William A.Hickman obeyed the Mormon teaching of polygamy and was husband to ten wives and father to thirty-five children.
William Adams ("Wild Bill") Hickman by his descendant. Wild Bill was one of the most notorious figures of the 19th-century American frontier. A Mormon who was eventually excommunicated and had married ten wives under the Mormon doctrine of polygamy and who fathered thirty-five children, Hickman served as a spy for church presidents Joseph Smith and Brigham Young and operated as a guerilla in the Utah War. All of this and much, much more, accurately depicting a colorful western figure's life, is plainly presented and makes for a fascinating look at the Old West within the context of the Mormon community in the western frontier that was to eventually form the states of Utah, Idaho, western Nevada, and northern Arizona.
Hickman admitted to the murders of several people, suggesting that he had been taking orders from Brigham Young. When his activities became embarrassing to the church, Hickman engaged in a game of power politics, playing Mormon and government officials against each other. He was successful for a time, but his violence eventually made him persona non grata in both camps. In 1872 he published an expose, Brigham's Destroying Angel, which implicated the Mormon leadership in his misdeeds.
Ogden Standard Examiner, John Devilbiss
It was Christmas Day afternoon 129
years ago when William A. Hickman,
standing in front of the Townsend Hotel
on First South and West Temple in Salt
Lake City, dared another man to shoot
him.
Hickman, who was well-known locally
as "Wild Bill," was quick with his
temper and fast with the pearl-handled
Colt and Yaeger revolvers that he kept
slung around his hips.
As a soldier, bodyguard and spy for
Brigham Young, Hickman, who stood about
six feet tall, was no stranger to confrontation.
He had used his guns many times before
and wouldn't hesitate to use them again.
Recounting that bloody Christmas Day
encounter, Hickman said he was in the
alley outside the hotel when Lott
Huntington drew his gun
on him. Hickman was close enough to
grab the cocked pistol with one hand
while drawing his knife with his other.
Just as he was about to plunge the
knife into Huntington, he heard someone
shouting not to do it. He hesitated.
At that moment, Hickman said someone
stepped between them. Huntington then
stepped back a few feet and shot Hickman
in the thigh.
"I drew my pistol, but before I got
it out of the scabbard, he shot at
me again," he wrote later. "As I brought
my pistol on him, he wheeled to run.
I shot. He jumped some three feet high,
clapping his hand behind him. He then
ran out from the alley about 50 steps,
wheeled, shot twice at J. Luce, then
at John Flack, upon which the boys
returned the compliments."
Hickman's "boys" were a group of some
20 men labeled by Brigham Young the
"Hickman Hounds," men said to often
take matters into their own hands.
It seems a few weeks earlier Hickman's
gang had a run-in with a rival gang,
of which Huntington was a member.
The colorful tale can be found in Hickman's
1872 autobiography, "Brigham's Destroying
Angel." For those who crave American
West genre, it probably doesn't get
any better than this—that is,
unless you're Mormon.
It seems Hickman dug his own grave
when he hastily wrote his autobiography,
which claimed that Brigham Young ordered
him to kill men without benefit of
trial.
From the time his book appeared in
local bookstores on Feb. 5, 1872, to
his lonely death 11 years later. Hickman
was despised by Mormons for the way
he vilified their prophet, and by Gentiles
for the deeds he claimed to have committed
out of loyalty to that prophet.
When Hope A. Hilton
first read the book her great-grandfather
wrote about himself, it sparked a flame
of curiosity that grew brighter over
the years.
Was he really as bad as he made himself
out to be? Why did he implicate Brigham
Young and other high Mormon officials?
Why did he betray those whom he had
once loyally obeyed? Why did the Mormon
Church turn its back on him and all
but exclude him from its history?
These were questions the Salt Lake
City woman thought deserved answers,
but they were answers that kept eluding
her whenever she approached her relatives—who
either tried to change the subject
or became overly defensive. She decided
to settle the matter herself. She turned
to journals, letters, court records
and the church archives in hopes of
retracing his controversial life and
placing it in perspective.
This month, Signature Books of Salt
Lake City has published those finding
in the book, "Wild Bill" Hickman and
the Mormon Frontier.
Hilton said Hickman's autobiography,
under the hands of anti-Mormon editor,
J.H. Beadle, focused only on the sensational
and failed to consider the setting
in which he acted—namely a frontier
territory that had essentially declared
war on the United States.
She was referring to the 1857-58 "Utah
War," which, among many things, was
a last-stand effort by Mormons to quell
an attempt by U.S. Army troops to march
to Utah and remove Brigham Young from
the office of governor.
In such a setting, she said, there
is a thin line between a war hero and
an outlaw—and it's unfair to
judge a person's actions during war
in the same way you would during peace.
The standards are different—a
distinction Hickman and Young were
not afforded, she said.
"History has willingly accorded Hickman
credit for his misdeeds and personal
failings while overlooking many of
his contributions to the Mormon frontier,"
she wrote in her preface. "I believe
he deserves a nore prominent place
in Utah and Wyoming history."
A frontiersman all of his life, Hickman was born in 1815 in a log cabin in western Kentucky. He joined the Mormon Church when he was 21 years old.
Hilton said Hickman was a man loyal
to the church and to Brigham Young
through most of his life.
The greatest
display of this loyalty came during
the Utah War period—a bloody
time in which Hickman is said to have
killed some 54 men under direct order
from Brigham Young.
Hilton believes that because the war
was not exactly a victory for Brigham
Young, the church downplayed its significance.
She also believes it used Hickman as
a scapegoat in much
the same way it did John D. Lee in blaming him for
the massacre at Mountain Meadows ? an
offshoot of the Utah War.
Hilton said Hickman appears to have
been acting under war orders in all
of the deaths except for one, the
murder of "Spanish Frank."
In this
particular case, she called it a "crime
of passion" in which Hickman gunned
down Frank Moreno, whom he claims ran
off with one of his wives and four
of his children.
Before his wives started leaving him,
Hickman was married to as many as 10
at one time.
In all, he fathered 35
children. The burden to care for them
was great, particularly since he never
worked at a steady job and was never
paid by Brigham Young
for any of his
services, Hilton said.
She said that is the main reason he
took employment between 1863 and 1865
as a government guide and Indian spy
for Brigadier General Patrick Connor.
This decision was not looked upon favorably
by Brigham Young, who distrusted men
who accepted government employment,
Hilton said. On two occasions he asked
Hickman to quit the job. For the first
time in Hickman's life, he disobeyed
an order from his beloved prophet.
In time he "lost the confidence of
both government and church," Hilton
wrote.
Feeling betrayed by Brigham Young and
desperately in need of money, Hickman
accepted an offer of some $50,000 to
write a book chronicling his years
with Brigham Young, Hilton said. The
book became an instant best seller
among non-Mormon readers, she said,
particularly those living in the East
who were hungry for any news about
the Mormons and the "Wild West."
Hilton said Hickman probably received
only $500 for his efforts.
While the book may have been a big
hit outside of Utah, within the borders,
Hickman became an instant outcast.
Hilton recorded that in 1873 Tom Monaghan,
a writer for a Kansas magazine, wrote
of Hickman: "Today he walks the streets
of Salt Lake City shunned like a leper
by every respectful man, no one pays
attention."
He called him a "religious fanatic"
and accused him of "murdering many
in order to secure happiness in the
next world."
Hilton wrote that if Hickman received
any compensation for his "confessions"
it would not have made up for the years
of anguish he and his family subsequently
suffered. He was a man who by then
lived outside the church, a man who
feared for his life, a man both broke
and broken.
On Aug. 21, 1883, in a cramped sod
dugout west of Lander, Wyoming, with
only his first wife and a few of his
children nearby, he quietly died.
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