Footnotes
For more information on the Avery kidnappings, see “Part 5: December 1843.”
In June 1843, Phelps began serving as an alderman pro tempore in the absence of regularly elected aldermen. (See Nauvoo City Council Rough Minute Book, 1 and 10 June 1843, 18; 18 Aug. [Sept.] 1843, 21.)
Wilford Woodruff, joint manager of the Nauvoo printing office, recorded in his journal entry for 8 December that the office published a one-page extra of the Nauvoo Neighbor. The issue was dated 9 December 1843, however. The extra contained the minutes and resolutions of a 7 December public meeting, the two city council ordinances passed on 8 December, selections from the United States Constitution, and two letters from Illinois’s attorney general and his predecessor on the independent nature of the Nauvoo Legion. (Woodruff, Journal, 8 Dec. 1843; Nauvoo Neighbor, Extra, 9 Dec. 1843, [1].)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Nauvoo Neighbor. Nauvoo, IL. 1843–1845.