Footnotes
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book, 24 June 1843.
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book. / “Record of Na[u]voo Lodge Under Dispensation,” 1842–1846. CHL. MS 3436
Shortly after making the sale, Mulch threatened legal action and the church returned the hall (retaining the documents), with the proviso that if Mulch ever decided to sell the property the church would have rights of first refusal. The church then repurchased the hall permanently in 1967. (“Settle Suit on Mormon Nauvoo Land,” Des Moines [IA] Register, 17 June 1955, 8; Allen, “Nauvoo’s Masonic Hall,” 45–46, 48–49; Bashore and Barrett, “To Unlock the Secrets of Nauvoo’s Masonic Hall,” 57–58.)
Des Moines Register. Des Moines, IA. 1860–.
Allen, James B. “Nauvoo’s Masonic Hall. The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 10 (1990): 39–49.
Bashore, Melvin L., and Anne Barrett. “To Unlock the Secrets of Nauvoo’s Masonic Hall.” In Historic Sites Division Research Reports, CHL.
Footnotes
A “dispensation” is a written document authorizing the creation of a lodge. Lodges referred to as “under dispensation” are “inchoate” during a probationary period wherein they prove their ability to perform their work in an acceptable manner, after which they become duly constituted.
Dispensation, 15 Oct. 1841, Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841–1842, CHL.
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841–1842. CHL. MS 9115.
Dispensation, 15 Oct. 1841, Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841–1842, CHL; see also Hogan, “Freemasons and the Mormons at Nauvoo,” 68–69.
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841–1842. CHL. MS 9115.
Hogan, Mervin B. “Freemasons and the Mormons at Nauvoo.” Philalethes 22, no. 4 (Aug. 1969): 68–69.
JS, Journal, 15 Mar. 1842; Aut horization from Abraham Jonas, 15 Mar. 1842.
Woodruff, Journal, 15 Mar. 1842.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
“An Observer” from Adams County, Illinois, wrote on 22 March 1842 to the Columbus (Illinois) Advocate of having witnessed the event. The author wrote that attendance estimates ranged from five to ten thousand and that “never in my life did I witness a better dressed or a more orderly and well behaved assemblage.” (“Nauvoo and the Mormons,” Times and Seasons, 1 Apr. 1842, 3:750.)
Minutes, 30 Dec. 1841, Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841–1842, CHL.
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841–1842. CHL. MS 9115.
Hogan, Vital Statistics of Nauvoo Lodge, 4, 11.
Hogan, Mervin B. Vital Statistics of Nauvoo Lodge. Salt Lake City: By the author, 1976.
In Freemasonry, 24 June is celebrated as St. John’s Day, or the feast of John the Baptist. The Nauvoo Lodge U.D. met for the occasion, but lodge minutes do not record Jonas’s presence. (Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book, 24 June 1842, 91–93; “Anniversary of St. John,” Wasp, 17 June 1842, [3].)
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book. / “Record of Na[u]voo Lodge Under Dispensation,” 1842–1846. CHL. MS 3436
The Wasp. Nauvoo, IL. Apr. 1842–Apr. 1843.
Lodge minutes for 24 June 1842 identify visitors from Columbus Lodge 6, Quincy’s Bodley Lodge, and other lodges in Illinois, Iowa Territory, Ohio, New York, and elsewhere. (Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book, 24 June 1842, 92.)
Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book. / “Record of Na[u]voo Lodge Under Dispensation,” 1842–1846. CHL. MS 3436