Footnotes
Revelation, 8 July 1838–A [D&C 118:4].
John Taylor, “Reminiscences,” Juvenile Instructor, 30 Oct. 1875, 256.
Noble, Joseph B. “Early Scenes in Church History.” Juvenile Instructor, 15 May 1880, 112.
John Taylor, Letter to the Editor, Millennial Star, May 1841, 2:13; John Taylor, Germantown, IN, to Leonora Cannon Taylor, Commerce, IL, 19 Jan. 1839, John Taylor, Collection, CHL; see also Esplin, “Sickness and Faith, Nauvoo Letters,” 425–434.
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
Esplin, Ronald K. “Sickness and Faith, Nauvoo Letters.” BYU Studies 15, no. 4 (Summer 1975): 425–434.
John Taylor, Letter to the Editor, Millennial Star, May 1841, 2:13–14; John Taylor, Liverpool, England, to Leonora Cannon Taylor, Commerce, IL, 30 Jan. 1840, John Taylor, Collection, CHL.
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
Even the fastest Atlantic mail steamers took approximately two weeks, and the additional distance from New York to Nauvoo added another several weeks. (See Shulman, Coal and Empire, 17–21.)
Shulman, Peter A. Coal and Empire: The Birth of Energy Security in Industrial America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015.
JS had written to the Twelve in England: “Having several communications laying before me, from my Brethren the ‘Twelve’ some of which have ere this merited a reply, but from the multiplicity of business which necessarily engages my attention I have delayed communicating to them, to the present time.” (Letter to Quorum of the Twelve, 15 Dec. 1840.)
For letters from other members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, see, for example, Letter from Brigham Young, 29 Apr. 1840; Letter from Brigham Young, 7 May 1840; Letter from Heber C. Kimball and Others, 25 May 1840; Letter from Heber C. Kimball, 9 July 1840; and Letter from Brigham Young and Willard Richards, 5 Sept. 1840.
The Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star, the church’s periodical in England, was founded in May 1840, with Parley P. Pratt as editor. The paper facilitated a great deal of the communication between church leaders in England and the church presidency in Nauvoo. (“Prospectus,” Millennial Star, May 1840, 1:1.)
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
This counsel most likely referred to the excerpt from JS’s 15 December 1840 letter to the Council of the Twelve that appeared in the January 1841 Times and Seasons. The printed excerpt included the bulk of the epistle while omitting the last section on baptism for the dead and particular instructions for the apostles serving in England. (“Extract from an Epistle to the Elders in England,” Times and Seasons, 1 Jan. 1841, 2:258–261.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
The church’s proselytizing efforts in Europe began in earnest in Preston, England, with the apostles’ first mission to the British Isles in July 1837. (Kimball, Journal, 22 July 1837.)
Kimball, Heber C. Journal, June 1837–Feb. 1838; Feb.–Mar. 1840; May 1846–Feb. 1847. Heber C. Kimball, Papers, 1837–1866. CHL. MS 627, box 3, fd. 2.
See 2 Samuel 5:24.
See Ezekiel 37:1–13.
Taylor’s fever exhausted his strength so severely that he tumbled out of the carriage onto the road twice. The second fall apparently caused Taylor to lose consciousness, as it was only “with difficulty that [he] was restored to animation.” Fever and fatigue delayed Taylor’s travels and forced him to rest in Indiana under the care of Jacob Waltz and his family, who ran the Waltz Inn in Germantown. (John Taylor, Letter to the Editor, Millennial Star, May 1841, 2:13–14; Woodruff, Journal, 1–2 Sept. 1839; Young, History of Wayne County, Indiana, 245; see also Esplin, “Sickness and Faith, Nauvoo Letters,” 425–434.)
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Young, Andrew W. History of Wayne County, Indiana, from Its First Settlement to the Present Time; with Numerous Biographical and Family Sketches. Cincinnati: Robert Clark & Co., 1872.
Esplin, Ronald K. “Sickness and Faith, Nauvoo Letters.” BYU Studies 15, no. 4 (Summer 1975): 425–434.
During his stay in Kirtland between 4 and 22 November 1839, Taylor and other members of the Quorum of the Twelve, including Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, and George A. Smith, visited the House of the Lord, participated in sacred rituals, and met regularly. On 9 November, Taylor was ceremonially washed in Reuben McBride’s home and anointed in the House of the Lord in preparation for his mission to the British Isles. (Turley, Reminiscences and Journal, 4–22 Nov. 1839.)
Turley, Theodore. Reminiscences and Journal, Sept. 1839–July 1840. Photocopy. CHL. MS 1950.
Taylor, Woodruff, and Turley arrived in Liverpool on 11 January 1840 and traveled to Preston on 13 January. (Fielding, Journal, 1838–1840, 104; John Taylor, Liverpool, England, to Leonora Cannon Taylor, Commerce, IL, 30 Jan. 1840, John Taylor, Collection, CHL.)
Fielding, Joseph. Journals, 1837–1859. CHL. MS 1567.
Joseph Fielding was serving as the president of the British mission with Willard Richards and William Clayton serving as his counselors. (Thompson, Journal of Heber C. Kimball, 37–38; Fielding, Journal, 1837–1838, 60.)
Thompson, Robert B. Journal of Heber C. Kimball an Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Nauvoo, IL: Robinson and Smith, 1840.
Fielding, Joseph. Journals, 1837–1859. CHL. MS 1567.
This account refers to Taylor’s experience in an Aitkenite chapel. The Aitkenites were followers of Reverend Robert Aitken, who broke with the Anglican Church and founded the “Christian Society” in 1835 in Liverpool. Aitken led his brand of Wesleyan congregations together with Reverend Timothy Matthews, the brother-in-law of Joseph Fielding, before eventually returning to Anglicanism. Matthews was familiar with Latter-day Saint teachings since this was not the first encounter between missionaries and the Aitkenites. Many of the early English converts from Heber C. Kimball’s mission in the late 1830s were Aitkenites. During Taylor’s 1841 encounters with them, Aitken’s followers proved to be receptive to the apostles’ message, even if their leaders vehemently opposed the missionaries. In fact, some of the bad reports mentioned by Taylor were from Matthews, who attempted to dissuade his congregation from listening to the missionaries. On this particular day, however, Matthews was not present, and another preacher delivered the sermon. The apostles’ preaching on the topics of authority and baptism convinced many Aitkenites that the apostles offered them something they were missing from Aitken and Matthews. (Fielding, Journal, 1838–1840, 108–109; Underwood, Millenarian World of Early Mormonism, 131–133; Oliver, Prophets and Millennialists, 222; John Taylor, Liverpool, England, to Leonora Cannon Taylor, Commerce, IL, 30 Jan. 1840, John Taylor, Collection, CHL; “Mission to England,” Millennial Star, Apr. 1841, 1:292–294.)
Fielding, Joseph. Journals, 1837–1859. CHL. MS 1567.
Underwood, Grant. The Millenarian World of Early Mormonism. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1993.
Oliver, William Hosking. Prophets and Millennialists: The Uses of Biblical Prophecy in England from the 1790s to the 1840s. [Oxford]: Oxford University Press, 1978.
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
This Aitkenite leader was William C. Mitchell, who was baptized a Latter-day Saint on 4 February 1840. (Fielding, Journal, 1838–1840, 108–109, 113.)
Fielding, Joseph. Journals, 1837–1859. CHL. MS 1567.
Included in this group were Mitchell and his wife, Eliza. Joseph Fielding’s record of the interaction with these ten individuals also included a miraculous healing. (Fielding, Journal, 1838–1840, 113.)
Fielding, Joseph. Journals, 1837–1859. CHL. MS 1567.
For his series of lectures, Taylor booked the Music Hall on Bold Street, which reportedly held over two thousand people. He had initially rented a smaller room in Renshaw Street, which only held three to four hundred. (George J. Adams, Liverpool, England, 14 Dec. 1841, Letter to the Editor, Millennial Star, Jan. 1842, 2:141; Fielding, Journal, 1840–1841, 1–2, 87.)
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
Fielding, Joseph. Journals, 1837–1859. CHL. MS 1567.
One of these two converts was Thomas Tait, who is considered the first convert to the church in Ireland. (John Taylor, Letter to the Editor, Millennial Star, May 1841, 2:15.)
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
Theodore Curtis arrived in Ireland in September 1840 and continued preaching the gospel and attending to a small group of converts in Hillsborough. (Utah Pioneers, 26.)
The Utah Pioneers. Celebration of the Entrance of the Pioneers into Great Salt Lake Valley. Thirty-Third Anniversary, July 24, 1880. Salt Lake City: Deseret News Printing, 1880.
In spring 1840, Reuben Hedlock joined Orson Pratt, Alexander Wright, and Samuel Mulliner as the first missionaries in Scotland. Hedlock had spent the better part of nine months proselytizing and organizing the church in Glasgow, leaving on 9 March 1841. (“Sketch of the Travels and Ministry of Elder R. Hedlock,” Millennial Star, Oct. 1841, 2:92–93.)
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.
The man Taylor encountered most likely printed James Mulholland’s poem “An Address to Americans” in a Belfast newspaper. Mulholland was a native of Ireland who immigrated to Canada and then the United States. This poem, which dealt with the persecutions the Latter-day Saints suffered in Missouri in the 1830s, was also published in Nauvoo in 1841 by Robert B. Thompson, one of the editors of the Times and Seasons. Mulholland died in November 1839. (Mulholland, Address to Americans, 2; Obituary for James Mulholland, Times and Seasons, Dec 1839, 1:32.)
Mulholland, James. An Address to Americans: A Poem in Blank Verse. Nauvoo, IL: E. Robinson, 1841.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Taylor rented the Wellington Room in Douglas, Isle of Man, for his lecture series in September 1840. (John Taylor, Liverpool, England, 27 Feb. 1841, Letter to the Editor, Millennial Star, Mar. 1841, 1:276.)
Latter-day Saints’ Millennial Star. Manchester, England, 1840–1842; Liverpool, 1842–1932; London, 1932–1970.