Footnotes
“New York Account Book Sept. 1834,” [3]–[9], Newel K. Whitney, Papers, BYU.
Whitney, Newel K. Papers, 1825–1906. BYU.
“New York Account Book Sept. 1834,” [7], [11], [17], Newel K. Whitney, Papers, BYU.
Whitney, Newel K. Papers, 1825–1906. BYU.
Revelation, 4 June 1833 [D&C 96:2]; Geauga Co., OH, Deed Records, 1795–1921, vol. 17, pp. 38–39, 10 Apr. 1833; pp. 359–361, 17 June 1833, microfilm 20,237, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.
U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.
Ames, Autobiography, 1834, [10].
Ames, Ira. Autobiography and Journal, 1858. CHL. MS 6055.
Revelation, 23 Apr. 1834 [D&C 104:29]; F. G. Williams & Co., Account Book, 2–3; Minutes, 24 Sept. 1834. In September 1834, church member Edmund Bosley made a covenant that he would “let President J. Smith Junr. & others have money on loan, for the printing of the Revelations,” but he apparently reneged on that agreement. (Minutes, 14 July 1835.)
F. G. Williams & Co. Account Book, 1833–1835. CHL. In Patience Cowdery, Diary, 1849–1851. CHL. MS 3493.
JS, Journal, 29 Nov. 1834.
Thorn, History of Tithes, 14–19.
Thorn, William [Biblicus, pseud.]. The History of Tithes, Patriarchal, Levitical, Catholic, and Protestant; with Reflections on the Extent and Evils of the English Tithe System. . . . 2nd ed. London: James Dinnis, 1831.
Lohrenz, “Economic and Social Effects of the American Revolution,” 127.
Lohrenz, Otto. “The Economic and Social Effects of the American Revolution on the Reverend William Vere of Virginia’s Eastern Shore.” Southern Studies 11, nos. 3 and 4 (Fall/Winter 2004): 123–136.
Cashdollar, Spiritual Home, 170–171; Hempton, Methodism, 122, 127.
Cashdollar, Charles D. A Spiritual Home: Life in British and American Reformed Congregations, 1830–1915. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000.
Hempton, David. Methodism: Empire of the Spirit. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2005.
Revelation, 11 Sept. 1831 [D&C 64:23]; Revelation, 2 Aug. 1833–A [D&C 97:10–12]; Letter to William W. Phelps, 27 Nov. 1832 [D&C 85:3].
Genesis 28:20–22.
JS, Journal, 29 Nov. 1834.
JS, Journal, 22 Sept. 1835.
Letter to the Presidency in Kirtland, 29 Mar. 1838. JS eventually applied for bankruptcy in 1842. (JS, Nauvoo, IL, to Horace Hotchkiss, Fair Haven, CT, 13 May 1842, copy, JS Collection, CHL.)
Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.
Revelation, 8 July 1838–C, in JS, Journal, 8 July 1838 [D&C 119:1, 4].
JS, Journal, 29 Nov. 1834.
See Revelation, 8 Mar. 1833 [D&C 90:22–23].
According to a February 1831 revelation outlining the laws of the church, church members were to consecrate their property and money to the church, part of which would go into the storehouse “to administer to the poor and needy.” (Revelation, 9 Feb. 1831 [D&C 42:34].)