keough cox. keokuk, iowa. their family had escaped, they escaped southern slavery to settle there. another question had to do with , you mentioned sympathizers, st. louis newspapers. the sympathized with the mormons. were there, were there any sympathetic parties, or vocal sympathetic parties, on the western side of the city, or were things just so bad that there really, there really were no vocal sympathizers on this part of the state in jackson county, in the nearby counties? >> i'm thinking of the journal of albert rockwood, who wrote in 1838, speaking of west missouri, that it, it seemed like the devil was in everyman in missouri. and i'm talking about western. now, of course, a decade later, hosea stout, as i read, is saying, hey, it was the dissenters causing problems, and, you know, these folks were friendly, so i think they're definitely were sympathizers on the west side, but it, it took a few years to calm down the tension. of what was happening at the time. but, you know, when i'm giving you a general -- just in the public here, we're getting a general sketch of things,