A scarcity of contemporary sources
makes analyzing the period covered in this second volume of the Documents series
difficult for historians. While this volume contains a significant collection of
contemporary sources—including JS
revelations,
minutes, JS correspondence, and other documents—many of the texts featured herein are
copies of original documents and were not created contemporaneously. The majority of
sources for this early period survive through later copies that appear in Revelation Book 1 (1831–1835), Revelation Book 2 (1832–1834), JS Letterbook 1 (1832–1835), Minute Book 1 (1832–1837), and Minute Book 2 (1838–circa 1839, 1842, 1844). Many histories, reminiscences, and
autobiographies of various figures in early Mormon history are also helpful in
understanding this period.
JS’s revelations comprise the majority
of the documents in this volume and are essential sources for understanding JS’s
history from 1831 to early 1833. The
revelations embodied JS’s religious values, conveyed his sense of mission, and
outlined his agenda for building . Most of JS’s early initiatives grew out of the revelations. JS
and his associates made painstaking efforts to record, preserve, publish, and
disseminate his revelations and their content throughout his life. Early loose
manuscripts and manuscript revelation books, early church periodicals and other
newspapers, and the church’s published compilations of the revelations all preserve
revelation texts of this early period. The first known attempt to officially compile
the revelations occurred in the summer of
1830, as JS later recounted: “I began to arrange and copy the revelations
which we had received from time to time; in which I was assisted by .” The product of
that effort was apparently revised and copied, mainly by John Whitmer, into “A Book of
Commandments and Revelations” (Revelation Book 1), which was likely begun in ,
Ohio, in 1831 and later sent to ,
Jackson County, Missouri, as a source text for publishing the revelations. In early 1832, leaders in Kirtland began
copying revelations into Revelation Book 2.
Later that same year, , the church printer in , and others began to set type for the
first published book of revelations, to be called the Book of Commandments.
Phelps also published
some two dozen revelations in the church’s first newspaper, The Evening and the
Morning Star, a monthly newspaper printed in from
June 1832 to July 1833. Phelps had
printed the first five sheets (160 pages) of the projected contents of the Book of Commandments and
may have been working on the last when, in July 1833,
opponents destroyed the Independence . A few copies of printed sheets of the Book of Commandments
were saved and bound, but the edition was never finished. A was established shortly thereafter in , and
printing of the interrupted Star continued there. The Kirtland printing
office also later published an edited reprint of the Independence issues of the
Star under the shortened title Evening and Morning
Star. A second effort to publish a compilation of the revelations, titled
the Doctrine and
Covenants, was completed in Kirtland in 1835. For
more information on the revelations, see the Revelations and Translations series of
The Joseph Smith Papers.
To preserve letters and minutes of
church meetings, official church historians and clerks often copied texts from loose
sheets into more permanent record books. Beginning in 1832, for instance, clerks copied surviving letters, some dating as early as
1829, into JS’s Letterbook 1. In late 1832, began compiling minutes of meetings held in into Minute Book 1. Another
book of minutes, known as Minute Book 2, was inscribed in 1838 (though
likely from an earlier compilation) and preserved copies of minutes of church meetings
in , Ohio,
and , the
first dating June 1830. Both letterbooks and minute
books contain source texts for this volume and provide important context for
understanding JS and the early church.
A variety of
other contemporary records help contextualize the featured texts.
Correspondence and legal records were drawn upon when possible. Contemporary
newspaper accounts provide some details not otherwise available and a useful
non-Mormon perspective.
,
Ohio, newspaper editor
lived close to the Mormon settlement in
and saw some of his own family members join the new church. He
compiled his observations and much written material into his
1834 publication, Mormonism
Unvailed. Though Howe was clearly antagonistic toward the church, his
firsthand experiences and observations provide information not found elsewhere.
Similarly, after he left the church,
wrote a series of negative letters about his brief experience as a
Mormon that contain information about early events not otherwise recorded.
JS’s historical narratives supply
important contextual information concerning many of the documents featured in this
volume. His 1832
history is a brief
six-page recollection of early events up through 1829.
For the next several years, JS and his scribes created several other histories,
including a series of letters from to , later published in
the Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate in 1834 and 1835, and ’s revision of JS’s diary entries, recast to read more like a history;
both accounts are located in JS’s 1834–1836
history. The most
complete composition is JS’s multivolume manuscript history, which was an attempt by JS’s scribes to
incorporate JS’s memory, institutional documents, and private papers and collections
into a documentary history of JS and the church. For more information on these
historical manuscripts, see the Histories series of The Joseph Smith
Papers.
Sometimes, the only sources for a
specific event in this volume’s time period are personal recollections and
autobiographies written years after the fact. Notable among these is “The Book of John
Whitmer,” an attempt by the official church historian to chronicle his own
experiences, as well as those of JS and the church, in , , and . ’s manuscript, published in volume 2
of the Histories series, contains copies of revelations, letters, and petitions
related to episodes in Missouri through 1838. Other early
church members who left valuable personal histories include ,
who left several reminiscent accounts, and , who wrote several
letters in his later life about his experiences with JS and the church. Often such
reminiscences were based upon early documents, including what seems to be a daily
diary in the case of . The 1844–1845
autobiography
dictated by JS’s mother, , also supplies essential context.