ANOTHER LOOK AT
by James R. Nix
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I still remember my surprise
at reading the account of the trial of Israel Damman (Dammon,
or Damon)
[1]
in
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[4]
and died in 1886.[5] A Free Will Baptist-turned-Millerite preacher,[6]
Damman associated briefly after 1844 with Ellen
Harmon and James White in
Damman’s first recorded contact with Ellen and James was at Exeter, Maine, in early February, 1845[11] Apparently, based upon Ellen’s vision of the “Bridegroom” given her there, Damman accepted the unfolding Shut Door understanding.[12]
From
Despite attempts to
locate the original court transcripts, the only account found to date is from
the
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.”[17] By all accounts, the
Saturday night meeting was a noisy one.[18] The stated purpose for the gathering was so that Ellen Harmon and Dorinda Baker, another visionary, could share their visions.[19]
Despite not being on trial, the activities of Ellen, James, and Dorinda all engendered considerable discussion by both prosecution and defense witnesses.[20] Damman, during his own self-defense as summarized in the newspaper, did not mention any of the three.[21]
Dorinda was known to several defense witnesses, though none previously knew Ellen.[22] Despite that, several testified to their belief in both women’s visions.[23] 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.[24]
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.”[25] 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.[26]
Dorinda’s main message was to a man she claimed thought badly of her.[27] In contrast, Ellen’s comments all had a sense of urgency to them.[28] Due to the group’s belief that Jesus would return within days,[29] it was reported that Ellen urged several to be baptized that night rather than risk going to “hell,”[30] a word possibly used by the reporter to summarize Ellen’s comments since nowhere else in her writings does she use such strong language.[31] 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.[32] In contrast, Ellen White later recalled that despite twelve reinforcements, the sheriff could not free Damman until God’s power released him.[33] Despite these unresolved differences, in Spiritual Gifts, book two, five witnesses attested to the accuracy of Ellen White’s account regarding Damman’s arrest.[34] At court, apparently his conviction was eventually overturned.[35]
Soon after returning to
The
About the same time Damman was again arrested regarding two other noisy
meetings held in
Later that year, Ellen and James met Damman
in
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.[41] 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
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
Returning to
While at
What kinds of fanaticism
did Ellen and James face, not just in
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,[54]
in the wake of the October 22 disappointment, a number of Millerite adventists in
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
If man was made to walk erect,
The serpent made to crawl,
Why imitate the odious thing
That introduced the fall?[56]
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[57] had come out of her vision![58]
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
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.[61] 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
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.[63]
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
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
“[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
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,[69] though at least one witness testified that most meetings he attended were louder than was Damman’s that Saturday night![70]
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.[71] (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. . . .”[72]
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.[73]
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.[74]
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
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.[76]
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.”[77] Likewise, Loton Lambert, the most hostile of the prosecution witnesses, testified, “The vision woman called Joel Doore, said he had doubted.”[78]
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.[79] In fact, Joel Doore himself was one of those who specifically declared his belief that Ellen’s visions were “genuine.”[80] 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.[81] However, we do know that James White mentions in one place that he rebaptized his wife,[82] 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.[83] Although it is specifically stated that Ellen did not participate in either of the two baptisms that took place that Saturday night in Atkinson,[84] 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.”[85] 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.”[86] Since nowhere else in Ellen White’s writings do we find her using similar language,[87] 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.[88] 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.).[89] 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,[90] or lying on the floor in a house,[91] or on the platform in a church.[92] 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”.[93]
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.[94] 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.[95] 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.[96]
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.”[97] 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.[98]
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).[99] 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.[100] 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.”[101] Isley Osborne testified regarding Damman’s view: “He believes there is good, bad, and indifferent in all churches. . . .”[102] Joel Doore testified, “Elder Dammon said there was [sic.] bad characters in the churches; I did not understand him to say all.”[103] 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.”[104]
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.’”[105] 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.”[106]
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.[107]
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.”[108] 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
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.”[110]
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