Footnotes
JS, Journal, 29 June 1842; “Clayton, William,” in Jenson, Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia, 1:718; Clayton, History of the Nauvoo Temple, 18, 30–31. Clayton’s docket reads simply “April.”
Jenson, Andrew. Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia: A Compilation of Biographical Sketches of Prominent Men and Women in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 4 vols. Salt Lake City: Andrew Jenson History Co., 1901–1936.
Clayton, William. History of the Nauvoo Temple, ca. 1845. CHL. MS 3365.
Following Clayton’s docket identifying the month, “April,” the unidentified scribe added the year “1844” and then corrected it to “1843.”
Jessee, “Writing of Joseph Smith’s History,” 456, 458; Woodruff, Journal, 22 Jan. 1865. Beneath Clayton’s docket identifying the month and the unidentified scribe’s addition identifying the year, Bullock inserted “Minutes of a Meeting in Nauvoo.”
Jessee, Dean C. “The Writing of Joseph Smith’s History.” BYU Studies 11 (Summer 1971): 439–473.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Historian’s Office, Journal, 7 June 1853; Wilford Woodruff, Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George A. Smith, 30 Aug. 1856, in Historian’s Office, Letterpress Copybooks, vol. 1, p. 364. Between Clayton’s docket identifying the month and the unidentified scribe’s addition identifying the year, Grimshaw inserted “Conference.”
Historian’s Office. Journal, 1844–1997. CHL. CR 100 1.
Historian’s Office. Letterpress Copybooks, 1854–1879, 1885–1886. CHL. CR 100 38.
See the full bibliographic entry for Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 1839–1877, in the CHL catalog.
Footnotes
It was called a “special conference” rather than a “general conference” because in October 1841, JS announced that the church would “not hold another general conference” until the temple was completed. (JS, Journal, 6–9 Apr. 1843; Minutes and Discourse, 1–5 Oct. 1841.)
JS, Journal, 6 Apr. 1843; Leviticus 25:1–17; see also JS, Journal, 30 Mar. 1836. Wilford Woodruff noted that the 1843 conference represented “the commenc[e]ment of the fourteenth year of the church.” (Woodruff, Journal, 6 Apr. 1843.)
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
JS, Journal, 23 and 28 Oct. 1842; 6 and 8 Apr. 1843; George Alley, Nauvoo, IL, to Joseph Alley, Lynn, MA, 13 Apr. 1843, George Alley, Letters, microfilm, CHL; see also McBride, House for the Most High, 115–117. By April 1843, construction on the temple walls had progressed to between four and twelve feet from the floor. (JS, Journal, 6 Apr. 1843.)
Alley, George. Letters, 1842–1859. Microfilm. CHL.
McBride, Matthew. A House for the Most High: The Story of the Original Nauvoo Temple. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2007.
Clayton, Journal, 6 Apr. 1843. Willard Richards made a more complete account of the conference proceedings in JS’s journal. (JS, Journal, 6–9 Apr. 1843.)
Clayton, William. Journals, 1842–1845. CHL.
For more information on Willard Richards’s note-taking methods, see Historical Introduction to Discourse, 4 July 1843.
Burgess arrived in Nauvoo on 12 April 1843 with many other English immigrants. JS delivered a discourse welcoming the new arrivals the following day, which Burgess mentioned in his journal. (Burgess, Journal and Notebook, [64]–[65]; Discourse, 13 Apr. 1843.)
Burgess, James. Journal, 1841–1848. CHL. MS 1858.
See Minutes, 7 Apr. 1843; and Discourse, 8 Apr. 1843.
In January 1843, JS attended a hearing before judge Nathaniel Pope of the United States Circuit Court for the District of Illinois regarding the attempt by Missouri and Illinois officials to extradite JS on the charge of being an accessory before the fact to the 6 May 1842 attempted assassination of former governor Lilburn W. Boggs. Pope ruled that the requisition was unlawful and ordered that JS be discharged from his arrest, which stemmed from a warrant issued by former Illinois governor Thomas Carlin. On 9 March, JS sent copies of the case documents and a statement by United States attorney Justin Butterfield, who represented JS in the proceedings, to Iowa Territory governor John Chambers. Chambers reported in a letter on 10 March that his warrant had been returned unserved and that he would not issue another unless the governor of Missouri ordered a new requisition. JS evidently did not receive notice of the content of the letter by 6 April 1843. (Court Ruling, 5 Jan. 1843; JS, Journal, 9 Mar. 1843; John Chambers, Burlington, Iowa Territory, to John Cowan, 10 Mar. 1843, JS Office Papers, CHL.)
The Green Mountain Boys was a militia founded in the 1760s in the New Hampshire Grants, which later became Vermont. The name subsequently came to be applied to all male Vermonters. (See Wren, Those Turbulent Sons of Freedom, chap. 1.)
Wren, Christopher S. Those Turbulent Sons of Freedom: Ethan Allen’s Green Mountain Boys and the American Revolution. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2019.
Later in Clayton’s account, JS identified the “great man” as Jacob Remick.
See Exodus 2:22.
JS was referring to his arrest on 8 August 1842. (JS, Journal, 8 Aug. 1842.)
In 1839, the church purchased about twenty thousand acres of land in what was known as the Half-Breed Tract in Iowa Territory on credit from land speculator Isaac Galland. In January 1842, Galland sold his “interest” in the tract to Jacob Remick. When Remick could not pay back the August 1842 loan from JS, Remick quitclaimed his interest in the tract to JS on 1 September 1842. On the same day, Remick also quitclaimed his interest in Keokuk, Iowa Territory, to JS. (Historical Introduction to Letter to Isaac Galland, 22 Mar. 1839; Historical Introduction to Discourse, 2 July 1839; Kilbourne, Strictures, 15; Lee Co., IA, Land Records, 1836–1961, Deeds [South, Keokuk], vol. 3, pp. 178–179, 20 Jan. 1842; pp. 449–450, 1 Sept. 1842; pp. 450–451, 1 Sept. 1842, microfilm 959,239, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL; see also Flanders, Nauvoo, 28–38.)
Kilbourne, David W. Strictures, on Dr. I. Galland’s Pamphlet, Entitled, “Villainy Exposed,” with Some Account of His Transactions in Lands of the Sac and Fox Reservation, etc., in Lee County, Iowa. Fort Madison, IA: Statesman Office, 1850.
U.S. and Canada Record Collection. FHL.
Flanders, Robert Bruce. Nauvoo: Kingdom on the Mississippi. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1965.
On 15 September 1842, JS encouraged John Smith and Daniel C. Davis to move to Keokuk. (JS, Journal, 15 Sept. 1842.)
In Willard Richards’s account of the discourse, JS indicated that Remick “calld for some more favors. & I let him have some cloths— to the amount of 6 or 7 hundrd dollars.”