Joseph
Smith's death at the hands of a mob at Carthage, Illinois, spurred a
Mormon exodus from Nauvoo. It was during this time of upheaval that
Rockwell shot and killed Frank A. Worrell, who was menacing Hancock
County Sheriff Jacob Backenstos. Rockwell had been hastily deputized
only moments before the shooting, a fact which made the incident no
less sensational when it was learned that the dead man had been the
militia lieutenant in charge of protecting Joseph Smith when the Mormon
prophet was assassinated the year before.
The
Mormons, now under the leadership of Brigham Young, crossed the plains
to Great Salt Lake Valley in 1847. Rockwell was one of the territory's
earliest lawmen--deputy marshal for the provisional state of Deseret
in 1849. When President James Buchanan appointed Alfred Cumming to replace
Brigham Young as Utah's governor in 1857 and ordered a large contingent
of U.S. troops to escort the new chief executive to his mountain offices,
Rockwell was among the number of Mormons chosen by Brigham Young to
harry and harass that "Utah Expedition," which Young considered nothing
less than an invasion "by a hostile force who are evidently assailing
us to accomplish our overthrow and destruction."