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Published Volumes
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  2. Introduction to Journals: Volume 2

Nauvoo Journals, December 1841–April 1843

The journals presented in this volume cover a seventeen-month period marked by the continued growth of the church, significant doctrinal developments, the ongoing settlement of the
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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community, and the maturing of Joseph Smith as a political and religious leader. Like most of the journal entries found in volume 1 of the Journals series, the Nauvoo journals were written entirely by scribes who accompanied Joseph Smith, not by the Mormon leader himself. Though not a comprehensive history of events, the journals are an essential source for reconstructing Joseph Smith’s life and the history of the church he founded.
1

For additional biographical context, see “Joseph Smith and His Papers.”


The journals in volume 1 ended as the Latter-day Saints, having been driven from
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

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, began to gather at
Commerce

Located near middle of western boundary of state, bordering Mississippi River. European Americans settled area, 1820s. From bank of river, several feet above high-water mark, ground described as nearly level for six or seven blocks before gradually sloping...

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, Illinois. Shortly after Joseph Smith left Commerce for a journey to
Washington DC

Created as district for seat of U.S. federal government by act of Congress, 1790, and named Washington DC, 1791. Named in honor of George Washington. Headquarters of executive, legislative, and judicial branches of U.S. government relocated to Washington ...

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in autumn 1839,
James Mulholland

1804–3 Nov. 1839. Born in Ireland. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Married Sarah Scott, 8 Feb. 1838/1839, at Far West, Caldwell Co., Missouri. Engaged in clerical work for JS, 1838, at Far West. Ordained a seventy, 28 Dec. 1838....

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, the scribe who was keeping Smith’s journal, died.
2

Emma Smith, Nauvoo, IL, to JS, Washington DC, 6 Dec. 1839, Charles Aldrich Autograph Collection, State Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Aldrich, Charles. Autograph Collection. State Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines.

Smith asked
Robert D. Foster

14 Mar. 1811–1 Feb. 1878. Justice of the peace, physician, land speculator. Born in Braunston, Northamptonshire, England. Son of John Foster and Jane Knibb. Married Sarah Phinney, 18 July 1837, at Medina Co., Ohio. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of ...

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, who accompanied him on part of the trip east, to keep a journal, but the extent to which Foster complied is unclear; Joseph Smith wrote him in March 1840 that he wanted “to get hold of your journal very much,” but no record is known to exist.
3

JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Robert D. Foster, Beverly, IL, 11 Mar. 1840, JS Collection, CHL.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

Scribes were employed to compile and write the history of the church and to copy Joseph Smith’s correspondence, but there is no evidence that anyone was keeping a record of his daily activities in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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until
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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’s appointment in December 1841.
Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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arrived in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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in August 1841 after a four-year mission to England. Joseph Smith found him to be “a man after his own heart, in all things, that he could trust with his business” and appointed him temple recorder and “Scribe for the private office of the President” on 13 December 1841. Richards began “the duties of his office” immediately, apparently writing the first entry of Joseph Smith’s journal on the day of his appointment.
4

Willard Richards, Nauvoo, IL, to Jennetta Richards, Richmond, MA, 26 Feb. 1842, CHL; JS, Journal, 13 Dec. 1841.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Richards, Willard. Letter, Nauvoo, IL, to Jennetta Richards, Richmond, MA, 26 Feb. 1842. Jennetta Richards Collection, 1842–1845. CHL. MS 23042.

Richards kept the journal for the remainder of Smith’s life, with the exception of the period from 30 June through 20 December 1842, when he moved his wife and son from
Massachusetts

One of original thirteen colonies that formed U.S. Capital city, Boston. Colonized by English religious dissenters, 1620s. Population in 1830 about 610,000. Population in 1840 about 738,000. Joseph Smith Sr. born in Massachusetts. Samuel Smith and Orson Hyde...

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to Nauvoo. During Richards’s absence,
William Clayton

17 July 1814–4 Dec. 1879. Bookkeeper, clerk. Born at Charnock Moss, Penwortham, Lancashire, England. Son of Thomas Clayton and Ann Critchley. Married Ruth Moon, 9 Oct. 1836, at Penwortham. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Heber...

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kept the journal, with occasional assistance from
Eliza R. Snow

21 Jan. 1804–5 Dec. 1887. Poet, teacher, seamstress, milliner. Born in Becket, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts. Daughter of Oliver Snow and Rosetta Leonora Pettibone. Moved to Mantua, Trumbull Co., Ohio, ca. 1806. Member of Baptist church. Baptized into Church...

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and
Erastus Derby

14 Sept. 1810–3 Dec. 1890. Tailor, carpenter, farmer, joiner. Born in Hawley, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts. Son of Edward Darby and Ruth Phoebe Hitchcock. Moved to Ohio, by 1834. Married Ruhamah Burnham Knowlton, 10 Aug. 1834, in Carthage, Hamilton Co., Ohio...

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. References in the journal to the recorder, scribe, or secretary always refer to Richards;
5

See, for example, JS, Journal, 22 Dec. 1841; 17 and 21 Jan. 1842; 26 Dec. 1842; and 9 Jan. 1843.


the other scribes did not make reference to themselves.
During the two-year interruption in journal keeping, much happened to set the stage for the events detailed in the
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
journals. In October 1839, Joseph Smith left
Commerce

Located near middle of western boundary of state, bordering Mississippi River. European Americans settled area, 1820s. From bank of river, several feet above high-water mark, ground described as nearly level for six or seven blocks before gradually sloping...

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for
Washington DC

Created as district for seat of U.S. federal government by act of Congress, 1790, and named Washington DC, 1791. Named in honor of George Washington. Headquarters of executive, legislative, and judicial branches of U.S. government relocated to Washington ...

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, seeking government redress for the Saints’ losses in
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

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. Failing to win any promises of support from either
United States

North American constitutional republic. Constitution ratified, 17 Sept. 1787. Population in 1805 about 6,000,000; in 1830 about 13,000,000; and in 1844 about 20,000,000. Louisiana Purchase, 1803, doubled size of U.S. Consisted of seventeen states at time ...

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president
Martin Van Buren

5 Dec. 1782–24 July 1862. Lawyer, politician, diplomat, farmer. Born in Kinderhook, Columbia Co., New York. Son of Abraham Van Buren and Maria Hoes Van Alen. Member of Reformed Protestant Dutch Church. Worked as law clerk, 1800, in New York City. Returned...

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or Congress, Smith returned to
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

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in March 1840. Shortly after, the post office at Commerce changed its name to Nauvoo, a word derived from a Hebrew word meaning “beautiful.”
6

Notice, Times and Seasons, May 1840, 1:106; Robert Johnston to Richard M. Young, 21 Apr. 1840, in JS Letterbook 2, p. 135; Richard M. Young, Washington DC, to Elias Higbee, 22 Apr. 1840, in JS Letterbook 2, pp. 135–136; Seixas, Hebrew Grammar, 111; Zucker, “Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew,” 48. In September 1839, Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith, Sidney Rigdon, and George W. Robinson submitted a plat for the town of Nauvoo. (Hancock Co., IL, Surveyors Record, 1836–1884, microfilm 954,775, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL; Hancock Co., IL, Plat Books, vol. 1, microfilm 954,774, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

JS Letterbook 2 / Smith, Joseph. “Copies of Letters, &c. &c.,” 1839–1843. Joseph Smith Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155, box 2, fd. 2.

Seixas, Joshua. Manual Hebrew Grammar for the Use of Beginners. 2nd ed., enl. and impr. Andover, MA: Gould and Newman, 1834.

Zucker, Louis C. “Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew.” Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 3 (Summer 1968): 41–55.

U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.

The Illinois legislature granted Nauvoo a city charter in December 1840, and Joseph Smith was elected a member of the city council in the first municipal election in February 1841.
In many ways,
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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’s charter was similar to other city charters in
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

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at the time.
7

See Bennett and Cope, “City on a Hill,” 33–40. Between 1837, when Chicago was chartered as a city by the Illinois General Assembly, and 1840, when Nauvoo’s charter was drafted, four other Illinois cities—Alton, Galena, Springfield, and Quincy—were granted charters. (Kimball, “Nauvoo Charter,” 68–70; An Act to Incorporate the City of Chicago [4 Mar. 1837], Laws of the State of Illinois [1836–1837], pp. 50–80; An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], 52–57.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Bennett, Richard E., and Rachel Cope. “‘A City on a Hill’—Chartering the City of Nauvoo.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal (2002): 17–42.

Kimball, James L., Jr. “The Nauvoo Charter: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 44 (Spring 1971): 66–78.

Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Tenth General Assembly, at Their Session Commencing December 5, 1836, and Ending March 6, 1837. Vandalia, IL: William Walters, 1837.

Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

Each limited the terms of office for city officials to either one or two years, for example, and the legislative powers granted to the Nauvoo City Council were essentially the same as those granted to
Springfield

Settled by 1819. Incorporated as town, 1832. Became capital of Illinois, 1837. Incorporated as city, 1840. Sangamon Co. seat. Population in 1840 about 2,600. Stake of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints organized in Springfield, Nov. 1840; discontinued...

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and
Quincy

Located on high limestone bluffs east of Mississippi River, about forty-five miles south of Nauvoo. Settled 1821. Adams Co. seat, 1825. Incorporated as town, 1834. Received city charter, 1840. Population in 1835 about 800; in 1840 about 2,300; and in 1845...

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.
8

Kimball, “Nauvoo Charter,” 70, 77–78.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Kimball, James L., Jr. “The Nauvoo Charter: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 44 (Spring 1971): 66–78.

On the other hand, Nauvoo’s charter required a much shorter residency period for voters and aspiring officeholders than many other charters and also eliminated the citizenship requirement for the same—the first, perhaps, in an effort to allow recently returned missionaries to participate in politics, and the second in response to the anticipated growth in the number of foreign-born residents.
9

An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], p. 54, sec. 7; Bennett and Cope, “City on a Hill,” 22; Kimball, “Nauvoo Charter,” 70–71.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

Bennett, Richard E., and Rachel Cope. “‘A City on a Hill’—Chartering the City of Nauvoo.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal (2002): 17–42.

Kimball, James L., Jr. “The Nauvoo Charter: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 44 (Spring 1971): 66–78.

Other important differences were various powers granted the city council, such as the authority to organize a university and a city militia, and the authority granted the municipal court to issue writs of habeas corpus “in all cases arising under the ordinances of the city council.”
10

An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], pp. 55–57, secs. 17, 24, 25. Some Illinois cities’ charters provided for the establishment of common schools (although not universities), and most chartered cities had volunteer militias that, while not organized by the city council, could nevertheless be called out, as in Nauvoo, by the mayor. Alton, Illinois, had a provision allowing the judge of the municipal court to issue writs of habeas corpus. (See Bennett and Cope, “City on a Hill,” 23–29.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

Bennett, Richard E., and Rachel Cope. “‘A City on a Hill’—Chartering the City of Nauvoo.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal (2002): 17–42.

Broad in its scope and forward-looking in its provisions, the Nauvoo charter gave the Mormons in Nauvoo the authority and autonomy necessary to integrate newcomers into the city, establish civic order, and provide for the safety, education, and prosperity of the city’s inhabitants.
Strong support from Democrats for the
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
charter had important ramifications for the Mormons’ political life in
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
. Most members of the church voted the Whig ticket in 1840 in both national and local elections, in part as a result of their disappointment with Democrat
Martin Van Buren

5 Dec. 1782–24 July 1862. Lawyer, politician, diplomat, farmer. Born in Kinderhook, Columbia Co., New York. Son of Abraham Van Buren and Maria Hoes Van Alen. Member of Reformed Protestant Dutch Church. Worked as law clerk, 1800, in New York City. Returned...

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and his failure to help them obtain redress for their losses in
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

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. Several months before the 1842 gubernatorial elections in Illinois, however, Joseph Smith published a lengthy article endorsing Democratic candidates Adam W. Snyder and John Moore (running for Illinois governor and lieutenant governor, respectively), citing their support for the charter as a primary consideration. Snyder and Moore were “free from the prejudices and superstitions of the age,” Smith wrote, “and such men we love, and such men will ever receive our support, be their political predilections what they may. . . . We will never be justly charged with the sin of ingratitude—they have served us, and we will serve them.”
11

JS, “State Gubernatorial Convention,” Times and Seasons, 1 Jan. 1842, 3:651; italics in original.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

State supreme court justice
Thomas Ford

5 Dec. 1800–3 Nov. 1850. Schoolteacher, newspaperman, lawyer, politician, judge, author. Born in Uniontown, Fayette Co., Pennsylvania. Son of Robert Ford and Elizabeth Logue Forquer. Moved to St. Louis, 1804; to New Design (later American Bottom), Randolph...

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replaced Snyder as the gubernatorial candidate after the latter’s untimely death shortly before the election and received, predictably, a significant majority of the Mormon vote.
12

Leonard, Nauvoo, 294–297.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Leonard, Glen M. Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, a People of Promise. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002.

Whig leaders chafed at the Saints’ apparent political capriciousness, and Whig papers like the Sangamo Journal excoriated the Mormons in spirited editorials and articles throughout 1842.
For all there was to do in
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
, Joseph Smith’s trip to
Washington DC

Created as district for seat of U.S. federal government by act of Congress, 1790, and named Washington DC, 1791. Named in honor of George Washington. Headquarters of executive, legislative, and judicial branches of U.S. government relocated to Washington ...

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in 1839–1840 demonstrates his continued preoccupation with
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

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. A revelation dated 19 January 1841, however, marked a turning point in his history. In effect, the revelation released Smith and the church from their obligation—for the time being, at least—to build a city and temple in Missouri and refocused their attention on Illinois. “When I [the Lord] give a commandment to any of the sons of men, to do a work unto my name,” the revelation read, “and those sons of men go with all their mights, and with all they have, to perform that work, and cease not their diligence, and their enemies come upon them, and hinder them from performing that work; behold, it behoveth me to require that work no more. . . . Therefore for this cause have I accepted the offerings of those whom I commanded to build up a city and a house unto my name, in
Jackson county

Settled at Fort Osage, 1808. County created, 16 Feb. 1825; organized 1826. Named after U.S. president Andrew Jackson. Featured fertile lands along Missouri River and was Santa Fe Trail departure point, which attracted immigrants to area. Area of county reduced...

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, Missouri, and were hindered by their enemies.”
13

Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:15, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:49, 51].


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

Freed from the immediate responsibility to build a
temple

The official name for the sacred edifice in Kirtland, Ohio, later known as the Kirtland temple; also the official name for other planned religious structures in Missouri. JS and the Latter-day Saints also referred to the House of the Lord in Kirtland as “...

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and the city of
Zion

A specific location in Missouri; also a literal or figurative gathering of believers in Jesus Christ, characterized by adherence to ideals of harmony, equality, and purity. In JS’s earliest revelations “the cause of Zion” was used to broadly describe the ...

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in Missouri,
14

Church leaders and members continued to appeal to Congress to redress their losses in Missouri, however. (See Elias Higbee et al., Memorial to Congress, 10 Jan. 1842, photocopy, Material Relating to Mormon Expulsion from Missouri, CHL; JS et al., Memorial to U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, 28 Nov. 1843, in Records of the U.S. Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Records, 1816–1982, National Archives, Washington DC.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Material Relating to Mormon Expulsion from Missouri, 1839–1843. Photocopy. CHL. MS 2145.

Smith, Joseph, et al. Memorial to U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, 28 Nov. 1843. In Records of the U.S. Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Records, 1816–1982. National Archives, Washington DC.

Joseph Smith and the church turned their attention to Nauvoo.
The same revelation identified several priorities for the Saints in
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
, including the need to construct two buildings in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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—neither one of which Joseph Smith would live to see completed. One, the
Nauvoo House

Located in lower portion of Nauvoo (the flats) along bank of Mississippi River. JS revelation, dated 19 Jan. 1841, instructed Saints to build boardinghouse for travelers and immigrants. Construction of planned three-story building to be funded by fifty-dollar...

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, was to serve both as a residence for Joseph Smith and his family and as a “house for boarding, a house that strangers may come from afar to lodge therein . . . that the weary traveller may find health and safety while he shall contemplate the word of the Lord.”
15

Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:9, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:23].


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

Money for construction was to come through selling stock in the project for at least $50 per share, with the amount one person could invest limited to $15,000.
16

Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:19, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:64–66].


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

George Miller

25 Nov. 1794–after July 1856. Carpenter, mill operator, lumber dealer, steamboat owner. Born near Stanardsville, Orange Co., Virginia. Son of John Miller and Margaret Pfeiffer. Moved to Augusta Co., Virginia, 1798; to Madison Co., Kentucky, 1806; to Boone...

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,
Lyman Wight

9 May 1796–31 Mar. 1858. Farmer. Born at Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York. Son of Levi Wight Jr. and Sarah Corbin. Served in War of 1812. Married Harriet Benton, 5 Jan. 1823, at Henrietta, Monroe Co., New York. Moved to Warrensville, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, ...

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,
John Snider

11 Feb. 1800–19 Dec. 1875. Farmer, mason, stonecutter. Born in New Brunswick, Canada. Son of Martin Snyder and Sarah Armstrong. Married Mary Heron, 28 Feb. 1822. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1836, at Toronto. Stockholder in Kirtland...

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, and
Peter Haws

17 Feb. 1796–1862. Farmer, miller, businessman. Born in Leeds Co., Johnstown District (later in Ontario), Upper Canada. Son of Edward Haws and Polly. Married Charlotte Harrington. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Moved to Kirtland...

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were appointed as trustees of the newly created
Nauvoo House Association

A corporation established in February 1841 to oversee the building of the Nauvoo House. A 19 January 1841 JS revelation included a commandment to construct a boardinghouse for visitors to Nauvoo that would also serve as a home for JS and his family. The association...

View Glossary
on 23 February 1841, and the cornerstone of the building was laid 2 October 1841.
17

An Act to Incorporate the Nauvoo House Association [23 Feb. 1841], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], 131–132; JS, Journal, 29 Dec. 1841.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

The other building was the
Nauvoo temple

Located in portion of Nauvoo known as the bluff. JS revelation dated Jan. 1841 commanded Saints to build temple and hotel (Nauvoo House). Cornerstone laid, 6 Apr. 1841. Saints volunteered labor, money, and other resources for temple construction. Construction...

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—an edifice dedicated to God in which the “fulness of the
priesthood

Power or authority of God. The priesthood was conferred through the laying on of hands upon adult male members of the church in good standing; no specialized training was required. Priesthood officers held responsibility for administering the sacrament of...

View Glossary
” could be restored. The revelation declared that the various ordinances and ceremonies that would be performed in the temple were the “foundation of Zion” and the means through which God would bestow “honor, immortality, and eternal life” upon the faithful. Like the Israelites’ wilderness tabernacle and Solomon’s temple, the Nauvoo temple was to be built of the finest materials available and would demonstrate that the church would faithfully perform “all things whatsoever” the Lord commanded them.
18

Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:10–17, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:25–55].


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

With sixteen companies of local militia looking on and thousands of people vying for a view, Joseph Smith directed the laying of the temple cornerstones on 6 April 1841.
19

The sixteen companies of militia included the Nauvoo Legion and two volunteer militia companies from Iowa Territory. (“Celebration of the Anniversary of the Church,” Times and Seasons, 15 Apr. 1841, 2:375–377.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

One of the specific ordinances to be performed in the
temple

Located in portion of Nauvoo known as the bluff. JS revelation dated Jan. 1841 commanded Saints to build temple and hotel (Nauvoo House). Cornerstone laid, 6 Apr. 1841. Saints volunteered labor, money, and other resources for temple construction. Construction...

More Info
was vicarious baptism for deceased persons. Briefly referenced in the New Testament,
20

See 1 Corinthians 15:29. For a brief discussion of this reference in its historical context, see “Baptism for the Dead: Ancient Sources,” in Encyclopedia of Mormonism, 1:97.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Encyclopedia of Mormonism. Edited by Daniel H. Ludlow. 5 vols. New York: Macmillan, 1992.

the doctrine of “baptism for the dead,” as it came to be called, was taught by Joseph Smith in his funeral sermon for
Seymour Brunson

1 Dec. 1798–10 Aug. 1840. Farmer. Born at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York. Son of Reuben Brunson and Sally Clark. Served in War of 1812. Married Harriet Gould of Hector, Tompkins Co., New York, ca. 1823. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day...

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on 15 August 1840.
21

Simon Baker, “15 Aug. 1840 Minutes of Recollection of Joseph Smith’s Sermon,” JS Collection, CHL .


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

Smith later elaborated: “The Saints have the privilege of being baptized for those of their relatives who are dead, whom they believe would have embraced the Gospel, if they had been privileged with hearing it, and who have received the Gospel in the spirit, through the instrumentality of those who have been commissioned to preach to them” in the afterlife.
22

JS, Nauvoo, IL, to “the Twelve,” Great Britain, 15 Dec. 1840, JS Collection, CHL.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

Such baptisms were performed in the
Mississippi River

Principal U.S. river running southward from Itasca Lake, Minnesota, to Gulf of Mexico. Covered 3,160-mile course, 1839 (now about 2,350 miles). Drains about 1,100,000 square miles. Steamboat travel on Mississippi very important in 1830s and 1840s for shipping...

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by September 1840.
23

Jane Neymon and Vienna Jaques, Statement, 29 Nov. 1854, Historian’s Office, JS History Documents, ca. 1839–1880, CHL.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Historian’s Office. Joseph Smith History Documents, 1839–1860. CHL. CR 100 396.

Revelation dictated that the ordinance be performed in a temple and that God would accept such baptisms performed elsewhere only for a time; otherwise, the revelation read, “ye shall be rejected as a church with your dead, saith the Lord your God.”
24

Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:11, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:32].


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

Taking the words seriously, church members dedicated a baptismal font in the basement of the unfinished temple on 8 November 1841, a mere seven months after laying the cornerstones.
25

JS, Journal, 30 June 1842; Clayton, History of the Nauvoo Temple, 6, 20–21.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Clayton, William. History of the Nauvoo Temple, ca. 1845. CHL. MS 3365.

During the two years preceding the commencement of these journals, important changes were made in church leadership as well. Canadian convert and businessman
William Law

8 Sept. 1809–12/19 Jan. 1892. Merchant, millwright, physician. Born in Co. Tyrone, Ireland. Son of Richard Law and Ann Hunter. Immigrated to U.S. and settled in Springfield Township, Mercer Co., Pennsylvania, by 1820. Moved to Delaware Township, Mercer Co...

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took the place of
Hyrum Smith

9 Feb. 1800–27 June 1844. Farmer, cooper. Born at Tunbridge, Orange Co., Vermont. Son of Joseph Smith Sr. and Lucy Mack. Moved to Randolph, Orange Co., 1802; back to Tunbridge, before May 1803; to Royalton, Windsor Co., Vermont, 1804; to Sharon, Windsor Co...

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, Joseph Smith’s older brother, as counselor in the
First Presidency

The highest presiding body of the church. An 11 November 1831 revelation stated that the president of the high priesthood was to preside over the church. JS was ordained as president of the high priesthood on 25 January 1832. In March 1832, JS appointed two...

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. Hyrum, in turn, was appointed “a prophet and a seer and a revelator” to the church, to “act in concert” with Joseph Smith, who would “shew unto him the
keys

Authority or knowledge of God given to humankind. In the earliest records, the term keys primarily referred to JS’s authority to unlock the “mysteries of the kingdom.” Early revelations declared that both JS and Oliver Cowdery held the keys to bring forth...

View Glossary
whereby he may ask and receive, and be crowned with the same blessing, and glory, and honor, and priesthood, and gifts of the priesthood, that once were put upon . . .
Oliver Cowdery

3 Oct. 1806–3 Mar. 1850. Clerk, teacher, justice of the peace, lawyer, newspaper editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Raised Congregationalist. Moved to western New York and clerked at a store, ca. 1825–1828...

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.” Hyrum Smith was also appointed
patriarch

An ecclesiastical and priesthood office with the authority to give inspired blessings, similar to the practice of Old Testament patriarchs. JS occasionally referred to patriarchs as “evangelical ministers” or “evangelists.” Joseph Smith Sr. was ordained as...

View Glossary
, in which office he held “the keys of the patriarchal blessings” for individual members of the church.
26

Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:29, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:91–95]. Cowdery, whom Hyrum Smith replaced, had received the keys of the priesthood in connection with Joseph Smith, had been ordained as the second elder of the church on 6 April 1830, and had served in the church’s presidency from December 1834 to April 1838 under the titles “assistant President” and “assistant Councillor.” (JS History, vol. A-1, 18, 27, 37; JS, Journal, 5 Dec. 1834; Minute Book 1, 3 Sept. 1837.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

JS History / Smith, Joseph, et al. History, 1838–1856. Vols. A-1–F-1 (original), A-2–E-2 (fair copy). Historian’s Office, History of the Church, 1839–ca. 1882. CHL. CR 100 102, boxes 1–7. The history for the period after 5 Aug. 1838 was composed after the death of Joseph Smith.

Minute Book 1 / “Conference A,” 1832–1837. CHL. Also available at josephsmithpapers.org.

Joseph Smith received additional assistance from the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles

Members of a governing body in the church, with special administrative and proselytizing responsibilities. A June 1829 revelation commanded Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer to call twelve disciples, similar to the twelve apostles in the New Testament and ...

View Glossary
, whose members began returning to
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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in July 1841 after a two-year mission in England. Before the apostles’ English mission, their responsibilities had been limited to overseeing scattered branches of the church lying outside the organized stakes. Upon their return, however, Joseph Smith explained to a conference of the church on 16 August 1841 that the Twelve “should be authorized to assist in managing the affairs of the Kingdom in this place [Nauvoo].” A sustaining vote of the conference formalized the new arrangement, allowing Smith to delegate an increasing number of church administrative responsibilities to the Twelve in the coming months and years.
27

General Church Minutes, 16 Aug. 1841; Esplin, “Emergence of Brigham Young,” 482, 500–506. In his journal, Willard Richards summed up the new arrangement in the words “Business of the church given to the 12.” (Richards, Journal, 16 Aug. 1841.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Esplin, Ronald K. “The Emergence of Brigham Young and the Twelve to Mormon Leadership, 1830–1841.” PhD diss., Brigham Young University, 1981. Also available as The Emergence of Brigham Young and the Twelve to Mormon Leadership, 1830–1841, Dissertations in Latter-day Saint History (Provo, UT: Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History; BYU Studies, 2006).

Richards, Willard. Journals, 1836–1853. Willard Richards, Papers, 1821–1854. CHL. MS 1490, boxes 1–2.

Shortly after the Quorum of the Twelve assumed their new responsibilities, members of the church who had been involved with Freemasonry prior to the church’s move to
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

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requested the establishment of a Masonic lodge in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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. Seeing the Mormons as potential allies who might help him obtain his political goals,
Abraham Jonas

12 Sept. 1801–8 June 1864. Auctioneer, merchant, newspaper publisher, lawyer. Born in Exeter, Devonshire, England. Son of Benjamin Jonas and Annie Ezekial. Jewish. Immigrated to U.S.; settled in Cincinnati, ca. 1819. Married first Lucy Orah Seixas, before...

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, Grand Master of the Columbus Lodge, endorsed the request and created a temporary lodge in Nauvoo on 15 October 1841. Joseph Smith, who had not been a Mason earlier, was not involved with these early efforts to establish a local lodge, although he served as Grand Chaplain at the installation of the permanent Nauvoo lodge on 15 March 1842. He and
Sidney Rigdon

19 Feb. 1793–14 July 1876. Tanner, farmer, minister. Born at St. Clair, Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania. Son of William Rigdon and Nancy Gallaher. Joined United Baptists, ca. 1818. Preached at Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio, and vicinity, 1819–1821. Married Phebe...

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were admitted as members of the lodge that same day. Perhaps attracted to the ideals of “brotherhood, justice, learning, and character development” Masons espoused, Smith occasionally participated in the proceedings of the lodge throughout the remainder of his life.
28

Leonard, Nauvoo, 313–321; JS, Journal, 15 Mar. 1842; Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Leonard, Glen M. Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, a People of Promise. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002.

Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book. / “Record of Na[u]voo Lodge Under Dispensation,” 1842–1846. CHL. MS 3436

The period between journals (1839–1841) had its share of challenges as well. One of the most significant came in 1840 when
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

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governor
Lilburn W. Boggs

14 Dec. 1796–14 Mar. 1860. Bookkeeper, bank cashier, merchant, Indian agent and trader, lawyer, doctor, postmaster, politician. Born at Lexington, Fayette Co., Kentucky. Son of John M. Boggs and Martha Oliver. Served in War of 1812. Moved to St. Louis, ca...

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issued a requisition to the governor of
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
,
Thomas Carlin

18 July 1789–14 Feb. 1852. Ferry owner, farmer, sheriff, politician. Born in Fayette Co., Kentucky. Son of Thomas Carlin and Elizabeth Evans. Baptist. Moved to what became Missouri, by 1803. Moved to Illinois Territory, by 1812. Served in War of 1812. Married...

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, to extradite Joseph Smith to Missouri as a fugitive from justice. This requisition arose from alleged treason and other charges brought against Joseph Smith,
Lyman Wight

9 May 1796–31 Mar. 1858. Farmer. Born at Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York. Son of Levi Wight Jr. and Sarah Corbin. Served in War of 1812. Married Harriet Benton, 5 Jan. 1823, at Henrietta, Monroe Co., New York. Moved to Warrensville, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, ...

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, and others during the 1838 Mormon conflicts in Missouri. Carlin signed the extradition order in September 1840, but no arrest attempt was made until 5 June 1841. Joseph Smith obtained a writ of habeas corpus in
Quincy

Located on high limestone bluffs east of Mississippi River, about forty-five miles south of Nauvoo. Settled 1821. Adams Co. seat, 1825. Incorporated as town, 1834. Received city charter, 1840. Population in 1835 about 800; in 1840 about 2,300; and in 1845...

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, Illinois, and was discharged five days later in
Monmouth

Post village about 120 miles northwest of Springfield. Made county seat, 1831. Population in 1858 about 900.

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after circuit court judge
Stephen A. Douglas

23 Apr. 1813–3 June 1861. Lawyer, politician. Born at Brandon, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of Stephen Arnold Douglass and Sarah Fisk. Moved to Ontario Co., New York, 1830. Moved to Jacksonville, Morgan Co., Illinois, 1833. Served as attorney general of Illinois...

View Full Bio
ruled that the arrest warrant was invalid.
29

“The Late Proceedings,” Times and Seasons, 15 June 1841, 2:447–449; Requisition for JS, 1 Sept. 1840, State of Missouri v. JS for Treason (Warren Co. Cir. Ct. 1841), JS Extradition Records, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Joseph Smith Extradition Records, 1839–1843. Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.

Adding to Smith’s difficulties that summer were the deaths of his young son
Don Carlos

13 June 1840–15 Aug. 1841. Born in Nauvoo, Hancock Co., Illinois. Son of JS and Emma Hale. Died in Nauvoo.

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, his brother
Don Carlos

25 Mar. 1816–7 Aug. 1841. Farmer, printer, editor. Born at Norwich, Windsor Co., Vermont. Son of Joseph Smith Sr. and Lucy Mack. Moved to Palmyra, Ontario Co., New York, 1816–Jan. 1817. Moved to Manchester, Ontario Co., 1825. Baptized into Church of Jesus...

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, and another of his clerks,
Robert B. Thompson

1 Oct. 1811–27 Aug. 1841. Clerk, editor. Born in Great Driffield, Yorkshire, England. Methodist. Immigrated to Upper Canada, 1834. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Parley P. Pratt, May 1836, in Upper Canada. Ordained an elder by...

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.
30

Obituary for Don Carlos Smith, Times and Seasons, 1 Sept. 1841, 2:533; General Church Minutes, 16 Aug. 1841; Richards, Journal, 16 Aug. 1841; “Death of General Don Carlos Smith,” Times and Seasons, 16 Aug. 1841, 2:503–504; “Death of Col. Robert B. Thompson,” Times and Seasons, 1 Sept. 1841, 2:519–520.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Richards, Willard. Journals, 1836–1853. Willard Richards, Papers, 1821–1854. CHL. MS 1490, boxes 1–2.

When
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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began writing the journals in this volume,
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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and the surrounding area were experiencing a population boom. In 1839, Joseph Smith identified Nauvoo as an important gathering place for the Saints; by January 1843, he estimated that twelve thousand Saints lived in the area.
31

“Proceedings of the General Conference,” Times and Seasons, Dec. 1839, 1:30–31; JS, Journal, 5 Jan. 1843.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Many lived on land the church had purchased from
Isaac Galland

15 May 1791–27 Sept. 1858. Merchant, postmaster, land speculator, doctor. Born at Somerset Co., Pennsylvania. Son of Matthew Galland and Hannah Fenno. Married first Nancy Harris, 22 Mar. 1811, in Madison Co., Ohio. Married second Margaret Knight, by 1816....

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and brothers
William

25 Apr. 1813–22 Sept. 1872. River pilot. Born in St. Charles, St. Charles Co., Missouri Territory. Son of James White and Lurana Barber. Married first Achsa Golden, 25 Sept. 1838, in Hancock Co., Illinois. Sold property in and around what became Commerce ...

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and Hugh White in 1839; others lived on the five hundred acres known as “the Flats” that Smith had contracted to purchase from
Connecticut

Originally inhabited by native Algonquin tribes. Among first thirteen colonies that formed U.S., southernmost state in New England. First permanent European settlements established by members of Massachusetts Bay Colony, ca. 1635. Population in 1820 about...

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land speculators
Horace R. Hotchkiss

15 Apr. 1799–21 Apr. 1849. Merchant, land speculator. Born in East Haven, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Son of Heman Hotchkiss and Elizabeth Rowe. Moved to New Haven, New Haven Co., by 1815. Married Charlotte Austin Street, 22 Feb. 1824, in East Haven. Purchased...

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,
John Gillett

2 Aug. 1796–17 July 1848. Likely born in Connecticut. Son of Benoni Gillett and Phoebe Dean. Moved to Commerce (later Nauvoo), Hancock Co., Illinois, by May 1837. In Aug. 1839, with land-speculating partners Horace Hotchkiss and Smith Tuttle, sold land in...

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, and
Smith Tuttle

12 Mar. 1795–7 Mar. 1865. Shipping merchant, land speculator. Born in East Haven, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Son of Christopher Tuttle and Abigail Luddington. Moved to Wallingford, New Haven Co., by 1810. Married first Rachel Gillett. Married second Amarilla...

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. Joseph Smith planned to make the required payments for some of these properties by selling lots to those moving into the city. Speculators holding land in nearby areas such as
Warsaw

Located at foot of Des Moines rapids of Mississippi River at site of three military forts: Fort Johnson (1814), Cantonment Davis (1815–1818), and Fort Edwards (1816–1824). First settlers participated in fur trade. Important trade and shipping center. Post...

More Info
,
Ramus

Area settled, 1826. Founded by Latter-day Saints, 1839–1840, following exodus from Missouri. Town platted, Aug. 1840. Post office established, Sept. 1840. Incorporated as Macedonia, Mar. 1843. Renamed Webster, 23 July 1847. Population in 1845 about 380. Crooked...

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, and
Shokokon

Located on east bank of Mississippi River, about twenty-five miles upriver from Nauvoo. Laid out by Robert McQueen and Charles A. Smith, 1836. Location for landing rafts of lumber cut in Wisconsin Territory forests. Population never exceeded 300. JS visited...

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also solicited Joseph Smith, leading to similar land contracts in some of these areas. Other land speculators who owned land in Nauvoo on “the Hill” or “the Bluffs,” located to the east of the Flats, however, sold their land to new arrivals at a lower price, making it difficult for Smith to meet the terms of his real estate contracts and creating tensions between the competing interests. The numerous references throughout the journals to the buying and selling of these lands reflect the frontier nature of Nauvoo, the growth of the church, and Joseph Smith’s prominent role in developing the community.
Many journal entries deal with building the
Nauvoo temple

Located in portion of Nauvoo known as the bluff. JS revelation dated Jan. 1841 commanded Saints to build temple and hotel (Nauvoo House). Cornerstone laid, 6 Apr. 1841. Saints volunteered labor, money, and other resources for temple construction. Construction...

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and the
Nauvoo House

Located in lower portion of Nauvoo (the flats) along bank of Mississippi River. JS revelation, dated 19 Jan. 1841, instructed Saints to build boardinghouse for travelers and immigrants. Construction of planned three-story building to be funded by fifty-dollar...

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. Despite support from many church members, both undertakings suffered from a lack of capital, complaints of mismanagement, and competition with private developers’ projects. The economic jealousies between promoters of the Flats and the Hill that plagued Joseph Smith’s efforts to pay off land debts also affected the building of the temple and the Nauvoo House. As a result, Joseph Smith publicly denounced other developers like
Robert D. Foster

14 Mar. 1811–1 Feb. 1878. Justice of the peace, physician, land speculator. Born in Braunston, Northamptonshire, England. Son of John Foster and Jane Knibb. Married Sarah Phinney, 18 July 1837, at Medina Co., Ohio. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of ...

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,
Amos Davis

Ca. 20 Sept. 1813–22 Mar. 1872. Merchant, farmer, postmaster, tavernkeeper. Born in New Hampshire or Vermont. Son of Wells Davis and Mary. Moved to Commerce (later Nauvoo), Hancock Co., Illinois, ca. fall 1836. Married first Elvira Hibard, 1 Jan. 1837, in...

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, and
Hiram Kimball

31 May 1806–27 Apr. 1863. Merchant, iron foundry operator, mail carrier. Born in West Fairlee, Orange Co., Vermont. Son of Phineas Kimball and Abigail. Moved to Commerce (later Nauvoo), Hancock Co., Illinois, 1833, and established several stores. Married ...

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, whose business enterprises, he believed, impeded these church building projects.
32

See JS, Journal, 21 Feb. and 13 Apr. 1843.


Addressing workers’ concerns, improving the methods for collecting funds, and keeping church members on task with these construction projects occupied much of the Mormon leader’s time and energy.
At the same time, concerns for the temporal well-being of his family and members of the community vied for Joseph Smith’s attention. By the end of 1842, Joseph and
Emma Smith

10 July 1804–30 Apr. 1879. Scribe, editor, boardinghouse operator, clothier. Born at Willingborough Township (later in Harmony), Susquehanna Co., Pennsylvania. Daughter of Isaac Hale and Elizabeth Lewis. Member of Methodist church at Harmony (later in Oakland...

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had four children to support, as well as others who lived in their home as household help or as wards. One means of providing for the family was Smith’s
store

Located in lower portion of Nauvoo (the flats) along bank of Mississippi River. Completed 1841. Opened for business, 5 Jan. 1842. Owned by JS, but managed mostly by others, after 1842. First floor housed JS’s general store and counting room, where tithing...

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on Water Street.
33

See “Store,” in Geographical Directory.


While Joseph Smith seems to have spent relatively little time directly managing or operating the store, journal entries indicate his continued involvement in stocking the store with hard-to-find goods. Similarly, although he turned the management of his farm over to
Cornelius Lott

27 Sept. 1798–6 July 1850. Farmer. Born in New York City. Son of Peter Lott and Mary Jane Smiley. Married Permelia Darrow, 27 Apr. 1823, in Bridgewater Township, Susquehanna Co., Pennsylvania. Lived in Bridgewater Township, 1830. Baptized into Church of Jesus...

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, Joseph Smith rode the three miles from
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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to visit Lott and hoe potatoes during the summer. Both the store and the farm—as well as his other business concerns and the building projects he oversaw as trustee for the church—affected the economic lives of numerous
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
residents. “Let me assure you,” wrote Emma to
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
governor
Thomas Carlin

18 July 1789–14 Feb. 1852. Ferry owner, farmer, sheriff, politician. Born in Fayette Co., Kentucky. Son of Thomas Carlin and Elizabeth Evans. Baptist. Moved to what became Missouri, by 1803. Moved to Illinois Territory, by 1812. Served in War of 1812. Married...

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in August 1842, “that there are many whole families that are entirely dependant upon the prosecution and success of Mr Smiths temporal business for their support.”
34

Emma Smith to Thomas Carlin, [17] Aug. 1842.


Administrative concerns also occupied a large part of Joseph Smith’s time. As lieutenant general of the
Nauvoo Legion

A contingent of the Illinois state militia provided for in the Nauvoo city charter. The Nauvoo Legion was organized into two cohorts: one infantry and one cavalry. Each cohort could potentially comprise several thousand men and was overseen by a brigadier...

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, he oversaw the training, staffing, and supplying of more than two thousand troops of the
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
militia. As a city councilman and later as mayor of
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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, he helped draft ordinances and resolutions, attended city council meetings, and served as a judge for both the mayor’s court and Nauvoo Municipal Court.
35

See Nauvoo City Officers.


Cases involving slander, assault, petty thievery, and disorderly conduct occupied much of the court docket, although more specialized and technical cases occasionally appeared, such as the Dana v. Brink medical malpractice suit. The forty-one pages of the journal dedicated to recording the graphic testimony of witnesses in this trial probably reflect scribe Dr.
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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’s interest in the medical details more than Smith’s, but the technical language about legal precedents and procedure illustrates how Joseph Smith understood and applied the law.
Through all of this, and especially during the year 1842, Joseph Smith directed and oversaw important developments in the doctrine and organization of the church. These included publishing writings of the biblical patriarch Abraham that Smith said he translated from papyri he had obtained from an antiquities dealer several years earlier in
Kirtland

Located ten miles south of Lake Erie. Settled by 1811. Organized by 1818. Latter-day Saint missionaries visited township, early Nov. 1830; many residents joined Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Population in 1830 about 55 Latter-day Saints and...

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, Ohio. Written as a first-person account of Abraham’s experiences, the record recounts the patriarch’s calling to the priesthood, his escape from idolatrous priests in “the land of the Chaldeans,” and his and Sarah’s journey toward Egypt.
36

“The Book of Abraham,” Times and Seasons, 1 Mar. 1842, 3:704 [Abraham 1:1].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Teachings about the priesthood, the Abrahamic covenant, premortal life, astronomy, and the Creation overshadow the more familiar elements of the biblical narrative and were considered significant enough for the church to accept the record into its official canon in 1880. The same status was eventually given to two lengthy letters Joseph Smith wrote during this time that further discuss the doctrine and practice of baptism for the dead. Explaining the need and procedure for making an official record of each baptism, the letters—both of which were copied into the journal
37

JS to “all the saints in Nauvoo,” 1 Sept. 1842 [D&C 127]; JS to “the Church of Jesus Christ,” [7] Sept. 1842 [D&C 128].


—discuss the ordinance in terms of an unfolding objective to provide for the salvation of the whole human family through priesthood ordinances whose efficacy reached beyond the grave.
38

See JSP, J1:222n478; and Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:7–20].


Comprehensive Works Cited

JSP, J1 / Jessee, Dean C., Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Richard L. Jensen, eds. Journals, Volume 1: 1832–1839. Vol. 1 of the Journals series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Dean C. Jessee, Ronald K. Esplin, and Richard Lyman Bushman. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2008.

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

During the years covered in these journals, Joseph Smith also delivered important discourses on a variety of topics ranging from gospel basics, such as obedience and gaining knowledge, to the second coming of Christ, the nature of God, and the ultimate destiny of the earth. Some of these discourses were copied into his journal, and a few, such as the writings of Abraham and the letters about baptism for the dead, were eventually canonized.
39

Instruction, 2 Apr. 1843, in JS, Journal, 2 Apr. 1843 [D&C 130]; see also Clayton, Journal, 2 Apr. 1843.


Smith also shared with a few trusted associates new rituals that would later be performed in the
Nauvoo temple

Located in portion of Nauvoo known as the bluff. JS revelation dated Jan. 1841 commanded Saints to build temple and hotel (Nauvoo House). Cornerstone laid, 6 Apr. 1841. Saints volunteered labor, money, and other resources for temple construction. Construction...

More Info
and that added to the ceremonies that had earlier been introduced in the
Kirtland temple

JS revelation, dated Jan. 1831, directed Latter-day Saints to migrate to Ohio, where they would “be endowed with power from on high.” In Dec. 1832, JS revelation directed Saints to “establish . . . an house of God.” JS revelation, dated 1 June 1833, chastened...

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. Building on Sarah Kimball’s efforts to create a women’s benevolent society, Joseph Smith also assisted in organizing the
Female Relief Society

A church organization for women; created in Nauvoo, Illinois, under JS’s direction on 17 March 1842. At the same meeting, Emma Smith was elected president, and she selected two counselors; a secretary and a treasurer were also chosen. The minutes of the society...

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of
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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during this period. At the society’s initial meeting, he charged the women with “searching after objects of charity” and “correcting the morals and strengthening the virtues of the female community,” after which
John Taylor

1 Nov. 1808–25 July 1887. Preacher, editor, publisher, politician. Born at Milnthorpe, Westmoreland, England. Son of James Taylor and Agnes Taylor, members of Church of England. Around age sixteen, joined Methodist church and was local preacher. Migrated ...

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ordained
Emma Smith

10 July 1804–30 Apr. 1879. Scribe, editor, boardinghouse operator, clothier. Born at Willingborough Township (later in Harmony), Susquehanna Co., Pennsylvania. Daughter of Isaac Hale and Elizabeth Lewis. Member of Methodist church at Harmony (later in Oakland...

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to preside over the organization.
40

Relief Society Minute Book, 17 Mar. 1842.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Relief Society Minute Book / “A Book of Records Containing the Proceedings of the Female Relief Society of Nauvoo,” Mar. 1842–Mar. 1844. CHL. Also available at josephsmithpapers.org.

The Relief Society, as it came to be called, quickly grew to a membership of over one thousand Mormon women in the Nauvoo area.
41

Ward, “Female Relief Society of Nauvoo,” 88.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Ward, Maurine Carr. “‘This Institution Is a Good One’: The Female Relief Society of Nauvoo, 17 March 1842 to 16 March 1844.” Mormon Historical Studies 3 (Fall 2002): 87–203.

By December 1842, the end of the first year covered in these journals, Joseph Smith had explained the doctrine of plural marriage to a few of his closest associates and was practicing it himself.
42

Among the best-documented examples of plural marriage involving Joseph Smith during this period are his marriages to Sarah Ann Whitney and Eliza R. Snow. (Revelation, 27 July 1842, in Revelations Collection, CHL; Blessing, JS to Sarah Ann Whitney, Nauvoo, IL, 23 Mar. 1843, Whitney Family Documents, CHL; Sarah Ann Whitney Kimball, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 19 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:36, 4:36; Snow, Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow, 68; Eliza R. Snow, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 7 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:25; Beecher, Personal Writings of Eliza R. Snow, 16–17. For evidence that others were practicing it as well, see Clayton, Journal, 27 Apr. 1843.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

Whitney Family Documents, 1843–1844, 1912. CHL. MS 17390.

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

Snow, Eliza R. Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow, One of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1884.

Beecher, Maureen Ursenbach, ed. The Personal Writings of Eliza Roxcy Snow. Life Writings of Frontier Women 5. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 2000.

Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.

Glimpses into the reasons for introducing the practice and his understanding of the doctrine behind it are provided in some of his translations and revelations. The Book of Mormon, for example, taught that monogamy was the rule but that it was permissible for one man to have multiple wives when God commanded.
43

See Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 125 [Jacob 2:27–30].


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Book of Mormon. 3rd ed. Nauvoo, IL: Robinson and Smith, 1840.

A revelation recorded 12 July 1843—the general outlines of which were reportedly understood much earlier
44

Orson Pratt, in Journal of Discourses, 7 Oct. 1869, 13:193; Bachman, “Ohio Origins of the Revelation on Eternal Marriage,” 19–32.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Journal of Discourses. 26 vols. Liverpool: F. D. Richards, 1855–1886.

Bachman, Danel W. “New Light on an Old Hypothesis: The Ohio Origins of the Revelation on Eternal Marriage.” Journal of Mormon History 5 (1978): 19–32.

—accordingly taught that Abraham, who was married to Sarah, was under no condemnation for taking Hagar as a second wife because the Lord had commanded him to do so.
45

Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:34–35].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

According to the revelation, other ancient prophets in addition to Abraham had the keys or authority from God to participate in or perform plural marriages, and those who received plural wives under the direction of these prophets stood blameless before God. The stipulation of prophetic direction meant that the practice was carefully controlled, however, and those who took plural wives on their own initiative faced serious consequences.
46

Israel’s king David, for example, who had received several wives under the direction of the prophet Nathan, lost his exaltation when he took Uriah’s wife. (See 2 Samuel 11–12; Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:38–39].)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

Joseph Smith believed that this ancient authority had been conferred upon him as part of the latter-day restoration of the keys and power of the priesthood
47

See Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:45]; and Vision, 3 Apr. 1836, in JS, Journal [D&C 110].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

and that his authorization of plural marriages was justified before God.
48

See Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:44, 48].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

With these checks in place,
49

Although reminiscent accounts must be used with caution (see note 51 below), later affidavits attest to the highly regulated nature of plural marriage during Joseph Smith’s lifetime. The most complete accounts generally refer to a specific ceremony, performed on a specific date, by an acknowledged holder of the priesthood, in the presence of witnesses, and according to specific regulations. Eliza R. Snow’s affidavit, for example, notes that “on the twenty-ninth day of June A.D. 1842 . . . she was married or sealed to Joseph Smith . . . by Brigham Young, President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of said Church, according to the laws of the same regulating marriage, in the presence of Sarah M. Cleaveland.” (Eliza R. Snow, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 7 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:25, CHL. For a description of rules regulating plural marriage as they were understood in 1853, see Orson Pratt, “Celestial Marriage,” The Seer, Feb. 1853, 1:25–32.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

The Seer. Washington DC, Jan. 1853–June 1854; Liverpool. Jan. 1853–Aug. 1854.

a man might legitimately take plural wives “to multiply & replenish the earth, . . . & for thire exaltation in the eternal worlds,” while plural relationships that were undertaken without Joseph Smith’s direct approval were unauthorized and adulterous.
50

See Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:41–43, 63]; and Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 125 [Jacob 2:27–33].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

The Book of Mormon. 3rd ed. Nauvoo, IL: Robinson and Smith, 1840.

The nature of the extant sources precludes a thorough understanding of the extent to which Joseph Smith and others practiced plural marriage in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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and the nature of the relationships between the men and women in these marriages. Most of the information on the practice during this period comes either from later affidavits and reminiscences or from reports of disaffected members of the church at the time—none of which, for a variety of reasons, can be considered entirely reliable historical sources for delineating how plural marriage was understood and practiced by those involved at the time.
51

Many accounts about plural marriage in Nauvoo during Joseph Smith’s lifetime were recorded decades after the events they describe. Similarly, most of the affidavits about plural marriage that authors cite were collected decades after the church left Nauvoo. Given the selective and social nature of human memory and its susceptibility to being influenced by more recent events, such reminiscent accounts must be used with caution when attempting to reconstruct past events and practices. Moreover, most of these affidavits were gathered in response to a concerted effort by the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints to deny that Joseph Smith practiced plural marriage and to lay the practice at the feet of Brigham Young after Smith’s death. In response, a number of women who had been sealed to Joseph Smith in Nauvoo prepared formal statements about their marriages. As with the affidavits, personal motives influenced the reports of disaffected members of the church in Nauvoo as well. (See Thelen, “Memory and American History,” 1117–1129.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Thelen, David. “Memory and American History.” The Journal of American History 75, no. 4 (Mar. 1989): 1117–1129.

William Clayton

17 July 1814–4 Dec. 1879. Bookkeeper, clerk. Born at Charnock Moss, Penwortham, Lancashire, England. Son of Thomas Clayton and Ann Critchley. Married Ruth Moon, 9 Oct. 1836, at Penwortham. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Heber...

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provides the best contemporaneous evidence that at least some plural marriages in Nauvoo during Joseph Smith’s lifetime involved conjugal relations
52

William Clayton married Margaret Moon as a plural wife on 27 April 1843. Margaret gave birth to a baby boy on 18 February 1844. (Clayton, Journal, 27 Apr. 1843 and 18 Feb. 1844.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.

—just as they did later in Utah—and nothing in the 12 July 1843 revelation on plural marriage provides any doctrinal reason for why any authorized plural marriage could not have included such relations. At the same time, there is insufficient evidence to conclude that all Nauvoo plural marriages or sealings were consummated.
53

Similarly, the fact that a number of women were sealed to Joseph Smith after his death, when there was no opportunity for conjugal relationships, suggests that plural marriage was instituted for reasons beyond simply “multiplying and replenishing the earth.” For records of some of these posthumous sealings, see Brown, Nauvoo Sealings, Adoptions, and Anointings, 281–286.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Brown, Lisle G., comp. Nauvoo Sealings, Adoptions, and Anointings: A Comprehensive Register of Persons Receiving LDS Temple Ordinances, 1841–1846. Salt Lake City: Smith-Pettit Foundation, 2006.

Although Joseph Smith had many children with
Emma

10 July 1804–30 Apr. 1879. Scribe, editor, boardinghouse operator, clothier. Born at Willingborough Township (later in Harmony), Susquehanna Co., Pennsylvania. Daughter of Isaac Hale and Elizabeth Lewis. Member of Methodist church at Harmony (later in Oakland...

View Full Bio
, no progeny from any of his plural marriages have been identified.
54

Ugo A. Perego and his associates have recently used DNA testing to rule out, to a high degree of probability, Joseph Smith’s paternity of five individuals traditionally identified as his possible children through plural wives. (See Perego et al., “Reconstructing the Y-Chromosome of Joseph Smith: Genealogical Applications,” 70–88; Perego et al., “Resolving the Paternities of Oliver N. Buell and Mosiah L. Hancock through DNA,” 128–136.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Perego, Ugo A., Natalie M. Myres, and Scott R. Woodward. “Reconstructing the Y-Chromosome of Joseph Smith: Genealogical Applications.” Journal of Mormon History 31 (Summer 2005): 70–88.

Perego, Ugo A., Jayne E. Ekins, and Scott R. Woodward. “Resolving the Paternities of Oliver N. Buell and Mosiah L. Hancock through DNA.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 28 (2008): 128–136.

Given the sensitivity of the topic, it is no surprise that clear references to plural marriage are virtually absent from Joseph Smith’s
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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journals. Some entries, however, may be best understood—or at least partially understood—in light of the practice, although a significant amount of ambiguity remains even after a careful examination of the context and supporting sources. For example, a revelation dated 2 December 1841 for
Marinda Nancy Johnson Hyde

28 June 1815–24 Mar. 1886. Born in Pomfret, Windsor Co., Vermont. Daughter of John Johnson and Alice (Elsa) Jacobs. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Apr. 1832, in Hiram, Portage Co., Ohio. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, 1833...

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(recorded in a 25 January 1842 entry of Smith’s journal) closes by counseling her to “hearken to the counsel of my servant Joseph in all things whatsoever he shall teach unto her, and it shall be a blessing upon her and upon her children after her.”
55

JS, Journal, 25 Jan. 1842.


Decades later, Hyde reported that this revelation had been delivered to her shortly after Joseph Smith had taught her the “doctrine of celestial marriage” and that she “followed the council of the prophet Joseph as above instructed” and continued to hope for “the fulfilment of the promises and blessings” contained in the revelation.
56

Marinda Nancy Johnson Hyde, Statement, [ca. 1880], CHL. This document is undated, but a reference to the death of Orson Hyde in the statement indicates it was written after his death on 28 November 1878. Marinda Hyde died 24 March 1886.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Hyde, Marinda Nancy Johnson. Statement, [ca. 1880]. CHL. MS 23157.

In addition, a 1 May 1869 affidavit signed by Hyde attests that she was “married or sealed” to Joseph Smith in May 1843.
57

Marinda Nancy Johnson Hyde, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 1 May 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:15. A notation in Joseph Smith’s journal in the handwriting of Thomas Bullock dates the event to April 1842. (JS Journal, 14 July 1843.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

Assuming Hyde’s memory accurately reflects events of 1841–1843 and that the “doctrine of celestial marriage” about which she learned included plural marriage, it would be reasonable to conclude that the revelation’s reference to “all things whatsoever” Smith would teach her included a marriage or sealing to the Mormon leader. But Joseph Smith could have counseled Hyde about many other issues in 1841 as well. Her husband,
Orson Hyde

8 Jan. 1805–28 Nov. 1878. Laborer, clerk, storekeeper, teacher, editor, businessman, lawyer, judge. Born at Oxford, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Son of Nathan Hyde and Sally Thorpe. Moved to Derby, New Haven Co., 1812. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, ...

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of the
Quorum of the Twelve

Members of a governing body in the church, with special administrative and proselytizing responsibilities. A June 1829 revelation commanded Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer to call twelve disciples, similar to the twelve apostles in the New Testament and ...

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, for example, had left on a mission to Europe and the Middle East in April 1840, leaving Hyde and her children to rely on others for much of their support until his return in December 1842.
Several later documents suggest that several women who were already married to other men were, like
Marinda Hyde

28 June 1815–24 Mar. 1886. Born in Pomfret, Windsor Co., Vermont. Daughter of John Johnson and Alice (Elsa) Jacobs. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Apr. 1832, in Hiram, Portage Co., Ohio. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, 1833...

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, married or sealed to Joseph Smith. Available evidence indicates that some of these apparent polygynous/polyandrous marriages took place during the years covered by this journal. At least three of the women reportedly involved in these marriages—
Patty Bartlett Sessions

4 Feb. 1795–14 Dec. 1892. Midwife. Born in Newry, York Co., Maine. Daughter of Enoch Bartlett and Martha Anna Hall. Married David Sessions, 29 June 1812, in Bethel, Oxford Co., Maine. Lived in Newry. Baptized into Methodist church, 1816. Moved to Andover,...

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, Ruth Vose Sayers, and
Sylvia Porter Lyon

31 July 1818–12 Apr. 1882. Born in Newry, Oxford Co., Maine. Daughter of David Sessions and Patty Bartlett. Moved to Far West, Caldwell Co., Missouri, Nov. 1837. Married Windsor Palmer Lyon, Mar. 1838, in Far West. Moved to Nauvoo, Hancock Co., Illinois, ...

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—are mentioned in the journal, though in contexts very much removed from plural marriage.
58

Sessions is mentioned in the 2 and 3 March 1843 entries in connection with a court case. Sayers appears in a business transaction in the 7 March 1843 entry, while Joseph Smith visited Lyon shortly after the death of her baby on 24 December 1842. Sessions married David Sessions on 28 June 1812 and reported being “sealed” on 9 March 1842 “for time and all eternity” to Joseph Smith.a Sayers married Edward Sayers on 23 January 1841 and signed an affidavit dated 1 May 1869 attesting that she was “married or sealed” to Joseph Smith in February 1843.b Evidence for a marriage or sealing between Lyon (who had married Windsor P. Lyon in March 1838) and Joseph Smith is less compelling, as it is based on an unsigned, unnotarized affidavit-in-the-making incompletely dated to 1869. Two copies of this incomplete affidavit are known; both say that Lyon was “married or sealed” to Joseph Smith, although one gives 8 February 1842 as the date and the other gives 8 February 1843.c(aSmart, Mormon Midwife, 276.b“Hymenial,” Times and Seasons, 15 Feb. 1841, 2:324.cSylvia Porter Lyon, Statements, 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:60, 2:62.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smart, Donna Toland, ed. Mormon Midwife: The 1846–1888 Diaries of Patty Bartlett Sessions. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 1997.

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

Even fewer sources are extant for these complex relationships than are available for Smith’s marriages to unmarried women, and Smith’s revelations are silent on them. Having surveyed the available sources, historian Richard L. Bushman concludes that these polyandrous marriages—and perhaps other plural marriages of Joseph Smith—were primarily a means of binding other families to his for the spiritual benefit and mutual salvation of all involved.
59

Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 437–446.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Bushman, Richard Lyman. Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling. With the assistance of Jed Woodworth. New York: Knopf, 2005.

More definitive echoes of plural marriage are apparent in several journal entries that refer to men attempting to seduce women by telling them that Joseph Smith sanctioned extramarital affairs. In these cases, though, the connection is an indirect one, and reflects an abuse or misrepresentation of the practice as reflected in Smith’s translations and revelations rather than the practice itself.
60

The abuse extended beyond Nauvoo and beyond Joseph Smith’s lifetime. In May 1845, Parley P. Pratt of the Quorum of the Twelve issued a carefully worded statement in New York warning church members in the East of unauthorized relationships between men and women while reaffirming the reality of properly performed “sealings, and covenants” designed “to secure the union of parents, children and companions in the world to come.” (Parley P. Pratt, “This Number Closes the First Volume of the ‘Prophet,’” The Prophet, 24 May 1845, [2].)


Comprehensive Works Cited

The Prophet. New York City, NY. May 1844–Dec. 1845.

Chief among those who invoked Joseph Smith’s name “to carry on their iniquitous designs”
61

JS, Journal, 10 Apr. 1842.


was
John C. Bennett

3 Aug. 1804–5 Aug. 1867. Physician, minister, poultry breeder. Born at Fairhaven, Bristol Co., Massachusetts. Son of John Bennett and Abigail Cook. Moved to Marietta, Washington Co., Ohio, 1808; to Massachusetts, 1812; and back to Marietta, 1822. Married ...

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. Bennett had helped obtain the charter for the city and was a major general in the
Nauvoo Legion

A contingent of the Illinois state militia provided for in the Nauvoo city charter. The Nauvoo Legion was organized into two cohorts: one infantry and one cavalry. Each cohort could potentially comprise several thousand men and was overseen by a brigadier...

View Glossary
, a prominent Mason, the mayor of
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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, and a member of the
First Presidency

The highest presiding body of the church. An 11 November 1831 revelation stated that the president of the high priesthood was to preside over the church. JS was ordained as president of the high priesthood on 25 January 1832. In March 1832, JS appointed two...

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of the church. While the journal and other documents indicate that Joseph Smith initially reproved Bennett privately for his immoral behavior, Bennett was eventually expelled from the Masonic lodge, dishonorably discharged from the Nauvoo Legion, and excommunicated from the church.
62

In the official notice informing the public of Bennett’s excommunication, church leaders wrote that they were withdrawing “the hand of fellowship” from Bennett. (“Notice,” Times and Seasons, 15 June 1842, 3:830.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

Faced with censure from many directions, Bennett resigned as mayor, left Nauvoo, and wrote emotionally charged letters to the Sangamo Journal and other newspapers accusing Smith and other church leaders of a variety of crimes and improprieties.
63

See Bennett’s letters printed in the 8, 15, and 22 July, 19 August, and 2 September 1842 issues of the Sangamo Journal. As a Whig paper, the Sangamo Journal had been publishing articles against the church ever since Joseph Smith published his endorsement of the Democratic candidate for Illinois governor.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

Bennett also lectured for pay against Joseph Smith and Mormonism in several eastern cities and eventually published a book attacking the church and its leader.
64

In his letters and in his 1842 book, History of the Saints, Bennett referred to plural marriage as “spiritual wifery”—a term not employed in Joseph Smith’s revelations or in other sources generated by those who participated in plural marriage in Nauvoo. Similarly, Bennett’s description of Joseph Smith’s plural wives as a “seraglio . . . divided into three distinct orders, or degrees” appears to be a creative account uncorroborated by other sources. James Arlington Bennet, who had recently discussed the forthcoming book with John C. Bennett himself, wrote Smith that he (John C. Bennett) “expects to make a fortune” out of his book. Bennett’s book and lectures were a financial success; for two years, his biographer notes, Bennett “had no known revenue other than the royalties from the book and his lecture fees.” (Bennett, History of the Saints, 218–225; James Arlington Bennet to JS, 1 Sept. 1842; Smith, Saintly Scoundrel, 127.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Bennett, John C. The History of the Saints; or, an Exposé of Joe Smith and Mormonism. Boston: Leland and Whiting, 1842.

Smith, Andrew F. The Saintly Scoundrel: The Life and Times of Dr. John Cook Bennett. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1997.

The willingness of the Sangamo Journal and others to publish
John C. Bennett

3 Aug. 1804–5 Aug. 1867. Physician, minister, poultry breeder. Born at Fairhaven, Bristol Co., Massachusetts. Son of John Bennett and Abigail Cook. Moved to Marietta, Washington Co., Ohio, 1808; to Massachusetts, 1812; and back to Marietta, 1822. Married ...

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’s claims, and the inclination of more recent authors to accept those allegations at face value, obscures the contempt in which many others at the time—including some who opposed Joseph Smith and the church he led—held Bennett and his reports. The Boston Courier, for example, had little regard for the “pretended revelations of J. C. Bennett . . . an offender against decency, who having been punished for his faults now wishes to take vengeance upon his judges for their righteous decisions.”
65

“The Mormons,” Boston Courier, 26 Sept. 1842, [1].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Boston Courier. Boston. 1824–before 1855.

Thomas Ford

5 Dec. 1800–3 Nov. 1850. Schoolteacher, newspaperman, lawyer, politician, judge, author. Born in Uniontown, Fayette Co., Pennsylvania. Son of Robert Ford and Elizabeth Logue Forquer. Moved to St. Louis, 1804; to New Design (later American Bottom), Randolph...

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remembered Bennett as “probably the greatest scamp in the western country,” while Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, saw Bennett’s book as “nothing more than a collection of all the newspaper trash about the Mormons that has been published for the last few years.”
66

Ford, History of Illinois, 263; “Literary Notices,” New York Daily Tribune, 1 Nov. 1842, [1].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Ford, Thomas. A History of Illinois, from Its Commencement as a State in 1818 to 1847. Containing a Full Account of the Black Hawk War, the Rise, Progress, and Fall of Mormonism, the Alton and Lovejoy Riots, and Other Important and Interesting Events. Chicago: S. C. Griggs; New York: Ivison and Phinney, 1854.

New-York Daily Tribune. New York City. 1841–1924.

Similarly, the editor of the Boston Investigator made it clear that although he questioned the claims of Mormonism, he doubted “the notorious John C. Bennett” and his “miserable catch-penny book” even more:
We place no sort of reliance . . . upon any testimony of Bennett himself, and indeed the testimony which he says was given by others is rendered suspicious by his own contemptible treatment of the Mormons. He says he went among them a stranger; they gave him a friendly welcome, elevated him to stations of honor and trust, and for years he lived upon their bounty. When he could no longer fleece them, the ungrateful whelp, in return for their kindness, published to the world a large volume of their pretended vices and immoralities. . . . We have no confidence in the statements of a fellow guilty of such consummate meanness and hypocrisy, and we cannot suffer any extract from his vile work to appear in our paper without saying beforehand, that we heartily despise and detest him.
67

“Mormon Bible,” Boston Investigator, 26 July 1843, [3]; italics in original.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Boston Investigator. Boston. 1831–1904.

Even
William Law

8 Sept. 1809–12/19 Jan. 1892. Merchant, millwright, physician. Born in Co. Tyrone, Ireland. Son of Richard Law and Ann Hunter. Immigrated to U.S. and settled in Springfield Township, Mercer Co., Pennsylvania, by 1820. Moved to Delaware Township, Mercer Co...

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, who had served as a counselor to Joseph Smith before turning against him and publishing the Nauvoo Expositor, remembered Bennett as a “scoundrel” rather than as an ally whose charges against Smith might be used to sustain his own.
68

“The Mormons in Nauvoo,” Salt Lake Daily Tribune, 3 July 1887, [6].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Salt Lake Daily Tribune. Salt Lake City. 1871–.

Such assessments by
Bennett

3 Aug. 1804–5 Aug. 1867. Physician, minister, poultry breeder. Born at Fairhaven, Bristol Co., Massachusetts. Son of John Bennett and Abigail Cook. Moved to Marietta, Washington Co., Ohio, 1808; to Massachusetts, 1812; and back to Marietta, 1822. Married ...

View Full Bio
’s contemporaries suggest that historians must be cautious when using Bennett’s reports as a means of understanding events in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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—including some recorded in Joseph Smith’s journal. For example, several entries in the journal reference “certain difficulties” and “surmises which existed” between Smith and
Sidney Rigdon

19 Feb. 1793–14 July 1876. Tanner, farmer, minister. Born at St. Clair, Allegheny Co., Pennsylvania. Son of William Rigdon and Nancy Gallaher. Joined United Baptists, ca. 1818. Preached at Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio, and vicinity, 1819–1821. Married Phebe...

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during this period, as well as the disaffection of Rigdon’s nineteen-year-old daughter,
Nancy

8 Dec. 1822–1 Nov. 1887. Born in Pittsburgh. Daughter of Sidney Rigdon and Phebe Brooks. Moved to Bainbridge, Geauga Co., Ohio, 1826. Moved to Mentor, Geauga Co., 1827. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, likely ca. Nov. 1830, in Ohio...

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, from the church.
69

JS, Journal, 12 May and 21 Aug. 1842.


Some authors have found the explanation for these difficulties in Bennett’s claim that Nancy had refused Joseph Smith’s invitation to become one of his plural wives.
70

“Astounding Mormon Disclosures! Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 8 July 1842, [2]; “Further Mormon Developments!! 2d Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

While the cause of these “difficulties” may have been a rejected proposal of marriage to Nancy, it is far from certain. Other issues also served as a wedge between Rigdon and Smith in Nauvoo, and given the nature of the evidence, it is not certain that such a proposal was even made in the first place.
71

Some sources corroborate Bennett’s charge, while others refute it. For example, Bennett later published portions of a purported letter from Rigdon’s son-in-law George W. Robinson to James Arlington Bennet repeating the allegation, and John W. Rigdon, Nancy’s younger brother, signed an affidavit more than sixty years later to the same effect. On the other hand, Orson Hyde asserted in 1845 that Nancy created the story of a proposal after Joseph Smith had reproved her for immoral behavior. The well-known “Happiness” letter Bennett published in the Sangamo Journal in August 1842 from (Bennett claimed) Joseph Smith to Nancy fails, even if taken at face value, to clarify the circumstances behind its genesis. The letter can be read in light of plural marriage without requiring it to refer to a proposal to Nancy and, given its emphasis on the blessings following obedience, may even have its origin in an issue altogether unrelated to plural marriage. (Bennett, History of the Saints, 243–247; John W. Rigdon, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah, 28 July 1905, pp. 6–8, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, CHL; Speech of Orson Hyde, 27–28; “6th Letter From Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 19 Aug. 1842, [2].)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Bennett, John C. The History of the Saints; or, an Exposé of Joe Smith and Mormonism. Boston: Leland and Whiting, 1842.

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

Speech of Elder Orson Hyde, Delivered before the High Priest’s Quorum in Nauvoo, April 27th, 1845, upon the Course and Conduct of Mr. Sidney Rigdon, and upon the Merits of His Claims to the Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1845. Copy at CHL.

Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

For his own part, Joseph Smith summarily dismissed Bennett’s charges as falsehoods and called for elders to “go forth and deluge the States with a flood of truth” to counteract Bennett’s influence.
72

JS, Journal, 26 Aug. 1842. A number of affidavits, some of which were collected earlier, attesting to Bennett’s immoral conduct were published at this time. (See Affidavits and Certificates, [Nauvoo, IL: 31 Aug. 1842], copy at CHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Affidavits and Certificates, Disproving the Statements and Affidavits Contained in John C. Bennett’s Letters. Nauvoo Aug. 31, 1842. [Nauvoo, IL: 1842]. Copy at CHL.

Bennett

3 Aug. 1804–5 Aug. 1867. Physician, minister, poultry breeder. Born at Fairhaven, Bristol Co., Massachusetts. Son of John Bennett and Abigail Cook. Moved to Marietta, Washington Co., Ohio, 1808; to Massachusetts, 1812; and back to Marietta, 1822. Married ...

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similarly accused Joseph Smith of seeking an illicit relationship with
Orson Pratt

19 Sept. 1811–3 Oct. 1881. Farmer, writer, teacher, merchant, surveyor, editor, publisher. Born at Hartford, Washington Co., New York. Son of Jared Pratt and Charity Dickinson. Moved to New Lebanon, Columbia Co., New York, 1814; to Canaan, Columbia Co., fall...

View Full Bio
’s wife,
Sarah

5 Feb. 1817–25 Dec. 1888. Seamstress. Born in Henderson, Jefferson Co., New York. Daughter of Cyrus Bates and Lydia Harrington. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Orson Pratt, 18 June 1835, near Sackets Harbor, Jefferson Co. Married...

View Full Bio
, while Orson was on a mission.
73

“Further Mormon Developments!! 2d Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

Sarah supported Bennett’s charge, sending Orson into a fit of despair and distrust. Orson’s subsequent refusal to retract his public statements “against Joseph & others” during the course of a four-day hearing with the
Quorum of the Twelve

Members of a governing body in the church, with special administrative and proselytizing responsibilities. A June 1829 revelation commanded Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer to call twelve disciples, similar to the twelve apostles in the New Testament and ...

View Glossary
led to his excommunication.
74

Woodruff, Journal, 10 Aug.–18 Sept. 1842.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.

Joseph Smith emphatically denied the charge: “She lied about me,” he told members of the Twelve. “I never made the offer which she said I did.”
75

Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Minutes, 20 Jan. 1843.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Minutes, 1840–1844. CHL.

According to his journal, Joseph Smith at one point also “stated before the public a general outline of J[ohn] C. Bennetts conduct. . . with regard to Sis P[ratt]”
76

JS, Journal, 15 July 1842.


—a cryptic phrase possibly clarified by other sources alleging that Sarah had actually been involved with Bennett in an adulterous relationship during Orson’s absence.
77

Affidavits and Certificates, [Nauvoo, IL: 31 Aug. 1842], copy at CHL.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Affidavits and Certificates, Disproving the Statements and Affidavits Contained in John C. Bennett’s Letters. Nauvoo Aug. 31, 1842. [Nauvoo, IL: 1842]. Copy at CHL.

Both Sarah and Orson Pratt were eventually rebaptized and reconfirmed under the hand of Joseph Smith himself, thus setting the issue at rest for the time being.
78

JS, Journal, 20 Jan. 1843; Woodruff, Journal, [20] Jan. 1843. In 1875, after she had separated from Orson and left the church, Sarah claimed that she had “not been a believer in the Mormon doctrines for thirty years.” Some evidence suggests that Sarah renewed her accusation against Joseph Smith later in life. (Papers in the Case of Maxwell vs. Cannon, H.R. Misc. Doc. 49, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess., p. 32 [1873]; Von Wymetal, Joseph Smith the Prophet, 60–61; “Workings of Mormonism Related by Mrs. Orson Pratt,” 1884, CHL; Kate Field, “Horrors of Polygamy,” San Francisco Chronicle, 4 Dec. 1892, 12.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.

Papers in the Case of Maxwell v. Cannon, for a Seat as Delegate from Utah Territory in the Forty-Third Congress. H.R. Misc. Doc. 49, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess. (1873).

Von Wymetal, Wilhelm [W. Wyl, pseud.]. Joseph Smith the Prophet: His Family and His Friends; A Study Based on Facts and Documents. Salt Lake City: Tribune Printing and Publishing, 1886.

“Workings of Mormonism Related by Mrs. Orson Pratt,” 1884. CHL. MS 4048.

San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco. 1865–1925.

In another dramatic accusation,
Bennett

3 Aug. 1804–5 Aug. 1867. Physician, minister, poultry breeder. Born at Fairhaven, Bristol Co., Massachusetts. Son of John Bennett and Abigail Cook. Moved to Marietta, Washington Co., Ohio, 1808; to Massachusetts, 1812; and back to Marietta, 1822. Married ...

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charged Joseph Smith with masterminding the 6 May 1842 assassination attempt on
Lilburn W. Boggs

14 Dec. 1796–14 Mar. 1860. Bookkeeper, bank cashier, merchant, Indian agent and trader, lawyer, doctor, postmaster, politician. Born at Lexington, Fayette Co., Kentucky. Son of John M. Boggs and Martha Oliver. Served in War of 1812. Moved to St. Louis, ca...

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, the former
Missouri

Area acquired by U.S. in Louisiana Purchase, 1803, and established as territory, 1812. Missouri Compromise, 1820, admitted Missouri as slave state, 1821. Population in 1830 about 140,000; in 1836 about 240,000; and in 1840 about 380,000. Latter-day Saint ...

More Info
governor who had ordered the removal of the Mormons from the state in 1838.
79

“Further Mormon Developments!! 2d Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2]; “Gen. Bennett’s 4th Letter,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 22 July 1842, [2].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

Although others had started this rumor, Bennett actively circulated it through his letters published in the Sangamo Journal and the
St. Louis

Located on west side of Mississippi River about fifteen miles south of confluence with Missouri River. Founded as fur-trading post by French settlers, 1764. Incorporated as town, 1809. First Mississippi steamboat docked by town, 1817. Incorporated as city...

More Info
Bulletin. Missouri authorities could do little on the basis of these claims, but when Boggs himself signed an affidavit on 20 July 1842 accusing Joseph Smith of complicity in the attempted assassination, Missouri governor
Thomas Reynolds

12 Mar. 1796–9 Feb. 1844. Attorney, politician, judge. Born at Mason Co. (later Bracken Co.), Kentucky. Son of Nathaniel Reynolds and Catherine Vernon. Admitted to Kentucky bar, 1817. Moved to Illinois, by 1818. Served as clerk of Illinois House of Representatives...

View Full Bio
requested that
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
governor
Thomas Carlin

18 July 1789–14 Feb. 1852. Ferry owner, farmer, sheriff, politician. Born in Fayette Co., Kentucky. Son of Thomas Carlin and Elizabeth Evans. Baptist. Moved to what became Missouri, by 1803. Moved to Illinois Territory, by 1812. Served in War of 1812. Married...

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deliver the accused to Missouri authorities. Carlin issued an arrest warrant, and on 8 August 1842 Smith was arrested in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

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by
Thomas King

25 July 1806–17 Apr. 1854. Merchant. Born in Virginia. Lived at Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, by Jan. 1832. Served as constable, beginning Aug. 1835. Married Juliett Ann McDade, 9 June 1836, in Adams Co. Served as Adams Co. coroner, by Aug. 1836. Served as...

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, undersheriff of
Adams County

Situated in western Illinois; bounded on west by Mississippi River. Organized from Pike Co., 1825. Quincy established as county seat, 1825. Population in 1830 about 2,200. Population in 1840 about 14,500. Latter-day Saint exiles from Missouri found refuge...

More Info
. Joseph Smith petitioned the Nauvoo Municipal Court for a writ of habeas corpus, which was granted. King, unsure of the writ’s validity, returned to
Quincy

Located on high limestone bluffs east of Mississippi River, about forty-five miles south of Nauvoo. Settled 1821. Adams Co. seat, 1825. Incorporated as town, 1834. Received city charter, 1840. Population in 1835 about 800; in 1840 about 2,300; and in 1845...

More Info
with the writ of habeas corpus and the governor’s arrest warrant in hand for further direction from Governor Carlin. Unable to hold a prisoner without an arrest warrant in their possession, Nauvoo authorities released Smith, who went into hiding and evaded authorities until federal district judge
Nathaniel Pope

5 Jan. 1784–22 Jan. 1850. Lawyer, judge. Born at present-day Louisville, Jefferson Co., Kentucky. Son of William Pope and Penelope Edwards. Graduated from Transylvania University, 1806, at Lexington, Fayette Co., Kentucky. Moved to St. Genevieve, St. Genevieve...

View Full Bio
ruled in early January 1843 that he be discharged from arrest. As more pages and entries in Joseph Smith’s Nauvoo journals are devoted to aspects of the extradition attempt than to any other single topic, an appendix providing a summary of the case and the full text of the most important relevant legal documents has been included in this volume.
80

See Appendix 1.


The journals reproduced here note both the momentous and the mundane. Several of Joseph Smith’s dreams find their way into the journals, as do some of his reminiscences, opinions about current events, and various excursions. Mission calls, church disciplinary decisions, and references to local politics, economic developments, and newspaper articles find a place as well. Following the 4 March 1843 entry in which Smith criticized
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

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for a failure in “naming or noticing surrou[n]ding objects. weather &c,” observations on the weather begin to appear. Other topics covered in these journals include Joseph Smith’s petition for bankruptcy, his emerging friendship with
James Arlington Bennet

21 Dec. 1788–25 Dec. 1863. Attorney, newspaper publisher, educator, author. Born in New York. Married first Sophia Smith, 8 May 1811. Served as third and later second lieutenant in First U.S. Artillery, 1 Aug. 1813–14 Oct. 1814. Published American System ...

View Full Bio
, and discussions in the
Illinois

Became part of Northwest Territory of U.S., 1787. Admitted as state, 1818. Population in 1840 about 480,000. Population in 1845 about 660,000. Plentiful, inexpensive land attracted settlers from northern and southern states. Following expulsion from Missouri...

More Info
legislature about repealing or amending the Nauvoo city charter. The journals also include copies of letters, reports of speeches and blessings, and other documents. With the exception of the 16 and 23 August 1842 entries, which include lengthy benedictory statements about individuals who had helped Joseph Smith over the years, it is doubtful that he dictated any portion of these journals. The first-person pronouns that occur in the
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
journals do not appear to be formal dictations but probably reflect the scribes’ conscious efforts to make this document Joseph Smith’s personal journal and to capture, on occasion, his own language.
The journal as kept by
Willard Richards

24 June 1804–11 Mar. 1854. Teacher, lecturer, doctor, clerk, printer, editor, postmaster. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Moved to Richmond, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts, 1813; to Chatham, Columbia Co...

View Full Bio
differs markedly from some of Joseph Smith’s earlier journals. For example, where Smith’s 1832–1834 and 1835–1836 journals contain many lengthy, descriptive accounts of his activities—some in his own hand—Richards’s entries are often short and terse and provide only the barest outlines of Joseph Smith’s activities. On numerous occasions, even for several days running, Richards failed to record anything at all.
William Clayton

17 July 1814–4 Dec. 1879. Bookkeeper, clerk. Born at Charnock Moss, Penwortham, Lancashire, England. Son of Thomas Clayton and Ann Critchley. Married Ruth Moon, 9 Oct. 1836, at Penwortham. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Heber...

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, who had primary responsibility for keeping the journal during Richards’s absence, also wrote in an abbreviated style at times. Nevertheless, the events, teachings, revelations, ordinances, and organizational changes documented in the journals constitute a significant contribution to foundational Latter-day Saint identity, beliefs, and practices. The journals were also part of Joseph Smith’s attempt to fulfill earlier commandments to keep a history—instructions that he took seriously but that often had been beyond his immediate ability to accomplish.
81

See Revelation, ca. 8 Mar. 1831–B, in Doctrine and Covenants 63, 1835 ed. [D&C 47]; JS, Kirtland, OH, to William W. Phelps, [Independence, MO], 27 Nov. 1832, in JS Letterbook 1, pp. 1–4 [D&C 85].


Comprehensive Works Cited

Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of the Latter Day Saints: Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith, Oliver Cowdery, Sidney Rigdon, and Frederick G. Williams. Kirtland, OH: F. G. Williams, 1835. Also available in Robin Scott Jensen, Richard E. Turley Jr., Riley M. Lorimer, eds., Revelations and Translations, Volume 2: Published Revelations. Vol. 2 of the Revelations and Translations series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Dean C. Jessee, Ronald K. Esplin, and Richard Lyman Bushman (Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2011).

JS Letterbook 1 / Smith, Joseph. “Letter Book A,” 1832–1835. Joseph Smith Collection. CHL. MS 155, box 2, fd. 1.

Perhaps most important, Joseph Smith’s Nauvoo journals provide scholars and other interested readers with a much-needed window into his life, personality, and religious contributions.
  1. 1

    For additional biographical context, see “Joseph Smith and His Papers.”

  2. 2

    Emma Smith, Nauvoo, IL, to JS, Washington DC, 6 Dec. 1839, Charles Aldrich Autograph Collection, State Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines.

    Aldrich, Charles. Autograph Collection. State Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines.

  3. 3

    JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Robert D. Foster, Beverly, IL, 11 Mar. 1840, JS Collection, CHL.

    Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

  4. 4

    Willard Richards, Nauvoo, IL, to Jennetta Richards, Richmond, MA, 26 Feb. 1842, CHL; JS, Journal, 13 Dec. 1841.

    Richards, Willard. Letter, Nauvoo, IL, to Jennetta Richards, Richmond, MA, 26 Feb. 1842. Jennetta Richards Collection, 1842–1845. CHL. MS 23042.

  5. 5

    See, for example, JS, Journal, 22 Dec. 1841; 17 and 21 Jan. 1842; 26 Dec. 1842; and 9 Jan. 1843.

  6. 6

    Notice, Times and Seasons, May 1840, 1:106; Robert Johnston to Richard M. Young, 21 Apr. 1840, in JS Letterbook 2, p. 135; Richard M. Young, Washington DC, to Elias Higbee, 22 Apr. 1840, in JS Letterbook 2, pp. 135–136; Seixas, Hebrew Grammar, 111; Zucker, “Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew,” 48. In September 1839, Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith, Sidney Rigdon, and George W. Robinson submitted a plat for the town of Nauvoo. (Hancock Co., IL, Surveyors Record, 1836–1884, microfilm 954,775, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL; Hancock Co., IL, Plat Books, vol. 1, microfilm 954,774, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

    JS Letterbook 2 / Smith, Joseph. “Copies of Letters, &c. &c.,” 1839–1843. Joseph Smith Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155, box 2, fd. 2.

    Seixas, Joshua. Manual Hebrew Grammar for the Use of Beginners. 2nd ed., enl. and impr. Andover, MA: Gould and Newman, 1834.

    Zucker, Louis C. “Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew.” Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 3 (Summer 1968): 41–55.

    U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.

  7. 7

    See Bennett and Cope, “City on a Hill,” 33–40. Between 1837, when Chicago was chartered as a city by the Illinois General Assembly, and 1840, when Nauvoo’s charter was drafted, four other Illinois cities—Alton, Galena, Springfield, and Quincy—were granted charters. (Kimball, “Nauvoo Charter,” 68–70; An Act to Incorporate the City of Chicago [4 Mar. 1837], Laws of the State of Illinois [1836–1837], pp. 50–80; An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], 52–57.)

    Bennett, Richard E., and Rachel Cope. “‘A City on a Hill’—Chartering the City of Nauvoo.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal (2002): 17–42.

    Kimball, James L., Jr. “The Nauvoo Charter: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 44 (Spring 1971): 66–78.

    Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Tenth General Assembly, at Their Session Commencing December 5, 1836, and Ending March 6, 1837. Vandalia, IL: William Walters, 1837.

    Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

  8. 8

    Kimball, “Nauvoo Charter,” 70, 77–78.

    Kimball, James L., Jr. “The Nauvoo Charter: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 44 (Spring 1971): 66–78.

  9. 9

    An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], p. 54, sec. 7; Bennett and Cope, “City on a Hill,” 22; Kimball, “Nauvoo Charter,” 70–71.

    Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

    Bennett, Richard E., and Rachel Cope. “‘A City on a Hill’—Chartering the City of Nauvoo.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal (2002): 17–42.

    Kimball, James L., Jr. “The Nauvoo Charter: A Reinterpretation.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 44 (Spring 1971): 66–78.

  10. 10

    An Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo [16 Dec. 1840], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], pp. 55–57, secs. 17, 24, 25. Some Illinois cities’ charters provided for the establishment of common schools (although not universities), and most chartered cities had volunteer militias that, while not organized by the city council, could nevertheless be called out, as in Nauvoo, by the mayor. Alton, Illinois, had a provision allowing the judge of the municipal court to issue writs of habeas corpus. (See Bennett and Cope, “City on a Hill,” 23–29.)

    Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

    Bennett, Richard E., and Rachel Cope. “‘A City on a Hill’—Chartering the City of Nauvoo.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal (2002): 17–42.

  11. 11

    JS, “State Gubernatorial Convention,” Times and Seasons, 1 Jan. 1842, 3:651; italics in original.

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

  12. 12

    Leonard, Nauvoo, 294–297.

    Leonard, Glen M. Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, a People of Promise. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002.

  13. 13

    Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:15, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:49, 51].

    The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

  14. 14

    Church leaders and members continued to appeal to Congress to redress their losses in Missouri, however. (See Elias Higbee et al., Memorial to Congress, 10 Jan. 1842, photocopy, Material Relating to Mormon Expulsion from Missouri, CHL; JS et al., Memorial to U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, 28 Nov. 1843, in Records of the U.S. Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Records, 1816–1982, National Archives, Washington DC.)

    Material Relating to Mormon Expulsion from Missouri, 1839–1843. Photocopy. CHL. MS 2145.

    Smith, Joseph, et al. Memorial to U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, 28 Nov. 1843. In Records of the U.S. Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Records, 1816–1982. National Archives, Washington DC.

  15. 15

    Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:9, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:23].

    The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

  16. 16

    Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:19, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:64–66].

    The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

  17. 17

    An Act to Incorporate the Nauvoo House Association [23 Feb. 1841], Laws of the State of Illinois [1840–1841], 131–132; JS, Journal, 29 Dec. 1841.

    Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly, at Their Session, Began and Held at Springfield, on the Seventh of December, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty. Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841.

  18. 18

    Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:10–17, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:25–55].

    The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

  19. 19

    The sixteen companies of militia included the Nauvoo Legion and two volunteer militia companies from Iowa Territory. (“Celebration of the Anniversary of the Church,” Times and Seasons, 15 Apr. 1841, 2:375–377.)

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

  20. 20

    See 1 Corinthians 15:29. For a brief discussion of this reference in its historical context, see “Baptism for the Dead: Ancient Sources,” in Encyclopedia of Mormonism, 1:97.

    Encyclopedia of Mormonism. Edited by Daniel H. Ludlow. 5 vols. New York: Macmillan, 1992.

  21. 21

    Simon Baker, “15 Aug. 1840 Minutes of Recollection of Joseph Smith’s Sermon,” JS Collection, CHL .

    Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

  22. 22

    JS, Nauvoo, IL, to “the Twelve,” Great Britain, 15 Dec. 1840, JS Collection, CHL.

    Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.

  23. 23

    Jane Neymon and Vienna Jaques, Statement, 29 Nov. 1854, Historian’s Office, JS History Documents, ca. 1839–1880, CHL.

    Historian’s Office. Joseph Smith History Documents, 1839–1860. CHL. CR 100 396.

  24. 24

    Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:11, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:32].

    The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

  25. 25

    JS, Journal, 30 June 1842; Clayton, History of the Nauvoo Temple, 6, 20–21.

    Clayton, William. History of the Nauvoo Temple, ca. 1845. CHL. MS 3365.

  26. 26

    Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841, in Doctrine and Covenants 103:29, 1844 ed. [D&C 124:91–95]. Cowdery, whom Hyrum Smith replaced, had received the keys of the priesthood in connection with Joseph Smith, had been ordained as the second elder of the church on 6 April 1830, and had served in the church’s presidency from December 1834 to April 1838 under the titles “assistant President” and “assistant Councillor.” (JS History, vol. A-1, 18, 27, 37; JS, Journal, 5 Dec. 1834; Minute Book 1, 3 Sept. 1837.)

    The Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith. 2nd ed. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1844.

    JS History / Smith, Joseph, et al. History, 1838–1856. Vols. A-1–F-1 (original), A-2–E-2 (fair copy). Historian’s Office, History of the Church, 1839–ca. 1882. CHL. CR 100 102, boxes 1–7. The history for the period after 5 Aug. 1838 was composed after the death of Joseph Smith.

    Minute Book 1 / “Conference A,” 1832–1837. CHL. Also available at josephsmithpapers.org.

  27. 27

    General Church Minutes, 16 Aug. 1841; Esplin, “Emergence of Brigham Young,” 482, 500–506. In his journal, Willard Richards summed up the new arrangement in the words “Business of the church given to the 12.” (Richards, Journal, 16 Aug. 1841.)

    Esplin, Ronald K. “The Emergence of Brigham Young and the Twelve to Mormon Leadership, 1830–1841.” PhD diss., Brigham Young University, 1981. Also available as The Emergence of Brigham Young and the Twelve to Mormon Leadership, 1830–1841, Dissertations in Latter-day Saint History (Provo, UT: Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History; BYU Studies, 2006).

    Richards, Willard. Journals, 1836–1853. Willard Richards, Papers, 1821–1854. CHL. MS 1490, boxes 1–2.

  28. 28

    Leonard, Nauvoo, 313–321; JS, Journal, 15 Mar. 1842; Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book.

    Leonard, Glen M. Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, a People of Promise. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002.

    Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book. / “Record of Na[u]voo Lodge Under Dispensation,” 1842–1846. CHL. MS 3436

  29. 29

    “The Late Proceedings,” Times and Seasons, 15 June 1841, 2:447–449; Requisition for JS, 1 Sept. 1840, State of Missouri v. JS for Treason (Warren Co. Cir. Ct. 1841), JS Extradition Records, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

    Joseph Smith Extradition Records, 1839–1843. Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.

  30. 30

    Obituary for Don Carlos Smith, Times and Seasons, 1 Sept. 1841, 2:533; General Church Minutes, 16 Aug. 1841; Richards, Journal, 16 Aug. 1841; “Death of General Don Carlos Smith,” Times and Seasons, 16 Aug. 1841, 2:503–504; “Death of Col. Robert B. Thompson,” Times and Seasons, 1 Sept. 1841, 2:519–520.

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

    Richards, Willard. Journals, 1836–1853. Willard Richards, Papers, 1821–1854. CHL. MS 1490, boxes 1–2.

  31. 31

    “Proceedings of the General Conference,” Times and Seasons, Dec. 1839, 1:30–31; JS, Journal, 5 Jan. 1843.

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

  32. 32

    See JS, Journal, 21 Feb. and 13 Apr. 1843.

  33. 33

    See “Store,” in Geographical Directory.

  34. 34

    Emma Smith to Thomas Carlin, [17] Aug. 1842.

  35. 35

    See Nauvoo City Officers.

  36. 36

    “The Book of Abraham,” Times and Seasons, 1 Mar. 1842, 3:704 [Abraham 1:1].

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

  37. 37

    JS to “all the saints in Nauvoo,” 1 Sept. 1842 [D&C 127]; JS to “the Church of Jesus Christ,” [7] Sept. 1842 [D&C 128].

  38. 38

    See JSP, J1:222n478; and Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:7–20].

    JSP, J1 / Jessee, Dean C., Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Richard L. Jensen, eds. Journals, Volume 1: 1832–1839. Vol. 1 of the Journals series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Dean C. Jessee, Ronald K. Esplin, and Richard Lyman Bushman. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2008.

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

  39. 39

    Instruction, 2 Apr. 1843, in JS, Journal, 2 Apr. 1843 [D&C 130]; see also Clayton, Journal, 2 Apr. 1843.

  40. 40

    Relief Society Minute Book, 17 Mar. 1842.

    Relief Society Minute Book / “A Book of Records Containing the Proceedings of the Female Relief Society of Nauvoo,” Mar. 1842–Mar. 1844. CHL. Also available at josephsmithpapers.org.

  41. 41

    Ward, “Female Relief Society of Nauvoo,” 88.

    Ward, Maurine Carr. “‘This Institution Is a Good One’: The Female Relief Society of Nauvoo, 17 March 1842 to 16 March 1844.” Mormon Historical Studies 3 (Fall 2002): 87–203.

  42. 42

    Among the best-documented examples of plural marriage involving Joseph Smith during this period are his marriages to Sarah Ann Whitney and Eliza R. Snow. (Revelation, 27 July 1842, in Revelations Collection, CHL; Blessing, JS to Sarah Ann Whitney, Nauvoo, IL, 23 Mar. 1843, Whitney Family Documents, CHL; Sarah Ann Whitney Kimball, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 19 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:36, 4:36; Snow, Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow, 68; Eliza R. Snow, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 7 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:25; Beecher, Personal Writings of Eliza R. Snow, 16–17. For evidence that others were practicing it as well, see Clayton, Journal, 27 Apr. 1843.)

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

    Whitney Family Documents, 1843–1844, 1912. CHL. MS 17390.

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

    Snow, Eliza R. Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow, One of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1884.

    Beecher, Maureen Ursenbach, ed. The Personal Writings of Eliza Roxcy Snow. Life Writings of Frontier Women 5. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 2000.

    Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.

  43. 43

    See Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 125 [Jacob 2:27–30].

    The Book of Mormon. 3rd ed. Nauvoo, IL: Robinson and Smith, 1840.

  44. 44

    Orson Pratt, in Journal of Discourses, 7 Oct. 1869, 13:193; Bachman, “Ohio Origins of the Revelation on Eternal Marriage,” 19–32.

    Journal of Discourses. 26 vols. Liverpool: F. D. Richards, 1855–1886.

    Bachman, Danel W. “New Light on an Old Hypothesis: The Ohio Origins of the Revelation on Eternal Marriage.” Journal of Mormon History 5 (1978): 19–32.

  45. 45

    Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:34–35].

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

  46. 46

    Israel’s king David, for example, who had received several wives under the direction of the prophet Nathan, lost his exaltation when he took Uriah’s wife. (See 2 Samuel 11–12; Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:38–39].)

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

  47. 47

    See Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:45]; and Vision, 3 Apr. 1836, in JS, Journal [D&C 110].

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

  48. 48

    See Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:44, 48].

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

  49. 49

    Although reminiscent accounts must be used with caution (see note 51 below), later affidavits attest to the highly regulated nature of plural marriage during Joseph Smith’s lifetime. The most complete accounts generally refer to a specific ceremony, performed on a specific date, by an acknowledged holder of the priesthood, in the presence of witnesses, and according to specific regulations. Eliza R. Snow’s affidavit, for example, notes that “on the twenty-ninth day of June A.D. 1842 . . . she was married or sealed to Joseph Smith . . . by Brigham Young, President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of said Church, according to the laws of the same regulating marriage, in the presence of Sarah M. Cleaveland.” (Eliza R. Snow, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 7 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:25, CHL. For a description of rules regulating plural marriage as they were understood in 1853, see Orson Pratt, “Celestial Marriage,” The Seer, Feb. 1853, 1:25–32.)

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

    The Seer. Washington DC, Jan. 1853–June 1854; Liverpool. Jan. 1853–Aug. 1854.

  50. 50

    See Revelation, 12 July 1843, in Revelations Collection, CHL [D&C 132:41–43, 63]; and Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 125 [Jacob 2:27–33].

    Revelations Collection, 1831–ca. 1844, 1847, 1861, ca. 1876. CHL. MS 4583.

    The Book of Mormon. 3rd ed. Nauvoo, IL: Robinson and Smith, 1840.

  51. 51

    Many accounts about plural marriage in Nauvoo during Joseph Smith’s lifetime were recorded decades after the events they describe. Similarly, most of the affidavits about plural marriage that authors cite were collected decades after the church left Nauvoo. Given the selective and social nature of human memory and its susceptibility to being influenced by more recent events, such reminiscent accounts must be used with caution when attempting to reconstruct past events and practices. Moreover, most of these affidavits were gathered in response to a concerted effort by the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints to deny that Joseph Smith practiced plural marriage and to lay the practice at the feet of Brigham Young after Smith’s death. In response, a number of women who had been sealed to Joseph Smith in Nauvoo prepared formal statements about their marriages. As with the affidavits, personal motives influenced the reports of disaffected members of the church in Nauvoo as well. (See Thelen, “Memory and American History,” 1117–1129.)

    Thelen, David. “Memory and American History.” The Journal of American History 75, no. 4 (Mar. 1989): 1117–1129.

  52. 52

    William Clayton married Margaret Moon as a plural wife on 27 April 1843. Margaret gave birth to a baby boy on 18 February 1844. (Clayton, Journal, 27 Apr. 1843 and 18 Feb. 1844.)

    Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.

  53. 53

    Similarly, the fact that a number of women were sealed to Joseph Smith after his death, when there was no opportunity for conjugal relationships, suggests that plural marriage was instituted for reasons beyond simply “multiplying and replenishing the earth.” For records of some of these posthumous sealings, see Brown, Nauvoo Sealings, Adoptions, and Anointings, 281–286.

    Brown, Lisle G., comp. Nauvoo Sealings, Adoptions, and Anointings: A Comprehensive Register of Persons Receiving LDS Temple Ordinances, 1841–1846. Salt Lake City: Smith-Pettit Foundation, 2006.

  54. 54

    Ugo A. Perego and his associates have recently used DNA testing to rule out, to a high degree of probability, Joseph Smith’s paternity of five individuals traditionally identified as his possible children through plural wives. (See Perego et al., “Reconstructing the Y-Chromosome of Joseph Smith: Genealogical Applications,” 70–88; Perego et al., “Resolving the Paternities of Oliver N. Buell and Mosiah L. Hancock through DNA,” 128–136.)

    Perego, Ugo A., Natalie M. Myres, and Scott R. Woodward. “Reconstructing the Y-Chromosome of Joseph Smith: Genealogical Applications.” Journal of Mormon History 31 (Summer 2005): 70–88.

    Perego, Ugo A., Jayne E. Ekins, and Scott R. Woodward. “Resolving the Paternities of Oliver N. Buell and Mosiah L. Hancock through DNA.” The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 28 (2008): 128–136.

  55. 55

    JS, Journal, 25 Jan. 1842.

  56. 56

    Marinda Nancy Johnson Hyde, Statement, [ca. 1880], CHL. This document is undated, but a reference to the death of Orson Hyde in the statement indicates it was written after his death on 28 November 1878. Marinda Hyde died 24 March 1886.

    Hyde, Marinda Nancy Johnson. Statement, [ca. 1880]. CHL. MS 23157.

  57. 57

    Marinda Nancy Johnson Hyde, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 1 May 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:15. A notation in Joseph Smith’s journal in the handwriting of Thomas Bullock dates the event to April 1842. (JS Journal, 14 July 1843.)

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

  58. 58

    Sessions is mentioned in the 2 and 3 March 1843 entries in connection with a court case. Sayers appears in a business transaction in the 7 March 1843 entry, while Joseph Smith visited Lyon shortly after the death of her baby on 24 December 1842. Sessions married David Sessions on 28 June 1812 and reported being “sealed” on 9 March 1842 “for time and all eternity” to Joseph Smith.a Sayers married Edward Sayers on 23 January 1841 and signed an affidavit dated 1 May 1869 attesting that she was “married or sealed” to Joseph Smith in February 1843.b Evidence for a marriage or sealing between Lyon (who had married Windsor P. Lyon in March 1838) and Joseph Smith is less compelling, as it is based on an unsigned, unnotarized affidavit-in-the-making incompletely dated to 1869. Two copies of this incomplete affidavit are known; both say that Lyon was “married or sealed” to Joseph Smith, although one gives 8 February 1842 as the date and the other gives 8 February 1843.c

    Smart, Donna Toland, ed. Mormon Midwife: The 1846–1888 Diaries of Patty Bartlett Sessions. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 1997.

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

  59. 59

    Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 437–446.

    Bushman, Richard Lyman. Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling. With the assistance of Jed Woodworth. New York: Knopf, 2005.

  60. 60

    The abuse extended beyond Nauvoo and beyond Joseph Smith’s lifetime. In May 1845, Parley P. Pratt of the Quorum of the Twelve issued a carefully worded statement in New York warning church members in the East of unauthorized relationships between men and women while reaffirming the reality of properly performed “sealings, and covenants” designed “to secure the union of parents, children and companions in the world to come.” (Parley P. Pratt, “This Number Closes the First Volume of the ‘Prophet,’” The Prophet, 24 May 1845, [2].)

    The Prophet. New York City, NY. May 1844–Dec. 1845.

  61. 61

    JS, Journal, 10 Apr. 1842.

  62. 62

    In the official notice informing the public of Bennett’s excommunication, church leaders wrote that they were withdrawing “the hand of fellowship” from Bennett. (“Notice,” Times and Seasons, 15 June 1842, 3:830.)

    Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.

  63. 63

    See Bennett’s letters printed in the 8, 15, and 22 July, 19 August, and 2 September 1842 issues of the Sangamo Journal. As a Whig paper, the Sangamo Journal had been publishing articles against the church ever since Joseph Smith published his endorsement of the Democratic candidate for Illinois governor.

    Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

  64. 64

    In his letters and in his 1842 book, History of the Saints, Bennett referred to plural marriage as “spiritual wifery”—a term not employed in Joseph Smith’s revelations or in other sources generated by those who participated in plural marriage in Nauvoo. Similarly, Bennett’s description of Joseph Smith’s plural wives as a “seraglio . . . divided into three distinct orders, or degrees” appears to be a creative account uncorroborated by other sources. James Arlington Bennet, who had recently discussed the forthcoming book with John C. Bennett himself, wrote Smith that he (John C. Bennett) “expects to make a fortune” out of his book. Bennett’s book and lectures were a financial success; for two years, his biographer notes, Bennett “had no known revenue other than the royalties from the book and his lecture fees.” (Bennett, History of the Saints, 218–225; James Arlington Bennet to JS, 1 Sept. 1842; Smith, Saintly Scoundrel, 127.)

    Bennett, John C. The History of the Saints; or, an Exposé of Joe Smith and Mormonism. Boston: Leland and Whiting, 1842.

    Smith, Andrew F. The Saintly Scoundrel: The Life and Times of Dr. John Cook Bennett. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1997.

  65. 65

    “The Mormons,” Boston Courier, 26 Sept. 1842, [1].

    Boston Courier. Boston. 1824–before 1855.

  66. 66

    Ford, History of Illinois, 263; “Literary Notices,” New York Daily Tribune, 1 Nov. 1842, [1].

    Ford, Thomas. A History of Illinois, from Its Commencement as a State in 1818 to 1847. Containing a Full Account of the Black Hawk War, the Rise, Progress, and Fall of Mormonism, the Alton and Lovejoy Riots, and Other Important and Interesting Events. Chicago: S. C. Griggs; New York: Ivison and Phinney, 1854.

    New-York Daily Tribune. New York City. 1841–1924.

  67. 67

    “Mormon Bible,” Boston Investigator, 26 July 1843, [3]; italics in original.

    Boston Investigator. Boston. 1831–1904.

  68. 68

    “The Mormons in Nauvoo,” Salt Lake Daily Tribune, 3 July 1887, [6].

    Salt Lake Daily Tribune. Salt Lake City. 1871–.

  69. 69

    JS, Journal, 12 May and 21 Aug. 1842.

  70. 70

    “Astounding Mormon Disclosures! Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 8 July 1842, [2]; “Further Mormon Developments!! 2d Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2].

    Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

  71. 71

    Some sources corroborate Bennett’s charge, while others refute it. For example, Bennett later published portions of a purported letter from Rigdon’s son-in-law George W. Robinson to James Arlington Bennet repeating the allegation, and John W. Rigdon, Nancy’s younger brother, signed an affidavit more than sixty years later to the same effect. On the other hand, Orson Hyde asserted in 1845 that Nancy created the story of a proposal after Joseph Smith had reproved her for immoral behavior. The well-known “Happiness” letter Bennett published in the Sangamo Journal in August 1842 from (Bennett claimed) Joseph Smith to Nancy fails, even if taken at face value, to clarify the circumstances behind its genesis. The letter can be read in light of plural marriage without requiring it to refer to a proposal to Nancy and, given its emphasis on the blessings following obedience, may even have its origin in an issue altogether unrelated to plural marriage. (Bennett, History of the Saints, 243–247; John W. Rigdon, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah, 28 July 1905, pp. 6–8, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, CHL; Speech of Orson Hyde, 27–28; “6th Letter From Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 19 Aug. 1842, [2].)

    Bennett, John C. The History of the Saints; or, an Exposé of Joe Smith and Mormonism. Boston: Leland and Whiting, 1842.

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

    Speech of Elder Orson Hyde, Delivered before the High Priest’s Quorum in Nauvoo, April 27th, 1845, upon the Course and Conduct of Mr. Sidney Rigdon, and upon the Merits of His Claims to the Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Nauvoo, IL: John Taylor, 1845. Copy at CHL.

    Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

  72. 72

    JS, Journal, 26 Aug. 1842. A number of affidavits, some of which were collected earlier, attesting to Bennett’s immoral conduct were published at this time. (See Affidavits and Certificates, [Nauvoo, IL: 31 Aug. 1842], copy at CHL.)

    Affidavits and Certificates, Disproving the Statements and Affidavits Contained in John C. Bennett’s Letters. Nauvoo Aug. 31, 1842. [Nauvoo, IL: 1842]. Copy at CHL.

  73. 73

    “Further Mormon Developments!! 2d Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2].

    Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

  74. 74

    Woodruff, Journal, 10 Aug.–18 Sept. 1842.

    Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.

  75. 75

    Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Minutes, 20 Jan. 1843.

    Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Minutes, 1840–1844. CHL.

  76. 76

    JS, Journal, 15 July 1842.

  77. 77

    Affidavits and Certificates, [Nauvoo, IL: 31 Aug. 1842], copy at CHL.

    Affidavits and Certificates, Disproving the Statements and Affidavits Contained in John C. Bennett’s Letters. Nauvoo Aug. 31, 1842. [Nauvoo, IL: 1842]. Copy at CHL.

  78. 78

    JS, Journal, 20 Jan. 1843; Woodruff, Journal, [20] Jan. 1843. In 1875, after she had separated from Orson and left the church, Sarah claimed that she had “not been a believer in the Mormon doctrines for thirty years.” Some evidence suggests that Sarah renewed her accusation against Joseph Smith later in life. (Papers in the Case of Maxwell vs. Cannon, H.R. Misc. Doc. 49, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess., p. 32 [1873]; Von Wymetal, Joseph Smith the Prophet, 60–61; “Workings of Mormonism Related by Mrs. Orson Pratt,” 1884, CHL; Kate Field, “Horrors of Polygamy,” San Francisco Chronicle, 4 Dec. 1892, 12.)

    Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.

    Papers in the Case of Maxwell v. Cannon, for a Seat as Delegate from Utah Territory in the Forty-Third Congress. H.R. Misc. Doc. 49, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess. (1873).

    Von Wymetal, Wilhelm [W. Wyl, pseud.]. Joseph Smith the Prophet: His Family and His Friends; A Study Based on Facts and Documents. Salt Lake City: Tribune Printing and Publishing, 1886.

    “Workings of Mormonism Related by Mrs. Orson Pratt,” 1884. CHL. MS 4048.

    San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco. 1865–1925.

  79. 79

    “Further Mormon Developments!! 2d Letter from Gen. Bennett,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 15 July 1842, [2]; “Gen. Bennett’s 4th Letter,” Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 22 July 1842, [2].

    Sangamo Journal. Springfield, IL. 1831–1847.

  80. 80

    See Appendix 1.

  81. 81

    See Revelation, ca. 8 Mar. 1831–B, in Doctrine and Covenants 63, 1835 ed. [D&C 47]; JS, Kirtland, OH, to William W. Phelps, [Independence, MO], 27 Nov. 1832, in JS Letterbook 1, pp. 1–4 [D&C 85].

    Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of the Latter Day Saints: Carefully Selected from the Revelations of God. Compiled by Joseph Smith, Oliver Cowdery, Sidney Rigdon, and Frederick G. Williams. Kirtland, OH: F. G. Williams, 1835. Also available in Robin Scott Jensen, Richard E. Turley Jr., Riley M. Lorimer, eds., Revelations and Translations, Volume 2: Published Revelations. Vol. 2 of the Revelations and Translations series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Dean C. Jessee, Ronald K. Esplin, and Richard Lyman Bushman (Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2011).

    JS Letterbook 1 / Smith, Joseph. “Letter Book A,” 1832–1835. Joseph Smith Collection. CHL. MS 155, box 2, fd. 1.

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