Documents, Volume 13, Part 1 Introduction: August 1843
Part 1: August 1843
Regional and national politics played a significant role in
JS’s life during August 1843. In preparation for the
7 August congressional election,
candidates and spent considerable time electioneering in
, Illinois,
hoping to secure the
vote. Because
JS previously pledged to vote for Walker—the Whig candidate and one
of JS’s personal attorneys—most observers believed that Walker would
easily win the election.
However, at a public meeting held two days before the election, announced that he had received a revelation indicating that the Saints should support
Hoge, the Democratic candidate. At a public Sunday worship service
held the next day, JS delivered a discourse in which he affirmed his personal pledge to
vote for Walker but endorsed Hyrum Smith’s revelation.
In the 7 August election, Nauvoo residents voted overwhelmingly for
Hoge, who carried the election in ’s sixth congressional
district.
Outraged over the failed attempt to extradite JS to earlier that summer as well as a physical
altercation between JS and a county tax collector on 1 August, JS’s opponents seized on
his involvement in the political sphere as an impetus to organize a
new political organization in . On 19 August, about two hundred people
attended a “Great Meeting of Anti-Mormons” in , Illinois.
Affirming its opposition to supposed “Mormon aggressions,” the group
organized several committees and then adjourned until September. Shortly afterward,
JS received word from attorney that opposition to JS was on the rise in Missouri
and northern . JS forwarded these reports to
Illinois governor to keep him
abreast of the situation.
Meanwhile, JS continued to preside over the
and attend to the ongoing
demands of its administration. He authorized one of his scribes,
, to respond to
a publishing firm’s request for a brief history of the Latter-day
Saints to include in a forthcoming book on churches in the . JS also received letters
from reporting on
the conditions of the church in and D. S. Perry declaring his
intention to join the church. JS attended and preached
at three of the four public Sunday worship services held in one of
the near the
’s
construction site. Most of these sermons discussed or , two doctrines that played
a critical role in planned for the temple. JS also publicly accused
, his somewhat-estranged
first counselor in the , of
colluding with state authorities from and in the earlier
attempts to arrest and extradite JS. At the 13 August worship service, the
assembled church members voted to withdraw fellowship from Rigdon at
JS’s request. Public discussion of
Rigdon’s situation continued for the next two months before being
resolved.
In his capacity as trustee-in-trust for the church,
landowner, and coproprietor of the steamboat Maid
of Iowa,
JS also engaged in a number of
financial transactions in August. This part features two
documents that represent the financial aspect of his duties,
including a pledge to donate a city lot in a subscription taken up for his scribe and a pay
order for lumber. Other prominent
facets of JS’s life during this period are not reflected in the
documentary record. Most notably, as presiding justice of the city’s
mayor’s court and municipal court, JS presided over eleven trials
over the course of five days.
While these court sessions represent a significant portion of JS’s
activities during August, the documents from those cases are
apparently not extant.
Toward the end of
August, JS moved his family into the newly
completed , a spacious residence and hotel. The edifice was
nearing completion around the beginning of the month. On 6 August, traveled to to
procure furniture, linens, china, and other supplies necessary to
run the hotel. She returned six days later. On 27 August, noted that he attended a
meeting with JS in the new home. JS’s 31 August journal entry stated that
the final days of the month were spent moving his family into the
new home “to commence keeping tavern.”
One of the main reasons JS needed a new home
was to provide a place for the many visitors who traveled to to conduct
business with him or to satisfy their curiosity about the religious
leader. In addition to visits from and , who were in the
city to electioneer, visits by three other groups or individuals are
recorded in documents featured in this part. In late August, JS
met with a delegation of Potawatomi Indians, during which he
received and responded to a letter from the tribe asking for his
advice and assistance. On 29 August, , the senior editor of
the Pittsburgh Gazette, visited JS’s home and
interviewed him about politics and revelation. Finally, H.
King of , Iowa Territory, wrote a letter to JS on 31 August 1843 asking him to show
kindness to a “Mr. Campfield of ,” who was visiting the region and wanted to tour
Nauvoo with his friends.
Part 1 comprises seventeen documents, including letters, discourses, financial records, a newspaper notice, and an interview.