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Discourse, 17 September 1843–B, as Reported by Levi Richards

Source Note

JS, Discourse, [
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
, Hancock Co., IL, 17 Sept. 1843]. Featured version inscribed [ca. 17 Sept. 1843] in Levi Richards, Journal, 31 July–17 Sept. 1843, pp. [15]–[16]; handwriting of
Levi Richards

14 Apr. 1799–18 June 1876. Teacher, mechanic, inventor, physician. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 31 Dec. 1836, in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio...

View Full Bio
; Levi Richards, Papers, CHL.
This discourse is found in a small book measuring 6¼ × 3¾ inches (16 × 10 cm) and comprising four sheets, which are folded and sewn together into a gathering of eight leaves. All sixteen pages are inscribed.
The journal, along with other
Levi Richards

14 Apr. 1799–18 June 1876. Teacher, mechanic, inventor, physician. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 31 Dec. 1836, in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio...

View Full Bio
papers, was apparently kept by Richards and passed down among his descendants. The journal and papers were acquired by the Church Historian’s Office (later Church Historical Department) sometime during the tenure of Andrew Jenson, who began working in the office in 1891 and served as assistant church historian from 1897 to 1941.
1

Jenson, Autobiography, 192, 389; Jenson, Journal, 9 Feb. 1891 and 19 Oct. 1897; Bitton and Arrington, Mormons and Their Historians, 47–52; see also the full bibliographic entry for Levi Richards, Papers, 1837–1867, in the CHL catalog.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Jenson, Andrew. Autobiography of Andrew Jenson: Assistant Historian of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. . . . Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1938.

Jenson, Andrew. Journals, 1864–1941. Andrew Jenson, Autobiography and Journals, 1864–1941. CHL.

Bitton, David, and Leonard J. Arrington. Mormons and Their Historians. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1988.

In 1975 the journal was cataloged as part of the Levi Richards Papers in the Church Historical Department (now CHL).
2

See the full bibliographic entry for Levi Richards, Papers, 1837–1867, in the CHL catalog.


Footnotes

  1. [1]

    Jenson, Autobiography, 192, 389; Jenson, Journal, 9 Feb. 1891 and 19 Oct. 1897; Bitton and Arrington, Mormons and Their Historians, 47–52; see also the full bibliographic entry for Levi Richards, Papers, 1837–1867, in the CHL catalog.

    Jenson, Andrew. Autobiography of Andrew Jenson: Assistant Historian of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. . . . Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1938.

    Jenson, Andrew. Journals, 1864–1941. Andrew Jenson, Autobiography and Journals, 1864–1941. CHL.

    Bitton, David, and Leonard J. Arrington. Mormons and Their Historians. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1988.

  2. [2]

    See the full bibliographic entry for Levi Richards, Papers, 1837–1867, in the CHL catalog.

Historical Introduction

On the afternoon of 17 September 1843, 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....

More Info
, Illinois, JS delivered a discourse in which he responded to a sermon by a Reverend Blodget and offered his thoughts on the use and abuse of medicine. Though the featured document does not reveal Blodget’s full name, it identifies him as a Unitarian minister 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...

More Info
who, on this occasion, spoke to a group of
Latter-day Saints

The Book of Mormon related that when Christ set up his church in the Americas, “they which were baptized in the name of Jesus, were called the church of Christ.” The first name used to denote the church JS organized on 6 April 1830 was “the Church of Christ...

View Glossary
concerning religious liberty.
1

Reverend Blodget may have been James Blodgett, who later led a congregation in Deerfield, Massachusetts. Blodgett graduated from Harvard Divinity School in 1843. According to a contemporary Unitarian publication, Blodgett suffered from poor health, and “for the sake of its improvement he entered on a missionary tour at the West.” It is possible that he preached in Nauvoo as part of this tour. (Quinquennial Catalogue of the Officers and Graduates of Harvard University, 1636–1915, 198; “Obituary,” 431.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Quinquennial Catalogue of the Officers and Students of the Law School of Harvard University, 1817–1889. Cambridge: Harvard Law School, 1890.

“Obituary.” Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany 4 (Nov. 1845): 431–432.

Most of the discourse, as recorded by
Levi Richards

14 Apr. 1799–18 June 1876. Teacher, mechanic, inventor, physician. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 31 Dec. 1836, in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio...

View Full Bio
, related to JS’s critique of medical practices. In antebellum
America

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 ...

More Info
, there was very little medical regulation or consensus about medical treatments. Some physicians employed heroic methods, including bloodletting, blistering, or prescribing emetic drugs such as calomel, while botanical doctors, such as those following the Thomsonian method, used natural herbs to cleanse the body through vomiting and sweating.
2

See, for example, Rothstein, American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century, 45–52, 131–137, 141–142, 146–150; Coventry, Address to the Graduates, 3–16; Harrison, Lecture, on the Best Mode of Discouraging Empiricism, 1–12; and Thomson, New Guide to Health, 5–132 (second numbering).


Comprehensive Works Cited

Rothstein, William G. American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: From Sects to Science. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1972.

Coventry, C. B. Address to the Graduates of the Medical Institution of Geneva College, Delivered January 25th, 1842. Utica, NY: Democrat Office, 1842.

Harrison, John P. A Lecture, on the Best Mode of Discouraging Empiricism: Delivered before the Ohio Medical Lyceum, January, 1843. Cincinnati: R. P. Donogh, 1843.

Thomson, Samuel. New Guide to Health; or, Botanic Family Physician. Containing a Complete System of Practice . . . to Which Is Prefixed a Narrative of the Life and Medical Discoveries of the Author. Boston: By the author, 1822.

Swayed by effective marketing, Americans consumed copious quantities of patent medicines, or nostrums, as panacea for a variety of physical ailments.
3

“Sherman’s Medicated Lozenges,” Nauvoo Neighbor, 6 Sept. 1843, [4]; “Physician Heal Thyself,” Times and Seasons, 15 Sept. 1843, 4:325–326; King, Quackery Unmasked, 248–256.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Nauvoo Neighbor. Nauvoo, IL. 1843–1845.

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

King, Dan. Quackery Unmasked; or A Consideration of the Most Prominent Empirical Schemes of the Present Time, with an Enumeration of Some of the Causes Which Contribute to Their Support. Boston: David Clapp, 1858.

JS’s views about medical practices were shaped by his personal experiences and those of close family members. When JS developed osteomyelitis in the 1810s, Dr. Nathan Smith of Dartmouth Medical College performed an innovative medical procedure that likely saved his leg from amputation.
4

Wirthlin, “Nathan Smith,” 320–321; Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1845, 58–62; JS History, vol. A-1, addenda, 131nA.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Wirthlin, LeRoy S. “Nathan Smith (1762–1828) Surgical Consultant to Joseph Smith.” BYU Studies 17 (Spring 1977): 319–337.

In November 1823, JS’s oldest brother,
Alvin Smith

11 Feb. 1798–19 Nov. 1823. Farmer, carpenter. Born at Tunbridge, Orange Co., Vermont. Son of Joseph Smith Sr. and Lucy Mack. Moved to Randolph, Orange Co., 1802; returned to Tunbridge, before May 1803. Moved to Royalton, Windsor Co., Vermont, 1804, and to...

View Full Bio
, died after a doctor administered a “heavy dose” of calomel that “lodged in his stomach.”
5

Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1845, 89–92.


In his late twenties and thirties, JS cultivated close relationships with Thomsonian practitioners, such as
Frederick G. Williams

28 Oct. 1787–10 Oct. 1842. Ship’s pilot, teacher, physician, justice of the peace. Born at Suffield, Hartford Co., Connecticut. Son of William Wheeler Williams and Ruth Granger. Moved to Newburg, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, 1799. Practiced Thomsonian botanical system...

View Full Bio
,
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
, and
Levi Richards

14 Apr. 1799–18 June 1876. Teacher, mechanic, inventor, physician. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 31 Dec. 1836, in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio...

View Full Bio
, as well as orthodox physician
John M. Bernhisel

23 June 1799–28 Sept. 1881. Physician, politician. Born in Sandy Hill, Tyrone Township, Cumberland Co. (later in Perry Co.), Pennsylvania. Son of Samuel Bernhisel and Susannah Bower. Attended medical lectures at University of Pennsylvania, 1818, in Philadelphia...

View Full Bio
.
6

Anderson, “Willard Richards’s Journey to Mormonism,” 81–98; Barrett, “Delegate John M. Bernhisel,” 354–358; Dinger, “Medicine and Obstetrics in Mormon Nauvoo,” 51–68. Levi Richards, who recorded the featured discourse, practiced the Thomsonian method and likely shared JS’s criticism of heroic methods.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Anderson, Devery S. “From Doctor to Disciple: Willard Richards’s Journey to Mormonism.” Journal of Mormon History 38, no. 2 (Spring 2012): 66–98.

Barrett, Glen. “Delegate John M. Bernhisel, Salt Lake Physician Following the Civil War.” Utah Historical Quarterly 50, no. 4 (Fall 1982): 354–360.

Dinger, Steven C. “‘The Doctors in This Region Don’t Know Much’: Medicine and Obstetrics in Mormon Nauvoo.” Journal of Mormon History 42, no. 4 (October 2016): 51–68.

However, JS sometimes expressed frustration with medical practitioners and their use of medicines. Speaking to a group of newly arrived immigrants on 13 April 1843, for example, JS said, “The Doctors in this region dont know much. . . . Doctors wont tell you where to go to be well. they want to kill. or cure you to get Your money.” He warned them about ingesting dangerous medicines such as calomel and lobelia.
7

Discourse, 13 Apr. 1843, underlining in original.


After a
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
Municipal Court session presided over by JS adjourned on 19 April 1843, JS told
William Brink

1810–4 Feb. 1884. Physician, cooper. Born in Pennsylvania. Married first Amelia. Practiced Thomsonian medicine. Defendant in malpractice lawsuit, 1843, at Nauvoo, Hancock Co., Illinois. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, by Apr. 1843...

View Full Bio
and
William Marr

5 Feb. 1817–5 Sept. 1844. Lawyer. Born in Scarborough, Cumberland Co., Maine. Son of Robert P. Marr and Olive Plaisted. Graduated from Bowdoin College, 1839, in Brunswick, Cumberland Co. Graduated from Harvard Law School, 1842. Moved to Nauvoo, Hancock Co...

View Full Bio
that he “lost a fathe[r] brothe[r] & child because. in my anxiety I have depended more on the jud[g]ment of other men than my own.” He asserted that “people will seldom die with disease provided we know it seasonably. & treat it mildly. pat[i]ently. & perseveri[n]gly. & do not use harsh means.”
8

JS, Journal, 19 Apr. 1843.


JS gave the featured discourse at a Sunday worship service in a
grove

Before partial completion of Nauvoo temple, all large meetings were held outdoors in groves located near east and west sides of temple site. Had portable stands for speakers. JS referred to area as “temple stand” due to its location on brow of hill.

More Info
near 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
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
. In the morning, church member
Almon Babbitt

Oct. 1812–Sept. 1856. Postmaster, editor, attorney. Born at Cheshire, Berkshire Co., Massachusetts. Son of Ira Babbitt and Nancy Crosier. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, ca. 1830. Located in Amherst, Lorain Co., Ohio, July 1831....

View Full Bio
spoke about “the building up of Zion in the Last Days,” followed by JS, who “gave some instuctin [instruction] ab[o]ut order in the congregation— men among women & wom[e]n among men. horess [horses] in the assembly men & boys on the stand &c.”
9

Levi Richards, Journal, 17 Sept. 1843; JS, Journal, 17 Sept. 1843.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Richards, Levi. Journals, 1840–1853. Levi Richards, Papers, 1837–1867. CHL. MS 1284, box 1.

In the afternoon, Reverend Blodget addressed the congregation, and JS followed, speaking for about an hour and a half. An entry in JS’s journal indicates that JS was generally pleased with Blodget’s sermon but that he “differd in opini[o]n on some po[i]nts— on which I freely ixpressed myself to his gre[a]t satisfacti[o]n on perscutin [persecution] making the work spread.”
10

JS, Journal, 17 Sept. 1843.


Church member
Levi Richards

14 Apr. 1799–18 June 1876. Teacher, mechanic, inventor, physician. Born at Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. Son of Joseph Richards and Rhoda Howe. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 31 Dec. 1836, in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio...

View Full Bio
was likely in the audience when JS delivered the featured discourse, and he produced a handwritten manuscript that captured portions of JS’s words. The disjointed nature of the account suggests that Richards wrote it as JS delivered the discourse.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    Reverend Blodget may have been James Blodgett, who later led a congregation in Deerfield, Massachusetts. Blodgett graduated from Harvard Divinity School in 1843. According to a contemporary Unitarian publication, Blodgett suffered from poor health, and “for the sake of its improvement he entered on a missionary tour at the West.” It is possible that he preached in Nauvoo as part of this tour. (Quinquennial Catalogue of the Officers and Graduates of Harvard University, 1636–1915, 198; “Obituary,” 431.)

    Quinquennial Catalogue of the Officers and Students of the Law School of Harvard University, 1817–1889. Cambridge: Harvard Law School, 1890.

    “Obituary.” Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany 4 (Nov. 1845): 431–432.

  2. [2]

    See, for example, Rothstein, American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century, 45–52, 131–137, 141–142, 146–150; Coventry, Address to the Graduates, 3–16; Harrison, Lecture, on the Best Mode of Discouraging Empiricism, 1–12; and Thomson, New Guide to Health, 5–132 (second numbering).

    Rothstein, William G. American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: From Sects to Science. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1972.

    Coventry, C. B. Address to the Graduates of the Medical Institution of Geneva College, Delivered January 25th, 1842. Utica, NY: Democrat Office, 1842.

    Harrison, John P. A Lecture, on the Best Mode of Discouraging Empiricism: Delivered before the Ohio Medical Lyceum, January, 1843. Cincinnati: R. P. Donogh, 1843.

    Thomson, Samuel. New Guide to Health; or, Botanic Family Physician. Containing a Complete System of Practice . . . to Which Is Prefixed a Narrative of the Life and Medical Discoveries of the Author. Boston: By the author, 1822.

  3. [3]

    “Sherman’s Medicated Lozenges,” Nauvoo Neighbor, 6 Sept. 1843, [4]; “Physician Heal Thyself,” Times and Seasons, 15 Sept. 1843, 4:325–326; King, Quackery Unmasked, 248–256.

    Nauvoo Neighbor. Nauvoo, IL. 1843–1845.

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

    King, Dan. Quackery Unmasked; or A Consideration of the Most Prominent Empirical Schemes of the Present Time, with an Enumeration of Some of the Causes Which Contribute to Their Support. Boston: David Clapp, 1858.

  4. [4]

    Wirthlin, “Nathan Smith,” 320–321; Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1845, 58–62; JS History, vol. A-1, addenda, 131nA.

    Wirthlin, LeRoy S. “Nathan Smith (1762–1828) Surgical Consultant to Joseph Smith.” BYU Studies 17 (Spring 1977): 319–337.

  5. [5]

    Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1845, 89–92.

  6. [6]

    Anderson, “Willard Richards’s Journey to Mormonism,” 81–98; Barrett, “Delegate John M. Bernhisel,” 354–358; Dinger, “Medicine and Obstetrics in Mormon Nauvoo,” 51–68. Levi Richards, who recorded the featured discourse, practiced the Thomsonian method and likely shared JS’s criticism of heroic methods.

    Anderson, Devery S. “From Doctor to Disciple: Willard Richards’s Journey to Mormonism.” Journal of Mormon History 38, no. 2 (Spring 2012): 66–98.

    Barrett, Glen. “Delegate John M. Bernhisel, Salt Lake Physician Following the Civil War.” Utah Historical Quarterly 50, no. 4 (Fall 1982): 354–360.

    Dinger, Steven C. “‘The Doctors in This Region Don’t Know Much’: Medicine and Obstetrics in Mormon Nauvoo.” Journal of Mormon History 42, no. 4 (October 2016): 51–68.

  7. [7]

    Discourse, 13 Apr. 1843, underlining in original.

  8. [8]

    JS, Journal, 19 Apr. 1843.

  9. [9]

    Levi Richards, Journal, 17 Sept. 1843; JS, Journal, 17 Sept. 1843.

    Richards, Levi. Journals, 1840–1853. Levi Richards, Papers, 1837–1867. CHL. MS 1284, box 1.

  10. [10]

    JS, Journal, 17 Sept. 1843.

Asterisk (*) denotes a "featured" version, which includes an introduction and annotation. Discourse, 17 September 1843–B, as Reported by Willard Richards Journal, December 1842–June 1844; Book 3, 15 July 1843–29 February 1844
*Discourse, 17 September 1843–B, as Reported by Levi Richards

Page [15]

P. M. heard the Rev Mr Blodget from
Mass.

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...

More Info
Unitarian Preached good discourse of religious Liberty Text “what is Truth”
1

See John 18:38.


followed by Pres Smith disproving the Idea that persecution causes a good work to prosper— continued his discours about 1½ hours [p. [15]]
View entire transcript

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Page [15]

Document Information

Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Discourse, 17 September 1843–B, as Reported by Levi Richards
ID #
1165
Total Pages
2
Print Volume Location
JSP, D13:109–111
Handwriting on This Page
  • Levi Richards

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    See John 18:38.

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