Footnotes
In February 1873, Lydia Goldthwaite Knight McClellan authored a preface to Knight’s history and explained that the creation of his history was his “dying request.” She stated to her readers that she had “done the best I could” in compiling the work although “considerable” portions of Knight’s journal were “kept on detached pieces of paper, and no doubt many interesting & valuable portions are lost.” (“Lydia Knight’s Statement,” 1, in Knight, History.)
Knight, Newel. History. Private possession. Copy in CHL. MS 19156.
Compare “History of Joseph Smith,” published serially in the Times and Seasons beginning 15 March 1842.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
At least three pages separated from what is apparently the earliest of these three manuscripts are housed in Lydia Goldthwaite Knight, Genealogical Records and Correspondence, 1833–1883, BYU.
Knight, Lydia Goldthwaite. Genealogical Records and Correspondence, 1833–1883. BYU.
“Newel Knight’s Journal,” 46–104, in Scraps of Biography. Tenth Book of the Faith-Promoting Series (Salt Lake City: Juvenile Instructor Office, 1883).
“Newel Knight’s Journal.” In Scraps of Biography, Faith-Promoting Series 10, pp. 52–128. Salt Lake City: Juvenile Instructor Office, 1883.
Historian’s Office, Journal, 9 Apr. 1872.
Historian’s Office. Journal, 1844–1997. CHL. CR 100 1.
Footnotes
JS History, vol. A-1, 44; see also Historical Introduction to Revelation, July 1830–A [D&C 24].
JS History, vol. A-1, 51; see also Historical Introduction to Revelation, ca. Aug. 1830 [D&C 27].
Knight, History, 127–128.
Knight, Newel. History. Private possession. Copy in CHL. MS 19156.
Knight, Autobiography and Journal, 21.
Knight, Newel. Autobiography and Journal, ca. 1846. CHL. MS 767.
See Acts 13:10.
Of this plan to keep the forthcoming meeting secret, JS’s history records, “We had called upon our Heavenly Father in mighty prayer, that he would grant us an opportunity of meeting with them; that he would blind the eyes of our enemies, so that they would not know us, and that we might on this occasion return unmolested.— Our prayers were not in vain, for, when within a little distance of Mr Knights [Joseph Knight Sr.’s] place, we encountered a large company at work upon the public road, among whom were several of our most bitter enemies. They looked earnestly at us, but not knowing us, we passed on with out interruption.” (JS History, vol. A-1, 53.)
See Genesis 18:20–33; and Book of Mormon, 1830 ed., 442 [Helaman 13:12–13].