Footnotes
Due to continued ill health, Rigdon remained in Philadelphia after JS left the city. Rigdon left Philadelphia for New Jersey on 5 March 1840 and wrote to JS on 3 April that he intended to return to Philadelphia. (Historian’s Office, JS History, Draft Notes, 14 Jan. 1840, 2; Letters from Elias Higbee, 9 and 24 Mar. 1840; Letter from Sidney Rigdon, 3 Apr. 1840.)
The 17 April 1840 issue of the Peoria Register and North-Western Gazetteer reported that “about 300 houses have been put up in Nauvoo since last October,” and “the increase of population by immigration is very great. Our informant states that several families arrive every day.” (“Latest from the Mormons,” Peoria [IL] Register and North-Western Gazetteer, 17 Apr. 1840, [2].)
Peoria Register and North-Western Gazetteer. Peoria, IL. 1837–1843.
Hotchkiss, Tuttle, and Gillet owned lands near Springfield in Sangamon and Logan counties. Gillet and some of his extended family resided at Lake Fork, Logan County, northeast of Springfield. (Horace Hotchkiss, New York, to John Gillet, 7 Nov. 1846; John Gillet, Nauvoo, IL, to Smith Tuttle, Fair Haven, CT, 15 July 1844; John Gillet to Smith Tuttle, 1 Aug. 1841, Gillett Family Papers, 1736–1904, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.)
Gillett Family Papers, 1736–1904. Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.