- R. N. Baskin
Robert Newton Baskin was born December 20, 1837, in
Hillsboro, Ohio . He attended Salem Academy, nearChillicothe, Ohio and studied law with the firm of James H. Thompson inSalem, Ohio . In route forCalifornia , Baskin visited the Little Cottonwood mining district with Thomas Hearst and saw possibilities in the minerals ofUtah Territory and decided to stay.Baskin became friends with a Dr. Robinson in
Salt Lake City who was assassinated on October 22, 1866. Dr. Robinson was building the first public hospital in Salt Lake City when the police tore it down and warned him not to "renew his operations there."Fact|date=August 2007 Brigham Young later said about Dr. Robinson's hospital: "The band of men had done wrong; that instead of going by night to destroy the building, they should have gone through it in broad day." ["New York Evening Post"November 7 ,1867 ] Dr. Robinson contacted Baskin in contemplation of bringing a suit to recover damages for the destruction of his property. A few weeks after the suit was instituted Dr. Robinson was called from his bed at midnight by some unknown person who said that a friend of Dr. Robinson was injured.Fact|date=February 2007 Ignoring the advise from his wife he went with the person, but at the corner of third south and main in down-town Salt Lake he was beaten to death. Standing over the mutilated body of his friend, Baskin resolved that he would do all in his power to increase federal authority in Utah. As a prominent Harvard trained,Protestant attorney inUtah . According to an article appearing in the "Deseret News " onAugust 26 ,1918 , "he did much to developUtah mines, prosecutedJohn D. Lee , wrote his Reminiscences, exposed Mormon ApostleOrson F. Whitney , and was active in politics, especially against polygamy. He drew and procured theCullom Bill , wasmayor of Salt Lake City elected under theUtah Liberal Party in 1892, and was associate justice of the Supreme Court of Utah (sworn inJanuary 3 ,1899 ). Baskin diedAugust 25 ,1918 .Many considered him a "radical"Fact|date=February 2007 and the "Deseret News" "found it necessary to oppose his operations and criticize his methods with all the force it could command."Fact|date=August 2007 However the paper "found itself able to conscientiously to support him for high public office, and to commend his official acts and policies, especially as mayor of
Salt Lake City ."Fact|date=August 2007 In his reply he says, "I assure theMormon people I am not their enemy, but their friend...I openly, and above board honestly and untiringly strove to Americanize theocraticUtah ...Though not a prophet, I have been profitable to theMormon people."Fact|date=August 2007Notes
References
* Van Wagoner, Richard S.; "Mormon Polygamy: A History"; Signature Books; ISBN 0-941214-79-6 (Paperback, 2nd edition, 1992)
*Baskin, Robert N. "Reminiscences of Early Utah: with " Reply to Certain Statements by O. F. Whitney"; Signature Books: Salt Lake City; ISBN 1-56085-193-7; (paperback)
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