Simeon kept a journal while on his
mission and in the following paragraphs much of this journal will be quoted.
While traveling through Kansas he
says he had the privilege of seeing the sun rise on the Kansas plains. He said it was a grand sight, it was a little
cloudy and the sun looked like a ball of fire coming out of the ground. When he arrived at the mission headquarters
all the Elders were gathering in to attend conference, which was held every six
months. The Elders were always called in
to attend conference. The next morning,
March 15, Elder Gilbert Thatcher and three other Elders came in from the south. Elder Sterrett was very glad to see Gilbert
as he was from Thatcher also, and they had known each other most all their
lives. Brother James G Duffin was
President of the South Western States Mission and was a very worth man. Conference was held in Independence and while
there, Elder Sterrett and Elder Thatcher visited the temple block. Elder Sterrett in his journal says, “It
filled my heart with joy to stand on the ground that had been dedicated so long
for the building of the Lord’s House.”
When they returned to Kansas City on
the 17th they visited some places of interest there. The Elders were also entertained at an oyster
dinner given by President Duffin and attended an evening’s entertainment given
by the Relief Society. The entire mission
was divided into three conferences: 1) Texas and Oklahoma, 2) Louisiana and
Arkansas, 3) Missouri and Kansas. The
latter was called the Missouri Conference, with Brother Hamilton as conference
President. Elder Sterrett was assigned
to labor in the Missouri Conference and his first companion was Elder William
Adams from Old Mexico. Their first field
of labor was in Barry County, Missouri.
They left Kansas City on the 19th,
went as far as Carthage on the train and the next day started to walk thirty
miles to Barry Co. The Elders traveled
without purse or script, seeking shelter and food from the people among whom
they labored. They walked hundreds of
miles, averaging from ten to seventeen miles a day. Sometimes they slept in the woods and
sometimes slept in the schoolhouses on benches, where they had held
meetings. They were also taken in and
given food and entertainment by all classes of people. Here in Barry Co they tracted and preached
and held meetings when they could get schoolhouses or churches to hold them
in. It rained a great deal of the time
and they walked many miles through mud and rain.
On
March 31 they held a meeting in a schoolhouse and I will quote a few lines from
the journal. “I took charge, my
companion only spoke a short time, about twenty minutes and then I arose and
talked on the life of Joseph Smith and the divinity of the Book of Mormon and
the Spirit of the Lord rested upon me in great abundance. I spoke with great power and in looking up
scripture to prove a point all I had to do was to open my bible and there it
was before me. I occupied 30 or 40
minutes and this was my second time before the public out in the world
preaching the gospel. I acknowledge the
hand of the Lord, for I realize I could not have done what was done through me
by the Lord.”
On April 4 they went to the town of
Monett to labor and asked the mayor for the privilege of holding street
meetings but were refused. He said he
would not tolerate it at all; he didn’t believe in their doctrine or polygamy. They told him that they were not teaching
that principle now, as it was forbidden by the laws of the land, so he told
them that if they could get a church to preach in he had no objections. While in Monett they rented a room and
boarded themselves. It took them three
weeks to canvas the city of Monett. Some
days they had good success, had several gospel conversations and distributed
many tracts. On other days they would
meet with much opposition. One day on
April 7, they went to the new part of the city to see the Directors of the
School board to get permission to hold meetings in the schoolhouse, but their
request was not granted. I quote from
the journal, “He was bitter and accused us of everything mean. It was pretty hard to take, but one has a
different spirit out here than he has at home.
He wouldn’t talk on the gospel, said the gospel we preached was alright
but the other things was all wrong. We
tried to get him to tell us where we were wrong but he would do nothing but
accuse us of all manner of crime and finally told us never to come in his
house, so we left our testimony with him.
If it won’t do him any good now, it might meet him some other day in a
*** he does not like. We continued on
all the rest of the day, had a pretty hard argument with two Baptists. They would first deny one thing and then
affirm it when it suited their purpose.
This was the hardest day for me so far.”
On the 13th they asked a
preacher for permission to hold meetings in his church, the ME Church, but he
refused. The journal says, “He said he
didn’t want to enter into a discussion tonight, said he knew all about Smith
and the Mormons and the Mountain Meadow Massacre and Roberts. Brother Adams told him that he guessed he had
read lots of vile reports about the Mormons and in regards to the Mountain
Meadow Massacre, that the Mormons had nothing to do with it and told him who
Lee was. I told him he should not judge
the Church by the actions of an individual.
Elder Adams told him that Roberts was a man of God and all who done
anything against him, would have it to meet as sure as there is a God in
Heaven. He bore his testimony to him and
I gave him one of my cards with the Articles of Faith on and then we left him
and come home.”
On the 17th the journal
says, “Had a hot time with a Southern Methodist. Brother Adams and he did most of the talking
and when the preacher got too abusive and accused the Mormons of being connected
with the Mountain Meadow Massacre, Elder Adams told him that was the blackest
lie ever told, at which the preacher took offense and said he didn’t want us to
ever approach him again, so we left him and com home. They won’t any of them meet you on a scriptural
argument for just as soon as you commence to clinch them on a point they will
commence to abuse you and say all manner of evil against the Church. I don’t believe its worth while contesting
with them, it just causes strife and contention.
On the 20th they attended
a beautiful Catholic service which they enjoyed very much. He said the priest said that the different
churches didn’t have any more faith than the Mormons out in Salt Lake. On the 24th the journal says, “We
met a man this afternoon who thinks the negros are not human beings but beasts
and he puts up quite an argument from the scriptures. A man has got to be a walking encyclopedia to
meet all the ideas that men can produce, but we don’t let on but make them
think we know a little of everything.”
They
finished laboring in Monett on April 25th and went again into the
rural districts. I quote from the
journal, “Sat. April 26, 1902. We
shouldered our grips and went east on the road between Barry and Laurence
Counties and began to enquire for the school directors. After walking four miles, found them and got
the Pluentdale Schoolhouse to hold meetings in.
We then started visiting the people and notifying them that we would
hold a meeting in the schoolhouse Sunday evening at eight o’clock. We visited the district and notified all the
people and then at six o’clock we began to hunt lodging for the night. Got refused seven times and by that time were
getting pretty tired, having walked seventeen miles and hadn’t had anything to
eat since morning, except some wild parsnips we had pulled and ate. It was after ten and we went in the edge of
the woods and built a fire under a big oak tree and we hadn’t been there long
when six or eight of the settlers came and sat there till eleven o’clock and
then they got up and bid us goodnight and went to their homes. We got some dry leaves and made us each a
bed, but the wind began to blow and it got so cold we could not sleep so at two
o’clock we started for the schoolhouse and after walking three miles we got
there at three o’clock and bu8ilt a fire in the stove and stretched ourselves
out for a nap, after walking twenty miles on an empty stomach, but such is life
in Southwestern Missouri, laboring as an Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints.”