Footnotes
Foote, Autobiography, 24 Sept. 1838, 29.
Foote, Warren. Autobiography, not before 1903. Warren Foote, Papers, 1837–1941. CHL. MS 1123, fd. 1.
Nothing further is known of Sarah Jackson, nor has her husband been identified.
See Hamer, Northeast of Eden, 59, 81.
Hamer, John. Northeast of Eden: A Historical Atlas of Missouri’s Mormon County. [Mirabile, MO]: Far West Cultural Center, 2004.
See Historian’s Office, Brigham Young History Drafts, 17; and JS, Journal, Mar.–Sept. 1838, p. 16; see also Riggs and Thompson, “Notorious Case of Aaron Lyon,” 108–109.
Historian’s Office. Brigham Young History Drafts, 1856–1858. CHL. CR 100 475, box 1, fd. 5.
Riggs, Michael S., and John E. Thompson. “Joseph Smith, Jr., and ‘the Notorious Case of Aaron Lyon’: Evidence of Earlier Doctrinal Development of Salvation for the Dead and a Trigger for the Practice of Polyandry?” John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 26 (2006): 101–119.
The minutes of this meeting state that the high council was “adjourned till Saturday the 28th inst.” (Minutes, 21 Apr. 1838.)
Several high council meetings had been held in Far West since JS’s arrival. JS attended and presided over most but not all of these councils. For example, JS did not attend the 17 March meeting, at which Thomas B. Marsh presided. Also, on 13 April 1838, JS testified in the trial of Lyman Johnson, but Marsh presided over the meeting. (Minute Book 2, 17 Mar. 1838; Minutes, 13 Apr. 1838.)
The recording of document transcripts continued up through the entry for 26 April 1838, which consisted of a copy of JS’s revelation on that date. The following entry, for 27 April, took the form of an ordinary journal entry. The entry for 28 April recounted the Lyon trial held that day. Daily entries for the next two weeks and sporadic entries over the next four months generally took the form of a journal. (JS, Journal, Mar.–Sept. 1838.)
Because Ebenezer Robinson likely wrote his minutes before George W. Robinson wrote his account, Ebenezer Robinson’s minutes are presented first in this volume.
no 1 | no. 2 | ||
" 2 3 | Zecheriah Wilson | " 4 | |
" 5 | Joseph Smith jr | " 6 | |
" 7 | " 8 | ||
" 9 | " 10 | ||
" 11 | " 12 |
Marsh was the president pro tempore of the church in Zion, with David W. Patten and Brigham Young as assistant presidents. Young may have not attended the meeting because JS had recently dictated a revelation directing Young to go to his property at Mill Creek, where his family was residing, and to provide for them. (Minutes, 6 Apr. 1838; Revelation, 17 Apr. 1838.)
When cases were brought before the council, the counselors were numbered, and one or more odd-numbered counselors represented the plaintiff, with the same number of even-numbered counselors representing the defendant. For each odd-numbered counselor representing the plaintiff, the even-numbered counselor just higher in number represented the defendant. The responsibilities for representing the two parties seem to have rotated through the council. In the council meeting of 28 April, it was the duty of counselors 9 and 10—George M. Hinkle and George W. Harris—to represent the plaintiff and defendant. (See Minute Book 2, 10 Mar.–29 June 1838.)