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LEROY
TOWN, GENESEE COUNTY, NEW YORK GENWEB PROJECT
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BIOGRAPHY WILLIAM MORGAN - OF BATAVIA, NY |
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William
Morgan (anti-Mason) Early
life: In October 1819, when he was in his mid 40s, Morgan married 16-year old Lucinda Pendleton in Richmond, Virginia. They had two children: Lucinda Wesley Morgan and Thomas Jefferson Morgan.[3] Two years after his marriage, he moved for unknown reasons to York, Upper Canada, where he operated a brewery. He has been described as a heavy drinker and a gambler.[4] When his business was destroyed in a fire, Morgan was reduced to poverty. He returned to the United States, settling first at Rochester, New York, and later in Batavia. Morgan claimed to have served with distinction as a captain during the War of 1812, though there is no evidence that he did so. Several men named William Morgan appear in the Virginia militia rolls, but none held the rank of captain. Association
with Freemasonry: Morgan announced that a local newspaper publisher, David Cade Miller, had given him a sizable advance for the work. Miller is said to have received the entered apprentice degree (the first degree of Freemasonry), but had then been stopped from advancement by the objection of one or more of the Batavia lodge members.[4] This would have given him motivation to join with Morgan. It appears that Morgan had entered into a $500,000 penal bond with three men: Miller, John Davids (Morgan's landlord) and one Russel Dyer.[5] The Morgan
affair: A few hours later, Morgan was arrested again, for a loan which a creditor claimed he had not paid back, and for supposedly stealing clothing. He was jailed again, this time in Canandaigua. On the night of 11 September, a man arrived who claimed to be a friend of Morgan's and offering to pay his debt to secure release. Morgan was taken to a carriage that was waiting for him outside the prison. The next day, the carriage arrived at Fort Niagara.[4] Several conflicting accounts exist about following events. The most common is that Morgan was taken in a boat to the middle of the Niagara River and drowned.[7] A man named Henry L. Valance allegedly confessed to his part in the murder in 1848 and his deathbed confession is recounted in chapter two of Reverend C. G. Finney's book The Character, Claims, and Practical Workings of Freemasonry.[8] A little more than a year after Morgan disappeared, in October, 1827, a badly decomposed body washed up on the shores of Lake Ontario. Many presumed it to be Morgan, and it was buried as such. But the clothing was positively identified as that of Timothy Monroe, a missing Canadian, by his widow.[9][10] Freemasons deny that Morgan was killed, saying that he was paid $500 to leave the country. There were numerous reports of Morgan being seen in other countries, but none have been confirmed. Three Masons, Loton Lawon, Nicholas Chesebro and Edward Sawyer, were charged with, convicted and served sentences for the kidnapping of Morgan.[11] The aftermath: the anti-Masonic movementSoon after Morgan disappeared, Miller published Morgan's book. It became a bestseller and some people have speculated that the disappearance was an elaborate publicity stunt. Miller made no claim that Morgan had been murdered, saying simply he had been "carried away". According to skeptics, Morgan assumed a new identity and settled in Albany, in Canada, or the Cayman Islands, or was hanged as a pirate. New York governor DeWitt Clinton, also a Mason, offered a $1,000 reward for information about Morgan's whereabouts, but it was never claimed.[10] Morgan's disappearanceand the minimal punishment received by his kidnapperssparked a series of protests against the Freemasons throughout New York and the neighboring states. Despite the Masonic hierarchy's prompt disavowal of the actions of the kidnappers, all Masons came under criticism. Under the leadership of a New York politician named Thurlow Weed, an anti-Masonic and anti-Andrew Jackson (Jackson was a Mason) movement was formed, the Anti-Masonic political party. It ran a candidate for the presidency in 1828, gaining the support of such politicians as William H. Seward. Its influence was such that other Jackson rivals, including John Quincy Adams, joined in denouncing the Masons. Adams in 1847 wrote a widely distributed book titled Letters on the Masonic Institution that was highly critical of the Masons. In 1832, the party fielded William Wirt as its presidential candidate, though the party only received seven electoral votes. Three years later, the party had become moribund everywhere but Pennsylvania, as other issues, such as slavery, became the focus of national attention. Morgan's widow Lucinda Pendleton Morgan later became one of the plural wives of Joseph Smith, Jr., founder of the Latter Day Saint movement. Subsequent confrontations between Freemasonry and the Mormons included controversy surrounding the churchs alleged adoption of Masonic rituals and regalia. William Morgan was given one of the first official baptisms for the dead into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[3] Monument
to Morgan Sacred to the memory of Wm. Morgan, a native of Virginia, a Capt. in the War of 1812, a respectable citizen of Batavia, and a martyr to the freedom of writing, printing and speaking the truth. He was abducted from near this spot in the year 1826, by Freemasons and murdered for revealing the secrets of their order. The court records of Genesee County, and the files of the Batavia Advocate, kept in the Recorders office contain the history of the events that caused the erection of this monument. In June 1881 in Pembroke, New York, a grave was discovered in a quarry two miles south of the Indian reservation. In it was a metal box containing a crumpled paper; its few still-readable words were interpreted to suggest that the body might have been Morgan's.[10] In fiction:
In his 2010 novel The Craft: Freemasons, Secret Agents, and William Morgan, author Thomas Talbot presents a fictional explanation for the William Morgan kidnapping in a fast-paced thriller which involves William Morgan as a British spy, rogue British Masons, and the quest by presidential agents to thwart a plot to assassinate the president.
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