss, Andrews University Seventh-day
Adventist Theological Seminary, December 2002, 131.
“Trial of Elder I.
Dammon: Reported for the Piscataquis Farmer,” Piscataquis
Farmer [Dover, Maine],
March 7, 1845, 1; Ellen G.
White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860, 2:40,
41.
“Trial of Elder I. Dammon:
Reported for the Piscataquis Farmer,” Piscataquis Farmer, March 7, 1845,
1, 2 (all citations to the report by the newspaper reporter for the Piscataquis
Famer will be from the reprint edited by
Frederick Hoyt, “Trial of I. Dammon Reported for the Piscataquis
Farmer,” Spectrum, vol. 17, no. 5 [August 1987], 29-36.) For this reference, see Hoyt 32, testimony of
James Ayer, Jr., starting toward bottom of col. 1; “The Horrors of Millerism: Trial of Israel Dammon,”
Eastern Argus [Portland], March 13, 1845; “The Fruits of Millerism,” New-York Observer, March 22, 1845, 47.
Hoyt, op cit., 29. See opening comments in bottom of col. 1 and
top of col. 2..
Ibid., see comments in bottom of col. 2 and
top of col. 3.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of prosecution witness William C. Crosby, Esq. at top of
col. 2; Ibid., 31. See testimony of
prosecution withnesss Dea.
James Rowe in middle of col. 2; Ibid., 31.
See testimony of prosecution witness Joseph Moulton [arresting sheriff]
toward bottom of col. 3; Defense witness Joel Doore
recalled “there was not one tenth part of the noise Saturday night, that there
generally is at the meetings I attend.”
Ibid., 33. See testimony of Joel Doore about three fifths way down col. 2.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of prosecution witness Loton
Lambert toward top of col 3; Ibid., 32. See testimony of James Ayer, Jr., about
four-fifths way down col. 2; Ibid., 34.
See testimony of Joshua Burnham about half way down col. 2.
Ibid., although not always agreeing, a number
of both prosecution and defense witnesses discuss the activities of Ellen
Harmon, James White, and Dorinda Baker throughout the
entire report of the trial.
Ibid., 35.
See comments of Prisoner [Israel Damman] in
bottom of col. 2 and top of col. 3.
Ibid., 32.
See testimony of James Ayer, Jr. under cross examination in lower half
of col. 2; .Ibid., 33. See testimony of
Jacob Mason about one-third down col. 1; Ibid., 34. See testimony of Joshua Burnham in middle of
col. 2. It is not surprising that some
witnesses were previously acquainted with Dorinda
Baker, but that none knew Ellen Harmon.
Atkinson is only about 35 miles (56 km) from Orrington,
Maine, where Dorinda
lived, but it is about 165 miles (264 km) from Portland,
Maine, Ellen’s home town.
Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Joel Doore cross examined
toward bottom of col. 2; Ibid., 33. See
testimony of George S. Woodbury about four fifths down col. 3.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of prosecution witness Loton
Lambert about one third down col. 3; Ibid., 32.
See testimony by James Ayer, Jr. at bottom of col. 1 refuting
Lambert. Ibid., 32. See cross examination testimony of James
Ayer, Jr. in middle of col. 2; Ibid., 32.
Also see testimony of defense witness Isley Osborn
toward middle of col. 3; Ibid., 34. See
testimony of defense witness John Gallison in middle
of col. 1.
Ibid., 30, 31. See testimony of Loton
Lambert at bottom of col. 3 on p. 30, and top of col. 1 on p. 31; Ibid.,
32. See testimony of James Ayer, Jr. top
of col. 2; Ibid., 33. See testimony of
Jacob Mason in col. 1; Ibid., 33. See
testimony of George S. Woodbury toward bottom half of col. 3; Ibid., 34. See testimony of Abel S. Boobar
starting at bottom of col. 1 and continuing at top of col. 2; Ibid., 34. See Loton Lambert
re-examined at bottom of col. 3; Ibid., 34, 35.
See testimony of Leonard Downes re-examined at
bottom of col. 3 on p. 34, and top of col. 1 on p. 35; Ibid., 35. See testimony of Thomas Proctor re-examined
toward top of col. 1; Ibid., 35. See
testimony of A. S. Bartlett, Esq. re-examined about middle of col. 1; Ibid.,
35. See testimony of Levi M. Moore about
middle of col. 2; Ibid., 35. See
testimony of Joel Doore, Jr. about middle of col. 2;
Ibid. 35. See testimony of James Boobar just over half-way down col. 2.
Ibid., 30.
See several places in testimony of Loton
Lambert in col. 3; Ibid., 31. See cross examination of Loton
Lambert in middle of col. 1; Ibid., 32.
See testimony of Job Moody at bottom of col. 2; Ibid., 32. See testimony of Isley
Osborn about middle of col. 3; Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Jacob Mason in middle of col. 1; Ibid., 33. See testimony of Joel Doore
top of col. 2; Ibid., 34. See testimony
of John Gallison about one-third down col. 1; Ibid.,
Ibid., 31.
See testimony of Loton Lambert at top of col.
1; Ibid., 32. See testimony of James
Ayer, Jr/ in top third of col. 3; Ibid., 33. See testimony of Joel Doore
in col. 2.
Ibid., 31.
See testimony of Loton Lambert several places
in col. 1; Ibid., 33. See testimony of Isley Osborn cross examined about two thirds down col. 3;
ibid., 33. See testimony of George S.
Woodbury toward bottom of col. 3; Ibid., 34.
See testimony of John Gallison cross examined
about two thirds down col. 1.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of prosecution witness J. W. E. Harvey about half way down
col. 1; Ibid., 31. See comment by Ebenezer Trundy
toward top of col. 3 describing Damman’s statement
that Mr. Boobar “must live on them that had property,
and if God did not come then we must all go to work together.”; Ibid., 33.
See testimony of George S. Woodbury about three fifths down col. 3;
Ibid., 35. See testimony of Prisoner
[Israel Damman] toward top of col. 3.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of Loton Lambert about half way
down col. 3;. and at bottom of col. 3; Ibid., 32. See cross examination testimony of Isley Osborn just over half way down col. 3; Ibid.,
33. See testimony of George S. Woodbury
toward bottom of col. 3.
“Hell,” The Complete Published Writings of
Ellen G. White, see also Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough,
August 24, 1874, Letter 2, 1874, 1; and Robert W. Olson to “The White Estate
Board of Trustees, White Estate Staff, Research Center Directors,” October 5,
1987, revised, October 21, 1987, 3, 4.
Hoyt, op cit., 31. See testimony of Joseph Moulton [arresting
sheriff] in middle of col. 3.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:40, 41; Ellen G. White, “Notes from a Talk with Mrs. E. G. White, Dec. 12,
1906,” EGWE-GC, DF 733-c, 2 (3).
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts,
1860, 2:302.
Israel
Dammon, “Letter from Bro. Dammon,”
The Jubilee Standard, June 5,
1845, 104.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:42, 43.
“Warning to Adventists,” The Morning Watch,
April 3, 1845, 111.
“State vs Damon,”
Penobscot County Court Records, April
8, 1845, April 25, 1845,
and April 26, 1845. Damon states that he been in court five
times. See Israel
Dammon, “Letter from Bro. Dammon,”
The Jubilee Standard, June 5,
1845, 104.
Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough,
August 24, 1874, Letter 2,
1874, 6, 7, 9.
Defense of Elder James White and
Wife. Vindications of their Moral and
Christian Character, 1870, 109-111.
J. N. Loughborough,
Rise and Progress of the Seventh-day Adventists, Battle Creek, Mich.:
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 1892, 129, 130; W. C. White to
Mrs. Mabel Workman, July 23, 1937, 1, 2.
Miles Grant, The True Sabbath. Which Day Shall We Keep? An Explanation of Mrs. Ellen G. White’s
Visions, Boston: Advent Christian
Publication Society, 1874, 70.
Ellen G. White, “Statement Regarding Israel
Dammon,” circa 1876, Manuscript 7, 1876.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:35.
Ellen G. White, Life Sketches, 1915,
72; Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White: the Early Years 1827-1862,
65.
Letter from John Megquier
quoted by Miles Grant in “Visions and Prophecies,” The World’s Crisis, July 1, 1874. Megquier’s name is
variously spelled Megquier, McGuire, and Macguire.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:35.
Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White: the
Early Years 1827-1862, 69; Ellen White would later recall that this was the
first time that she had met James White.
See Spiritual Gifts, 1860, 2:38; Life Sketches. Ancestry, Early Life, Christian Experience, and
Extensive Labors, of Elder James White, and His Wife, Mrs. Ellen G. White,
1880, 197; Life Sketches, 1915, 73.
However, James White first recalled meeting Ellen White nearly two years
earlier when he was in Portland, Maine. See Life Sketches, 1880, 126; Arthur
L. White, Ibid., 71. Toward the end of
her life, in an interview dated December
12, 1906, Ellen White recalled, “I was introduced to James White by
the Pearsons in Portland.” White Estate Document File 733-c.
Frederick Hoyt, ed., “Trial of Elder I Dammon Reported for the Piscataquis Farmer,” Spectrum,
vol. 17, no. 5 [Aug. 1987], p. 33, col 1. See testimony of witnesses Abraham Pease and
Gardner Farmer.
Israel
Dammon, “Letter from Bro. Dammon,”
The Jubilee Standard, June 5,
1844, 104.
Burt, op cit., 130; see also Arthur L. White, op cit., 78.
Israel Dammon,
“Letter from Bro. Dammon,” The Jubilee Standard,
June 5, 1844, 104; Ellen G. White to Joseph Bates, July 13, 1847, Letter 3,
1847; Burt, op cit., 131.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860, 2:39,
40; Arthur L. White, op cit., 77.
M. C. Stowell
Crawford, “Extracts from Letter of M S Crawford to WCW,” attached at end of her
letter to Ellen G. White, dated October
9, 1908, DF 439.
Fragment of interview with Ellen G. White, ca. 1906, DF 733-c.
Probably either Dorinda
Baker or Mary Hamlin, see M. C. Stowell Crawford
letter to Ellen G. White, October 9, 1908, 5, DF 439; see also Merlin Burt, op
cit., 2002, 148.
Portion of Ellen White interview, ca. 1906,
5, DF 733-c.
Herbert E. Douglass, Messenger of the Lord,
1998, 474. See top half of col. 1.
Although Ellen White specifically recalled
having to deal with a few fanatics in Exeter, Maine, in early February, 1845
[see Spiritual Gifts, 1860, 2:39, 40], and again a short time later with
a small group of fanatics in Claremont, New Hampshire [Ibid., 46-48], it
appears that it was in Springfield, New Hampshire, that she was given the first
vision specifically instructing her regarding the reproach that fanaticism was
having on the cause of God, and that she should return to Maine to bear her
testimony against it [see Ellen G. White, unpublished Life Sketches
Manuscript, 126, 127].
Obvious parallels include:
1.
Several witnesses testified that the Saturday night meeting was held so
that both Ellen Harmon and Dorinda Baker could
relate their visions [Loton Lambert 30, col. 3; James
Ayer, Jr., 32, col. 2; Joshua Burnham, 34, col. 2].
2.
Several defense witnesses believed the visions of both women to be
genuine [Joel Doore, 33, col. 2; George S. Woodbury,
33, col. 3].
3.
The content of both women’s messages was described by several recipients
as being accurate [James Ayer, Jr., 32, col. 2; Joel Doore,
32, col. 2; Isley Osborn, 32, col. 3; Jacob Mason,
33, col. 1; George S. Woodbury, 33, col. 3].
4.
Both women fell to the floor when going into vision [Isley
Osborn, 32, col. 3].
5.
At least during part of the evening, both women were laying on the floor
[James Ayer, Jr., 32, cols. 1 and 2; Joel Doore, 33,
col. 2; all witnesses who say anything about it agree that Ellen Harmon lay on
the floor that evening].
Obvious differences include:
1.
Where the two women spent that evening.
All agree Ellen lay on the floor, while
Dorinda spent part of the evening in a back
room of the house, though earlier she also laid on the floor.
2.
Descriptions of the two women while have their visions also differ. Ellen laid on the floor quietly where she
could be observed by everyone; Dorinda on the other
hand was part of the time in a back room where she had some kind of “exercise.”
3.
Although several defense witnesses testified to their belief regarding
the genuineness of both women’s visions, it is only while specifically
describing Ellen’s visions that they actually attribute her visions to
God. Admittedly, this is an argument
from silence, but I do find curious the fact that nobody made such an
observation when talking specifically about Dorinda’s
vision(s).
4.
Apparently that night Dorinda Baker only had
one visionary message. It was for Joel Doore. On the other
hand, Ellen Harmon reportedly had several.
Also, the purposes for the visionary messages seem to have been somewhat
different. One senses an urgency in
Ellen’s visions that does not seem to have been present in Dolrinda’s
single message for Doore. Likewise, when looking at the content of the
messages, all of Ellen’s involved some aspects of a person’s eternal
salvation. Not so with Dorinda. She seemed
concern because Doore thought “hard” of her.
5. Although Dorinda
was decribed as being involved in both noise making
and kissing between sexes, with the single exception of Ellen’s call for
rebaptism by some, not one witness describes her as being involved with any of
the other fanatical activities going on that night: halooing,
creeping, crawling, mixed foot washing, foot kissing, kissing between sexes,
etc.
John Francis Sprague, Sprague’s Journal of Maine History, X, January
1922 to January 1923, 4.
Hoyt, op cit.., 29. See cols. 1 and 2.
Ibid., 32.
See testimony of Benjamin Smith, Esq., Selectman of Atkinson, in col. 1.
Ibid., 30, 33, 35. See testimony of J. W. E. Harvey in col. 1 of
p.30; George S. Woodbury in col. 3 of p.
33; and of Israel Damman in col. 3 of p. 35. Damman testified to
his belief that the end of the world would come within a week.
Ibid., 31, 33, 34. See testimony of Ebenezer Trundy
at top of col. 3 on p. 31; and of George S. Woodbury at bottom of col 3 on p. 33 and top of col. 1 on p. 34.
Ibid., 31.
See testimony of Ebenezer Trundy at top of
col. 3.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:80, 81.
Hoyt, op cit., 31. See testimony of Wm. C. Crosby, toward middle
of col. 2; and Joseph Moulton, toward bottom of col. 3.
Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Joel Doore about two thirds
of the way down col. 2.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of Wm. C. Crosby, about one third way down in col. 2.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of Ebenezer Blethen, about
one-third to half way down in col. 1.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of Loton Lambert near the top of
col. 3.
Ibid., 32, 34. See testimony of James Ayer, Jr. near bottom
of col. 2 on p. 32. Also, although Dorinda Baker is specifically mentioned by Joshua Burnham,
and Ellen is not, still in the context of all the descriptions given by
witnesses at the trial, it seems likely that Burnham is referring to Ellen and
not Dorinda. in his testimony. See Burnham’s comments near the middle of p.
34, col. 2.
Ellen G. White, “Suppression and the Shut
Door,” Manuscript 4, 1883.
Hoyt, op cit., 31. See testimony of Wm. C. Crosby, re-examined,
top of col. 2.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of Loton Lambert, bottom of col.
3.
Ibid., 33, See testimony of Jacob Mason about
two-thirds down col. 1; Ibid., 33. See
testimony of Joel Doore about four-fifths down col.
2; Ibid., 33. See testimony of George S.
Woodbury about two thirds down col. 3; Ibid., 34. See testimony of John Gallison,
bottom of col. 1; Ibid., 32. See
testimony of Isley Osborn middle of col. 3;
Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Joel Doore, cross-examined,
toward bottom of col. 2. Doore is the one who
arranged for the attorney, J. S. Holmes, to represent Damman
at the trial.
See Ellen G. White, Evangelism, 1946,
372-375; Apparently this evening in Atkinson, one of the two girls baptized had
already been baptized, but the other one probably had not. It appears that in neither case were these
instances of several multiple rebaptisms as happened elsewhere among some
former Millerites.
James White, Life Incidents, in Connection with the Great Advent Movement,
as Illustrated by the Three Angels of Revelation XIV, 1868, 273.
Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White: The Early
Years 1827-1862, 1985, 121, 122.
Hoyt, op cit., 31. See testimony of
prosecution witness Loton Lambert about half way down
col. 1.
James White, Life Incidents, 1868,
273.
Hoyt, op cit., 30. See testimony of
prosecution witness Loton Lambert about half way down
col. 3; Hoyt, Ibid., 32. See testimony
of defense witness Isley Osborn about three-fifths
way down col. 3; Hoyt, Ibid., 33. See
testimony of George S. Woodbury about two-thirds down col. 3.
“Hell,” The Complete Published Writings of
Ellen G. White on CD-ROM; see also Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough, August 24, 1874, Letter 2, 1874, and Robert
W. Olson to” The White Estate Board of Trustees, White Estate Staff, Research
Center Directors,” October 5, 1987, revised, October 21, 1987, 3, 4.
Douglass, op cit., 474. See bottom of col. 1 and top of col. 2; see
also Ellen G. White, “The Doctrine of Eternal Punishment,” Life Sketches,
1915, 29, 30; and White, “The Immortality Question,” Ibid., 48-50.
Hoyt, op cit., 32. See testimony of James Ayer, Jr. about
one-third down col. 2.
Vision of January 12, 1861, Parkville,
MI, Church.
See Arthur L. White, op. cit., 463; Vision of January 3, 1875, at home in Battle
Creek, Michigan. W. C.. White, Review and Herald, February 10, 1983, quoted in Arthur
L. White, Ellen G. White, the Progressive Years, 1862-1876, 459, 460.
Hoyt, op cit., 30, 31. See testimony of Loton Lambert in top of col. 3 on p. 30, and middle of col.
1 on p. 31; Ibid., 32. See testimony of
Job Moody at bottom of col. 2; Ibid., 32.
See testimony of Isley Osborn in middle of
col. 3; Ibid., 33. See testimony of Jacob
Mason about middle of col. 1; Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Joel Doore toward top of col.
2; Ibid., 34. See testimony of John Gallison about one-third down col. 1; Rochester, NY,
June 26, 1854. See also testimony of D. H. Lamson quoted in J. N. Loughborough,
The Great Second Advent, 1905, 207.
Vision of June 12, 1868, “Camp Meeting
Talks,” Nellie Sisley Boyd, quoted in Arthur L.
White, Ellen G. White, the Progressive Years, 1862-1876, 1986, 233, 235.
Martha D. Amadon, Mrs. E. G. White in Vision, undated
pamphlet, 1.
Hoyt, op cit., 32. See testimony of
James Ayer, Jr. in col. 2 about two-thirds of the way down.
Ibid., 30.
See testimony of Loton Lambert near bottom of
col. 3.
There is one possible exception regarding the
“Imitation of Christ” allegation that needs to be pointed out. One other prosecution witness, Leonard Downes, a friend of Lambert’s who went to the meeting that
evening with Lambert, may have agreed with him about Ellen being called
“Imitation of Christ.” We really can’t know
for sure since the newspaper reporter did not copy Downes’
full comments because “his testimony was so near a repetition of Mr. Lamberts,
that it is by me, considered useless to copy it.” [Hoyt., op cit., 31. See
testimony of Leonard Downes at bottom of col. 1, and
top of col. 2.] As mentioned, every
other witness who spoke to the point disagreed with Lambert’s assertion. And since Lambert said several other things
in his testimony, possibly even Downes did not agree
with Lambert on this particular point; we really do not know.
Even more unlikely is that Lambert had heard
of Thoms a Kempis’
(1380-1471) book, The Imitation of Christ (ca. 1425), and thought
that Ellen was being called by the same name.
Admittedly, Lambert says Damman
repeatedly called her “Imitation of Christ,” as did others (Hoyt, Ibid., 31:
See Lambert’s cross examination testimony about two thirds down col. 1). So it is possible, given the fact that all
the defense witnesses who addressed the issue denied Lambert’s claim, that he
just made up his claim rather than having been mistaken regarding what he
thought Damman and others had said that evening. But I would prefer to think that he just
misheard.
Miller changed his Shut-Door views on March 8 or 9, 1845. See Burt, op cit., 89.
Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough, August 26, 1874, Letter 2, 1874, 1.
Hoyt, op cit., 32. See testimony of James Ayer, Jr. at bottom of
col. 1.
Ibid., 32.
See testimony of Isley Osborne in about middle
of col. 3.
Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Joel Doore at top of col. 2.
Ibid., 33.
See testimony of Jacob Mason about half way down col. 1. See also testimony of Job Moody, Ibid., 32,
at the bottom of col. 2. Moody
testified, “Brother Dammon said in relation to other
churches they were bad enough; said they were corrupt. . . .–he did say they
were theives (sic) etc. I am not certain, but think he said that
evening there was exceptions.”
Ibid., 35.
See testimony of Joel Doore, Jr. about one
third way down col. 2.
Ibid., 35.
See testimony of Prisoner [Israel Dammon] at
top of col. 3.
Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough,
August 24, 1874, Letter 2, 1874, 1; see also Ellen G. White, “Suppression and the Shut Door,” Manuscript
4, 1883, 4.
Hoyt, op. cit., 33. See testimony of Joel Doore
toward bottom of col. 2. Admittedly in
his cross examination testimony Doore refers to both Dorinda Baker and Ellen Harmon. However, since the quoted sentence follows
immediately after a comment about “Miss Hammond” (sic.), presumably he is
addressing his remarks regarding her. If
he meant both women, presumably he would have used “them” rather than “her” in
his statement.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:40, 41.
Hoyt, op cit., 32. See testimony of Joseph Moulton in the bottom
half of col. 2.
Ellen G. White, ibid.; Hoyt, ibid.
Hoyt, Ibid., 31. See testimony of Dea.
James Rowe in middle of col. 2.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860, 2:40-42.
Ellen G. White, “Portion of narrative related
by E.G.W.” 7. DF 733-c.
Ellen G. White, “Notes from a talk with Mrs.
E. G. White, Dec. 12, 1906,”
2. DF 733-c.
Ellen G. White, Life Sketches, 1915,
59.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:12.
James White and Ellen G. White, Ancestry,
Early Life, Christian Experience, and Extensive Labors, of Elder James White,
and His Wife, Mrs. Ellen G. White, 1888, 143, 144.
Ibid., 164; see also Ellen G. White,
unpublished Life Sketches Manuscript, 48.
Ellen G. White, Spiritual Gifts, 1860,
2:40.
J. O. Corliss, “The
Message and Its Friends–No. 5,” Review and Herald, September 6, 1923, 7;
quoted in James R. Nix, Sacrifice and Commitment, 2000, 107, 108.
Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the Church,
vol. 1, 266, 267.
W. W. Blackford, War Years with Jeb Stuart, 1946, 32-35.
Wording of explanatory signs on the walking
tour of the Manassas National
Historical Park was copied during a visit to the battlefield
on September 3, 2001.
Ellen G. White to J. N. Loughborough,
August 24, 1874, Letter 2,
1874, 2, 7.
Douglass, op cit., 474, 475.