Footnotes
This serialized history drew on the journals herein beginning with the 4 July 1855 issue of the Deseret News and with the 3 January 1857 issue of the LDS Millennial Star.
The labels on the spines of the four volumes read respectively as follows: “Joseph Smith’s Journal—1842–3 by Willard Richards” (book 1); “Joseph Smith’s Journal by W. Richards 1843” (book 2); “Joseph Smith’s Journal by W. Richards 1843–4” (book 3); and “W. Richards’ Journal 1844 Vol. 4” (book 4). Richards kept JS’s journal in the front of book 4, and after JS’s death Richards kept his own journal in the back of the volume.
“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]; “Contents of the Historian and Recorder’s Office G. S. L. City July 1858,” 2; “Index of Records and Journals in the Historian’s Office 1878,” [11]–[12], Historian’s Office, Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904, CHL; Johnson, Register of the Joseph Smith Collection, 7.
Historian’s Office. Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904. CHL. CR 100 130.
Johnson, Jeffery O. Register of the Joseph Smith Collection in the Church Archives, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Salt Lake City: Historical Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1973.
Footnotes
Historical Introduction to JS, Journal, Dec. 1841–Dec. 1842.
Source Note to JS, Journal, 1835–1836; Source Note to JS, Journal, Mar.–Sept. 1838.
See Appendix 3.
TEXT: Transliteration from Taylor shorthand: “nn-t-d”.
“Baurak Ale” was a substitute name for JS. (Doctrine and Covenants, 1844 ed., 387–388, 391, 392; Orson Pratt, in Journal of Discourses, 16 Aug. 1873, 16:156; see also “Substitute Words in the 1835 and 1844 Editions of the Doctrine and Covenants.”)
Journal of Discourses. 26 vols. Liverpool: F. D. Richards, 1855–1886.
See Woodruff, Historian’s Private Journal, 26 Feb. 1867.
Woodruff, Wilford. Historian’s Private Journal, 1858–1878. CHL. MS 8563.
Emma Smith. From this point on, women regularly attended meetings of this council that received ordinances that would later be performed in the Nauvoo temple.
Three weeks earlier, participants at an anti-Mormon meeting in Carthage directed the meeting’s president to ask the governor of Missouri to initiate another order for JS’s arrest. At the time, JS was also concerned that Sidney Rigdon had been collaborating with people intent on taking JS to Missouri. (JS, Journal, 13 and 27 Aug. 1843; 15 Sept. 1843.)