The Joseph Smith Papers website discusses the history of the Kirtland Safety Society.

Date
2017
Type
Website
Source
The Joseph Smith Papers
LDS
Hearsay
Secondary
Reference

"Kirtland Safety Society," The Joseph Smith Papers website, 2017, accessed December 5, 2023

Scribe/Publisher
The Joseph Smith Papers
People
The Joseph Smith Papers
Audience
Internet Public
PDF
Transcription

A financial institution formed to raise money and provide credit in Kirtland, Ohio. On 2 November 1836, JS, Sidney Rigdon, and others officially organized the Kirtland Safety Society as a community bank by ratifying its constitution. Sidney Rigdon served as president and JS as cashier. Stock in the bank was available for subscription beginning in October 1836. In winter 1836–1837, Orson Hyde traveled to Columbus, Ohio, to seek a bank charter from the Ohio state legislature. Before such legislation could be introduced, the Kirtland Safety Society was reorganized as an unincorporated banking company on 2 January 1837 with Sidney Rigdon as secretary and JS as treasurer. The banking office opened for business in early January 1837. The institution may have closed temporarily on 23 or 24 January because of growing opposition in the surrounding area. On 9 February 1837, Samuel Rounds, acting for Grandison Newell, brought charges against JS, Rigdon, and four others for violating a state banking statute that prohibited unchartered institutions from issuing bank notes. The following day, the Ohio senate denied a proposal to grant the society a bank charter. In May 1837, mounting financial tensions and specie shortages in the U.S. and Great Britain resulted in a financial panic that created further pressure on the institution and resulted in most banks being unwilling to accept or redeem the society’s notes. Between 8 June and 7 July 1837, JS and Sidney Rigdon resigned as officers of the institution, and Frederick G. Williams and Warren Parrish were elected as replacements. In August of that year, JS, no longer affiliated with the society, issued a notice warning the public to beware of speculators using Kirtland Safety Society notes. The institution closed before 3 September 1837. JS and Sidney Rigdon were tried in absentia on charges of unauthorized banking on 24 October 1837. They were found guilty and fined one thousand dollars each. The Kirtland Safety Society’s troubles prompted some church members to publicly criticize JS’s leadership and prophetic calling; some of these critics formed a dissenting party and some left the church or were excommunicated.

The Kirtland Safety Society changed names at least twice from its founding in fall 1836 until its closure in late summer 1837. Initially designated the Kirtland Safety Society Bank, on 2 January 1837 the structure of the institution changed and it was officially renamed the Kirtland Safety Society Anti-Banking Company. In March 1837 the institution’s name appeared in the LDS Messenger and Advocate as the Kirtland Safety Society Banking Company. In bonds, agreements, and other legal documents the officers of the Safety Society used multiple names interchangeably to reference the institution. Given this degree of complexity and variety, documents relating to the institution on this website have generally been standardized to “Kirtland Safety Society.”

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