Philo Dibble, Faithful Friend of the Prophet
Figure 1. Philo Dibble, who is buried in the Springville, Utah, Cemetery.
Philo
Dibble showed faith and courage throughout his life. He was an early convert to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (nicknamed the Mormons) and a close friend to the Prophet Joseph
Smith who recorded several miracles and important events in Church history in
Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, and Utah.
He was born in Peru, Massachusetts, on June 6,
1806. Marrying Celia Kent in 1829, the couple moved to the Kirtland, Ohio, area
(three miles west of Chardon).
One fall morning in 1830, while the twenty-four-year-old Philo stood by his gate, two neighbors asked if he had heard the news about four
missionaries with a new book called the Book of Mormon. One of those
missionaries claimed to have seen an angel. Though the men ridiculed the idea
of angels visiting the earth, Philo thought that if an angel had appeared, he
wanted to know about it. He and Celia went to investigate.
The four missionaries were Oliver Cowdery, Ziba
Peterson, Peter Whitmer Jr., and Parley P. Pratt, who were heading west to preach
to the Native Americans on the western border of the United States. Attending a
meeting in which Oliver taught the message of the restored gospel and bore his
testimony, Philo, along with four others, believed and was baptized by Parley
P. Pratt on October 16. That night, in the home of Frederick G. Williams, Philo
could not sleep for joy and was filled with a heavenly influence “like fibers
of fire” (“Philo Dibble’s Narrative,” 75).
Grateful
for the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, he penned the words to “The Happy Day at
Last Has Come.”
The truth restored is now made known.
The promised angel’s come again
To introduce Messiah’s reign.
The gospel trump again is heard.
The truth from darkness has appeared.
The lands which long benighted lay
Have now beheld a glorious day:
The day by prophets long foretold,
The day which Abram did behold,
The day that Saints desired so long,
When God his great work would perform,
The day when Saints again shall hear
The voice of Jesus in their ear,
And angels, who above do reign,
Come down to speak again with men.
(Hymns of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, no. 32)
Figure 2. Elsa Johnson, whose arm was miraculously healed in 1831.
Philo witnessed Joseph Smith calling on the power of God to heal the lame arm of Elsa Johnson of Hiram, Ohio, in 1831:
When
Joseph came to Kirtland his fame spread far and wide. There was a woman living
in the town of Hiram . . . who had a crooked arm, which she had not been able
to use for a long period. She persuaded her husband, whose name was Johnson, to
take her to Kirtland to get her arm healed.
I
saw them as they passed my house on their way. She went to Joseph and requested
him to heal her. Joseph asked her if she believed the Lord was able to make him
an instrument in healing her arm. She said she believed the Lord was able to
heal her arm.
Joseph
put her off till the next morning, when he met her at Brother [Newel K.]
Whitney’s house. There were eight persons present, one a Methodist preacher,
and one a doctor. Joseph took her by the hand, prayed in silence a moment,
pronounced her arm whole, in the name of Jesus Christ, and turned and left the
room.
The
preacher asked her if her arm was whole, and she straightened it out and
replied: “It is as good as the other.” (“Philo Dibble’s Narrative,” 79)
Figure 3. The John Johnson home in Hiram,
Ohio, where “the Vision” (Doctrine and Covenants 76) was received on February 16, 1832.
On February 16, 1832, Philo went to the Johnson home while the Prophet Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon were receiving a marvelous vision of the Father and the Son and the afterlife. He said that although Joseph wore black clothes, his clothes appeared gloriously white, and his face glowed “as if it were transparent”
(“Early Scenes in Church History,” 81). Philo offered a first-person testimony of these events:
The
vision which is recorded in the Book of Doctrine and Covenants was given at the
house of “Father Johnson,” in Hiram, Ohio, and during the time that Joseph and
Sidney were in the spirit and saw the heavens open, there were other men in the
room, perhaps twelve, among whom I was one during a part of the time—probably
two-thirds of the time—I saw the glory and felt the power, but did not see the
vision. . . . Joseph would, at intervals, say: “What do I see?” as one might
say while looking out the window and beholding what all in the room could not
see. Then he would relate what he had seen or what he was looking at. Then
Sidney replied, “I see the same.” Presently, Sidney would say, “What do I see?”
and would repeat what he had seen or was seeing, and Joseph would reply, “I see
the same.” (Juvenile Instructor, May
1892, 303)
While Philo and the others waited in silence, Joseph and Sidney conversed with each other: “During the whole time not a word was spoken by any other person. Not a sound nor motion made by anyone but Joseph and Sidney, and it seemed to me that they never moved a joint or limb during the time I was there, which I think was over an hour, and to the end of the vision. Joseph sat firmly and calmly all the time in the midst of a magnificent glory, but Sidney sat limp and pale, apparently as limber as a rag, observing which, Joseph remarked, smilingly, ‘Sidney is not used to it as I am’” (Juvenile Instructor, May 1892, 304). Joseph seemed as “strong as a lion,” while Sidney was as “weak as water” (“Philo Dibble’s Narrative,” 81). However, Sidney stayed up that night recording the events. Their testimony is recorded in section 76 of the Doctrine and Covenants:
The
Lord touched the eyes of our understandings and they were opened, and the glory
of the Lord shone round about.
And we beheld the glory of the
Son, on the right hand of the Father, and received of his fulness;
And
saw the holy angels, and them who are sanctified before his throne, worshiping
God, and the Lamb, who worship him forever and ever. And now, after the many
testimonies which have been given of him, this is the testimony, last of all,
which we give of him: That he lives!
For
we saw him, even on the right hand of God; and we heard the voice bearing
record that he is the Only Begotten of the Father—
That
by him, and through him, and of him, the worlds are and were created, and the
inhabitants thereof are begotten sons and daughters unto God. (Doctrine
and Covenants 76:19–24)
Although early reactions were mixed, the Latter-day Saints eventually embraced the vision:
Nothing could be more pleasing to the Saints
upon the order of the Kingdom of the Lord, than the light which burst upon the
world through the foregoing vision. Every law, every commandment, every
promise, every truth, and every point touching the destiny of man, from Genesis
to Revelation, where the purity of the Scriptures remains unsullied by the folly
of men, go to show the perfection of the theory [of different degrees of glory
in the future life] and witnesses the fact that that document is a transcript
from the records of the eternal world. The sublimity of the ideas; the purity
of the language; the scope for action; the continued duration for completion,
in order that the heirs of salvation may confess the Lord and bow the knee; the
rewards for faithfulness, and the punishments for sins, are so much beyond the
narrow-mindedness of men, that every honest man is constrained to exclaim: “It came from God.” (“Joseph Smith, the
Prophet,” Historical Record, January 1888, 402)
A
Missouri Mob and a Miracle
In 1832 the Dibbles moved to Missouri and
homesteaded on the Whitmer Settlement, where Philo worked a twenty-acre farm. Trouble
soon erupted between the locals and the newcomers, who saw the Saints as a
political and economic threat. Most of the Whitmer Settlement Saints were
driven from the county by mid-November 1833. Many crossed the Missouri River
north into Clay County or east into Lafayette County, while some fled
elsewhere.
While fighting a Missouri mob in the fall of 1833, Philo
was shot in the stomach, and the bullet lodged in the small of his back. In
great pain, he went to the home of Joshua Lewis, where he spent the night.
Fearing that the mob members would find him, he left to hide in Aaron Wild’s
house in the woods. Ironically, the mob leader, James Campbell, knew Philo and brought
a physician to attend to the wound. Dr. Marsh said it was hopeless; Philo could
not possibly live.
Shortly thereafter, Newel Knight came by. Without saying a
word, Brother Knight laid his right hand upon the head of the wounded man. As he did so, the Spirit of the Lord rested upon Philo, filling his body from his
head through his fingers and toes. He later testified, “I
immediately arose and discharged three quarts of blood or more, with some
pieces of clothing that had been driven into my body by the bullets. I then
dressed myself and went out doors. . . . From that time not a drop of blood
came from me and I never afterwards felt the slightest pain or inconvenience
from my wounds except that I was somewhat weak from the loss of blood” (“Philo
Dibble’s Narrative,” 84). Thereafter he could feel the bullet under the skin of
his back, but he never had it removed, keeping it as a reminder of his
miraculous healing.
In the years that followed, the Missouri Saints
sought legal help to regain their lands, but to no avail. On July 4, 1838, the
Saints gathered to speak of the freedoms they sought but did not possess. A
liberty pole had been erected at Far West, but during the course of the day a
thunder cloud passed over, and a bolt of lightning struck the pole, shattering
it into splinters. As the Prophet walked around the shattered pole, he said, “As that pole was splintered,
so shall the nations of the earth be!” (“Philo Dibble’s
Narrative,” 88).
Tragedy
in Illinois
In the spring of 1840, Philo moved to the Church’s
new gathering place: Commerce (Nauvoo), Illinois. The next year his wife died
and left him with five children: two daughters and three sons. Discouraged, he decided
to find homes for his children and then travel and preach the gospel. On
February 11, 1841, he married Widow Smith from Philadelphia. The Prophet Joseph
performed the ceremony, and Emma Smith gave them a wedding supper.
On June 27, 1844, a mob stormed the Carthage Jail and
killed Joseph and his brother Hyrum. George Cannon (father of future Church leader George Q. Cannon) cast the death masks of
Joseph and Hyrum Smith, and Philo kept the masks safe for forty-one years.
Figure 4. The death masks of Joseph and
Hyrum Smith were kept by Philo for forty-one years. Photo by Kenneth R. Mays.
The Utah Years
Although the Saints began leaving Nauvoo in 1846, Philo and his family lacked money to travel, and they lingered there for many years. They eventually crossed the plains with Philemon C. Merrill’s wagon company in 1851 and settled in Bountiful, Utah.
Philo married three times and became the father
of eight children. He served as director of a co-op store in Centerville, Utah
(Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History,
s.v. “Philo Dibble”). He also traveled around showing a gigantic mural of scenes from Church history along with relics from the time of the Prophet Joseph Smith.
In 1857, when
President James Buchanan sent federal troops to put down a supposed rebellion
in Utah, the Dibbles moved south to Springville, Utah, and decided to settled
there.
Philo's oldest daughter, Eliza Ann, married Mormon Battalion veteran Henry Wells Jackson, who eventually fought and died in the Civil War, becoming the first known Latter-day Saint Civil War death and the only Utah battle death in that war.
Eighty-nine-year-old Philo Dibble died on June 7, 1895. That very day the Deseret News offered a fitting tribute to this faithful friend of the Prophet:
Elder Philo Dibble, an aged and respected Utah veteran, died at his home
in Springville at 2 o’clock this morning. Elder Dibble had been failing for
some time past and was perfectly resigned to his position. He was in the
ninetieth year of his age, and had very remarkable career.
In his death it is thought the oldest member of the Church has passed
from mortality. He was baptized [October] 15th 1830 by Parley P. Pratt. He was
wounded by a mob during the troubled times of 1833 in Jackson County, Missouri.
He was shot in the abdomen. The ball passed through his body and lodged near
the backbone just beneath the skin where it remained up to the time of his
death. On May 27th, he was visited by some Elders of the Church and among other
things he said at that time: “I know, he said, the Church was established by
divine revelation, Joseph Smith being God’s Prophet, Seer and Revelator. With
him I was familiar and closely associated during his life from 1833 until 1844.
When I beheld him as a martyr, shot with four bullets, even unto death; and I
now lie here on my death bed with lead in my body at the age of 89, and I shall
soon go to meet the martyr, for I now feel that my work here on earth is done,
and my desire is that I may soon go in peace where I shall see many others who,
like myself, have suffered many tribulations for Christ’s sake.”
References
“An Old
Respected Veteran Passed to His Final Rest at Springville This Morning.” Deseret Evening News, June 7, 1895.
Dibble,
Philo. “Early Scenes in Church History.” In Four
Faith Promoting Classics. Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1968.
———.
“Philo Dibble’s Narrative.” In Early
Scenes in Church History. Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1882.
———.
Juvenile Instructor, May 1892, 303–4.
———. The Happy Day at Last Has Come.” Hymns of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, no. 32. Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, 1985.
Garr,
Arnold K., Donald Q. Cannon, and Richard O. Cowan, editors. Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint Church
History. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2000.
“Joseph
Smith, the Prophet.” Historical Record, January 1888, 402.
Parkin, Max H. Missouri, vol. 4 of Sacred
Places: A Comprehensive Guide to Early LDS Historical Sites, edited by
LaMar C. Berrett. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2004.
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