Moroni Clawson

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Moroni Clawson
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BornJanuary 1, 1837
Caldwell County, Missouri
DiedJanuary 17, 1862
Great Salt Lake City
Cause of deathShot by law enforcement
Resting placeDraper City Cemetery, Utah
Known forBeing the victim of a widely publicized grave robbery and for his crimes.
Spouse(s)Eliza Manhard
Children1

Moroni Clawson (1 January 1837 – 17 January 1862) was a resident of Utah Territory in the mid-19th century. He was killed by police in Salt Lake City in January 1862 while resisting arrest. His death became notable after his grave was exhumed and robbed by Jean Baptiste, a cemetery worker later revealed to have desecrated numerous graves in Salt Lake City.

Early life

Clawson was born on January 1, 1837, in Caldwell County, Missouri, to Moses Clawson and Cornelia Brown. He married Eliza Manhard in Draper, Utah Territory, in 1859.[1]

In January 1862, Clawson was fatally shot by police officers in Salt Lake City. His funeral expenses were covered by police officer Henry Heath, who arranged for his burial.

Grave Robbery

In January 1862, shortly after his death, Moroni Clawson was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Within days, his family arranged for the body to be exhumed and reinterred in a family plot; when the coffin was opened the corpse was found without its burial clothing.[1]

An investigation traced the thefts to the cemetery gravedigger Jean Baptiste. Officers searching his house found boxes of burial clothing, shoes, and other items taken from the dead; contemporaneous accounts estimate that Baptiste had robbed hundreds of graves. The discovery produced widespread public outrage in Salt Lake City.[2]

Authorities ultimately banished banished Baptiste to Fremont Island near the Great Salt Lake, never to be seen again.[2]

In media

  • Clawson is featured in the 2011 American indie film, Redemption: For Robbing the Dead, which shows his grave robbery by Jean Baptiste.[3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Moroni Clawson | Wilford Woodruff Papers". wilfordwoodruffpapers.org. Retrieved 2025-10-28.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Unsolved Mysteries in Utah—The Bizarre Case of Grave Robber Jean Baptiste | History to Go". historytogo.utah.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-28.
  3. For Robbing the Dead, Firstlight Independent, 2011-10-16, retrieved 2025-10-28

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