Footnotes
Letter to Emma Smith, 16 Aug. 1842. JS had also written Wilson Law on 16 August, asking for advice on whether he should flee. (Letter to Wilson Law, 16 Aug. 1842.)
See, for example, Deed to Emma Smith, 13 June 1842.
See entries and ink changes in JS, Journal, Copied Correspondence, 30 June–17 Aug. 1842; and Book of the Law of the Lord, 170–181.
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Page 175
In his 16 August letter to Emma, JS had asked whether Hyrum was willing to help her prepare to travel to Wisconsin Territory and to escort her to JS’s location should JS and Emma decide to leave with their family. (Letter to Emma Smith, 16 Aug. 1842.)
In his 16 August letter, JS had noted, “If it were possible I would like to live here in peace and wind up my business.” (Letter to Emma Smith, 16 Aug. 1842.)
Emma visited JS while he was in hiding, accompanied by some of JS’s close friends and acquaintances. On the night of 15 August, his brother Hyrum Smith, along with George Miller, William Law, Amasa Lyman, John D. Parker, Newel K. Whitney, and William Clayton, had traveled separately to Sayers’s farm to meet with JS and discuss how to respond to efforts to extradite him. (JS, Journal, 11–15 Aug. 1842.)
During this period, a lawyer and state senator named James H. Ralston, Latter-day Saint David Hollister, and perhaps others provided JS and the Saints with updates from Quincy, including information about Governor Thomas Carlin’s involvement with Missouri’s attempt to extradite JS. (JS, Journal, 11 and 13 Aug. 1842; David Hollister, Quincy, IL, to Hyrum Smith, Nauvoo, IL, 12 Aug. 1842, JS Office Papers, CHL; Letter to Emma Smith, 16 Aug. 1842.)
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