Footnotes
Letter to William W. Phelps and Others, 25 July 1836; Letter to John Thornton and Others, 25 July 1836; Letter from the Editor, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Sept. 1836, 2:372–375; Letter from the Editor, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Oct. 1836, 3:386–393. Hyrum Smith departed for Kirtland shortly after 19 August; the other three men left Salem by 26 August. This was JS’s second trip to Salem. He had first visited the city as a young boy with his uncle Jesse Smith while recovering from leg surgery to remove diseased bone. (Letter to Emma Smith, 19 Aug. 1836; Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1844–1845, bk. 3, [2].)
Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.
Letter from the Editor, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Oct. 1836, 3:388, 391; “Salem,” Christian Register and Boston Observer, 8 Aug. 1836, [3]; Saltonstall, Address to the City Council.
Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.
Christian Register and Boston Observer. Boston. 1835–1843.
Saltonstall, Leverett. Address to the City Council, at the Organization of the City Government in Salem, May 9, 1836. Salem, MA: Palfray and Chapman, 1836.
Most of Salem’s residents were involved in seafaring and commercial trade. In his May 1836 address at the city’s incorporation, Mayor Leverett Saltonstall stated, “In maritime enterprize, Salem is still unsurpassed. . . . We now hold, as we have always held, a respectable rank among the principal commercial places in the country.” The East India Marine Society Museum (now the Peabody Essex Museum) in Salem was founded by local mariners involved in international trade in Asia and the Pacific Rim. (Saltonstall, Address to the City Council, 22; Whitehill, East India Marine Society and the Peabody Museum of Salem, 3–15.)
Saltonstall, Leverett. Address to the City Council, at the Organization of the City Government in Salem, May 9, 1836. Salem, MA: Palfray and Chapman, 1836.
Whitehill, Walter Muir. The East India Marine Society and the Peabody Museum of Salem. Salem, MA: Peabody Museum, 1949.
Letter from the Editor, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Oct. 1836, 3:386–388; JS History, vol. B-1, 749. An Essex Register article reported that the four men rented a house on Union Street and may have planned to return the next year. In the nineteenth century some properties on Union Street in Salem were resident houses and others were rooming houses. (News Item, Essex Register [Salem, MA], 25 Aug 1836, [2]; Proper, “Joseph Smith and Salem,” 97n27.)
Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.
Essex Register. Salem, Massachusetts. 1807–1840.
Proper, David B. “Joseph Smith and Salem.” Essex Institute Historical Collections 100 (Apr. 1964): 88–98.
Letter to Emma Smith, 19 Aug. 1836; Letter from the Editor, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Sept. 1836, 2:372–375; Letter from the Editor, LDS Messenger and Advocate, Oct. 1836, 3:386–393. Cowdery’s “letters from the editor” were used as a source for JS’s history. (JS History, vol. B-1, 749.)
Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. Kirtland, OH. Oct. 1834–Sept. 1837.
Minutes, 2 Apr. 1836. Some individuals unwilling to donate funds were brought before the Kirtland high council. (Minutes, 16 June 1836.)
As a young man in Kirtland in 1837, Brewster claimed to have visions of ancient scriptures, and he and his small group of followers were disfellowshipped. He published his extra-scriptural Book of Esdras in 1842, which was the subject of a notice written by editor John Taylor in the December 1842 issue of the Times and Seasons. Responding to Taylor’s description of treasure hunting as a “ridiculous and pernicious” practice, Brewster wrote: “I would ask him who was the author of this practice among the Mormons? If he has a good memory, he will remember the house that was rented in the city of Boston, with the expectation of finding a large sum of money buried in or near the cellar.” (Minute Book 1, 20 Nov. 1837; “Notice,” Times and Seasons, 1 Dec. 1842, 4:32; Brewster, Very Important! To the Mormon Money Diggers, 4; see also Vogel, “James Colin Brewster,” 120–139.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Brewster, James Colin. Very Important! To the Mormon Money Diggers. Springfield, IL: No publisher, 1843.
Vogel, Dan. “James Colin Brewster: The Boy Prophet Who Challenged Mormon Authority.” In Differing Visions: Dissenters in Mormon History, edited by Roger D. Launius and Linda Thatcher, 120–139. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994.
Robinson wrote that he learned of JS’s 6 August 1836 revelation many years after JS’s trip to New England. It is not clear when Robinson first read the revelation, but he stated in 1889 that he had first heard of it only “recently,” when he saw it printed in an 1853 issue of the Millennial Star. (Ebenezer Robinson, “Items of Personal History of the Editor,” Return, July 1889, 104–108.)
The Return. Davis City, IA, 1889–1891; Richmond, MO, 1892–1893; Davis City, 1895–1896; Denver, 1898; Independence, MO, 1899–1900.
Robinson remained a Latter-day Saint during JS’s life, though he seems to have become disillusioned by JS’s financial dealings as well as his teachings about plural marriage in the 1840s. After JS’s death, Robinson first followed Sidney Rigdon, serving as his counselor for a time, and was then baptized into the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1863. In 1888, he was affiliated with David Whitmer’s Church of Christ and served as the editor of the Return until his death in 1891. (Ebenezer Robinson, “Items of Personal History of the Editor,” Return, July 1889, 105–108; Nov. 1889, 173–174; Biographical and Historical Record of Ringgold and Decatur Counties, Iowa, 543–544.)
The Return. Davis City, IA, 1889–1891; Richmond, MO, 1892–1893; Davis City, 1895–1896; Denver, 1898; Independence, MO, 1899–1900.
Biographical and Historical Record of Ringgold and Decatur Counties, Iowa. . . . Chicago: Lewis, 1887.
Ebenezer Robinson, “Items of Personal History of the Editor,” Return, July 1889, 105–106.
The Return. Davis City, IA, 1889–1891; Richmond, MO, 1892–1893; Davis City, 1895–1896; Denver, 1898; Independence, MO, 1899–1900.
Ebenezer Robinson, “Items of Personal History of the Editor,” Return, July 1889, 105–106; Letter to Emma Smith, 19 Aug. 1836.
The Return. Davis City, IA, 1889–1891; Richmond, MO, 1892–1893; Davis City, 1895–1896; Denver, 1898; Independence, MO, 1899–1900.
“Mormonism,” Essex Register (Salem, MA), 22 Aug. 1836, [3]; “Mormonism,” Boston Daily Times, 24 Aug. 1836, [2]; “Mormonism—Again,” Boston Daily Times, 26 Aug. 1836, [2].
Essex Register. Salem, Massachusetts. 1807–1840.
Boston Daily Times. Boston. 1836–1837.
Snow, Journal, 1841–1847, 3–4, 11.
Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.
Snow, Journal, 1841–1847, 13–22. Snow spent most of his time in Salem, but he also traveled to other areas in Massachusetts, including Boston, Lynn, Marblehead, Northbridge, and Lowell, as well as Peterboro, New Hampshire, and Woonsocket, Rhode Island.
Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.
Snow, Journal, 1841–1847, 21, 27; “The Mormons in Salem,” Salem (MA) Register, 2 June 1842, [2]. Snow recorded that there were fifty-three members at the organization of the Salem branch on 5 March 1842. By June 1842 the branch had grown to ninety members.
Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.
Salem Register. Salem, MA. 1841–1903.
Snow, Journal, 1841–1847, 44. For more detail on Snow’s mission in Salem, see Godfrey, “More Treasures Than One,” 196–204.
Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.
Godfrey, Kenneth W. “More Treasures Than One: Section 111.” In Hearken, O Ye People: Discourses on the Doctrine and Covenants. Sperry Symposium 1984, 191–204. Sandy, UT: Randall Book, 1984.
Snow, Journal, 1841–1847, 3–4. The copy found in the Book of the Law of the Lord omits two clauses in the last few lines of the revelation, as described in footnotes below. One of these omissions can be explained as a scribal error, due to the repetitive nature of the first words of two adjacent sentences, but the omissions could also reflect a different version of the revelation. However, unlike Erastus Snow’s copy, the inscription in the Book of the Law of the Lord has the same first line as the Phelps copy, and it includes grammatical errors found in Phelps’s copy but not in Snow’s. (Book of the Law of the Lord, 22.)
Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.
JS History, vol. B-1, 750; Searle, “Authorship of the History of Joseph Smith,” 110–112.
Searle, Howard C. “Authorship of the History of Joseph Smith: A Review Essay.” BYU Studies 21 (Winter 1981): 101–122.
“History of Joseph Smith,” Deseret News, 25 Dec. 1852, [1]; “History of Joseph Smith,” LDS Millennial Star, 17 Dec. 1853, 15:51.
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
See Isaiah 3:17. A blessing given to Hyrum Smith by JS on 18 Dec. 1833 stated, “He shall be hid by the hand of the Lord that none of his secret parts shall be discovered unto his hu[r]t.” (JS, Journal, 18 Dec. 1833.)
The clause “Concern not yourselves about your debts, for I will give you power to pay them” is omitted in the copy found in the Book of the Law of the Lord. (Book of the Law of the Lord, 22.)
TEXT: Ellipses in original.