Joseph Smith, John C. Bennett, and the Extradition Attempt, 1842

Andrew H. Hedges and Alex D. Smith

Andrew H. Hedges and Alex D. Smith, 鈥淛oseph Smith, John C. Bennett, and the Extradition Attempt,鈥 in Joseph Smith, the Prophet and Seer, ed. Richard Neitzel Holzapfel and Kent P. Jackson (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2010), 437鈥66.

Andrew H. Hedges and Alex D. Smith were editors of The Joseph Smith Papers when this was published.

As a careful study of Joseph Smith鈥檚 journal shows, the months between December 1841 and March 1843 were busy ones for the Prophet. While much of his time was spent on ecclesiastical affairs, numerous other issues demanded his attention as well. This paper provides a brief overview of the Prophet鈥檚 activities during this fifteen-month period, followed by more detailed discussions of two issues that dominated Joseph鈥檚 life during this time. These were, first, John C. Bennett鈥檚 estrangement from the Church; and second, Joseph鈥檚 and his friends鈥 efforts to keep him out of the hands of the Missourians after he was charged with being accessory to the May 1842 assassination attempt on former Missouri governor Lilburn W. Boggs. This paper draws heavily on research conducted under the auspices of the Joseph Smith Papers Project, and we want to thank our colleagues鈥攑articularly Dean C. Jessee, Richard L. Anderson, David Grue, and Kay Darowski and her team of researchers鈥攆or all their help in bringing together much of the information presented here.

Joseph in Nauvoo, 1842

Numerous references throughout Joseph鈥檚 journal to buying and selling land reflect the frontier nature of Nauvoo as well as the growth of the Church. Consistent with the doctrine of 鈥済athering,鈥 Church members from the eastern states, Canada, and England had settled in and around Nauvoo by 1842; in January 1843, Joseph estimated that some twelve thousand lived in the area. Many of these lived on land purchased from Isaac Galland and brothers William and Hugh White following the expulsion of the Saints from Missouri in 1839. Joseph also contracted with Connecticut land speculators Horace R. Hotchkiss, John Gillet, and Smith Tuttle for an additional five hundred acres on the 鈥淔lats鈥 near the Mississippi River. Under the terms of the contract, the Latter-day Saints were to have immediate use of the land, but no deeds were to be issued until the land was paid for. Among other methods, Joseph hoped to make the required payments for the land by selling lots to those moving into the city. Speculators also courted Joseph and other Church members to purchase land in nearby areas like Warren, Warsaw, Ramus, and Shokokin, leading to similar land contracts in some of these places. Other land speculators, however, who owned land on the 鈥淗ill鈥 or the 鈥淏luff鈥 east of the Flats were able to sell that land at a lower price than Joseph, threatening his ability to meet the terms of his real estate contracts.

Joseph was also heavily involved with building the Nauvoo Temple and the Nauvoo House鈥攖he latter intended to be a hotel where 鈥渟trangers may come from afar to lodge, . . . [where] the weary traveler may find health and safety while he shall contemplate the word of the Lord鈥 (Doctrine and Covenants 124:23). Donations from Church members funded the construction of the temple, which was built on a bluff overlooking the Flats, while money for the Nauvoo House was to come through selling stock in the project according to guidelines received by revelation. Having been commanded by God to build the two structures, Joseph viewed both as of paramount importance; also, as the duly appointed trustee-in-trust for the Church, he was legally accountable for the building funds, which added urgency to the situation. In spite of a hearty response from many Church members, both undertakings suffered from a lack of capital and occasional mismanagement on the part of the committees overseeing them. Both projects also suffered from the competition of private developers鈥 projects. The same economic jealousies between the Flats and the Hill that plagued Joseph鈥檚 efforts to pay off land debts hindered the temple and the Nauvoo House. Addressing workers鈥 concerns, improving the methods for collecting funds, and keeping the Saints on task with these construction projects occupied no small amount of Joseph鈥檚 time and energy. On more than one occasion he publicly denounced developers like Robert Foster, Amos Davis, and Hiram Kimball, whose private land sales and business enterprises were seen as an impediment to accomplishing larger Church goals.

Other concerns vied for Joseph鈥檚 attention as well. By the end of 1842, Joseph and Emma had four living children to support and raise, ranging from eleven-year-old Julia to four-year-old Alexander. One means of providing for his family was his red brick store. While he seems to have spent relatively little time directly managing or operating the store, journal entries indicate his continued involvement with stocking the store with hard-to-find goods. Similarly, while he turned his farm over to Cornelius Lott for management, any given day in the summer might find him riding the three miles out of Nauvoo to visit Lott and hoe potatoes. Both enterprises鈥攖he store and the farm鈥攁s well as Joseph鈥檚 other business concerns and the building projects he oversaw as trustee for the Church, were significant factors in the overall economy of Nauvoo. 鈥淟et me assure you,鈥 wrote Emma to Illinois governor Thomas Carlin in August 1842, 鈥渢hat there are many whole families that are entirely dependent upon the prosecution and success of Mr Smiths temporal business for their support.鈥[1]

A large part of Joseph鈥檚 time was taken up with managing the details of a number of enterprises. Most of 1842 he served as editor of the Church鈥檚 newspaper, the Times and Seasons. As lieutenant general of the Nauvoo Legion, Joseph was ultimately responsible for training, staffing, and supplying some three thousand troops of the Illinois militia. As a city councilman and then, after May 1842, the mayor of Nauvoo, he spent several hours most weeks drafting ordinances, discussing proposals, and attending city council meetings. As a councilman he was required to serve as a justice on the appellate municipal court, and as mayor he served occasionally as judge of that court and as chief justice of the mayor鈥檚 court. Cases involving charges of slander, assault, petty thievery, and disorderly conduct were the usual bill of fare for these courts, although more specialized and technical cases occasionally appeared, including the Dana v. Brink medical malpractice suit. The forty-one manuscript pages of Joseph鈥檚 journal dedicated to recording the graphic testimony of the witnesses in this trial鈥攚hich involved a case of childbirth鈥攑robably reflect his scribe鈥檚 professional interest in the details more than Joseph鈥檚. The scribe was Willard Richards of the Twelve, who had practiced medicine. With the journal鈥檚 numerous references to legal precedence, haggling over expert witnesses, and technical language, it also illustrates how well versed Joseph and his associates needed to be, and were, in the law.

Through all this, Joseph continued to direct and oversee important developments in the Church. These included publishing the book of Abraham and the first pages of his history as well as writing two lengthy letters detailing how baptisms for the dead were to be recorded鈥攁ll of which have since been accepted into the standard works of the Church. Building on Sarah M. Kimball鈥檚 efforts to create a women鈥檚 charitable organization, Joseph at this time also organized the 鈥淔emale Relief Society of Nauvoo.鈥 Charging the society with 鈥渟earching after objects of charity, and . . . correcting the morals and strengthening the virtues of the female community,鈥[2] Joseph appointed his wife Emma to preside over the organization. Joseph also revealed new temple ordinances to a few trusted associates during this time.

By December 1841, Joseph had revealed the doctrine of plural marriage to his closest associates and was practicing it himself. Contemporary sources, reminiscent accounts, and later affidavits indicate that he took a number of plural wives over the course of the next two years. It was probably inevitable that some of the people to whom Joseph revealed the doctrine of plural marriage would misunderstand or reject it鈥攕everal pieces of information, for example, suggest the practice was at least partly behind Sidney Rigdon鈥檚 and George Robinson鈥檚 estrangement from Joseph during this time. It was also probably inevitable that some of Joseph鈥檚 confidants would abuse Joseph鈥檚 understanding of plural marriage. This abuse often took the form of men seducing women by telling them that Joseph had sanctioned extramarital affairs鈥攁 charge Joseph strenuously denied. Among those who 鈥渕ade use of his name to carry on their iniquitous designs鈥[3] was John C. Bennett, general in the Nauvoo Legion, a prominent Mason, first mayor of Nauvoo, and one-time member of the First Presidency. While Joseph鈥檚 journal and other documents indicate that the Prophet initially sought to resolve the problem privately, mounting evidence of Bennett鈥檚 rascality eventually brought the city council, the Nauvoo Legion, and the Masonic lodge into the picture. Faced with censure from all quarters, Bennett fled Nauvoo and launched a smear campaign against Joseph through the pages of the Sangamo Journal and other newspapers. Most prominent among those who took Bennett鈥檚 accusations seriously was Elder Orson Pratt, whose wife, Sarah, accused Joseph of making improper advances toward her during her husband鈥檚 absence.

Along with misrepresenting Joseph鈥檚 intentions regarding plural marriage, Bennett joined others in charging the Prophet with masterminding the May 6, 1842, assassination attempt of Lilburn W. Boggs, who had ordered the removal of the Mormons from Missouri in 1838. Initially appearing as editorials and letters in newspapers, these accusations eventually led to formal legal charges being leveled against Joseph and formal requests to the governor of Illinois and Iowa Territory that Joseph, if captured, be extradited to Missouri for trial. Having barely survived his most recent encounter with Missouri justice and not daring to trust himself in the hands of the Missourians a second time, Joseph accordingly spent a good part of the last five months of 1842 hiding in and around Nauvoo.

The Fall of John C. Bennett

Bennett鈥檚 fall from grace began shortly after he moved to Nauvoo in August 1840, when Joseph received a letter 鈥渇rom a person of respectable character鈥 in Ohio who lived 鈥渋n the vicinity where Bennett had lived.鈥[4] The letter warned Church officials that their new convert, ostensibly a bachelor, was 鈥渁 very mean man鈥 who had a wife and children in McConnelsville, Morgan County, Ohio. Joseph, 鈥渒nowing that it is no uncommon thing for good men to be evil spoken against,鈥 tried to keep the matter quiet but was apparently forced into confronting Bennett with it after the latter began courting a young lady in Nauvoo. Only after Joseph threatened to publicly expose him, however, did Bennett end the relationship.[5]

Seeing that Joseph, at least, was suspicious of his marital status, Bennett took his amorous designs underground. Failing in his efforts to convince unsuspecting women that promiscuity 鈥渨as a doctrine believed in by the Latter-Day Saints,鈥 Bennett tried to convince them that 鈥渢he authorities of the church鈥濃攊ncluding Joseph鈥斺渘ot only sanctioned, but practiced鈥 it themselves. The argument proved to be an effective one, Joseph wrote, with Bennett eventually seducing several women 鈥渂y the same plausible tale.鈥[6]

Meanwhile, in July 1841, Joseph received a letter from his brother Hyrum and William Law, who presented further evidence of Bennett鈥檚 wife and children and the 鈥渋ll-treatment鈥 they had received at his hands. Bennett 鈥渃andidly acknowledged鈥 the truth of the letter鈥檚 contents, then attempted suicide by taking poison. An antidote saved his life but did little to bring about the 鈥渢horough reformation in his character鈥 that Joseph was hoping for. Adding to the 鈥渁ggravating nature of this case,鈥 Joseph wrote, Bennett鈥檚 statement that Joseph sanctioned illicit relationships had convinced other men 鈥渢o persue the same adulterous practice鈥 and to make use 鈥渙f the same language insinuated by Bennett鈥 to convince unsuspecting women of the propriety of what they were doing. Faced with a growing body of evidence from victims and perpetrators alike, mortified that Joseph鈥檚 name was being invoked to justify the deeds, and 鈥渟eeing no prospects of any satisfaction from his future life,鈥 the First Presidency, nine members of the Quorum of the Twelve, and the Presiding Bishopric quietly withdrew the hand of fellowship from Bennett on May 11, 1842.[7]

鈥淪ome four or five days鈥 later, William Law informed Bennett concerning the Church leaders鈥 action. 鈥淗e plead with me to intercede for him,鈥 Law wrote, 鈥渁ssuring me that he would turn from his iniquity, and never would be guilty of such crimes again.鈥擧e said that if he were exposed it would break his mother鈥檚 heart鈥攖hat she was old, and if such things reached her ears it would bring her down with sorrow to the grave.鈥 Moved by Bennett鈥檚 pleas, Law asked Joseph to 鈥渟pare Bennett from public exposure, on account of his mother.鈥[8]

A similar scene played itself out shortly afterward on May 17, 1842, when Hyrum Smith learned of Bennett鈥檚 continuing perfidy, including evidence that he had promised to give his victims 鈥渕edicine to produce abortions, providing they should become pregnant.鈥 鈥淥n becoming acquainted with these facts,鈥 Hyrum wrote, 鈥淚 was determined to prosecute him, and bring him to justice.鈥 Learning of Hyrum鈥檚 intentions, Bennett tearfully pleaded with Hyrum not to expose him, then asked Joseph for the same favor.[9] 鈥淥n account of his earnestly requesting that we would not publish him to the world,鈥 Joseph wrote later, 鈥渨e concluded not to do so at that time, but would let the matter rest until we saw the effect of what we had already done.鈥[10] Concerned with how Bennett had been using his name to convince men and women alike of the correctness of his actions, however, Joseph required Bennett at this time to make a sworn deposition to the effect that he, Bennett, had never known Joseph to teach or practice anything contrary to the highest standards of virtue. Bennett immediately repaired to city alderman Daniel H. Wells, where, in the presence of William Clayton, Hyrum Smith, and Wells, he 鈥渟tood at the desk鈥 and wrote 鈥渢hat he was never taught any thing in the least cantrary to the strictest principles of the Gospel, or of virtue, or of the laws of God, or man, under any occasion either directly or indirectly, in word or deed, by Joseph Smith; and that he never knew the said Smith to countenance any improper conduct whatever, either in public or private;鈥 and that Joseph had never taught him or anyone else that illicit relationships were, 鈥渦nder any circumstances, justifiable.鈥 Joseph accepted the statement and agreed to keep silent.[11]

Bennett resigned as mayor the same day and also confessed his sins in the Masonic lodge later in the afternoon. 鈥淗e seemed to be very penitent and wept much,鈥 Hyrum recorded. 鈥淗e penitence excited sympathy in the minds of the brethren, and they withdrew the charge for the time being.鈥[12] A similar confession followed two days later in the city council鈥攖he same day Joseph was elected as mayor鈥攚hen Bennett again defended Joseph鈥檚 character, expressed his desire to continue his association with the Saints, and looked forward to the time, he said, 鈥渨hen I may be restored to full confidence, and fellowship, and my former standing in the church.鈥[13]

Even as Bennett was proclaiming his loyalty to Joseph and the Church, however, evidence was accruing that he had been expelled from a Masonic lodge in Ohio before moving to Nauvoo. The evidence was reviewed in a special lodge meeting on June 16, 1842, at which time it was determined that the lodge in question was the Pickaway lodge. At the meeting, however, Bennett presented laudatory character references from men in Ohio dated about the time of his alleged expulsion and claimed that he had never been informed of his expulsion from Pickaway lodge. Choosing to err on the side of caution, the Nauvoo lodge postponed his case until more testimony could be gathered. By July 7 the Nauvoo lodge became 鈥渇ully satisfied鈥 that he had been expelled from Pickaway and summarily expelled him as a Mason for falsely claiming Ohio membership and for being unworthy of fellowship. When additional charges against Bennett鈥檚 character and activities were substantiated over the course of the following month, the action was confirmed and elaborated upon, with Bennett being expelled from the Nauvoo lodge 鈥渁nd from all the priviledges of Masonry鈥 for seduction, adultery, using Joseph Smith鈥檚 name to justify immoral acts, perjury, embezzlement, and seducing a master mason鈥檚 wife.[14]

Long before the lodge took action against him, however, Bennett had skipped town and begun attacking Joseph and the Church through the press. In his letters, Bennett claimed that Joseph, not he, had been the immoral one and that he had left the Church because of the wickedness of the Saints. Bennett also claimed that the statements he had made defending Joseph鈥檚 character had been made under duress and in the face of threats.[15] Joseph responded to Bennett鈥檚 defection quietly at first by simply publishing a short 鈥淣otice鈥 on the last page of the June 15, 1842, issue of the Times and Seasons announcing that Church leaders had withdrawn the hand of fellowship from Bennett on May 11.[16] The following issue鈥攖hat of July 1鈥攃alled forth a lengthy account of Bennett鈥檚 rascality and Joseph鈥檚 efforts to reform him, Bennett鈥檚 May 17 affidavit and May 19 statement before the city council, and excerpts from letters that 鈥済entlemen in this city鈥 had received from various correspondents regarding Bennett鈥檚 less-than-savory character.[17] Bennett鈥檚 claims about being under duress when he defended Joseph鈥檚 character and that he had left the Church before being excommunicated brought forth additional affidavits and testimonials in the August 1 issue of the Times and Seasons explicitly denying the charges.[18]

The 1842 Extradition Attempt

At the same time Bennett鈥檚 true colors were making themselves publicly known, events of a far more sinister aspect were coming to a head. On the evening of May 6, 1842, an unknown assailant shot Lilburn W. Boggs, former governor of Missouri, as he sat in his home in Independence, Missouri.[19] Eight days later, on May 14, news of the event reached Nauvoo, apparently with the erroneous report that Boggs had been killed in the attack.[20] Joseph Smith鈥檚 enemies in the area were quick to connect him with the attack. The same day Joseph heard about it, for example, David Kilbourn鈥攁 presbyterian merchant, land speculator, and lawyer with ties to John C. Bennett鈥攚rote to Missouri governor Thomas Reynolds accusing Joseph of complicity in the assassination attempt and calling for his arrest.[21] One week later, on May 21, Sylvester M. Bartlett, editor of the Quincy Whig, addressed the issue in the pages of his paper: 鈥淭here are several rumors in circulation in regard to the horrid affair,鈥 wrote Bartlett. 鈥淥ne of which throws the crime upon the Mormons鈥攆rom the fact, we suppose, that Mr. Boggs was governor at the time, and no small degree instrumental in driving them from the state.鈥擲mith too, the Mormon Prophet, as we understand, prophesied a year or so ago, his death by violent means. Hence, there is plenty of foundation for rumor.鈥[22] Joseph was quick to deny the charge, complaining by letter to the Whig鈥檚 editor the following day of the 鈥渕anifest injustice鈥 he had done him. 鈥淗e died not through my instrumentality,鈥 wrote Joseph, pointing out that Boggs might simply have been the victim of political intrigue. 鈥淚 am tired of the misrepresentation, calumny and detraction heaped upon me by wicked men,鈥 Joseph added, 鈥渁nd desire and claim only those privileges guaranteed to all men by the Constitution and Laws of the United States and Illinois.鈥[23]

The issue might have died there had not John C. Bennett kept it alive in letters published in the Sangamo Journal on July 15. 鈥淚n 1841,鈥 reported Bennett, 鈥淛oe Smith predicted or prophesied in a public congregation in Nauvoo, that Lilburn W Boggs, ex-Governor of Missouri, should die by violent hands within one year. From one or two months prior to the attempted assassination of Gov. Boggs, Mr. O. P. Rockwell left Nauvoo for parts unknown to the citizens at large. I was then on terms of close intimacy with Joe Smith, and asked him where Rockwell had gone? 鈥楪one,鈥 said he, 鈥楪ONE TO FULFILL PROPHECY!鈥欌 Bennett provided affidavits from other individuals to the same effect, openly acknowledging his 鈥渄etermination . . . [to] arouse the public indignation鈥 against Joseph, 鈥渋f there is yet virtue and courage left in man.鈥[24]

Authorities could do nothing on the basis of the circumstantial evidence and rumor provided by Kilbourne, Bartlett, Bennett, and others. But when Boggs himself鈥攚ho fully recovered from the attack鈥攕igned an affidavit on July 20 accusing Joseph of being 鈥渁ccessary before the fact of the intended murder鈥 and requesting Governor Reynolds to extradite Joseph to Missouri for trial, officials from Illinois and Missouri sprang into action.[25] Acting on Boggs鈥檚 affidavit, Reynolds signed a requisition on July 22 requiring Illinois governor Thomas Carlin to deliver Joseph to Missouri for trial.[26] Concerned for Joseph鈥檚 well-being, 鈥渁bout eight hundred, or upwards鈥 of the citizens of Nauvoo signed a petition that same day urging Carlin not to issue a writ for Joseph 鈥渢o be given up to the authorities of Missouri鈥 but to try him in Illinois if he really thought the Prophet may have committed the crime.[27] Carlin received the Saints鈥 petition on July 26 but chose to honor Reynolds鈥檚 requisition instead, issuing a writ for Joseph鈥檚 arrest on August 2.[28]

Reynolds鈥檚 requisition, based on Bogg鈥檚 affidavit, was ill-conceived. Extradition, as defined in the Constitution, requires that one be charged with committing a crime in one state and then fleeing to another.[29] Boggs鈥檚 affidavit, upon which the extradition proceedings were based, accused Joseph of being 鈥渁ccessary before the fact鈥 and identified him as 鈥渁 citizen or resident of the State of Illinois鈥 but failed to accuse him of actually committing a crime in Missouri and then fleeing to Illinois. Without such an accusation, Reynolds had no constitutional grounds for calling on Carlin to deliver Joseph to Missouri for trial鈥攎eaning, in effect, that Carlin鈥檚 arrest warrant for Joseph was not issued on legal grounds.

Six days after Carlin issued his warrant, Thomas King of Adams County and two other officers showed up in Nauvoo with the warrant in hand and arrested Joseph Smith and Orrin Porter Rockwell, 鈥渢he latter being charged with shooting ex-Governor Boggs of Missouri with intent to kill . . . and Joseph with being accessory.鈥[30] The municipal court immediately convened and issued a writ of habeas corpus.[31] Unsure of the authority of the municipal court鈥檚 writ in this particular case, King and his men left Joseph and Rockwell in the custody of Henry G. Sherwood, Nauvoo city marshal, and returned to Quincy with the arrest warrant to seek instructions from Carlin.

Without the arrest warrant in his possession, Sherwood had no legal authority to retain Joseph and Rockwell in custody. Neither man was anywhere to be found when King returned two days later. Convinced, apparently, that 鈥淕overnor Carlin鈥檚 course which he had pursued was unjustifiable and illegal鈥 and that 鈥渢he whole business [was] but another evidence of the effects of prejudice,鈥[32] both men had gone into hiding鈥擱ockwell back east to Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and Joseph in various locations in and around Nauvoo.[33] King, no doubt furious with this new development, reportedly 鈥渆ndeavored to alarm sister Emma & the Brethren by his threats, but could not do it they understanding the nature of the Law in that case.鈥[34] The sheriff and his men remained in the area for several days, 鈥渦tter[ing] heavy threats . . . that if they could not find Joseph they would lay the city in ashes,鈥 William Clayton reported. 鈥淭hey say they will tarry in the city a month but they will find him.鈥[35]

Joseph first stayed at the home of his uncle John Smith in Zarahemla, across the river from Nauvoo, in Iowa Territory. Pursuant to instructions from Joseph, on the night of August 11, Emma, Hyrum, William Law, Newel K. Whitney, George Miller, William Clayton, and Dimick B. Huntington rowed out to the island between Nauvoo and Montrose to meet with the Prophet and Erastus H. Derby. There it was decided that Joseph should 鈥渁bide for a season鈥 at the home of Edward Sayers, some distance upriver from Nauvoo on the Illinois side.[36]

Joseph stayed at Sayer鈥檚 home six days. After accidentally meeting Martin Henderson Harris, nephew of Martin Harris, while getting some exercise in the woods and then hearing of rumors in Nauvoo that his hiding place had been discovered, Joseph retired to Carlos Granger鈥檚 home in the northeast part of Nauvoo on the night of August 17.[37] Here he remained another six days, when he received a 鈥渇ew lines from sister Emma informing him that she would expect him home this evening believing that she could take care of him better at home than elsewhere.鈥 Joseph accordingly left Granger鈥檚 home 鈥渟oon after dark鈥 on August 23 and arrived home 鈥渨ithout being noticed by any person.鈥[38]

Joseph kept a low profile for several more days, meeting with members of the Twelve and a few others at his home or in the red brick store.[39] After another six days, however, he felt sufficiently secure to make an unannounced appearance at a special conference on August 29. 鈥淭he brethren were rejoiced to see him,鈥 recorded William Clayton. 鈥淗e had not been seen for three weeks and his appearance amongst the brethren under present circumstances caused much animation and joy, it being unexpected. Some had supposed that the was gone to Europe and some to Washington. . . . Every one rejoiced to see him.鈥 As he addressed the conference, Joseph called for volunteers to go out and disabuse the public mind concerning his character鈥攁 call some three hundred and eighty answered immediately.[40]

Five days later, however, Joseph was back on the run. The day began with the Prophet entertaining former Apostle John Boynton in his home, when a note was brought in from David Hollister, who was acting as an informant of sorts for Joseph, 鈥渢o the effect that the Missourians were again on the move.鈥 Shortly after noon, three officers showed up at Joseph鈥檚 house, having apparently reached it undetected by 鈥渃om[ing] up the river side and hitch[ing] their horses below the Nauvoo House and then proceed[ing] on foot.鈥 While Boynton stalled for time, Joseph, who had been eating lunch with his family, 鈥減assed out at the back door and through the corn in his garden鈥 to the red brick store, where Newel K. Whitney鈥檚 family was living at the time. By this time Emma was talking with the officers, who insisted on searching the house even though they had no search warrant with them. Joseph remained at the red brick store until nine that evening鈥攖hereby avoiding another search conducted at his home 鈥渟oon after Sun down鈥濃攁fter which he retreated to the home of Edward Hunter, 鈥渨here he was welcomed and made comfortable by the family.鈥[41]

The following day, Sunday, Joseph sent William Clayton a letter he had written September 1, shortly after his unexpected conference appearance. Pursuant to Joseph鈥檚 request, the letter鈥攚hich outlined procedures for how baptisms for the dead were to be recorded鈥攚as read to the Saints assembled in the grove near the temple.[42]

The week Joseph remained in hiding was not an idle one. Several trusted friends, such as Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, William Clayton, and Newel K. Whitney dropped by for instruction. George Adams and David Rogers delivered several letters from Saints in the east, including one from Willard Richards. Joseph dictated a lengthy letter to Mormon sympathizer James Arlington Bennet in New York and dictated a 鈥渓ong Epistle to the Saints鈥 on September 7, which provided further instruction about recording baptisms for the dead and which he 鈥渙rdered to be read next sabbath.鈥[43] Emma, Wilson Law, Amasa Lyman, and George A. Smith paid him a visit after dark on the evening of September 9.[44] The following day was one of the designated 鈥渢raining days鈥 for the Nauvoo Legion, during which Nauvoo swarmed with people. After spending the day 鈥渧ery close and still; lest on account of the quantity of people passing two and fro he should accidently be discovered,鈥 Joseph received word from Emma 鈥渢hat she wished him to come home, as she thought he would be as safe at home as any where for the present.鈥 Heeding his wife鈥檚 request a second time, Joseph arrived home after dark 鈥渟afe and undiscovered.鈥[45]

Joseph slowly came out of hiding over the course of the next four weeks, although a lingering sickness of Emma kept him at home a good part of the time. Gathering rumors that 鈥渕any of the Missourians were coming to unite with the Militia of this State鈥 to search for him, however, sent him off to the home of James Taylor鈥擩ohn Taylor鈥檚 father鈥攁fter dark the evening of October 7.[46] There he remained鈥攅xcept for one brief visit to his family[47]鈥攗ntil October 28, when, 鈥渇rom the appearance of thinks [things] abroad鈥 he was 鈥渆ncouraged to believe that his enemies wont trouble him much more at present鈥 and moved back home.[48]

Joseph鈥檚 first big break on the extradition issue came several weeks later, when Stephen A. Douglas recommended to several of Joseph鈥檚 associates that Joseph petition Thomas Ford, the newly elected governor of Illinois, to revoke former governor Carlin鈥檚 arrest warrant for Joseph. Taking Douglas鈥檚 advice, Joseph鈥檚 associates asked U.S. district attorney Justin Butterfield to prepare the petition, which he did, at the same time remarking, William Clayton recorded, that 鈥淸Joseph鈥檚] arrest was based upon far weaker premises than he had previously supposed, inasmuch as the affidavit of Ex Gov. Boggs said nothing about Joseph having fled from justice, . . . and the constitution only authorizes the delivery up of a 鈥fugitive from Justice to the Executive authority of the State from which he fled.鈥欌[49] Unsure of his authority to revoke an act of the previous governor, Ford consulted with six justices of the Illinois Supreme Court concerning Joseph鈥檚 petition. The justices, Ford wrote to Joseph, 鈥渨ere unanimous in the opinion that the requisition from Missouri was illegal and insufficient to cause your arrest, but were equally divided as to the propriety and Justice of my interference with the acts of Governor Carlin.鈥 Ford, playing it safe, declined to revoke Carlin鈥檚 writ and recommended that Joseph 鈥渟ubmit to the laws and have a Judicial investigation鈥 into his rights.[50] In a letter to Joseph, Butterfield confirmed Ford鈥檚 report of the justices advice and recommended that Joseph immediately come to Springfield, where the charges against him were sure to be discharged by habeas corpus either through the Illinois Supreme Court or the U.S. Circuit Court currently in session.[51]

Joseph and several trusted friends complied with Butterfield鈥檚 request. The party arrived in Springfield on December 30 with Joseph in custody of Wilson Law, who had arrested him four days earlier on the authority of Carlin鈥檚 Proclamation鈥攁n executive order of sorts that Carlin had issued September 20, 1842, giving any citizen the right to arrest Joseph.[52] Unsure of where Carlin鈥檚 original writ for Joseph鈥檚 arrest was and not wanting to leave any room for Joseph鈥檚 enemies to make a competing arrest on the authority of that writ, Joseph petitioned Ford the following day for a new writ for his arrest, which was promptly granted. Joseph was then arrested on the authority of this new writ by William F. Elkin, sheriff of Sangamon County.[53] This placed him, for the time being, in custody of both Elkin and Law, and secure from arrest by someone in possession of Carlin鈥檚 original warrant.

In the meantime, Butterfield had decided that since this habeas corpus hearing dealt with extradition and since extradition was a constitutional concern, the federal U.S. Circuit Court was the most appropriate venue for it. Disregarding Ford鈥檚 earlier suggestion that Joseph鈥檚 hearing be held before the Illinois State Supreme Court, Butterfield petitioned Nathaniel Pope, judge of the U.S. Circuit Court then in session in Springfield, that Joseph be allowed a hearing there and that he also be released on bail. Pope agreed to both, appointing Monday, January 2, for the hearing and setting Joseph鈥檚 bail at $4,000.[54]

Joseph鈥檚 presence in Springfield did not go unnoticed by her citizens, nor by members of the state legislature then in session. As Joseph and his party came 鈥渢o the head of the stairs鈥 after leaving Judge Pope, for example, 鈥渟ome man observd there goes Smith the prophet and a good looking man he is. & (said another) as damnd a rascal as ever lived. . . . & any one that takes his part is as damed a rascal as he is.鈥 Wilson Law retorted, 鈥淚 am th[e] man. & I take his part.鈥 The confrontation quickly turned into a name-calling match and was moving outside into the street when the marshal interfered and restored order.[55] Later in the day, the Illinois House of Representatives effected an impromptu adjournment when a team of horses spooked and went clattering down the road past the State House, and someone yelled, 鈥淛oe Smith is running away.鈥[56]

Joseph spent the remainder of Saturday, December 31, conversing with friends and new acquaintances on topics ranging from the Nauvoo Legion to the Nauvoo Charter. A good part of Sunday was spent in worship services held in the hall used by the House of Representatives. The following day, Monday, which had been set aside for Joseph鈥檚 habeas corpus hearing, opened with Josiah Lamborn, the state attorney, requesting the hearing be pushed back a day. Pope scheduled it for Wednesday, January 4, giving Joseph and his associates another two days of downtime.[57] These were spent in conversation, as well as in watching the state Senate in action. While Joseph鈥檚 thoughts on the Senate鈥檚 activities are unknown, it is clear that this latter activity afforded Willard Richards no small entertainment. This was especially so when it came to watching the antics of Edward D. Baker, a senator from Sangamon county. The 鈥淪enator. appears much like an african Monken [Monkey],鈥 Richards recorded, 鈥渁t <one> moment standing by one stove. the next by another on the opposite side of the chamber. setting down in every senators chair in his way & he never gooes out of his way for his way is every where & and his nose in every mans face. eating apples staring at & pointing & staring at every one, . . . a monkey without a monkey鈥檚 wit.鈥[58]

The hearing, when it was finally held, went relatively smoothly. The only real opposition was provided by state attorney Josiah Lamborn, who argued, first, that extradition was a state matter and that this federal circuit court therefore had no jurisdiction in this case; and second, that it was inappropriate in a habeas corpus hearing鈥攚hich is simply a review of the arresting documents鈥攖o ask whether Joseph was in Missouri when Boggs was shot because that was delving into the evidence concerning guilt or innocence that could only be heard in a trial. Butterfield challenged Lamborn鈥檚 objections by arguing that extradition was a federal matter, and therefore the federal court had jurisdiction, and that discussing Joseph鈥檚 whereabouts was not an attempt to establish guilt or innocence but simply to point out that Joseph had not committed a crime in one state and then fled to another as extradition requires. Butterfield then pointed out the illegality of the documents鈥攅specially Boggs鈥檚 affidavit鈥攗sed to arrest Joseph, which said nothing about Joseph having fled from justice in Missouri. Lamborn鈥檚 rebuttals were weak at best, Richards recorded, with the state attorney 鈥渁pparently saying littl[e] more than the natu[r]e of his situation required鈥& no more than would be usefull in satisfying the public mind鈥攖hat there had been a fair investigation鈥攐f the whole matter.鈥[59]

In his decision given the following day, Pope agreed with Butterfield鈥檚 arguments and discharged Joseph.[60] The five-month-long ordeal ended with Joseph and his party leaving Springfield for Nauvoo on January 7 in high spirits. On the journey home, Wilson Law composed a song, with the assistance of Willard Richards, for the occasion鈥攕ung to the tune of Auld Lang Syne and later known as the Mormon Jubilee鈥攊n which he praised those who had had a hand in bringing the whole affair to a successful close. 鈥淎nd are you sure the news is true?鈥 ran the opening verse,

And are you sure he鈥檚 free?

Then let us Join with one accord,

And have a Jubilee.

 

Chorus

We鈥檒l have a Jubilee. my frie[n]ds

We鈥檒l have a Jubilee

With heart & voice we鈥檒l all rejoice

In that our Prophet鈥檚 free[61]

Along with demonstrating the resiliency of Joseph and his associates, the 1842 extradition attempt also provides an important glimpse into the character and talents of Emma. Often a silent figure in Church history, Emma emerges from the background following a letter she received early on from Joseph instructing her on what to do should the need arise for them to flee to Wisconsin, as some of Joseph鈥檚 associates were urging him to do. Evidently following up on an earlier conversation, Joseph also advised Emma in this letter against personally visiting Thomas Carlin in Quincy: 鈥淵ou may write to him,鈥 he wrote his wife, 鈥渨hatever you see proper, but to go and see him, I do not give my consent at present.鈥[62] Emma responded she was ready to go to Wisconsin if necessary, but that she was still confident that Joseph could 鈥渂e protected without leaving this country.鈥[63]

Emma then wrote a lengthy letter to the governor maintaining Joseph鈥檚 innocence and asking, even begging, him to recall the writs he had issued for Joseph鈥檚 and Rockwell鈥檚 arrest. 鈥淵ou must be aware that Mr Smith was not in Missouri, and of course he could not have left there,鈥 she wrote, evidently in an effort to draw Carlin鈥檚 attention to the inappropriateness of extradition in this case.[64] Carlin wrote back that he was simply fulfilling his duty as governor to deliver fugitives from justice to the executives of other states, so long as those other executives have 鈥渃omplied with the requisitions of the act of congress in that case made and provided.鈥[65] Emma responded, in a follow-up letter, that that was precisely the point鈥攖he 鈥渞equisitions of the act of congress鈥 regarding extradition had not been complied with in this case, as there was ample evidence that Joseph 鈥渨as not in Missouri鈥 when the crime was committed, and that therefore 鈥渉e is not a fugitive from justice.鈥 鈥淚t only requires a knowledge of the constitution of the United States, and statute of the State of Missouri,鈥 Emma informed the governor, 鈥渁nd a knowledge of the outrages committed by some of the inhabitants of that State [Missouri] upon the people called Mormons, . . . to know that there is not the least confidence to be placed鈥 in Boggs and other Missouri officials.[66]

Choosing to take issue with another point Emma brought up鈥攖hat of the legality of the municipal court鈥檚 writ of habeas corpus in this case鈥擟arlin sidestepped Emma鈥檚 point about extradition in his response the following month. Nor would he acknowledge the very real threats that had been leveled against the Prophet in the past, writing that he had 鈥渘ot the most distant thought that any person in Illinois, or Missouri, contemplated personal injury to Mr Smith by violence in any manner whatever.鈥[67] No record has been found of Emma responding to this second letter of Carlin.

In the end, Emma failed in her effort to persuade Carlin to recall the arrest warrant he had issued against her husband. In the correspondence surrounding that effort, however, one gets a rare glimpse into the personality and thoughts of Joseph鈥檚 wife. As her expressive and thoughtful letters show, she was a woman of extraordinary ability and temperament who understood the finer points of the complex issue and articulated an intelligent argument. Carlin himself, we are told, 鈥渆xpressed astonishment at the judgement and talent manifest in the manner of her address鈥 after reading her first letter;[68] and while he was unwilling to concede any ground to Emma, one gets the distinct impression that when he closed his last letter to her 鈥渨ith sentiments of high regard and esteem,鈥 he really did mean it.[69]

One also sees, in the brief correspondence between Joseph and his wife during this time, the degree to which the Prophet himself relied on her judgment and support鈥攁 degree of dependence perhaps too few over the years have appreciated. In Joseph鈥檚 letter to Emma about writing to Carlin, for example, he addresses the recommendation of some of his associates that he flee alone to Wisconsin, where his family would later join him. 鈥淢y mind will eternally revolt at every suggestion of that kind,鈥 Joseph wrote his wife. 鈥淢y safety is with you. . . . Any thing more or less than this cometh of evil. . . . If I go to the Pine County, you shall go along with me, and the children; and if you and the children go not with me, I don[鈥橾t go.鈥[70] Emma鈥檚 judgment carried a lot of weight with Joseph during this stressful time. As we have already seen, for example, Joseph twice followed Emma鈥檚 advice on when it was safe for him to return home from hiding. The Prophet鈥檚 soliloquy on meeting Emma on the island is too well known to repeat here but is further evidence of how much he relied on his wife for comfort and support.

Conclusion

Joseph employed a number of different clerks during the Nauvoo years, one of whom, William Clayton, we have quoted above. We conclude with a lengthy description of Joseph that Clayton provided for his friends back in England shortly after arriving in Nauvoo in 1840. It stands as an important testimony of Joseph鈥檚 prophetic calling during the last few years of his life and reflects our own sentiments about the prophet of the Restoration. 鈥淗e is a man of sound judgment, and possessed of abundance of intelligence,鈥 Clayton wrote, responding to the negative reports he and his readers had heard about Joseph,

and whilst you listen to his conversation you receive intelligence which expands your mind and causes your heart to rejoice. He is very familiar, and delights to instruct the poor saints. I can converse with him just as easy as I can with you, and with regard to being willing to communicate instruction he says 鈥淚 receive it freely and I will give it freely鈥. He is willing to answer any question I have put to him and is pleased when we ask him questions. He seems exceeding well versed in the scriptures, and whilst conversing upon any subject such light and beauty is revealed I never saw before. If I had come from England purposely to converse with him a few days I should have considered myself well paid for my trouble. He is no friend to iniquity but cuts at it wherever he sees it, & it is in vain to attempt to cloke it before him. He has a great measure of the spirit of God, and by this means he is preserved from imposition. He says 鈥淚 am a man of like passions with yourselves,鈥 but truly I wish I was such a man.[71]

Notes

[1] Emma Smith to Thomas Carlin, August 16 [17], 1842, recorded in Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City.

[2] Minutes of March 17, 1842, Relief Society Minutebook, 1842鈥1844, 7, Church History Library.

[3] Joseph Smith, Journal, April 10, 1842, Church History Library, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City.

[4] 鈥淭o the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and to All the Honorable Part of Community,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 839.

[5] 鈥淭o the Church,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 839.

[6] 鈥淭o the Church,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 840.

[7] 鈥淭o the Church,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 840鈥41; 鈥淣辞迟颈肠别,鈥 Times and Seasons, June 15, 1842, 830.

[8] 鈥淎ffidavit of William Law,鈥 Times and Seasons, August 1, 1842, 873.

[9] 鈥淎ffidavit of Hyrum Smith,鈥 Times and Seasons, August 1, 1842, 870.

[10] 鈥淭o the Church,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 841.

[11] 鈥淎ffidavit of Hyrum Smith,鈥 Times and Seasons, August 1, 1842, 871.

[12] 鈥淎ffidavit of Hyrum Smith,鈥 Times and Seasons, August 1, 1842, 871.

[13] 鈥淭o the Church,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 841; see also Joseph Smith, Journal, May 19, 1842, Church History Library.

[14] Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minute Book, June 16, July 7, and August 8, 1842, Church History Library.

[15] Sangamo Journal, July 15, 1842.

[16] 鈥淣辞迟颈肠别,鈥 Times and Seasons, June 15, 1842, 830.

[17] 鈥淭o the Church,鈥 Times and Seasons, July 1, 1842, 839鈥42.

[18] 鈥淛ohn C. Bennett,鈥 Times and Seasons, August 1, 1842, 868鈥78.

[19] Boggs served as governor of Missouri from 1836 to 1840.

[20] Joseph Smith, Journal, May 14, May 22, 1842.

[21] David Kilbourn to Thomas Reynolds, May 14, 1842, in David Kilbourn and Edward Kilbourn, 鈥淟atter-Dayism, No. 1,鈥 Hawk-Eye and Iowa Patriot, September 30, 1841, [1].

[22] 鈥淎ssassination of Ex-Governor Boggs of Missouri,鈥 Quincy Whig, May 21, 1842, 3.

[23] Smith to Bartlett, May 22, 1842, in Quincy Whig, June 4, 1842, 2.

[24] John C. Bennett, letters, July 2 and 4, 1842, in Sangamo Journal, July 15, 1842.

[25] Lilburn W. Boggs, Affidavit, Jackson Co., MO, July 20, 1842, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, Illinois; also copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, December 9鈥20, 1842, Church History Library.

[26] State of Missouri, Requisition of Thomas Reynolds, Jefferson City, Missouri, July 22, 1842, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, Illinois; also copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, December 9鈥20, 1842, Church History Library.

[27] Nauvoo City Council Minutes, July 22, 1842, 95鈥97, Church History Library.

[28] Thomas Carlin to Joseph Smith, July 27, 1842, Joseph Smith Letterbook 2, Joseph Smith Collection, Church History Library; also copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library. While the original warrant from Carlin has not be located, a copy of the warrant made by clerk James Sloan before the Nauvoo municipal court dates the original to August 2, 1842 (Thomas Carlin, Writ, Springfield, Illinois, August 2, 1842, copy by James Sloan, Nauvoo City, Records, 1841鈥1845, Church History Library).

[29] U. S. Constitution, article 4, section 2.

[30] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 8, 1842.

[31] The Nauvoo city charter, which was ratified by the Illinois legislature in December 1840, granted authority to the municipal court to issue writs of habeas corpus 鈥渋n all cases arising under the ordinances of the City Council鈥 (鈥淎n Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo,鈥 sec. 17, 55; 鈥淎n Act to Incorporate the City of Nauvoo,鈥 Times and Seasons, January 15, 1841, 283). Anticipating attempts by 鈥渆nemies鈥 of the Church to subject the citizens of Nauvoo to 鈥渋llegal process,鈥 the Nauvoo city council had passed an ordinance in July declaring that 鈥渘o Citizen of this City shall be taken out of the City by any Writs without the privilege of investigation before the Municipal Court, and the benefit of a Writ of Habeas Corpus鈥 (Nauvoo City Council Minute Book, July 5, 1842, 86鈥87, Church History Library). Along with issuing the writ of habeas corpus, the city council passed a statute on this date granting the Nauvoo municipal court the power to inquire into both proper procedure and merits of the case for any arrest warrant served in Nauvoo. The Nauvoo statutes were attempts to codify the broadest interpretation of the habeas corpus grant in the charter, with the goal to prevent the legal system from being used for 鈥渞eligious or other persecution鈥 (Nauvoo City Council Minute Book, July 5, 1842, 98鈥99, Church History Library).

[32] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 11, 1842.

[33] Orrin Porter Rockwell per S. Armstrong, Philadelphia, PA, to JS, Nauvoo, IL, December 1, 1842, Joseph Smith Collection, Church History Library; Joseph Smith, Journal, March 13, 1843.

[34] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 10, 1842.

[35] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 13, 1842.

[36] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 11, 1842.

[37] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 17, 1842.

[38] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 23, 1842.

[39] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 24鈥28, 1842.

[40] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 29, 1842.

[41] Joseph Smith, Journal, September 3, 1842.

[42] Joseph Smith, Journal, September 4, 1842. The letter was published in the Times and Seasons, September 15, 1842, 919鈥920, and is now Doctrine and Covenants 127.

[43] Joseph Smith, Journal, September 6鈥8, 1842. The September 7 letter to the Saints, incorrectly dated in the original manuscript and published sources, is now Doctrine and Covenants 128.

[44] Joseph Smith, Journal, September 9, 1842.

[45] Joseph Smith, Journal, September 10, 1842.

[46] Joseph Smith, Journal, October 7, 1842.

[47] Joseph Smith, Journal, October 20, 1842.

[48] Joseph Smith, Journal, October 28, 1842.

[49] Joseph Smith, Journal, December 9, 1842.

[50] Thomas Ford to Joseph Smith, December 17, 1842, in Joseph Smith, Journal, December 9, 1842.

[51] Justin Butterfield to Joseph Smith, December 17, 1842, in Joseph Smith, Journal, December 9, 1842.

[52] Joseph Smith, Journal, 26, December 30, 1842; 鈥淧roclamation,鈥 Illinois State Register, September 30, 1842, [3], and 鈥淔our Hundred Dollars Reward!鈥 Sangamo Journal, September 30, 1842, [3]. For the authority Carlin鈥檚 proclamation gave to private citizens, see Joseph Smith, Journal, October 5, 1842.

[53] Joseph Smith, Journal, December 31, 1842.

[54] Joseph Smith, Journal, December 31, 1842.

[55] Joseph Smith, Journal, January 4, 1843.

[56] Joseph Smith, Journal, December 31, 1842.

[57] Joseph Smith, Journal, December 31, 1842鈥揓anuary 2, 1843.

[58] Joseph Smith, Journal, January 2, 1843.

[59] Joseph Smith, Journal, January 4, 1843.

[60] Joseph Smith, Journal, January 5, 1843.

[61] Joseph Smith History, Draft Notes, January 7, 1843, Church History Library.

[62] Joseph Smith to Emma Smith, August 16, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library. As noted below, Emma and others had delivered a petition to the governor in person on July 29 requesting protection for Joseph Smith.

[63] Emma Smith to Joseph Smith, [August 16, 1842], copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library.

[64] Emma Smith to Thomas Carlin, August 16, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library.

[65] Thomas Carlin to Emma Smith, August 24, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, September 3, 1842, Church History Library. Carlin was quoting from 鈥淎n Act Concerning Fugitives From Justice,鈥 January 6, 1827, in The Revised Code of Laws, of Illinois, Enacted by the Fifth General Assembly (Vandalia, Illinois: Robert Blackwell, 1827), 232鈥34. The 鈥渁ct of congress鈥 that the Illinois law referred to is 鈥淎n Act Respecting Fugitives from Justice, and Persons Escaping from the Service of their Masters,鈥 February 12, 1793, in The Public Statutes at Large of the United States of America, 1789鈥1799 (Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown, 1845), 1:302鈥5.

[66] Emma Smith to Thomas Carlin, August 27, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, September 3, 1842, Church History Library.

[67] Thomas Carlin to Emma Smith, September 7, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, September 12, 1842, Church History Library.

[68] Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library. Carlin read the letter in the presence of Judge James A. Ralston, a member of the Church living in Quincy.

[69] Thomas Carlin to Emma Smith, September 7, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, September 12, 1842, Church History Library.

[70] Joseph Smith to Emma Smith, August 16, 1842, copied in Joseph Smith, Journal, August 21, 1842, Church History Library.

[71] William Clayton to the Saints in England, December 10, 1840, in James B. Allen, 鈥淭o the Saints in England: Impressions of a Mormon Immigrant,鈥 BYU Studies 18, no. 3 (Spring 1978): 478鈥79.