Footnotes
Andrus et al., “Register of the Newel Kimball Whitney Papers, 1825–1906,” 5–6.
Andrus, Hyrum L., Chris Fuller, and Elizabeth E. McKenzie. “Register of the Newel Kimball Whitney Papers, 1825–1906,” Sept. 1998. BYU.
Footnotes
Leonard, Nauvoo, 57–59.
Leonard, Glen M. Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, a People of Promise. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 2002.
Nauvoo High Council Minutes, 21 Oct. 1839, 26.
Nauvoo High Council Minutes, 1839–1845. CHL. LR 3102 22.
More examples of extant bonds, promissory notes, and town lot orders associated with Nauvoo land purchases during this period are available on this website.
Platt, Nauvoo, 19. A later compiler of land transactions from records in the Nauvoo Land and Records office identified John J. Miller as Jane’s spouse. The George Miller listed here is possibly the same George Miller who became a bishop in Nauvoo in January 1841, but he was married to Mary C. Fry, and Jane does not appear to be a sibling. A John Miller had purchased lot 3 in block 27 on 27 February 1840 for $350. (Miller, “Study of Property Ownership: Nauvoo; Index,” 71; Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841 [D&C 124:20–21]; Mills, “De Tal Palo Tal Astilla,” 88; JS, Sidney Rigdon, and Hyrum Smith to John Miller, Bond, 27 Feb. 1840, Newel K. Whitney, Papers, BYU.)
Platt, Lyman De. Nauvoo: Early Mormon Records Series, 1839–1846. Vol. 1. Highland, UT, 1980.
Miller, Rowena J. “Study of Property Ownership: Nauvoo; Index, 1839–1850,” ca. 1965. In Nauvoo Restoration, Inc., Corporate Files, 1839–1992. CHL.
Mills, H. W. “De Tal Palo Tal Astilla.” Annual Publications Historical Society of Southern California 10 (1917): 86–174.
“Abstracts Containing a Description of All City Lots,” [1842], 2, Nauvoo, IL, Records, CHL.
Nauvoo, IL. Records, 1841–1845. CHL. MS 16800.
Nauvoo Relief Society Minute Book, 28 Apr. 1842, 41, in Derr et al., First Fifty Years of Relief Society, 61; see also Ward, “Female Relief Society of Nauvoo,” 159.
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.
Ward, Maurine Carr. “‘This Institution Is a Good One’: The Female Relief Society of Nauvoo, 17 March 1842 to 16 March 1844.” Mormon Historical Studies 3 (Fall 2002): 87–203.
Nauvoo, IL, Marriage Record, [28].
Nauvoo, IL, Recorder. Marriage Record, 1842–1845. CHL.
Salmon, Women and the Law of Property in Early America, xv. Beginning around 1839, laws were passed in several states providing married women with more independence in terms of property, but it does not appear such a law was on the Illinois statutes at this time. (Shammas, “Re-Assessing the Married Women’s Property Acts,” 9–11; see also An Act to Protect Married Women in Their Separate Property [24 Apr. 1861], Public Laws of the State of Illinois, 143.)
Salmon, Marylynn. Women and the Law of Property in Early America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1986.
Shammas, Carole. “Re-Assessing the Married Women’s Property Acts.” Journal of Women’s History 6, no. 1 (Spring 1994): 9–30.
Public Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twenty-Second General Assembly, Convened January 7, 1861. Springfield, IL: Bailhache and Baker, 1861.
For example, 1840 land transaction documents exist for Elizabeth Comins (or Cummins) Tyler, Hesterann Lyons, Caroline Murdock, Cyntha Baggs, Philinda C. Eldredge Merrick, and Maria Clark. Little information exists about some of these individuals, but it appears that at least Tyler, Baggs, and Merrick were widows. (Tyler, Autobiography, 5; Ward, “Female Relief Society of Nauvoo,” 98; Philindia Myrick, Affidavit, 9 Jan. 1840, Record Group 233, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives, National Archives, Washington DC.)
Tyler, Ruth Welton. Autobiography, no date. Biographical Sketches and Reminiscences of Daniel and Ruth Tyler. CHL.
Ward, Maurine Carr. “‘This Institution Is a Good One’: The Female Relief Society of Nauvoo, 17 March 1842 to 16 March 1844.” Mormon Historical Studies 3 (Fall 2002): 87–203.
Record Group 233, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives / Petitions and Memorials, Resolutions of State Legislatures, and Related Documents Which Were Referred to the Committee on Judiciary during the 27th Congress. Committee on the Judiciary, Petitions and Memorials, 1813–1968. Record Group 233, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives, 1789–2015. National Archives, Washington DC. The LDS records cited herein are housed in National Archives boxes 40 and 41 of Library of Congress boxes 139–144 in HR27A-G10.1.
Letter from Emma Smith, 6 Dec. 1839; “Death of Col. Robert B. Thompson,” Times and Seasons, 1 Sept. 1841, 2:519–520.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Mulholland was appointed a clerk over land contracts at the 21 October 1839 meeting of the Nauvoo high council. He died in November 1839. (Nauvoo High Council Minutes, 21 Oct. 1839, 25; “Obituary,” Times and Seasons, Dec. 1839, 1:32.)
Nauvoo High Council Minutes, 1839–1845. CHL. LR 3102 22.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Docket in the handwriting of Robert B. Thompson.