Ray County was located immediately south of the Mormon-dominated
Caldwell County. The two counties were separated by a no-man's land 24 miles long and 6 miles wide, known as "Bunkham's Strip" or "Buncombe Strip". This unincorporated strip was attached to Ray County for administrative and military purposes. In early 1838, a group of prominent leaders from the Latter Day Saint church, including
David Whitmer,
William W. Phelps,
John Whitmer and
Oliver Cowdery, were excommunicated on accounts of wrongdoing. They fled Caldwell County and relocated their families to
Richmond and
Liberty, the county seats of Ray and Clay, respectively. The expulsion of the dissenters alarmed and created mistrust among the Missourians. Meanwhile, relations between the Missourians and the Mormons living in the recently colonized
Carroll and
Daviess counties deteriorated. In August, a
brawl erupted in Gallatin when a group of Missourians attempted to block the Mormons from voting. In early October, a mob
besieged the Mormon settlement of
DeWitt, Missouri, demanding that the Mormons leave Carroll County. The citizens of DeWitt appealed for assistance to other Mormon settlements. In response, the
Danites, a Mormon vigilante group,
marched to Daviess County, Missouri, where they believed the attackers where located, and sacked the county seat of
Gallatin. The following day, apostles
Thomas B. Marsh and
Orson Hyde left their association with the Church, and swore out affidavits reporting on the Daviess County expedition, the existence of the Danites, and rumors that the Danites were planning to attack Richmond and Liberty. Though no such attack was ever contemplated, dispatches of militia forces were authorized to prevent such an invasion. ==Prelude to the battle==