Footnotes
“Emigration Movements,” Millennial Star, Mar. 1842, 2:155; “Emigration,” Millennial Star, Oct. 1842, 3:112; Andrew Jenson, “Church Emigration,” Contributor, Oct. 1891, 441, 444–448.
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
Jenson, Andrew. “Church Emigration.” Contributor 12, no. 12 (Oct. 1891): 441–450.
No reliable count of Nauvoo’s population during the 1840s exists. Different estimates of the city’s population range from 12,000 to 15,000. In January 1843, for instance, JS estimated the population was about 12,000. Nearly three years later, however, an actual count of city residents reported a population of only 11,057. (Black, “How Large Was the Population of Nauvoo?,” 91–94; JS, Journal, 5 Jan. 1843; “Mobocracy,” Times and Seasons, 15 Nov. 1845, 6:1031; “Nauvoo,” Times and Seasons, 1 Oct. 1842, 3:936.)
Black, Susan Easton. “How Large Was the Population of Nauvoo?” BYU Studies 35, no. 2 (1995): 91–94.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Godfrey, “Crime and Punishment in Mormon Nauvoo,” 198–212. Available evidence does not suggest higher crime rates in Nauvoo than in surrounding areas with comparable populations, but critics of JS and the church denounced Nauvoo as crime ridden, causing city authorities to try to reassure observers that order reigned there.
Godfrey, Kenneth W. “Crime and Punishment in Mormon Nauvoo, 1839–1846.” BYU Studies 32 (Winter and Spring 1992): 195–228.
“Laws and Ordinances of the City of Nauvoo,” Wasp, 8 Feb. 1843, [1]–[2]. In the Wasp version of the laws and ordinances, section 1 in the second division omits the word “Alley,” which appears in the fair copy of the ordinance. The draft version of the ordinances indicates that that word was later added as an insertion and therefore did not appear in the original version of the ordinance. (“Laws and Ordinances of the City of Nauvoo,” 30 Jan. 1843, Nauvoo, IL, Records, CHL.)
During the previous two decades, metal cooking stoves became increasingly popular. Between 1820 and 1839, the United States patent office issued 165 patents for cookstoves. A Franklin was an iron stove and fireplace hybrid innovated by Benjamin Franklin in the 1740s. Despite the emergence of smaller cookstoves, the Franklin remained popular because it combined the convenience of a stove with the aesthetic of an open fire. (Brewer, “Advertising, Design, and Consumer Response to the Cookstove,” 36–37.)
Brewer, Priscilla J. “‘We Have Got a Very Good Cooking Stove’: Advertising, Design, and Consumer Response to the Cookstove, 1815–1880.” Winterthur Portfolio: A Journal of American Material Culture 25, no. 1 (Spring 1990): 35–54.
An ash house was a small shed used to store ashes from fires until they could be used for fertilizing fields and garden plots. (Sharpe, Traditional Buildings of the English Countryside, 21.)
Sharpe, Geoffrey R. Traditional Buildings of the English Countryside: An Illustrated Guide. London: I. B. Tauris, 2011.