Footnotes
“An Act to Repeal the Nauvoo Charter,” 14th General Assembly, 1844–1845, Senate Bill no. 35 (House Bill no. 42), Illinois General Assembly, Enrolled Acts of the General Assembly, 1818–2012, Illinois State Archives, Springfield.
Illinois General Assembly. Enrolled Acts of the General Assembly, 1818–2012. Illinois State Archives, Springfield.
“Schedule of Church Records. Nauvoo 1846,” [1], Historian’s Office, Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904, CHL.
Historian’s Office. Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904. CHL. CR 100 130.
“Inventory. Historian’s Office. 4th April 1855,” [1]–[2]; “Index of Records and Journals in the Historian’s Office 1878,” [11]; “Index to Papers in the Historians Office,” ca. 1904, 7, Historian’s Office, Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904, CHL.
Historian’s Office. Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904. CHL. CR 100 130.
Footnotes
Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo, 16 Dec. 1840. Six days earlier, the charter was in process of being printed as a pamphlet, which would have made this power more public. (Nauvoo City Council Minute Book, 12 July 1842, 94; see also Pay Order to Nauvoo City Treasurer, 12 July 1842.)
John C. Bennett, “Inaugural Address,” Times and Seasons, 15 Feb. 1841, 2:318; see also Proclamation, 15 Jan. 1841. Other extant petitions issued before the 18 July petition did not address public health but instead dealt with improving and protecting property, especially building and altering roads. (See Petitions, 1841–1842, Nauvoo, IL, Records, CHL.)
Nauvoo, IL. Records, 1841–1845. CHL. MS 16800.
Contemporaneous medical publications supported a connection between effluvia and malaria. In summer 1839, a malaria epidemic struck the communities of Nauvoo and Montrose, Iowa Territory. These communities continued to suffer from malaria during the summers of 1840 and 1841. (See “Miasm,” in Dunglison, Medical Lexicon, 451; Barker, Inaugural Dissertation on Typhus Fever, 7; JS, Journal, 8–23 July 1839; Discourse, 28 July 1839; Discourse, 30 July 1840; and Introduction to Part 3: 3 July–30 Sept. 1841.)
Dunglison, Robley. Medical Lexicon: A New Dictionary of Medical Science, Containing a Concise Account of the Various Subjects and Terms; with the French and Other Synonymes, and Formulae for Various Officinal and Empirical Preparations, &c. 3rd ed. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1842.
Barker, Thomas Collis. Inaugural Dissertation on Typhus Fever. [Giessen, Germany]: G. F. Heyeri, 1842.
See Book of Assessment, 1842, First Ward, copy, Nauvoo, IL, Records, CHL.
Nauvoo, IL. Records, 1841–1845. CHL. MS 16800.
Johnson G Bentley | Seth Jackson |
Josiah James | Wm Oaks |
Benjn. Sweat | David Jenkins |
Ormond Butler | |
John Thorp | |
Jacob h Johnson | James Spencer |
. | Richard Withnell |
Geo Middagh | |
John H Lyons | |
Francis Lee | |
Chester Southworth | John Baus[h] |
H[enry] L, Moore | |
Joseph Dudley | |
Charles Hulett | |
Peter Hopkines [Hopkins] | |
Allen Taylor | Calob Lions [Caleb Lyons] |
O D Hovey | |
Luther V Burklow | |
Lewis Leigler | |
David W Wright | |
Worthy Clark | Daniel Cahoon |
John Aitkin | Andrew Smith |
Lorenzo D Driggs | Samuel hodge |
Lewis Hyde | John Drysdale |
Lyman Curtis | |
George Ritche | |
Charles L Lewis | John Keown |
James Standing | |
Abel Prior | |
Henry Kearns | Wm. Higbee |
Franklin Green | |
Wm Anderson | |
TEXT: The “h” in “Baush” appears to have been accidentally smudged, without the intent to cancel the text.