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Indenture from Warren A. Cowdery, 23 November 1836

Source Note

Warren A. Cowdery

17 Oct. 1788–23 Feb. 1851. Physician, druggist, farmer, editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Married Patience Simonds, 22 Sept. 1814, in Pawlet, Rutland Co. Moved to Freedom, Cattaraugus Co., New York, 1816...

View Full Bio
, Indenture,
Kirtland Township

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...

More Info
, Geauga Co., OH, to JS,
Kirtland Township

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...

More Info
, Geauga Co., OH, 23 Nov. 1836; handwriting of
Warren A. Cowdery

17 Oct. 1788–23 Feb. 1851. Physician, druggist, farmer, editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Married Patience Simonds, 22 Sept. 1814, in Pawlet, Rutland Co. Moved to Freedom, Cattaraugus Co., New York, 1816...

View Full Bio
; signatures of
Warren A. Cowdery

17 Oct. 1788–23 Feb. 1851. Physician, druggist, farmer, editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Married Patience Simonds, 22 Sept. 1814, in Pawlet, Rutland Co. Moved to Freedom, Cattaraugus Co., New York, 1816...

View Full Bio
,
Lyman H. Cowdery

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, and JS; witnessed by
Warren Parrish

10 Jan. 1803–3 Jan. 1877. Clergyman, gardener. Born in New York. Son of John Parrish and Ruth Farr. Married first Elizabeth (Betsey) Patten of Westmoreland Co., New Hampshire, ca. 1822. Lived at Alexandria, Jefferson Co., New York, 1830. Purchased land at...

View Full Bio
; two pages; JS Collection, CHL. Includes docket and archival marking.
One leaf, measuring 10 × 7⅞ inches (25 × 20 cm). The document was trifolded for filing and was docketed by
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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as follows: “Wn A. Cowdery’s | Indenture | To Joseph Smith”. After being trifolded, the document was folded again to form a square measuring 4 × 3¼ inches (10 × 8 cm).
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...

View Full Bio
’s docket on the verso suggests the indenture was in institutional custody as early as 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
, Illinois, period. Graphite notations by Andrew Jenson on the recto indicate institutional custody into the early 1940s.

Historical Introduction

Warren A. Cowdery

17 Oct. 1788–23 Feb. 1851. Physician, druggist, farmer, editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Married Patience Simonds, 22 Sept. 1814, in Pawlet, Rutland Co. Moved to Freedom, Cattaraugus Co., New York, 1816...

View Full Bio
,
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...

View Full Bio
’s oldest brother, moved to
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...

More Info
, Ohio, from
Freedom

Area settled, 1811. Township created, 1820. Population in 1835 and 1840 about 1,800. Included Freedom village, which had about fifteen dwellings in 1836. Branch of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints organized in township, 1834. Warren Cowdery appointed...

More Info
, New York, on 25 February 1836, with his wife, Patience Simmonds Cowdery, and their ten children.
1

Cowdery, Diary, 25 Feb. 1836; Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 170–171.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Cowdery, Oliver. Diary, Jan.–Mar. 1836. CHL. MS 3429. Also available as Leonard J. Arrington, “Oliver Cowdery’s Kirtland, Ohio, ‘Sketch Book,’” BYU Studies 12 (Summer 1972): 410–426.

Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

In Kirtland, Warren began working in the
printing office

Following destruction of church printing office in Independence, Missouri, July 1833, JS and other church leaders determined to set up new printing office in Kirtland under firm name F. G. Williams & Co. Oliver Cowdery purchased new printing press in New ...

More Info
and as a scribe for JS.
2

In the printing office, Warren A. Cowdery helped his brother Oliver with the Messenger and Advocate, taking over his duties as editor during Oliver’s trip with JS, Hyrum Smith, and Sidney Ridgon to the East Coast of the United States in summer 1836. In February 1837, when Oliver moved to Michigan to serve on the board of directors for the Bank of Monroe, Warren took over as the editor of the Messenger and Advocate and became the agent for JS and Sidney Rigdon in the printing office. It is not certain when Warren began serving as a scribe for JS, but he worked on JS’s 1834–1836 history and inscribed some early April 1836 entries in JS’s journal. (Oliver Cowdery, Long Island Sound, NY, to Warren A. Cowdery, Kirtland, OH, [4] Aug. 1836, in LDS Messenger and Advocate, Sept. 1836, 2:373–375; Notice, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Feb. 1837, 3:458–459; JS History, 1834–1836, 105; JS, Journal, 2–3 Apr. 1836.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.

This was a departure from his previous employment in
New York

Located in northeast region of U.S. Area settled by Dutch traders, 1620s; later governed by Britain, 1664–1776. Admitted to U.S. as state, 1788. Population in 1810 about 1,000,000; in 1820 about 1,400,000; in 1830 about 1,900,000; and in 1840 about 2,400,...

More Info
, where he had been a physician and the local postmaster.
3

Warren A. Cowdery may have also had an apothecary business in New York. (Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 170.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

On 23 November 1836, Warren and his fourth son,
Lyman Hervy Cowdery

View Full Bio

, entered into an indenture with JS. It was Lyman’s fifteenth birthday.
4

Lyman Hervy Cowdery was born 23 November 1821 in Leroy, Genesee County, New York. He married Sarah H. Holmes in Kirtland, Ohio, on 30 August 1849. Together they had eight children. He worked for the Lake Shore Railroad and at one point was a station agent in Perry, Ohio. He died 24 March 1906 in Rochester, New York. (Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 171, 253.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

An indenture for a child in nineteenth-century
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
was a legal contract made between a parent or government official and another adult for whom the child would provide labor or serve as an apprentice; this practice was sometimes called “binding out.” Indentures and apprenticeships were arranged for children from colonial settlement to the mid-nineteenth century; the practice increased in the eighteenth century and declined over the course of the nineteenth century.
5

Herndon, “‘Proper’ Magistrates and Masters,” 40–42.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Herndon, Ruth Wallis. “‘Proper’ Magistrates and Masters: Binding Out Poor Children in Southern New England, 1720–1820.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 39–51. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

Indentures took many forms, such as immigrants indentured to pay for their travel to America, craft apprentices indentured to study and work under master craftsmen and learn a specific trade, and children bound to an adult to labor and possibly learn trade skills. The most common forms of indenture for children in the 1800s were apprenticeships and binding out. Binding out was particularly common for children who were orphaned, abandoned, or otherwise left without caretakers.
6

Herndon and Murray, Children Bound to Labor, 2. Government officials often placed children without caretakers into indentures. When government officials were not involved, indentures were generally voluntary, though often still motivated by financial difficulties. (Zipf, “Labor of Innocents”; Herndon and Murray, “Proper and Instructive Education,” 4–5.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

Zipf, Karin. “Labor of Innocents: Parents, Children, and Apprenticeship in Nineteenth-Century North Carolina.” PhD diss., University of Georgia, 2000.

Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. “‘A Proper and Instructive Education’: Raising Children in Pauper Apprenticeship.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 3–18. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

An indenture specified the conditions and duration of the child’s term of service, which generally involved some type of artisanal or vocational training. Under the terms of an indenture, the adult supervisor, often referred to as a master, was obligated to care for the child, providing food, quarters, clothing, and other basic necessities in exchange for the child’s labor.
7

The term master used here originates from medieval indentures that involved an apprentice being bound to a master craftsman in the guild of the trade he was being taught.


The arrangement documented here appears to be the only time a youth was formally indentured to JS as a servant. While at other times JS may have agreed to informal indentures, with individuals working as servants in his household, such arrangements were probably not documented as indentures with a specified term of service.
8

In his memoirs, Joseph Smith III mentions several individuals who worked for his parents in Nauvoo, Illinois, as servants. One young woman, Lucy Walker, served as a maid and worked for her board and education. This may have been something like an informal indenture, where Lucy’s necessities and the cost of her education were provided in exchange for her work. (Mary Audentia Smith Anderson, “The Memoirs of President Joseph Smith,” Saints’ Herald, 18 Dec. 1934, 1614.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Saints’ Herald. Independence, MO. 1860–.

This indenture for
Lyman H. Cowdery

View Full Bio

differs from more traditional apprentice or master-servant relationships. It does not stipulate that JS provide any form of artisanal or vocational training but does, perhaps as a substitute, require that he fund Cowdery’s education. Though most nineteenth-century indentures required masters to provide a minimum education of reading, writing, and basic arithmetic for their indentured children, the agreement with JS specified that Cowdery should receive a classical—or collegiate-level—education.
9

Herndon and Murray, “Proper and Instructive Education,” 4, 13.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. “‘A Proper and Instructive Education’: Raising Children in Pauper Apprenticeship.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 3–18. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

Tuition and books were also included in the expenses to be covered by JS. Lyman’s oldest brother, Marcellus, was a schoolteacher, as were some of his uncles, and this might have been a vocation Lyman’s father considered for him.
10

Oliver Cowdery boarded with the family of Joseph Sr. and Lucy Mack Smith while he taught school in the Palmyra, New York, area in 1828 and 1829. Marcellus Cowdery became a widely recognized educator in Ohio, established some of the first teachers institutes there, and served as the superintendent of city schools in Sandusky, Ohio, for twenty-three years. (Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 170.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

The Cowderys might not have been able to afford tuition at that time, however, because of the family’s apparent financial difficulties after their move to
Ohio

French explored and claimed area, 1669. British took possession following French and Indian War, 1763. Ceded to U.S., 1783. First permanent white settlement established, 1788. Northeastern portion maintained as part of Connecticut, 1786, and called Connecticut...

More Info
.
11

See “To the Subscribers of the Journal,” Elders’ Journal, Aug. 1838, 54–55.


JS’s reasons for agreeing to the indenture are not clear. He may have needed additional labor in his household, on his lands, or in one of the mercantile stores he was associated with. The agreement may have simply formalized an existing working relationship between Lyman H. Cowdery and the Smiths, binding Lyman to work for JS for five years, until he reached twenty years of age.
Shortly after the indenture was signed, JS began to fulfill his commitment to
Lyman

View Full Bio

’s education. Lyman attended the
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...

More Info
High School, held in the attic of the
House of the Lord

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...

More Info
, beginning in the winter of 1836–1837. JS paid the six-dollar tuition for Lyman, who enrolled as a student in the Classical department, taught by Professor H. M. Hawes. Students in the Classical department studied Latin and Greek, while those in the English department were less advanced and had a broader range of study that included reading, writing, English grammar, geography, and mathematics.
12

“Our Village,” LDS Messenger and Advocate, Jan. 1837, 3:441; Kirtland High School Register, ca. 1836–1837, CHL. According to George A. Smith, Marcellus Cowdery taught in the English department at the Kirtland High School in 1836 and 1837. (George A. Smith, “My Journal,” Instructor, Nov. 1946, 528.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.

Kirtland High School Register, ca. 1836–1837. CHL.

Smith, George Albert. “My Journal.” Instructor, Nov. 1946, 514–517, 528.

Within months of entering into this indenture,
Lyman

View Full Bio

appears to have been integrated into JS’s household. He was referred to by his middle name, Hervy, in a letter from
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...

View Full Bio
to JS in May 1837. Emma praised Lyman and suggested that JS offer him some encouragement since “he is very faithful not only in business, but in taking up his cross in the family.”
13

Letter from Emma Smith, 3 May 1837.


The arrangement did not last the full five years.
Warren A. Cowdery

17 Oct. 1788–23 Feb. 1851. Physician, druggist, farmer, editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Married Patience Simonds, 22 Sept. 1814, in Pawlet, Rutland Co. Moved to Freedom, Cattaraugus Co., New York, 1816...

View Full Bio
became disaffected with
church

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
leaders by summer 1837 and distanced himself from the church in 1838. His family, including
Lyman

View Full Bio

, remained 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...

More Info
after JS and the majority of church members moved to
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
in early 1838. It is unknown what became of this indenture after JS’s move. Apprentices were not required to follow their masters out of the state;
14

Butts, Business Man’s Assistant, 15.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Butts, I. R. The Business Man’s Assistant, Part I. Containing Useful Forms of Legal Instruments: Enlarged by the Addition of Forms. . . . Boston: By the author, 1847.

the Cowderys and JS may have mutually agreed to annul the indenture, or they may have simply allowed the agreement to lapse when JS departed to Missouri.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    Cowdery, Diary, 25 Feb. 1836; Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 170–171.

    Cowdery, Oliver. Diary, Jan.–Mar. 1836. CHL. MS 3429. Also available as Leonard J. Arrington, “Oliver Cowdery’s Kirtland, Ohio, ‘Sketch Book,’” BYU Studies 12 (Summer 1972): 410–426.

    Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

  2. [2]

    In the printing office, Warren A. Cowdery helped his brother Oliver with the Messenger and Advocate, taking over his duties as editor during Oliver’s trip with JS, Hyrum Smith, and Sidney Ridgon to the East Coast of the United States in summer 1836. In February 1837, when Oliver moved to Michigan to serve on the board of directors for the Bank of Monroe, Warren took over as the editor of the Messenger and Advocate and became the agent for JS and Sidney Rigdon in the printing office. It is not certain when Warren began serving as a scribe for JS, but he worked on JS’s 1834–1836 history and inscribed some early April 1836 entries in JS’s journal. (Oliver Cowdery, Long Island Sound, NY, to Warren A. Cowdery, Kirtland, OH, [4] Aug. 1836, in LDS Messenger and Advocate, Sept. 1836, 2:373–375; Notice, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Feb. 1837, 3:458–459; JS History, 1834–1836, 105; JS, Journal, 2–3 Apr. 1836.)

    Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.

  3. [3]

    Warren A. Cowdery may have also had an apothecary business in New York. (Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 170.)

    Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

  4. [4]

    Lyman Hervy Cowdery was born 23 November 1821 in Leroy, Genesee County, New York. He married Sarah H. Holmes in Kirtland, Ohio, on 30 August 1849. Together they had eight children. He worked for the Lake Shore Railroad and at one point was a station agent in Perry, Ohio. He died 24 March 1906 in Rochester, New York. (Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 171, 253.)

    Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

  5. [5]

    Herndon, “‘Proper’ Magistrates and Masters,” 40–42.

    Herndon, Ruth Wallis. “‘Proper’ Magistrates and Masters: Binding Out Poor Children in Southern New England, 1720–1820.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 39–51. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

  6. [6]

    Herndon and Murray, Children Bound to Labor, 2. Government officials often placed children without caretakers into indentures. When government officials were not involved, indentures were generally voluntary, though often still motivated by financial difficulties. (Zipf, “Labor of Innocents”; Herndon and Murray, “Proper and Instructive Education,” 4–5.)

    Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

    Zipf, Karin. “Labor of Innocents: Parents, Children, and Apprenticeship in Nineteenth-Century North Carolina.” PhD diss., University of Georgia, 2000.

    Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. “‘A Proper and Instructive Education’: Raising Children in Pauper Apprenticeship.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 3–18. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

  7. [7]

    The term master used here originates from medieval indentures that involved an apprentice being bound to a master craftsman in the guild of the trade he was being taught.

  8. [8]

    In his memoirs, Joseph Smith III mentions several individuals who worked for his parents in Nauvoo, Illinois, as servants. One young woman, Lucy Walker, served as a maid and worked for her board and education. This may have been something like an informal indenture, where Lucy’s necessities and the cost of her education were provided in exchange for her work. (Mary Audentia Smith Anderson, “The Memoirs of President Joseph Smith,” Saints’ Herald, 18 Dec. 1934, 1614.)

    Saints’ Herald. Independence, MO. 1860–.

  9. [9]

    Herndon and Murray, “Proper and Instructive Education,” 4, 13.

    Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. “‘A Proper and Instructive Education’: Raising Children in Pauper Apprenticeship.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 3–18. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

  10. [10]

    Oliver Cowdery boarded with the family of Joseph Sr. and Lucy Mack Smith while he taught school in the Palmyra, New York, area in 1828 and 1829. Marcellus Cowdery became a widely recognized educator in Ohio, established some of the first teachers institutes there, and served as the superintendent of city schools in Sandusky, Ohio, for twenty-three years. (Mehling, Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy, 170.)

    Mehling, Mary Bryant Alverson. Cowdrey-Cowdery-Cowdray Genealogy: William Cowdery of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1630, and His Descendants. New York: Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1911.

  11. [11]

    See “To the Subscribers of the Journal,” Elders’ Journal, Aug. 1838, 54–55.

  12. [12]

    “Our Village,” LDS Messenger and Advocate, Jan. 1837, 3:441; Kirtland High School Register, ca. 1836–1837, CHL. According to George A. Smith, Marcellus Cowdery taught in the English department at the Kirtland High School in 1836 and 1837. (George A. Smith, “My Journal,” Instructor, Nov. 1946, 528.)

    Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.

    Kirtland High School Register, ca. 1836–1837. CHL.

    Smith, George Albert. “My Journal.” Instructor, Nov. 1946, 514–517, 528.

  13. [13]

    Letter from Emma Smith, 3 May 1837.

  14. [14]

    Butts, Business Man’s Assistant, 15.

    Butts, I. R. The Business Man’s Assistant, Part I. Containing Useful Forms of Legal Instruments: Enlarged by the Addition of Forms. . . . Boston: By the author, 1847.

Page [2]

that said party of the second part is to continue to said send said
Lyman H. Cowdery

View Full Bio

to such a school as in it he may obtain, in the five years aforesaid, a full and competent knowledge of the circle of sciences embraced in a collegiate or classical education.
2

The majority of indentures made with children included freedom dues, or payment given to them when their term of service ended. Freedom dues might be a suit of clothing, land, tools necessary for their trade, or livestock in rural areas. Lyman’s indenture does not include any freedom dues, likely because he was bound at an older age. Children who were older when bound usually served shorter indentures and their freedom dues were lower or omitted because they had deprived their master of profits from being bound for a longer period of time. (Herndon and Murray, “Proper and Instructive Education,” 14–16; Whitman, “Orphans in the City and Countryside in Maryland,” 59.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. “‘A Proper and Instructive Education’: Raising Children in Pauper Apprenticeship.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 3–18. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

Whitman, T. Stephen. “Orphans in City and Countryside in Nineteenth-Century Maryland.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 52–70. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals——

Signatures of Warren A. Cowdery, Lyman H. Cowdery, JS, and Warren Parrish.


W. A. Cowdery

17 Oct. 1788–23 Feb. 1851. Physician, druggist, farmer, editor. Born at Wells, Rutland Co., Vermont. Son of William Cowdery and Rebecca Fuller. Married Patience Simonds, 22 Sept. 1814, in Pawlet, Rutland Co. Moved to Freedom, Cattaraugus Co., New York, 1816...

View Full Bio
L.S.
3

TEXT: Instances of “L.S.” (locus sigilli, in place of the seal) are enclosed in hand-drawn representations of seals. Handwriting of Warren A. Cowdery.


Lyman H. Cowdery

View Full Bio

LS.
Joseph Smith Jr L.S.
In presence of
W[arren] Parrish

10 Jan. 1803–3 Jan. 1877. Clergyman, gardener. Born in New York. Son of John Parrish and Ruth Farr. Married first Elizabeth (Betsey) Patten of Westmoreland Co., New Hampshire, ca. 1822. Lived at Alexandria, Jefferson Co., New York, 1830. Purchased land at...

View Full Bio
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Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Indenture from Warren A. Cowdery, 23 November 1836
ID #
333
Total Pages
2
Print Volume Location
JSP, D5:312–317
Handwriting on This Page
  • Warren A. Cowdery
  • Lyman H. Cowdery
  • Joseph Smith Jr.
  • Warren Parrish

Footnotes

  1. [2]

    The majority of indentures made with children included freedom dues, or payment given to them when their term of service ended. Freedom dues might be a suit of clothing, land, tools necessary for their trade, or livestock in rural areas. Lyman’s indenture does not include any freedom dues, likely because he was bound at an older age. Children who were older when bound usually served shorter indentures and their freedom dues were lower or omitted because they had deprived their master of profits from being bound for a longer period of time. (Herndon and Murray, “Proper and Instructive Education,” 14–16; Whitman, “Orphans in the City and Countryside in Maryland,” 59.)

    Herndon, Ruth Wallis, and John E. Murray, eds. “‘A Proper and Instructive Education’: Raising Children in Pauper Apprenticeship.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 3–18. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

    Whitman, T. Stephen. “Orphans in City and Countryside in Nineteenth-Century Maryland.” In Children Bound to Labor: The Pauper Apprentice System in Early America, edited by Ruth Wallis Herndon and John E. Murray, 52–70. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.

  2. new scribe logo

    Signatures of Warren A. Cowdery, Lyman H. Cowdery, JS, and Warren Parrish.

  3. [3]

    TEXT: Instances of “L.S.” (locus sigilli, in place of the seal) are enclosed in hand-drawn representations of seals. Handwriting of Warren A. Cowdery.

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