Footnotes
Textual evidence does not conclusively reveal what sources Clayton and JS used to produce the revised minutes, but they probably drew on Clayton’s original minutes and their memories. It is unlikely that they utilized Willard Richards’s notes of the conference, given that the revised minutes differ from Richards’s version when recording the meetings’ openings and closings.
Revised Minutes Draft, ca. 23 Apr. 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6 Apr. 1843.
Revised Minutes and Discourses Draft, 23 Apr.–ca. 3 May 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6 Apr. 1843. Sloan’s expanded draft covered the midday session and part of the afternoon session of 6 April, concluding with JS’s comments on Jacob Remick.
See Revised Minutes and Discourses Printed Draft, 23 Apr.–ca. 3 May 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6–7 Apr. 1843. Two fragments of the first printed draft are extant. The first includes the 6 April 1843 midday session, and the second includes comments made during the afternoon session by Hyrum Smith and JS on stealing in Nauvoo.
See Revised Minutes and Discourses Printed Draft, ca. 3 May 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6–7 Apr. 1843. Three fragments of the second printed draft are extant and include comments made during the afternoon session on 6 April 1843 by Hyrum Smith and JS on stealing in Nauvoo and JS’s comments on Jacob Remick and land in Iowa Territory. The first of these fragments is glued to the first fragment of the first printed draft. Portions of this printed draft were cut out. The second and third fragments of the second printed draft were used in the 1850s in compiling JS’s History; Thomas Bullock made emendations for the history to the text on these fragments.
Willard Richards, Journal, 3 May 1843.
Richards, Willard. Journals, 1836–1853. Willard Richards, Papers, 1821–1854. CHL. MS 1490, boxes 1–2.
Revised Minutes and Discourses Draft, 3 May–ca. 8 May 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6 Apr. 1843. Some of the clippings attached to Richards's draft match holes in the first and second printed drafts. Richards made his draft on printed sheets that included Book of Abraham facsimiles. (See Revised Minutes and Discourses Printed Draft, ca. 3 May 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6–7 Apr. 1843.)
The extant portion of the third printed draft includes only the 6 April 1843 midday session. (See Revised Minutes and Discourses Printed Draft, 3 May–ca. 8 May 1843, in Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6–7 Apr. 1843.)
See Notice, 8 May 1843, in Times and Seasons, 1 May 1843, 4:185.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Tanner, “Mormon Press in Nauvoo,” 102.
Tanner, Terrence A. “The Mormon Press in Nauvoo, 1839–46.” In Kingdom on the Mississippi Revisited: Nauvoo in Mormon History, edited by Roger D. Launius and John E. Hallwas, 94–118. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1996.
For full annotation of Clayton’s minutes and Richards's notes, see Minutes and Discourses, 6–7 Apr. 1843; and JS, Journal, 6 Apr. 1843.
See, for example, Minutes and Discourses, 5–7 Oct. 1839; Minutes, 7–11 Apr. 1841; and Minutes and Discourses, 6–8 Apr. 1842.
By the 1840s the church was holding conferences twice a year, in April and October. In October 1841, JS announced that the church would “not hold another general conference” until the temple was completed. Church members apparently used the word annual to refer to the April conference and semiannual to refer to the October conference. In the manuscript minutes of the April 1843 conference, Clayton recorded that JS referred to it as a “special conference.” (Minutes and Discourse, 1–5 Oct. 1841; see also Minutes, 4–5 May 1839; Minutes, Times and Seasons, Dec. 1839, 1:30–31; “Conference Notice,” Times and Seasons, 15 Sept. 1841, 2:543; and Historian’s Office, General Church Minutes, 6 Apr. 1843.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Both William Clayton’s minutes and Willard Richards’s notes indicate that the other counselors in the First Presidency, Sidney Rigdon and William Law, as well as church patriarch Hyrum Smith, were also presented “for trial” to the conference. On 27 March 1843, JS wrote to inform Rigdon that at the upcoming conference, he would seek to withdraw fellowship from him due to persistent suspicions that Rigdon was conspiring with John C. Bennett against JS. Rigdon responded the same day, denying any association with Bennett and insisting on his loyalty to JS. Following the conference’s 6 April 1843 vote in JS’s favor, Rigdon was permitted to speak about his relationship with Bennett and his ongoing support for JS and the church, leading to his “almost unanimous” sustaining by the conference. The portion of the minutes devoted to the other sustaining votes, including Rigdon’s “trial” and its resolution, was omitted from the published account. (JS, Journal, 6 Apr. 1843; Letter to Sidney Rigdon, 27 Mar. 1843; Letter from Sidney Rigdon, 27 Mar. 1843; Minutes and Discourses, 6–7 Apr. 1843.)