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Backman, Heavens Resound, 139–140.
Backman, Milton V., Jr. The Heavens Resound: A History of the Latter-day Saints in Ohio, 1830–1838. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1983.
Whitney had purchased goods for his store through wholesale merchants in New York for years. Extant records show such business transactions dating from 1833. (See “New York Account Book Sept 1834,” 17 Oct. 1833 and 15 Oct. 1834, Newel K. Whitney, Papers, BYU.)
Whitney, Newel K. Papers, 1825–1906. BYU.
JS, Journal, 7 and 29 Oct. 1835. The Cahoon, Carter & Co. store was often informally called the “committee store.”
Invoices for Buffalo Merchandise, 15–27 June 1836; Invoices for New York City Merchandise, 8–15 Oct. 1836, JS Office Papers, CHL; see also Historical Introduction to Constitution of the Kirtland Safety Society Bank, 2 Nov. 1836. Extant invoices from Buffalo show the firms purchasing over $16,000 of goods on credit, with nearly $12,000 of goods purchased by the firm of Cahoon, Carter & Co. Extant invoices from New York City merchants show the firms purchasing goods amounting to almost $12,000 on credit. Most of these purchases were made by the firm of Rigdon, Smith & Cowdery.
A pocket notebook kept by Willard Richards in 1837 records debts related to the Kirtland-area firms that exceed the debts recorded on the extant invoices from the 1836 buying trips. Litigation for unpaid store debts further demonstrates that purchases were made for which there are no surviving invoices. (See Richards, Journal, Mar.–Nov. 1837; and Introduction to Halsted, Haines & Co. v. O. Granger et al.)
Richards, Willard. Journals, 1836–1853. Willard Richards, Papers, 1821–1854. CHL. MS 1490, boxes 1–2.
William Perkins, Statement, 23 July 1867 [Halsted, Haines & Co. v. O. Granger et al.]; see also Historical Introduction to Blessing to Newel K. Whitney, 7 Oct. 1835.
See, for example, Invoice, Mead, Stafford & Co. to H. Smith & Co., 8 Oct. 1836; Invoice from H. Smith & Co., 12 Nov. 1836; Invoice, H. Smith & Co. to William Smith, 15 Nov. 1836; and Invoice, H. Smith & Co. to Jared Carter, Nov. 1836; see also “Joseph Smith Documents from October 1835 through January 1838.”
N. K. Whitney & Co., Daybook, 192.
N. K. Whitney & Co. Daybook, Nov. 1836–Apr. 1837. Microfilm. CHL. Original at CCLA.
William Perkins, Statement, 23 July 1867 [Halsted, Haines & Co. v. O. Granger et al.]; Historical Introduction to Statement of Account from Perkins & Osborn, ca. 29 Oct. 1838. These wholesale firms included Mead & Betts, John A. Newbould, Holbrook & Ferme, and Halsted, Haines & Co. Both Kirtland-area firms—Rigdon, Smith & Cowdery and Cahoon, Carter & Co.—appear to have combined their debts in the renegotiation with the firm of John A. Newbould. However, Rigdon, Smith & Cowdery was responsible for the debt owed to Holbrook & Ferme, while Cahoon, Carter & Co. was responsible for the debts to Halsted, Haines & Co. and Mead & Betts. (Agreement with John A. Newbould, ca. 2 Aug. 1839; Promissory Note to Halsted, Haines & Co., 1 Sept. 1837–A; Promissory Note to Halsted, Haines & Co., 1 Sept. 1837–B; Promissory Note to Halsted, Haines & Co., 1 Sept. 1837–C; Promissory Note to Holbrook & Ferme, 1 Sept. 1837–A; Promissory Note to Mead & Betts, 1 Sept. 1837–C.)
Historical Introduction to Letter of Introduction from John Howden, 27 Oct. 1838; Historical Introduction to Power of Attorney to Oliver Granger, 27 Sept. 1837.
The August 1839 agreements allowed Granger to pay a portion of the debt in land and have the remaining debt forgiven. The agreements required that all four of the New York merchants accept the conditions. It is unclear if Halsted, Haines & Co. or Holbrook & Ferme accepted the proposed arrangement; the only surviving agreements are those signed by John A. Newbould and Mead & Betts. (Agreement with Mead & Betts, 2 Aug. 1839; Agreement with John A. Newbould, ca. 2 Aug. 1839.)
By 1839, JS took financial responsibility for not only the Kirtland debts related to Rigdon, Smith & Cowdery, in which he had been a partner, but also the firms of Cahoon, Carter & Co. and H. Smith & Co. He had no personal financial responsibilities to the latter two firms but likely assumed these debts because of the companies’ ties to the church. JS could also have been legally held accountable because he cosigned the renegotiated promissory notes in September 1837. (See Historical Introduction to Statement of Account from Perkins & Osborn, ca. 29 Oct. 1838; and Agreement with Mead & Betts, 2 Aug. 1839.)
In a May 1841 letter to Granger, JS wrote, “Your health is precarious and if any thing should occur— so that you were to bid adieu to mortality it would be impossible for me ever to get the run of the business and I should be again involved in difficulties from which it would be impossible for me to extrecate myself.” (Letter to Oliver Granger, 4 May 1841.)
Application for Bankruptcy, ca. 14–16 Apr. 1842, in JSP, D9:360–372.
JSP, D9 / Smith, Alex D., Christian K. Heimburger, and Christopher James Blythe, eds. Documents, Volume 9: December 1841–April 1842. Vol. 9 of the Documents series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Matthew C. Godfrey, R. Eric Smith, Matthew J. Grow, and Ronald K. Esplin. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2019.
See Historical Introduction to Application for Bankruptcy, ca. 14–16 Apr. 1842, in JSP, D9:363; Notice to Creditors and Others, 17 June 1842, in JSP, D10:162–164; and “Joseph Smith Documents from May through August 1842,” in JSP, D10:xxii–xxiv.
JSP, D9 / Smith, Alex D., Christian K. Heimburger, and Christopher James Blythe, eds. Documents, Volume 9: December 1841–April 1842. Vol. 9 of the Documents series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Matthew C. Godfrey, R. Eric Smith, Matthew J. Grow, and Ronald K. Esplin. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2019.
JSP, D10 / Kuehn, Elizabeth A., Jordan T. Watkins, Matthew C. Godfrey, and Mason K. Allred, eds. Documents, Volume 10: May–August 1842. Vol. 10 of the Documents series of The Joseph Smith Papers, edited by Matthew C. Godfrey, R. Eric Smith, Matthew J. Grow, and Ronald K. Esplin. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2020.
See, for example, Hancock Co., IL, Probate Records, 1831–1912, Probate Records, 1841–1849, pp. 229, 245, 16 Sept. and 16 Nov. 1848, microfilm 947,494, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.
U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.
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