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Revelation, 27 July 1842

Source Note

Revelation, [
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
, Hancock Co., IL], 27 July 1842. Featured version copied [ca. 1 Apr. 1912]; typescript; two pages; Whitney Family Documents Collection, CHL.
Two leaves measuring 8½ × 11 inches (22 × 28 cm) on machine-cut paper, typed with blue-violet ink, with blank versos. A blue ink stamp on the upper left corner of the recto of the first leaf reads: “RECEIVED | APR–1 ’12 | President’s Office”. The document was folded twice horizontally, likely for filing.
The original revelation was in the possession of the Whitney family and is apparently no longer extant. Years later, Orson F. Whitney received a copy of the revelation from his father, Horace Whitney, which Orson believed may have come from his grandfather
Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

View Full Bio
. Orson F. Whitney made a typescript of the revelation at the request of church president Joseph F. Smith, probably in early 1912, and gave the typescript to Smith on 1 April 1912. At some point the letter was transferred to the possession of the
First Presidency

The highest presiding body of the church. An 11 November 1831 revelation stated that the president of the high priesthood was to preside over the church. JS was ordained as president of the high priesthood on 25 January 1832. In March 1832, JS appointed two...

View Glossary
—possibly in 1970, when Church Historian Joseph Fielding Smith became president of the church and took several documents with him from the Church Historian’s Office to the Office of the First Presidency.
1

See Source Note for Revelation Book 1; and Source Note for Journal, Dec. 1841–Dec. 1842.


In 2010, the document was transferred to the Church History Department (CHL).
2

See the full bibliographic entry for Whitney Family Documents Collection, 1843–1912, in the CHL catalog.


Footnotes

  1. [1]

    See Source Note for Revelation Book 1; and Source Note for Journal, Dec. 1841–Dec. 1842.

  2. [2]

    See the full bibliographic entry for Whitney Family Documents Collection, 1843–1912, in the CHL catalog.

Historical Introduction

On 27 July 1842, JS dictated a revelation for
Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

View Full Bio
in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
, Illinois, which provided instructions for Whitney to use in performing the
sealing

To confirm or solemnize. In the early 1830s, revelations often adopted biblical usage of the term seal; for example, “sealed up the testimony” referred to proselytizing and testifying of the gospel as a warning of the approaching end time. JS explained in...

View Glossary
of his daughter
Sarah Ann Whitney

22 Mar. 1825–4 Sept. 1873. Born in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Daughter of Newel K. Whitney and Elizabeth Ann Smith. Located at Carrollton, Greene Co., Illinois, winter 1838–1839. Moved to Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, winter 1839–1840, and then to Commerce...

View Full Bio
to JS that same day.
1

At this time, Emma Smith, JS’s first wife, was absent from Nauvoo. She had traveled to Quincy, Illinois, along with Eliza R. Snow and Amanda Barnes Smith, to present Illinois governor Thomas Carlin with a petition from the Female Relief Society of Nauvoo requesting that JS not be extradited to Missouri. (See Nauvoo Female Relief Society, Petition to Thomas Carlin, ca. 22 July 1842, in Derr et al., First Fifty Years of Relief Society, 136–141. For information on JS’s practice of plural marriage, see “Joseph Smith Documents from May through August 1842”.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Derr, Jill Mulvay, Carol Cornwall Madsen, Kate Holbrook, and Matthew J. Grow, eds. The First Fifty Years of Relief Society: Key Documents in Latter-day Saint Women’s History. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2016.

Seventeen-year-old Sarah Ann was the eldest daughter of Newel and
Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney

26 Dec. 1800–15 Feb. 1882. Born at Derby, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Daughter of Gibson Smith and Polly Bradley. Moved to Ohio, 1819. Married Newel K. Whitney, 20 Oct. 1822, at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Shortly after, joined reformed Baptist (later Disciples...

View Full Bio
. Sarah Ann was born in
Kirtland

Located ten miles south of Lake Erie. Settled by 1811. Organized by 1818. Latter-day Saint missionaries visited township, early Nov. 1830; many residents joined Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Population in 1830 about 55 Latter-day Saints and...

More Info
, Ohio, and had moved to Nauvoo with her family in 1840.
2

Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, “A Leaf from an Autobiography,” Woman’s Exponent, 15 Nov. 1878, 7:91.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

Her friend and sister-in-law,
Helen Mar Kimball

22 Aug. 1828–15 Nov. 1896. Born in Mendon, Monroe Co., New York. Daughter of Heber C. Kimball and Vilate Murray. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, fall 1833. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Brigham Young, 1836, in the Chagrin...

View Full Bio
, later described Sarah as a popular young woman, one of the “guiding stars” in their group of friends in Nauvoo. Although some called her “proud and somewhat eccentric,” Sarah Ann nevertheless had a magnetic personality, and Helen felt she was a “most pure-minded, conscientious and God-fearing girl.”
3

Helen Mar Kimball Whitney, “Scenes in Nauvoo after the Martyrdom,” Woman’s Exponent, 1 Mar. 1883, 11:146.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

Sarah Ann

22 Mar. 1825–4 Sept. 1873. Born in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Daughter of Newel K. Whitney and Elizabeth Ann Smith. Located at Carrollton, Greene Co., Illinois, winter 1838–1839. Moved to Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, winter 1839–1840, and then to Commerce...

View Full Bio
’s sealing to JS was arranged by her parents, and according to
Helen

22 Aug. 1828–15 Nov. 1896. Born in Mendon, Monroe Co., New York. Daughter of Heber C. Kimball and Vilate Murray. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, fall 1833. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Brigham Young, 1836, in the Chagrin...

View Full Bio
’s later account, Sarah freely entered into the marriage. No extant records convey how Sarah Ann learned about plural marriage, although it was likely from her parents.
4

The experience of Helen Mar Kimball, who was also sealed to JS, may be instructive. She later recounted that her father, Heber C. Kimball, introduced her to the practice of plural marriage; then JS visited their home and met with Helen and her parents to explain the principle further. (See Helen Mar Kimball Whitney, “Scenes and Incidents in Nauvoo,” Woman’s Exponent, 1 Aug. 1882, 11:39.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

JS introduced
Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

View Full Bio
to the principle of plural marriage, possibly in connection to his request to marry Sarah Ann, and Newel then introduced the principle to his wife. In her autobiography,
Elizabeth Ann

26 Dec. 1800–15 Feb. 1882. Born at Derby, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Daughter of Gibson Smith and Polly Bradley. Moved to Ohio, 1819. Married Newel K. Whitney, 20 Oct. 1822, at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Shortly after, joined reformed Baptist (later Disciples...

View Full Bio
related that after learning about the doctrine, she and her husband were both concerned and prayed for guidance. According to her account, they prayed that “the Lord would grant us some special manifestation concerning this new and strange doctrine,” after which they were “seemingly wrapt in a heavenly vision, a halo of light encircled us, and we were convinced in our own minds that God heard and approved our prayers and intercedings before Him.” Elizabeth Ann further noted that the vision comforted them and left them with such a testament of the practice that they were willing to have their daughter marry JS “in the holy order of plural marriage.”
5

Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, “A Leaf from an Autobiography,” Woman’s Exponent, 15 Dec. 1878, 7:105.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

JS’s 27 July revelation represents the only extant instructions from JS’s lifetime for conducting a plural marriage ceremony.
6

Some men who solemnized early plural marriage sealings later recounted that JS had given them the words to use for the ceremony. Since no other revelations or instructions for conducting plural marriage sealings are extant for the Nauvoo period, it is impossible to know how unique or standardized these sealings were. (See Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy, 1:233.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Hales, Brian C. Joseph Smith’s Polygamy. 3 vols. SLC: Greg Kofford Books, 2013.

The sealing ceremony outlined by this revelation departed in many ways from traditional nineteenth-century marital vows and included matters of both temporal and eternal significance. The revelation emphasized that the sealing was a salvific rite that would be performed through
Newel Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

View Full Bio
’s
priesthood

Power or authority of God. The priesthood was conferred through the laying on of hands upon adult male members of the church in good standing; no specialized training was required. Priesthood officers held responsibility for administering the sacrament of...

View Glossary
authority. It promised immortality and eternal life to
Sarah Ann

22 Mar. 1825–4 Sept. 1873. Born in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Daughter of Newel K. Whitney and Elizabeth Ann Smith. Located at Carrollton, Greene Co., Illinois, winter 1838–1839. Moved to Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, winter 1839–1840, and then to Commerce...

View Full Bio
, and by extension her entire family, through her sealing to JS. By uniting the Whitney family with JS, the marriage created kinship ties that promised to seal the two families together eternally.
7

For additional information on the creation of kinship ties through polygamous marriages, see Daynes, “Mormon Polygamy,” 130–146.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Daynes, Kathryn M. “Mormon Polygamy: Belief and Practice in Nauvoo.” In Kingdom on the Mississippi Revisited: Nauvoo in Mormon History, edited by Roger D. Launius and John E. Hallwas, 130–146. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1996.

The instruction in the ceremony for Sarah Ann to be JS’s companion through life (and beyond the grave), preserve herself for him, and observe the rights of matrimony seem to suggest that all parties understood that the marriage could include sexual intimacy and the prospect of children. However, no documentation exists as to whether Sarah Ann and JS’s relationship was sexual in nature.
8

Some of the women who were sealed to JS indicated that conjugal relations were not part of their relationships with him, while the majority of JS’s plural wives never discussed this subject. A few of his plural wives stated decades later that their marriages did involve such relations with JS. Given nineteenth-century cultural mores and reticence about discussions of sexuality, these statements are often not explicit. Emily Dow Partridge, Lucy Walker, and Malissa Lott each implied in their respective statements that they had intimate relations with JS, with Lott affirming that she had been JS’s wife “in very deed.” (See Emily Dow Partridge Young, Testimony, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, [19 Mar. 1892], pp. 371, 384, Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints v. Church of Christ of Independence, Missouri, et al. [C.C.W.D. Mo. 1894], typescript, United States Testimony, CHL; D. H. Morris, Statement, 12 June 1930, typescript, Vesta P. Crawford, Papers, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City; Andrew Jenson, “Plural Marriage,” Historical Record, May 1887, 6:230; Malissa Lott Willes, Statement, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, 4 Aug. 1893, CHL; and Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy, 2:379–390.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints v. Church of Christ of Independence, Missouri, et al. (C.C.W.D. Mo. 1894). Typescript. Testimonies and Depositions, 1892. Typescript. CHL.

Crawford, Vesta P. Papers, 1844–1955. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City.

The Historical Record, a Monthly Periodical, Devoted Exclusively to Historical, Biographical, Chronological and Statistical Matters. Salt Lake City. 1882–1890.

Willes, Malissa Lott. Affidavit, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, 4 Aug. 1893. CHL. MS 29468.

Hales, Brian C. Joseph Smith’s Polygamy. 3 vols. SLC: Greg Kofford Books, 2013.

Newel K. Whitney used the revelation to perform the sealing on 27 July, with
Elizabeth Ann Whitney

26 Dec. 1800–15 Feb. 1882. Born at Derby, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Daughter of Gibson Smith and Polly Bradley. Moved to Ohio, 1819. Married Newel K. Whitney, 20 Oct. 1822, at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Shortly after, joined reformed Baptist (later Disciples...

View Full Bio
serving as a witness.
9

See Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 30 Aug. 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:72.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

In 1869,
Sarah

22 Mar. 1825–4 Sept. 1873. Born in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Daughter of Newel K. Whitney and Elizabeth Ann Smith. Located at Carrollton, Greene Co., Illinois, winter 1838–1839. Moved to Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, winter 1839–1840, and then to Commerce...

View Full Bio
signed two affidavits affirming her sealing to JS, but she left no documents offering her perspective on their relationship. The first affidavit attested to her sealing to JS, while the second verified an 18 August 1842 letter written by JS.
10

Sarah Ann Whitney Kimball, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 19 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:36; Elizabeth Ann Whitney and Sarah Ann Whitney Kimball, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 13 Aug. 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 2:27–28; Letter to Newel K., Elizabeth Ann Smith, and Sarah Ann Whitney, 18 Aug. 1842.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

Although Sarah Ann was silent on the details of her marriage to JS, two women close to her offered differing perspectives in their reminiscences. Her mother,
Elizabeth Ann Whitney

26 Dec. 1800–15 Feb. 1882. Born at Derby, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Daughter of Gibson Smith and Polly Bradley. Moved to Ohio, 1819. Married Newel K. Whitney, 20 Oct. 1822, at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Shortly after, joined reformed Baptist (later Disciples...

View Full Bio
, referred with apparent pride to the marriage in her autobiography. She wrote that her daughter “was the first woman ever given in plural marriage by or with the consent of both parents.” Elizabeth portrayed the marriage as evidence of the family’s faithfulness to God, their belief in the revealed nature of plural marriage, and their loyalty to and support for JS and the practice of plural marriage.
11

Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, “A Leaf from an Autobiography,” Woman’s Exponent, 15 Dec. 1878, 7:105.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

In contrast, the reminiscences of
Helen Mar Kimball

22 Aug. 1828–15 Nov. 1896. Born in Mendon, Monroe Co., New York. Daughter of Heber C. Kimball and Vilate Murray. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, fall 1833. Baptized into Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Brigham Young, 1836, in the Chagrin...

View Full Bio
, who would be sealed to JS as a plural wife in May 1843, emphasized the sacrifice and secrecy inherent in Sarah Ann’s marriage. Helen recounted how Sarah Ann worried that the marriage would socially isolate her from friends and that it required her to keep information from at least one of her brothers. Helen wrote that Sarah Ann’s marriage was not motivated by any “earthly inducement,” but rather by its spiritual significance. Perhaps reflecting her own experience, Helen noted that Sarah Ann and other women who were sealed to JS did so as a “life sacrifice for the sake of an everlasting glory and exaltation.”
12

Helen Mar Kimball Whitney, “Scenes in Nauvoo after the Martyrdom,” Woman’s Exponent, 1 Mar. 1883, 11:146.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

The original manuscript of the revelation featured here is apparently no longer extant. In 1912, Orson F. Whitney used a copy of the revelation in the possession of his father, Horace Whitney, to make a typescript. Orson Whitney believed that his father had received a copy of the revelation from his own father,
Newel K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

View Full Bio
. Orson Whitney gave the typescript to church president Joseph F. Smith on 1 April 1912, along with a cover letter.
13

Orson F. Whitney, Salt Lake City, UT, to Joseph F. Smith, 1 Apr. 1912, Whitney Family Documents Collection, CHL. In addition to his letter, Whitney gave Smith a lock of hair Whitney’s parents claimed belonged to JS and a piece of wood taken from the well in Carthage where JS was killed. (See Whitney Family Documents Collection, CHL.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Whitney Family Documents Collection, 1843–1912. CHL.

Two manuscript copies of the revelation in unidentified handwriting are also extant. They appear to have been created in the nineteenth century, prior to Orson Whitney producing the typescript copy. However, the provenance of these manuscript copies is unknown. They may have been passed down through the Whitney or Kimball families and were apparently donated to the Historian’s Office in the 1920s. These copies of the revelation include an additional paragraph that is not part of the revelation text; this paragraph appears to be a journal entry from Newel K. Whitney describing the August 1842 rebaptism and blessing of both Whitney and his wife
Elizabeth Ann

26 Dec. 1800–15 Feb. 1882. Born at Derby, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Daughter of Gibson Smith and Polly Bradley. Moved to Ohio, 1819. Married Newel K. Whitney, 20 Oct. 1822, at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Shortly after, joined reformed Baptist (later Disciples...

View Full Bio
—possibly in connection with their daughter’s sealing to JS.
14

See “Revelation to Newel K. Whitney through Joseph the Seer,” 27 July 1842, Revelations Collection, CHL.


Because of its clearer provenance, the typescript made by Orson F. Whitney is the text featured here. Significant differences between the versions are noted.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    At this time, Emma Smith, JS’s first wife, was absent from Nauvoo. She had traveled to Quincy, Illinois, along with Eliza R. Snow and Amanda Barnes Smith, to present Illinois governor Thomas Carlin with a petition from the Female Relief Society of Nauvoo requesting that JS not be extradited to Missouri. (See Nauvoo Female Relief Society, Petition to Thomas Carlin, ca. 22 July 1842, in Derr et al., First Fifty Years of Relief Society, 136–141. For information on JS’s practice of plural marriage, see “Joseph Smith Documents from May through August 1842”.)

    Derr, Jill Mulvay, Carol Cornwall Madsen, Kate Holbrook, and Matthew J. Grow, eds. The First Fifty Years of Relief Society: Key Documents in Latter-day Saint Women’s History. Salt Lake City: Church Historian’s Press, 2016.

  2. [2]

    Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, “A Leaf from an Autobiography,” Woman’s Exponent, 15 Nov. 1878, 7:91.

    Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

  3. [3]

    Helen Mar Kimball Whitney, “Scenes in Nauvoo after the Martyrdom,” Woman’s Exponent, 1 Mar. 1883, 11:146.

    Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

  4. [4]

    The experience of Helen Mar Kimball, who was also sealed to JS, may be instructive. She later recounted that her father, Heber C. Kimball, introduced her to the practice of plural marriage; then JS visited their home and met with Helen and her parents to explain the principle further. (See Helen Mar Kimball Whitney, “Scenes and Incidents in Nauvoo,” Woman’s Exponent, 1 Aug. 1882, 11:39.)

    Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

  5. [5]

    Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, “A Leaf from an Autobiography,” Woman’s Exponent, 15 Dec. 1878, 7:105.

    Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

  6. [6]

    Some men who solemnized early plural marriage sealings later recounted that JS had given them the words to use for the ceremony. Since no other revelations or instructions for conducting plural marriage sealings are extant for the Nauvoo period, it is impossible to know how unique or standardized these sealings were. (See Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy, 1:233.)

    Hales, Brian C. Joseph Smith’s Polygamy. 3 vols. SLC: Greg Kofford Books, 2013.

  7. [7]

    For additional information on the creation of kinship ties through polygamous marriages, see Daynes, “Mormon Polygamy,” 130–146.

    Daynes, Kathryn M. “Mormon Polygamy: Belief and Practice in Nauvoo.” In Kingdom on the Mississippi Revisited: Nauvoo in Mormon History, edited by Roger D. Launius and John E. Hallwas, 130–146. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1996.

  8. [8]

    Some of the women who were sealed to JS indicated that conjugal relations were not part of their relationships with him, while the majority of JS’s plural wives never discussed this subject. A few of his plural wives stated decades later that their marriages did involve such relations with JS. Given nineteenth-century cultural mores and reticence about discussions of sexuality, these statements are often not explicit. Emily Dow Partridge, Lucy Walker, and Malissa Lott each implied in their respective statements that they had intimate relations with JS, with Lott affirming that she had been JS’s wife “in very deed.” (See Emily Dow Partridge Young, Testimony, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, [19 Mar. 1892], pp. 371, 384, Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints v. Church of Christ of Independence, Missouri, et al. [C.C.W.D. Mo. 1894], typescript, United States Testimony, CHL; D. H. Morris, Statement, 12 June 1930, typescript, Vesta P. Crawford, Papers, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City; Andrew Jenson, “Plural Marriage,” Historical Record, May 1887, 6:230; Malissa Lott Willes, Statement, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, 4 Aug. 1893, CHL; and Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy, 2:379–390.)

    Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints v. Church of Christ of Independence, Missouri, et al. (C.C.W.D. Mo. 1894). Typescript. Testimonies and Depositions, 1892. Typescript. CHL.

    Crawford, Vesta P. Papers, 1844–1955. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City.

    The Historical Record, a Monthly Periodical, Devoted Exclusively to Historical, Biographical, Chronological and Statistical Matters. Salt Lake City. 1882–1890.

    Willes, Malissa Lott. Affidavit, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, 4 Aug. 1893. CHL. MS 29468.

    Hales, Brian C. Joseph Smith’s Polygamy. 3 vols. SLC: Greg Kofford Books, 2013.

  9. [9]

    See Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 30 Aug. 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:72.

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

  10. [10]

    Sarah Ann Whitney Kimball, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 19 June 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1:36; Elizabeth Ann Whitney and Sarah Ann Whitney Kimball, Affidavit, Salt Lake Co., Utah Territory, 13 Aug. 1869, in Joseph F. Smith, Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 2:27–28; Letter to Newel K., Elizabeth Ann Smith, and Sarah Ann Whitney, 18 Aug. 1842.

    Smith, Joseph F. Affidavits about Celestial Marriage, 1869–1915. CHL. MS 3423.

  11. [11]

    Elizabeth Ann Smith Whitney, “A Leaf from an Autobiography,” Woman’s Exponent, 15 Dec. 1878, 7:105.

    Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

  12. [12]

    Helen Mar Kimball Whitney, “Scenes in Nauvoo after the Martyrdom,” Woman’s Exponent, 1 Mar. 1883, 11:146.

    Woman’s Exponent. Salt Lake City. 1872–1914.

  13. [13]

    Orson F. Whitney, Salt Lake City, UT, to Joseph F. Smith, 1 Apr. 1912, Whitney Family Documents Collection, CHL. In addition to his letter, Whitney gave Smith a lock of hair Whitney’s parents claimed belonged to JS and a piece of wood taken from the well in Carthage where JS was killed. (See Whitney Family Documents Collection, CHL.)

    Whitney Family Documents Collection, 1843–1912. CHL.

  14. [14]

    See “Revelation to Newel K. Whitney through Joseph the Seer,” 27 July 1842, Revelations Collection, CHL.

Asterisk (*) denotes a "featured" version, which includes an introduction and annotation. Revelation, 27 July 1842, in Unidentified Handwriting–A Revelation, 27 July 1842, in Unidentified Handwriting–B
*Revelation, 27 July 1842

Page [1]

Wednesday 27th
1

TEXT: A comma in this location was canceled by a graphite strikethrough; it is unclear whether this was done by Orson F. Whitney or another individual.


July 1842.
Verily, thus saith the Lord unto my servant
N[ewel] K. Whitney

3/5 Feb. 1795–23 Sept. 1850. Trader, merchant. Born at Marlborough, Windham Co., Vermont. Son of Samuel Whitney and Susanna Kimball. Moved to Fairfield, Herkimer Co., New York, 1803. Merchant at Plattsburg, Clinton Co., New York, 1814. Mercantile clerk for...

View Full Bio
, the thing that my servant Joseph Smith has made known unto you and your family and which you have agreed upon, is right in mine eyes, and shall be crowned upon your heads with honor and immortality and eternal life to all your house both old and young. Because of the lineage of my
Priesthood

Power or authority of God. The priesthood was conferred through the laying on of hands upon adult male members of the church in good standing; no specialized training was required. Priesthood officers held responsibility for administering the sacrament of...

View Glossary
,
2

JS had previously explained the ancient and eternal lineage of the priesthood, tracing priesthood authority back to Adam. (See Revelation, 22–23 Sept. 1832 [D&C 84:6–16]; and Discourse, between ca. 26 June and ca. 4 Aug. 1839–A.)


saith the Lord, it shall be upon you and upon your children after you from generation to generation, by virtue
3

TEXT: Written originally as “virture”. The cancellation to correct the spelling was made in ink; it is unclear whether the correction was made by Whitney after he made the typescript or by another individual.


of the holy promise which I now make unto you, saith the Lord. These are the words which you shall pronounce upon my servant Joseph and your daughter
S. A. [Sarah Ann] Whitney

22 Mar. 1825–4 Sept. 1873. Born in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Daughter of Newel K. Whitney and Elizabeth Ann Smith. Located at Carrollton, Greene Co., Illinois, winter 1838–1839. Moved to Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, winter 1839–1840, and then to Commerce...

View Full Bio
:
4

TEXT: The original period was replaced by a colon. The change was made in ink; it is unclear whether this was done by Whitney or another individual.


They shall take each other by the hand, and you shall say, You both mutually agree (calling them by name) to be each other’s companion so long as you both shall live, preserving yourselves for each other and from all others, and also throughout eternity, reserving only those rights which have been given to my servant Joseph by revelation and commandment and by legal authority in times past. If you both agree to covenant and to <​do​>
5

TEXT: The word “to” was changed to “do”. The change was made in ink; it is unclear whether this was done by Whitney or another individual.


this, I then give you,
S. A. Whitney

22 Mar. 1825–4 Sept. 1873. Born in Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Daughter of Newel K. Whitney and Elizabeth Ann Smith. Located at Carrollton, Greene Co., Illinois, winter 1838–1839. Moved to Quincy, Adams Co., Illinois, winter 1839–1840, and then to Commerce...

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, my daughter, to Joseph Smith, to be his wife, to observe all the rights between you both that belong to that condition.
6

Similar to this clause in the revelation, when JS performed the marriage of Newel Knight and Lydia Goldthwaite Bailey in 1835, he directed the couple to “covenant to be each others companions through life, and discharge the duties of husband & wife in every respect,” without enumerating what those duties included. (JS, Journal, 24 Nov. 1835; see also Flake, “Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites,” 79–84.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Flake, Kathleen. “The Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites, 1831–53.” Journal of Mormon History 41, no. 1 (Jan. 2015): 77–102.

I do it in my own name and in the name of my
wife

26 Dec. 1800–15 Feb. 1882. Born at Derby, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Daughter of Gibson Smith and Polly Bradley. Moved to Ohio, 1819. Married Newel K. Whitney, 20 Oct. 1822, at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio. Shortly after, joined reformed Baptist (later Disciples...

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, your mother,
7

For more on the expansion of women’s ecclesiastical roles, see Flake, “Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites,” 84–90.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Flake, Kathleen. “The Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites, 1831–53.” Journal of Mormon History 41, no. 1 (Jan. 2015): 77–102.

and in the name of my holy progenitors by the right of birth, which is of Priesthood vested [p. [1]]
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Page [1]

Document Information

Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Revelation, 27 July 1842
ID #
12576
Total Pages
2
Print Volume Location
JSP, D10:308–314
Handwriting on This Page
  • Printed text

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    TEXT: A comma in this location was canceled by a graphite strikethrough; it is unclear whether this was done by Orson F. Whitney or another individual.

  2. [2]

    JS had previously explained the ancient and eternal lineage of the priesthood, tracing priesthood authority back to Adam. (See Revelation, 22–23 Sept. 1832 [D&C 84:6–16]; and Discourse, between ca. 26 June and ca. 4 Aug. 1839–A.)

  3. [3]

    TEXT: Written originally as “virture”. The cancellation to correct the spelling was made in ink; it is unclear whether the correction was made by Whitney after he made the typescript or by another individual.

  4. [4]

    TEXT: The original period was replaced by a colon. The change was made in ink; it is unclear whether this was done by Whitney or another individual.

  5. [5]

    TEXT: The word “to” was changed to “do”. The change was made in ink; it is unclear whether this was done by Whitney or another individual.

  6. [6]

    Similar to this clause in the revelation, when JS performed the marriage of Newel Knight and Lydia Goldthwaite Bailey in 1835, he directed the couple to “covenant to be each others companions through life, and discharge the duties of husband & wife in every respect,” without enumerating what those duties included. (JS, Journal, 24 Nov. 1835; see also Flake, “Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites,” 79–84.)

    Flake, Kathleen. “The Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites, 1831–53.” Journal of Mormon History 41, no. 1 (Jan. 2015): 77–102.

  7. [7]

    For more on the expansion of women’s ecclesiastical roles, see Flake, “Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites,” 84–90.

    Flake, Kathleen. “The Development of Early Latter-day Saint Marriage Rites, 1831–53.” Journal of Mormon History 41, no. 1 (Jan. 2015): 77–102.

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