William Cameron Stewart (1827-1895) was born in Enganmore, Inverness-shire in the Northwest Scottish Highlands. In the 1840s or early 1850s, he converted to Mormonism. Like many European converts to Mormonism in the mid-19th century, Stewart saved his money to immigrate to America and join the Mormons in Utah Territory.
Immigration to America and onto Utah
In the early 1850s (?), he sailed to the United States and immigrated to Utah.
Sketch - Iron works.jpg
Relocating to Cedar City and the Iron MIssion
By the mid-1850s, Stewart had settled in Cedar City in southern Utah. In 1855 he married Mary Ann Clark Corlett (1838-1894) from Salford (Manchester), Lancashire, England.
In the Iron Military District
In September 1857, William Stewart, 30, was 2nd Lt. in one of the Cedar City platoons.
Sunday, September 6
On Sunday, September 6, at the Cedar City council meeting to consideractions against the emigrants, Stewart and many prominent members of the church and community were present. Isaac Haight presented the plan to attack the emigrants but Laban Morrill opposed it and extracted a promise that Haight that he send an express to Great Salt Lake City to solicit Brigham Young's counsel. Haight reluctantly agreed. But Haight, his son-in-law, Dan McFarlane, McFarlane's fellow Scot, Dan Stewart, and others were angry with Morrill. According to Ellott Willden, Stewart and Dan McFarlane set after Morrill to waylay him on his way back to Fort Johnson. But Morrill avoided them by taking an alternate route home.
Monday, September 7
On Monday morning, September 7, John D. Lee led his Paiute contingent in a surprise assault on the emigrant camp. That afternoon back in Cedar City, Isaac Haight ordered militiamen to assemble and quickly make preparations and depart for Mountain Meadows. At sundown, town herdsman and fellow militiaman, Henry Higgins, observed a militia detachment of approximately twenty-five armed men departing Cedar City in wagons or on horseback. Besides Stewart, he mentioned William Bateman, Ezra Curtis, Samuel Pollock, Alexander Loveridge and John M. Higbee. John D. Lee confirmed that William Stewart arrived at Mountain Meadows in one of the companies from Cedar City. Multiple witnesses attested Bill Stewart's prominent role at Mountain Meadows.
Tuesday, September 8
It was probably on Tuesday, September 8, at Hamblin's Ranch that Bill Stewart asked Ellott Willden for his pistols, saying that he was going after the emigrant riders returning toward Cedar City in search of their stray cattle. Stewart, Joel White and Benjamin Arthur pursued them and when they encountered William Aden and the other riders, Stewart shot and killed Aden while White fired on the others. However, one rider escaped alive and retreated to the protection of the emigrants' fortified camp.
Wednesday, September 9
There seems to have been another encounter between Stewart and several emigrant riders. The second episode probably occurred on Wednesday evening when Stewart and other militia sentries tracked two emigrant riders who were returning toward Cedar City seeking Mormon assistance. According to Ellott Willden, Stewart and his sentries killed both of these men.
Thursday, September 10
On Thursday, September 10, more militia reinforcements arrived at the meadows. That evening, according to John D. Lee, nearly 25 Cedar City citizens attended the war council. However, although it seems likely that Bill Stewart was present at the council, Lee failed to mention Stewart by name. But whether present or not, Stewart's earlier actions were at the center of the debate that evening. The fact than an emigrant had survived the fusilade of the Mormon sentries and escaped to rejoin his compatriots figured prominently in the arguments for "silencing" the entire company. "The killing of Aden is what caused, more than anything else, the decision to destroy the whole company" because, Ellott Willden explained, the retreating man "was supposed to have reported in the camp that the whites were in league with the Indians to kill the emigrants." "After that," continued Willden, "it seemed to become necessary to kill all to silence the rest. . . ."
Friday, September 11
In the main massacre on Friday, September 11, many witnesses mention Bill Stewart's prominence. The plan was to have mounted riders sweep the field to cut down those who escaped the initial fusilade. However, according to Ellott Willden, Bill Stewart and Joel White were so enthusiastic in pursuit of fleeing emigrants that Stewart was mistaken for an emigrant himself and nearly shot by his own forces. "[W]ild with enthusiasm," Willden said, Stewart raced after one fleeing man for several hundred yards before killing him. "It was well known," Willden maintained, that Stewart along with Lee and Klingensmith "were the most bloodthirsty."
Stewart and his family remained in Cedar City and his wife bore him seven children.
Indicted for Complicity in the Massacre
In 1874, following the federal grand jury indictment, naming Stewart and eight other militiamen for complicity in the massacre, a warrant was issued for his arrest.
Stewart, Haight and Higbee Flee to Avoid Arrest
Stewart, Isaac C. Haight and John M. Higbee went into hiding and Stewart remained a fugitive.
Final Years
He moved to the Mormon colony in Chihuahua, Mexico where he died in 1895, around the time the Mountain Meadows prosecutions were finally closed.
References
Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 120, 128, 133, 142, 148, 153, 205, 226, 229, 242, 283, 290, 309-11, 323, 325; Bigler and Bagley, Innocent Blood: Essential Narratives, 235, 328, 345, 411, 413, 421; Brooks, The Mountain Meadows Massacre, ; FamilySearch.org; Fielding, ed., The Tribune Reports of the Trials of John D. Lee, 42-43; Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, 230, 235, 244, 273, 293, 380; Lee Trial transcripts; Turley and Walker, Mountain Meadows Massacre: The Jenson and Morris Collections, 111, 150, 159-60, 189, 191, 202, 206, 209, 216-17, 220-21; Walker, et al, Massacre at Mountain Meadows, 157, 159, 160, 163-64, 167, 200, 207, 219, 229-30, Appendix C, 262; Woolley, Personal History of Isaac Haight, 100 (photo).
For full bibliographic information, see Bibliography.
External Links
For further information on William C. Stewart, see: