Footnotes
McIntire, Autobiography, 62.
McIntire, William Patterson. Autobiography. In William Patterson McIntire, Daybook, 1840–1856, pp. 57–67. BYU.
Footnotes
JS, Journal, 18 Nov. 1835. The format described by McIntire—three speakers addressing various topics—fits the lyceum model. Women were typically included in lyceum meetings, but it is unclear if women participated in the Nauvoo lyceum at this time. (Ray, Lyceum and Public Culture in the Nineteenth-Century United States, 22–26, 36; Wright, Cosmopolitan Lyceum, chap. 2.)
Ray, Angela G. The Lyceum and Public Culture in the Nineteenth-Century United States. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2005.
Wright, Tom F. The Cosmopolitan Lyceum: Lecture Culture and the Globe in Nineteenth-Century America. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2013.
Both men arrived in the area only a few months before January 1841. McIntire moved to Nauvoo at the end of October 1840, and Clayton at the end of November. (McIntire, Autobiography, [62]; Clayton, Diary, 24 Nov. 1840.)
McIntire, William Patterson, Daybook and Autobiography, 1840. BYU.
Clayton, William. Diary, Vol. 1, 1840–1842. BYU.
Probably “Doctor” Josiah Ells, a former Methodist preacher. (Benjamin Winchester, Payson, IL, 18 June 1839, Letter to the Editor, Times and Seasons, Nov. 1839, 1:11; Notice, Times and Seasons, 1 Dec. 1844, 5:734.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
See Genesis 2:7.