Documents, Volume 11, Part 4 Introduction: 20 January–28 February 1843
Part 4: 20 January–28 February 1843
After he was discharged from arrest in his extradition case
and he returned to , Illinois,
from ,
Illinois, JS felt safe from additional legal
threats and poured his energy into grappling with and city business. Some of the matters demanding
his attention pertained to members of the highest levels of church
leadership. On 20 January, JS attended a meeting
of the to
discuss the case of , who had been
dropped from the and “cut off from the Church” in
August 1842. In the 20 January meeting, Pratt
“repented in dust & ashes as it were for opposing Joseph &
the Twelve” and expressed his desire “to return to the quorum.” JS then announced
that the actions cutting off Pratt were invalid because only three
of the were present when the action was taken. As a
result of the meeting, Pratt and his wife, ,
were rebaptized and Orson was restored to his former position within
the quorum.
During this period, JS also attempted to effect a reconciliation
with , his estranged counselor
in the . In addition to dealing
with these matters, JS addressed concerns about the Nauvoo ’s management of resources that church
members had donated for the construction of the , the
delayed progress on the temple and the , and the recovery of a book of patriarchal blessings
that a dissenter from the church had stolen years earlier.
After spending months primarily in hiding, JS was now able to address the
Latter-day Saints on a variety of topics in both public and private
instruction. He delivered at least six discourses during this
period, addressing both doctrinal and practical concerns.
On 9 February, he privately instructed apostles
and and others regarding the
nature of angelic beings and how they could be distinguished from
the devil appearing as an angel of light. In addition,
JS published in the Times and Seasons a letter regarding the signs of the second coming of Jesus
Christ as well as a lengthy poetic
adaptation of an earlier vision.
Various city matters likewise occupied JS’s time throughout this period,
including struggles related to the cash-poor economy of and the rest
of as well as the means by which Nauvoo residents
paid fees to the city. The city council, led by JS as mayor, passed
a number of significant ordinances aimed at expanding the council’s
power over economic and civic matters. On
6 February 1843, Nauvoo held its
biennial municipal elections, in which voters cast ballots for
mayor, aldermen, and city council members. JS had
been serving as mayor since 19 May 1842, when he was
appointed by the city council to fill that position following the
resignation of .
Running unopposed in 1843, JS received all the votes cast in the mayoral
election. JS’s new two-year term
began on 11 February, when he and the other
newly elected city officials were sworn in.
JS remained heavily invested and
involved in land transactions in
and the surrounding area. For instance, he sought to expand his , located
just east of Nauvoo, and he received a gift of land from land agent . JS also sought to
procure land for the expansion of Latter-day Saint settlement in
western . On 20 February, he purchased
thirty-nine town lots in , Illinois, and quickly arranged for to supervise the new
settlement.
Part 4 of this volume consists of
thirty-three documents. In addition to the documents associated with
the land purchases and the church and city business already
described, this part includes documents pertaining to the sale and
distribution of land in
and to offers of land and ferry rights in several miles upriver from Nauvoo. It also
features a representative sample of city ordinances passed during
these months.