Documents, Volume 13, Part 3 Introduction: October 1843
Part 3: October 1843
October 1843 was a cold and wet month
in , Illinois—one
that saw the first snowfall of the season.
At the beginning of
the month, JS and his family
celebrated the opening of the town’s newest hotel, the . During a dinner party held there on 3 October, JS remarked on past
trials and persecutions and expressed his love and gratitude to his
guests and to God for blessing him abundantly.
A few days later, JS presided over a
in . Among the business discussed during the conference
was the “case and standing of
.” JS had openly accused
his counselor of betraying him and conspiring to have him extradited
to , and in mid-August he
induced a church congregation to disfellowship Rigdon pending an
investigation. However, during a
session of the October general conference, church
members voted that Rigdon should “retain his station” as JS’s
counselor. The conference also
addressed the progress of the Nauvoo .
Construction work had slowed due to a “want of team work and
provisions.” Church leaders spoke at
the conference, “setting forth the importance of the saints using
their utmost exertions to fulfil the revelation concerning the Temple.” JS concluded the
conference “with exhortations to the church to renew their exertions
to forward the work.” Shortly after the
conference, JS and authorized church elder to
collect funds for ongoing construction. Specifically, they told him
to collect donations “both from the Saints, and all honorable men of
the earth, to assist in building the Temple of the Lord at
Nauvoo.”
Following the conference, other missionaries departed for locations
around the globe, including the Kingdom of
Tahiti.
Meanwhile, emigrants continued to pour into Nauvoo from and the eastern , raising
Nauvoo’s population to around eleven thousand individuals.
Letters from leaders in the British mission described the continuing
growth that fueled the gathering to Nauvoo. “The condition of the
churches in England is much better than it has been,” church elders
and
wrote from , “and the work is prospering generally, the
number of members at the General Conference in June last was about 8000.” Ward and
Clark anticipated “an accelerated progress to the work” as more
missionaries arrived.
, who was charged with
leading the British Mission in May 1843, arrived in Liverpool from
Nauvoo in late September
and promptly penned a letter to the and on 4 October echoing Ward and Clark’s
assessment of church growth and informing church leaders that “there
is a great want of Laborers in the winyard.”
While the church largely prospered overseas, letters and
other documents created in October reveal challenging times for
the Latter-day Saints in the British Isles
and the . informed church leaders in that a
leadership vacuum, created when members of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles and other seasoned missionaries returned to America, had
resulted in doctrinal disagreements and even apostasy in some in the British mission; he also discussed
various negative depictions of JS and the church
then circulating in the British media.
’s antagonistic
writings and lecture tour in the eastern United States had also
generated prejudice toward the church. In
a letter written from in late October,
informed JS that bias
was “strong And Friends as scarce Since the Benit [Bennett]
revolution” and that “the people appears to be affraid of Evry thing
they see and hear And Eaven will deny their own Eye sight For fear
of being deluded And they not have power to prevent it without They
act Contirary to all light and Knowledge.” In western , the Saints remained apprehensive about the
mobilization of the “ Mob” that had passed resolutions against the
church the previous month.
Amid growing tension, JS reiterated his
belief in the Constitution
while also seeking out allies to help protect the rights, property,
and lives of the Saints. In a discourse delivered on 15 October, JS declared, “I am the
greatest advocate of the C[onstitution] of U.S. there is there on
the earth.” Nevertheless, he intimated that the nation’s
foundational text was not broad enough to adequately defend minority
rights.
The following day, JS wrote to governor and petitioned him for more public arms for
the . Church member ’s late October
letter to JS introduced United States surveyor Colonel
, who was sympathetic
to the Saints and willing to use his connections in to help
them. Heywood’s letter and Frierson’s offer to help provided one
impetus for JS to recommence efforts to petition Congress for
reparations for the Latter-day Saints’ forced expulsion from during the 1830s and for protection from adversaries
during the present time. Even as their
opponents continued to threaten and revile them, JS and the Saints
received written support and encouragement from various individuals
sympathetic to their cause, including land speculator and author and
educator , who
told JS “I am capable of being a most undeviating fr[i]end.”
Part 3 features twenty-three documents created in October 1843, including letters,
discourses, and pay orders.