Footnotes
Agreement with George W. Robinson, 30 Apr. 1839. During the 4–5 May general conference, church members approved a resolution to purchase land in Iowa Territory, but no extant documents indicate that this purchase had taken place by 27 May. According to extant records, the church’s earliest purchase of land there was made by church agent Oliver Granger on 29 May 1839. (Minutes, 4–5 May 1839; Lee Co., IA, Land Records, 1836–1961, vol. 1, pp. 507–508, 29 May 1839, microfilm 959,238, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)
U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.
Mulholland may have copied the letter the day it was composed.
JS History, vol. C-1, 946; Historian’s Office, Journal, 3 May 1845, 1:38. For information on the creation of JS’s manuscript history, see Historical Introduction to History Drafts, 1838–ca. 1841.
Historian’s Office. Journal, 1844–1997. CHL. CR 100 1.
Bigler, Autobiographical Sketch, 1; Bathsheba Bigler Smith, Autobiography, 2–3, 6.
Bigler, Jacob G. Autobiographical Sketch, 1907. Typescript. CHL.
Smith, Bathsheba W. Bigler. Autobiography, ca. 1875–1906. Microfilm. CHL.
Bigler, Autobiographical Sketch, 1; Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1844–1845, bk. 17, [6].
Bigler, Jacob G. Autobiographical Sketch, 1907. Typescript. CHL.
Mark Bigler died in Quincy on 23 September 1839. (Bigler, Autobiographical Sketch, 1.)
Bigler, Jacob G. Autobiographical Sketch, 1907. Typescript. CHL.
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See 2 Peter 3:1.
Because the church was not incorporated in Illinois, church business was conducted in the names of individual church leaders and agents, but these transactions were understood as church business. The recent land purchases were unanimously approved in priesthood councils and a general conference of the church. (See Minutes, 24 Apr. 1839; and Minutes, 4–5 May 1839.)
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