The life of Joseph Smith from 1827 to 1830, when he was 22–25 years old, begins in late 1827, after Smith announced he had obtained a book of golden Plates buried in a hill near his home in Manchester, New York (near Palmyra village). Because of opposition by former treasure-seeking colleagues who believed they owned a share of the golden plates, Smith prepared to leave the Palmyra area for his wife's home town of Harmony, Pennsylvania (now Oakland). From late 1827 to the end of 1830, Smith wrote and published the Book of Mormon, and established the Church of Christ.
To write the Book of Mormon, Smith enlisted the assistance of Martin Harris, a wealthy Palmyra landowner who acted as Smith's scribe. Smith said that he used seer stones (one set of which Smith later called the Urim and Thummim) translate the plates he said to possess.[1] Translation ceased, however, when Harris lost 116 manuscript pages of uncopied text. Translation resumed in earnest when Smith was joined in May 1829 by a Smith family associate named Oliver Cowdery. Translation was completed near the end of July 1829, and the resulting manuscript was published as the Book of Mormon on March 26, 1830, in Palmyra.
By the time the Book of Mormon was published, Smith had baptized several followers who called themselves the Church of Christ. On April 6, 1830, Smith and five others formally established the Church of Christ in western New York. Among the most notable early converts was Sidney Rigdon, a Disciples of Christ (Campbell Movement) minister from Kirtland, Ohio, who already shared many early beliefs of the Latter Day Saint movement. With Rigdon came most of Rigdon's congregation, and at the end of 1830, Smith decided that all members of his new church should move to Kirtland.
Writing the Book of Mormon
editRecruitment of Martin Harris
editWhen Smith said he had obtained the book of golden plates from the Angel Moroni (see Early life of Joseph Smith), he also said the angel commanded him "that the plates must be translated, printed and sent before the world".[2] To do so, however, he needed money, and at the time he was penniless.[3] Therefore, Smith sent his mother[4] to the home of Martin Harris, a local landowner said at the time to be worth about $8,000 to $10,000.[5]
Harris had been a close confidant of the Smith family since at least 1826,[6] and he may have heard about Smith's attempts to obtain the plates from the angel even earlier from Joseph Smith Sr.[7] He was also a believer in Smith's powers with his seer stone.[8] When Lucy visited Harris, he had heard through the grapevine in Palmyra that Smith said he had discovered a book of Golden Plates, and he was interested in finding out more.[9] Thus, at Lucy Smith's request, Harris went to the Smith home, heard the story from Smith, and hefted a glass box that Smith said contained the plates.[10] Smith convinced Harris that he had the plates, and that the angel had told him to "quit the company of the money-diggers".[2] Convinced, Harris immediately gave Smith $50,[11] and committed to sponsor the translation of the plates.[12]
The money provided by Harris was enough to pay all of Smith's debts in Palmyra, and for him to travel with his new bride Emma and all of their belongings to Harmony Township, Pennsylvania (now in Oakland Township), where they would be able to avoid the public commotion in Palmyra over the plates.[13] Thus, in late October 1827, they moved to Harmony, with the glass box purportedly holding the plates hidden during the trip in a barrel of beans.[13]
Early transcription and translation
editWhen Joseph and Emma arrived in Harmony, they stayed temporarily in the home of Emma's father Isaac Hale, while Hale set them up in a home on an adjoining 13-acre (5.3 ha) property a few hundred yards from the Susquehanna River.[14] Skeptical that Smith had found golden plates, Hale asked to see them, but was only allowed to lift the glass box in which Smith said they were kept.[15] Nevertheless, Hale refused to allow the plates in his home if he could not see them, so the glass box was hidden in the woods nearby, where the plates are said to have remained during much of the translation process that followed.[16]
After a short stay in the Hale home, Joseph and Emma arranged to live in a house moved onto the Hale property.[17] Emma said that for at least part of the time, Joseph kept the plates in this house on a table, wrapped in a linen tablecloth.[18] Beginning in December 1827, Smith began transcribing the characters he said were engraved on the plates, and dictating what he said was a translation of some of them.[19] While transcribing, he reportedly sat behind a curtain and looked at the plates through the Urim and Thummim, passing the written transcriptions to Emma, who was sitting on the other side of the curtain.[20] Eventually, after some transcription, he began to dictate what he said was a translation of the plates to Emma or her brother Reuben.[18] To translate, he reportedly "put the urim and thummim into his hat and Darkened his Eyes than [sic] he would take a sentance [sic] and it would apper [sic] in Brite [sic] Roman Letters. Then he would tell the writer and he would write it."[21] Reportedly, Smith did not need the physical presence of the plates to create the translation,[22] and the plates remained in the nearby woods[16] during the translation.
Harris came to assist with the translation in February 1828.[19] Around this time, Smith reportedly confided to Emma's uncle that he had doubts about whether or not he should translate the plates, because despite the commandment from God, "he was afraid of the people".[23] Thus, when Harris arrived, he reportedly had to convince Smith to continue translating, saying, "I have not come down here for nothing, and we will go on with it".[24]
Visit to Charles Anthon and others
editIn February 1828, after visiting Smith in Harmony, Harris took a sample of the characters Smith had copied to a few prominent scholars, including Charles Anthon.[25] He said Anthon initially authenticated the characters and their translation, but then retracted his opinion after learning that Smith claimed to have received the plates from an angel.[26] Anthon denied Harris's account of the meeting, claiming instead that he had tried to convince Harris that he was the victim of a fraud.[27] In any event, Harris returned to Harmony in April 1828 and began serving as Smith's scribe.[28]
Harris also visited several other well-known scholars, including at least Luther Bradish in Albany, New York[29] and Samuel L. Mitchill of New York City.[30] The purpose of these visits was to see if they could translate or authenticate some of the transcribed characters,[31] but Harris was unable to get any of the scholars' help or backing.[32]
Loss of 116 manuscript pages
editAfter visiting his home in Palmyra, Harris then returned to Harmony in the middle of April 1828 and began acting as Smith's scribe while Smith dictated what he later would call the Book of Lehi.[33] Harris reported that for at least part of Smith's early translation, Smith used his seer stone to translate, rather than the Urim and Thummim, because the stone was more convenient.[34] Smith also at least sometimes made use of a curtain;[35] Harris stated that one time during the translation, Smith raised a curtain between him and Harris, because "the presence of the Lord was so great", or sometimes Smith dictated to Harris from upstairs or from a different room.[36]
By the middle of June 1828, Smith had dictated about 116 manuscript pages of text,[37] beginning with a story about a man named Lehi in Jerusalem, and ending with a story about King Benjamin, one of his descendants, in the Americas.[38] Harris, however, was having marital problems with his wife Lucy, who was upset about not being able to see the plates.[39] Hoping to appease her, and to quell his own doubts, Harris convinced a reluctant Smith to allow him to take the 116 manuscript pages with him on a visit back home in Palmyra.[40] Because the manuscript was the only copy, however, Smith made Harris sign a written oath that he would show the pages only to five specified people in his family.[41]
While Harris visited Palmyra, Emma gave birth to the young couple's first child,[42] but the boy was deformed and stillborn,[43] leaving Emma deathly ill for about two weeks.[42] Not hearing word from Harris for three weeks, Smith traveled in July 1828 to Palmyra and learned that Harris had lost the manuscript pages, and had been avoiding him.[44] Despite his oath, Harris had been exhibiting the manuscript to numerous visitors, and somehow it had disappeared from the drawer where he kept it.[45]
Smith was despondent over losing his child and the manuscript. He had had great hopes for his first-born child, reportedly telling people that the child would see the plates,[15] and that he would assist in the translation.[46] After returning to Harmony without Harris, Smith dictated to Emma his first written revelation, which rebuked him for losing the manuscript pages, but pinned most of the blame upon Harris.[47]
During this period, Smith also reportedly joined a local Methodist Episcopal Church Sunday school class in Harmony.[48] This church was attended by Emma's family, and led by Nathaniel Lewis,[49] Isaac Hale's brother-in-law.[50] His membership, however, was resisted by several members who were aware of his treasure hunting activities, and Smith voluntarily withdrew his membership.[49]
Resumption of writing
editAs part of the penalty for losing the manuscript, Smith said the angel took away the Urim and Thummim,[51] returning it once again on September 22, 1828, the autumn equinox and the anniversary of the day he first received the plates.[52] Smith said the angel also temporarily took back the plates during that time.[53]
By February 1829, Smith had begun writing sporadically with Emma as scribe.[52] Smith resumed the translation beginning at the story of King Benjamin now found in the Book of Mosiah, where Smith had left off with Harris before losing the 116 pages.[54] In February, when Smith's parents visited Harmony, and Smith dictated a revelation for his father, an optimistic description of the translated book as a "marvelous work…about to come forth among the children of men".[55]
According to Emma, Smith no longer used the Urim and Thummim in the writing process after the loss of the 116 manuscript pages; rather, he began using exclusively his dark seer stone.[56] He dictated after sitting "with his face buried in his hat with the seer stone in it, and dictating hour after hour with nothing between us".[18] While looking at the stone, he "rest[ed] his elbows upon his knees",[57] and drew the hat "closely around his face to exclude the light", so that the "spiritual light" would shine.[58]
The writing during this time was sporadic, in part because Emma was busy running the household, and Joseph was working outside the home.[21] They received some support for the translation, however, including money for paper, from Joseph Knight Sr., Smith's associate from his treasure hunting expeditions.[21]
In March 1829, Harris returned to Harmony and wanted to see the plates first hand. Smith reportedly told Harris that Smith "would go into the woods where the Book of Plates was, and that after he came back, Harris should follow his tracks in the snow, and find the Book, and examine it for himself"; after following these directions, however, Harris could not find the plates.[59] The next day,[60] Smith dictated a revelation[61] indicating that there was no need for the present "unbelieving" generation of humanity to see the plates because—in the words of God—"if they will not believe my words" written on the plates, "they would not believe my servant Joseph, if it were possible that he could show them all things."[62] Nevertheless, according to the revelation, the words of the plates would go forth to "this generation" accompanied by the testimonies of three witnesses who would have the exclusive privilege to "view [the plates] as they are".[63] Harris could be one of those three witnesses if he would "go out and bow down before me [God], and humble himself in mighty prayer and faith".[64]
Arrival of Oliver Cowdery
editOn April 5, 1829 Oliver Cowdery arrived at Smith’s residence.[65] Cowdery, a school teacher born in Vermont, had heard about Smith's golden plates while he boarded with the Joseph Smith Sr. family during the school year, and had traveled with Joseph's brother Samuel Harrison Smith to Harmony hoping that he could serve as Smith's scribe.[66] Smith was happy to have his assistance, and on April 7, 1829, Smith and Cowdery began writing full-time.[65] During this time, they received financial support from Joseph Knight Sr.[67]
In April 1829, Smith stated that Cowdery had a "gift" that could allow Cowdery to translate ancient hidden records, and that the "keys of this gift" to translate would be given both to Smith and to Cowdery.[68] According to the revelation Smith said he had, this gift to translate was not limited to the golden plates, but included other ancient hidden records. For example, Smith's next revelation was what he said was the translation of a hidden parchment written by John the Apostle,[69] and presumably still hidden at the time of the translation.[note 1]
While Cowdery, too, was to have the "gift" to translate, when Cowdery attempted his own translation of some unknown hidden record, he was unsuccessful, and he returned to acting as Smith's scribe.[70] Consequently, a revelation by Smith stated that Cowdery's translation of hidden records would have to wait until after Smith had fully translated the golden plates.[70][note 2]
With Cowdery as scribe, Smith continued dictating what he said was the translation of the golden plates. On or before May 1829,[note 3] Smith dictated a revelation warning him that whoever had stolen the 116 manuscript pages was planning to wait until Smith re-translated that section of the golden plates, and then alter it, to show Smith could not translate the same words twice.[71] Therefore, according to the revelation, God's plan was for Smith to "go on unto the finishing of the remainder of the work as you [Smith] had begun",[72] and instead of going back and re-translating the original 116 manuscript pages, Smith was to substitute a translation which he would create from another set of plates, called the "plates of Nephi", which covered roughly the same material, except in more detail.[73]
On May 15, 1829,[74] according to Cowdery's later reminiscences, what is now the book of Third Nephi led Smith and Cowdery to pray so that they could receive authority to baptize.[75] Thus, they said that an angel appeared, granting them that authority,[76] and then they baptized each other in a river near their home in Harmony.[77] Ten days later, they baptized Samuel, who was still residing with them.[78]
In late May 1829, Samuel Smith returned home to Palmyra, reporting to the Smith and Harris families that Smith's translation with Cowdery as scribe was proceeding rapidly.[79] Samuel's report excited Martin Harris, but angered Harris's wife Lucy, who gathered witnesses and filed a criminal complaint against Smith in Lyons, New York, in an attempt to prove that Smith was pretending to have the golden plates in order to defraud her husband.[79] A trial proceeded in absentia against Smith, but was dismissed after the judge heard the testimony of Martin Harris.[80]
Meanwhile, a group of people in Harmony began to threaten the progress of Smith's translation.[81] Therefore, Oliver Cowdery wrote to one of his acquaintances named David Whitmer in Fayette, New York,[note 4] who had previously shown an interest in the golden plates,[note 5] and got permission for Smith and Cowdery to stay at David Whitmer's parents' house in Fayette], while they completed the translation.[82] The Whitmers were happy to oblige, and offered free room and board.[83] Thus, David Whitmer took a large wagon to Harmony at the beginning of June 1829, and moved Smith and Cowdery to Fayette.[83] This time, Smith said he gave the plates to an angel, who transported the plates and then delivered them to Smith in Fayette.[84] However, by this time, Smith was not directly using the plates in the process of writing.[85] Emma did not initially accompany Smith to Fayette,[86] although she came later for a time.[87]
Completion and publication of the Book of Mormon
editInitial publication attempt
editAt the Whitmer home in Fayette, New York, Smith, Cowdery, David Whitmer, David's brother John Whitmer,[83] and another scribe whose handwriting has not been identified worked to complete the Book of Mormon.[88]
On June 11, 1829, to secure his copyright,[note 6] Smith deposited a copy of the title page with the local federal district court.[89] In the early part of June 1829,[90] Smith also took a copy of the title page and a few pages of text[91] to Palmyra village and attempted during several interviews to make arrangements to have his work published by E. B. Grandin, publisher of The Wayne Sentinel and friend of Martin Harris.[92] Although Grandin provided an approximate estimate of the costs, he initially declined to publish the book.[93] As for funding, Smith attempted unsuccessfully to secure the financial assistance from several family acquaintances.[94]
Twelve witnesses and the completion of translation
editDuring the remainder of June 1829, Smith continued the work of translation in Fayette by dictating a replacement section for the 116 pages previously lost by Harris.[95] Some time before June 14, 1829,[96] a revelation by Smith commanded Cowdery and Whitmer to seek out twelve "disciples", who desired to serve, and who would "go into all the world to preach my gospel unto every creature", and who would be ordained to baptize and to ordain priests and teachers.[97] Soon thereafter in the second half of June 1829,[85] a group of Three Witnesses and a separate group of Eight Witnesses were selected, in addition to Smith himself, to testify that Smith had the golden plates.
The Three Witnesses were selected soon after a visit by Harris to the Whitmer home in Fayette, accompanied by Smith's parents,[98] to inquire about the translation.[99][note 7] When Harris arrived, he joined with Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer to request that the three be named as the Three Witnesses referred to in the much earlier revelation directed to Harris, and also referred to in a recently translated portion of the plates called the Book of Ether (2:2–4).[99] In response, Smith dictated a revelation that the three of them would see the golden plates.[100] Thus, Smith took the three of them to the woods near the Whitmer home and they had a shared vision in which they all claimed to see (with their "spiritual eyes", Harris reportedly said[90]) an angel holding the golden plates and turning its leaves.[101] The four of them also said they heard "the voice of the Lord" telling them that the translation of the plates was correct and commanding them to testify of what they saw and heard.[101][note 8]
The Eight Witnesses were selected a few days later when Smith traveled to Palmyra with the males of the Whitmer home, including David Whitmer's father Peter, his brothers Christian, Jacob, and John, and his brother-in-law Hiram Page. Smith took this group, along with his father Joseph Smith Sr. and his brothers Hyrum and Samuel to a location near Smith's parent's home in Palmyra where the angel had transported the plates,[3][note 9] where Smith said he showed them the golden plates.[102] Like the Three Witnesses, the Eight Witnesses later signed an affidavit for inclusion at the end of the Book of Mormon.[103] Though the Eight Witnesses did not refer, like the Three, to an angel or the voice of God, they said that they had hefted the plates and seen the engravings on them.[103]
After the experiences of the twelve witnesses, Smith continued the translation at the Whitmer home in Fayette.[104] On June 26, 1829, E.B. Grandin published in The Wayne Sentinel a copy of the Book of Mormon title page Smith had given him earlier, and offered it to his readers as a "curiosity", stating that "[m]ost people entertain an idea that the whole matter is the result of a gross imposition, and a grosser superstition".[105] Possibly because of this article and Smith's growing notoriety, the late stages of Smith's translation were interrupted periodically with curious visitors.[104] Translation was completed around July 1, 1829,[85] after which Smith reportedly returned the plates to the angel.[106]
Publication of the Book of Mormon and associated notoriety
editSmith's first attempt at arranging publication of the Book of Mormon with E.B. Grandin was unsuccessful. Harris had also unsuccessfully approached Jonathan A. Hadley, another Palmyra printer who published the anti-Masonic Palmyra Freeman.[107] Smith and Harris also traveled to Rochester, New York and approached Thurlow Weed, an anti-Masonic publisher[note 10] who, like Grandin and Hadley in Palmyra, also refused to publish the book, even though Harris offered his farm as security.[108] Smith next approached Weed's competitor in Rochester, Elihu F. Marshall, who agreed to publish the book.[108] With Marshall's offer in hand, Smith and Harris then approached Grandin a second time, hoping for a better offer that wouldn't require travel to Rochester.[109] Negotiations with Grandin continued from July to August 1829. On August 25, 1829, Grandin entered into a secured transaction, using Harris's land as collateral,[110] to print 5,000 copies of the book for $3,000,[111] to be paid within 18 months after printing began.[110] Half the sum was to be paid by Harris, and the other half was to be paid by Smith and his brother Hyrum.[112]
While Smith was attempting to arrange for publication during July and August 1829, several area newspapers ran harshly critical articles on the Book of Mormon, and reprinted the title page published on June 26, 1829, in The Wayne Sentinel.[105] This began with a Palmyra Freeman article written by Jonathan A. Hadley.[113] Between August and October 1829, the Hadley article was reprinted in Lockport, New York,[114] Rochester, New York,[115] Painesville, Ohio,[116] and Salem, Massachusetts.[117] In July and August, the Biblical-sounding language style of the Book of Mormon's title page was satirized by a series of articles in a Rochester paper.[118]
In October, Smith moved to Harmony, Pennsylvania to rejoin his wife Emma, leaving Oliver Cowdery in charge of supervising the publication in Palmyra.[119] Before leaving, Smith said he had a revelation that the original manuscript should remain in the Smith home while Cowdery made a copy, then Hyrum Smith would take only enough of the transcript for each day's typesetting to Grandin's office per day, accompanied by a guard, while Peter Whitmer guarded the Smith home.[120]
Smith arrived in Harmony on October 4, 1829, where he found the opposition that had caused his move to Fayette had abated.[121] In order to pay his $1500 share of the costs for printing the Book of Mormon, Smith attempted unsuccessfully to raise at least $500 from his old friend Josiah Stowell.[121] He also sent Cowdery and Hiram Page as missionaries to Toronto, unsuccessfully, to raise money by selling the book's Canadian copyright.[122]
In January 1830, Hyrum Smith and Cowdery discovered that Abner Cole, publisher of the Palmyra newspaper The Reflector, had taken portions of the pre-published Book of Mormon and began printing them in his newspaper.[123] The paper was printed at E. B. Grandin's printing shop on nights and weekends, and therefore Cole had access to the unpublished Book of Mormon text.[124] Unable to convince Cole to stop printing, Hyrum and Oliver sent for Smith, who returned briefly from Harmony and convinced Cole to submit the matter to an arbitrator, who held that Cole's publication was a copyright infringement and ordered him to stop.[125]
Later in January 1830, a group of Palmyra citizens passed a resolution calling for a local boycott of the Book of Mormon.[126] As a result, Grandin stopped printing in January 1830.[127][note 11] In addition, Harris was coming to realize that the full share of the $3,000 cost of printing the book would fall on his shoulders when it came due in early 1831, and under the prodding of his wife Lucy, was considering breaching his contract to pay his share.[127] In response, Smith traveled once again from Harmony Palmyra, and placated Harris by entering into a contract on January 16, 1830 stating: "I hereby agree that Martin Harris shall have an equal privilege with me and my friends of selling the Book of Mormon of the edition now printing by Egbert B. Grandin until enough of them shall be sold to pay for the printing of the same".[128] Smith and Harris then went to Grandin's office, and convinced Grandin to resume printing,[129] which he did on January 26, 1830.[127]
In late March 1830, Smith travelled once again from Harmony to Palmyra.[130] The first advance copies of the Book of Mormon were becoming available, and Harris was attempting to sell them, but not getting any buyers.[131] Harris, therefore, waffled on his commitment to pay the printing costs.[131] In response, Smith dictated a revelation commanding Harris, upon penalty of eternal damnation he could not imagine, to: "Impart a portion of thy property; Yea, even a part of thy lands and all save the support of thy family. Pay the printer's debt."[132][note 12] Harris renewed his commitment to pay the printing costs, and on March 26, 1830, Grandin made copies of the Book of Mormon available for purchase at the bookshop on the ground floor of his shop.[133][note 13]
Bible revision
editIn June 1830, Smith dictated a revelation in which Moses narrates a vision in which he sees "worlds without number" and speaks with God about the purpose of creation and the relation of humankind to deity.[134] This revelation initiated a revision of the Bible which Smith worked on sporadically until 1833 but which remained unpublished until after his death.[135] Smith expressed to his followers that this "new translation" of the Bible would be published "as soon the Lord permit." He may have considered it complete, though according to Emma Smith, the biblical revision was still unfinished when Joseph died.[136]
In the course of producing the Book of Mormon, Smith declared that the Bible was missing "the most plain and precious parts of the gospel".[137] He produced a "new translation" of the Bible, not by directly translating from manuscripts in another language, but by amending and appending to a King James Bible in a process which he and Latter Day Saints believed was guided by inspiration; Smith asserted his translation would correct lacunae and restore what the contemporary Bible was missing.[138] While many changes involved straightening out seeming contradictions or making small clarifications, other changes added large interpolations to the text.[139] For example, Smith's revision nearly tripled the length of the first five chapters of Genesis into a text called the Book of Moses.[140]
Book of Moses
editThe Book of Moses itself begins with Moses speaking with God "face to face" and seeing a vision of all existence. Moses is initially overwhelmed by the immensity of the cosmos and humanity's smallness in comparison, but God then explains that he made the earth and heavens to bring humans to eternal life.[141] The book subsequently provides an enlarged account of the Genesis creation narrative which describes God having a corporeal body,[142] followed by a rendering of the fall of Adam and Eve in celebratory terms which emphasize eating the forbidden fruit as part of a process of gaining knowledge and becoming more like God.[143] The Book of Moses also expands the story of Enoch, described in the Bible as being an ancestor of Noah. In the expanded narrative, Enoch has a theophany in which he discovers that God is capable of sorrow, and that human sin and suffering cause him to grieve.[144] Enoch then receives a prophetic calling, and he eventually builds a city of Zion so righteous that it is taken to heaven.[145] Enoch's example inspired Smith's own hopes to establish the nascent Church of Christ as a Zion community.[146] The book also elaborates some passages that (to Christians) foreshadowed the coming of Christ, into explicit Christian knowledge of and faith in Jesus as a Savior - in effect Christianizing the Old Testament.[147]
Early ecclesiastical leadership
editInformal "Church of Christ" in 1829 and early 1830
editEven before translation of the Book of Mormon was completed, Smith and Cowdery began baptizing several converts to the new faith.[104] These adherents referred to themselves as the Church of Christ.[148] In June 1829, in response to concerns by Cowdery, Smith dictated a revelation commanding Cowdery to "build up my church", based upon the theological principles Smith had been dictating, he said, from the golden plates.[149] Possibly in conformance with this revelation, some time later in 1829 Cowdery said he received his own revelation, called the Articles of the Church of Christ, about "how he should build up his church & the manner thereof".[150] Cowdery was described in his revelation as "an Apostle of Jesus Christ".[150] Similarly, several of the other Twelve Witnesses to the Book of Mormon were described by people of the Palmyra area as "apostles"[151] or "elders"[152] in this new faith, and beginning in August 1829 some of them were given missions to preach the gospel.[151]
During the winter of 1829, when Smith was attempting to raise money for the publication of the Book of Mormon, Smith is said to have received a revelation through his seer stone[122] sending Cowdery and Hiram Page on a mission to Canada to sell the Book of Mormon's Canadian copyright for $8,000.[153] This mission, however, was unsuccessful, and the group returned empty-handed to the Whitmer home in Fayette, New York, where Smith was then visiting.[122] As the group did not understand why the previous revelation had directed the group to carry out an unsuccessful mission, according to the recollection of David Whitmer, Smith received another revelation indicating that "[s]ome revelations are of God: some revelations are of men; and some revelations are of the devil."[122] In early 1830, Smith reportedly discontinued the use of his seer stones in dictating revelations, from then on dictating the revelations based solely upon the impressions the Holy Spirit was said to have put in his mind.[154][note 14]
Formal organization of the Church of Christ
editBy the spring of 1830, Smith had in mind the idea that his informal body of believers who called themselves the Church of Christ should be organized as a formal, legal body.[131] Therefore, Smith traveled from Harmony to the Manchester-Palmyra area.[note 15] In March 1830,[155] just before publication of the Book of Mormon. Smith stayed in Palmyra until April 6, 1830, the date he had chosen to formally organize the church. While in Manchester that day, a Tuesday, Smith dictated a series of short revelations,[156] including a revelation stating that Smith was to be considered "a seer, a translator, a prophet, an apostle of Jesus Christ, an elder of the church".[157] The revelation stated that Smith was to be the first "elder" in the Church of Christ, while Cowdery was to be the "first preacher".[158] Then several people, including Martin Harris and Joseph Smith Sr.,[131] but apparently not Joseph Smith himself,[159] were baptized that night in a nearby dammed-off stream.[160] The majority of witnesses say this organizational event took place in the log home of Joseph Smith Sr. in the Manchester area,[161] followed by a meeting the next Sunday in Fayette, New York.[160] Nevertheless, one of Smith's histories,[162] and a later statement by David Whitmer place the event in Fayette.[163]
On April 11, 1830, the first Sunday after the Tuesday, April 6 organization date, the newly formed church held its first worship services in Fayette,[164] attended by a much larger group of about 30 people.[159] At least six other people were baptized that day in the nearby Seneca Lake, and at least seven others were baptized on the following Sunday, April 18,[164] after a revelation two days earlier had stated that new converts had to be rebaptized into "a new and an everlasting covenant" regardless of any prior baptism.[165] Oliver Cowdery, as the "first preacher", took the lead in both baptism and the giving of sermons.[166] Smith and the leaders of his church also began teaching and baptizing in Colesville, New York, near Smith's home in Harmony, where his friend Joseph Knight Sr. lived. The Colesville meetings were "well-attended" and led to several baptisms, particularly after word got out that Smith had performed an exorcism of one of Joseph Knight's sons.[167]
Thus, by June 1830, the new church had about 30 members.[168] On June 9, 1830, the church held its first conference in Fayette. It was on this occasion that Smith called for a vote on the Articles and Covenants of the Church of Christ,[169] which would serve as the church's constitution.[170] At the conference, several said they had visions, others fainted and had to be laid on beds, others shouted hosannas.[168]
Colesville branch
editIn addition to the members in the Palmyra-Manchester area and in Fayette, Smith soon found followers in Colesville, New York, a town near Harmony on the Susquehanna River. Smith's friend Joseph Knight Sr. lived there, and the Universalist Knight had been receptive to Smith's ideas.[131] In April 1830, Smith visited Colesville and held several "well-attended" meetings.[164] Smith achieved a great deal of notoriety[171] when he reportedly performed an exorcism on one of Knight's sons, Newel Knight.[172] This exorcism convinced several Colesville residents to be baptized,[173] including eventually Newel, who traveled to Fayette in late May to be baptized, and was present during the June 9, 1830 conference, where he fell into a trance and awoke saying he'd had a theophany.[168]
After the June 9, 1830 conference and a brief return home to Harmony, with Knight's exorcism in recent memory, Smith dictated what was described as a secret vision of Moses,[174] not to be shown "unto any except them that believe",[174] in which Satan attempted to convince Moses that he was Jesus.[174] Much later, while speaking about the early history of the church, Smith said he had heard "[t]he voice of Michael on the banks of the Susquehanna, detecting the devil when he appeared as an angel of light".[175] Although Smith did not give a date for this event, it could have occurred during this time when he was thinking about exorcisms and appearances of the devil near the Susquehanna.
In late June 1830, Smith, Emma, Cowdery, and John and David Whitmer visited Colesville and baptized Joseph Knight Sr., many of his family, and several others in the area.[176] This activity, and the recent exorcism of Newel Knight, aroused the animosity of a group of local residents,[dubious – discuss] leading to Smith's arrest by the local constable on "disorderly person" (vagrancy) charges.[177] Smith was transported to South Bainbridge, New York. His two-day trial took place in late June, ending on July 1, 1830,[178] and he was defended by two attorneys hired by Joseph Knight,[note 16] who got him acquitted.[179] Immediately after his release, however, he was arrested again and transported back to Colesville for a second trial, for which he was also acquitted.[180]
After a few days home in Harmony, Smith returned to Joseph Knight's house in Colesville with Cowdery, but after they saw a mob gathering, were quickly forced to run all night back to Harmony, while pursued by the mob, stopping only once to rest under a tree.[181] A source who said he heard Smith describe this flight in 1844 said that while resting at the tree, Smith and Cowdery were visited by Peter, James, and John who gave them their priesthood "keys",[182] which according to Smith included "the keys of the kingdom, and of the dispensation of the ful[l]ness of times".[175][note 17]
Definition of Smith's role in the church
editBack at his home in Harmony, Pennsylvania, Smith dictated a revelation indicating that he and Cowdery should begin acting more as full-time clergy.[183] After planting crops in Harmony, they would begin visiting the church's branches in Colesville, Fayette, and Manchester, "devote all [their] service in Zion", and while traveling, they would receive clothes, food, and money from the church as needed.[184] John Whitmer, who had begun living with Joseph and Emma,[185] was also given a full-time clerical role.[186] Smith's wife Emma also wanted to know her place within the new church, and a second revelation reassured her that Smith would support her with church funds.[187] She was not destined to be a witness of the golden plates (v. 8), but she was to act as Joseph's scribe when Cowdery was unavailable (v. 5), and she was to create a church hymnal (v. 11).
Smith, with the assistance of John Whitmer, then began to copy and compile the revelations Smith had dictated up to that point, while Cowdery returned to Fayette. Cowdery and most of the Whitmer family in Fayette became alarmed, however, when they learned that Smith had added a phrase to the "Articles and Covenants of the Church of Christ",[169] requiring good works as a prerequisite for baptism, and Cowdery commanded Smith to retract the added phrase.[188] Smith had to travel to Fayette to convince Cowdery and the Whitmers "that the sentence was reasonable, and according to Scripture".[188]
In August 1830, back in Harmony, Smith began once again to arouse resentment with the neighbors, and Emma's parents finally turned against him.[189] On the urging of Nathaniel Lewis, a Methodist deacon who was married to Isaac Hale's sister,[50] Isaac Hale indicated he would no longer offer Smith and other church members his protection.[189] As he began to fear for his safety, he dictated a revelation that it was not safe to buy wine or liquor from the church's enemies, and that any wine or liquor consumed by church members, including sacramental wine, must be made by church members.[190]
Given the resentment in Harmony, and the continued open hostility in Colesville,[189] Smith moved in September 1830 to Fayette, where the Whitmer family had once again offered him residence.[189] In Fayette, Smith found that Hiram Page, one of the Eight Witnesses, had been dictating revelations using his own seer stone, and that Oliver Cowdery, the Whitmer family, and most church members[191] had been accepting them as the word of God.[192] Page's revelations had to do with the establishment of Zion,[193] including the location of the "New Jerusalem" city predicted in the Book of Mormon (Ether, ch. 13).[note 18]
Page's revelations, and their general acceptance as scripture by the Fayette branch, weighed upon Smith as he prepared for the church's second conference, scheduled for September 26, 1830.[192] Prior to that conference, Smith dictated a revelation to Cowdery indicating, for the first time, that Smith alone was "appointed to receive commandments and revelations in the Church".[191][note 19] Cowdery would continue to have his own written revelations, but he was to "write them not by way of commandment", and he was particularly forbidden to command Smith, whom the revelation described was to be "at the head of the church".[191] Furthermore, after the conference, Cowdery would be sent on a mission "among the Lamanites" (Native Americans).[191] As to Page's revelations, they originated from Satan, and in fact nobody knew the location of the "New Jerusalem", though it would be somewhere "among the Lamanites".[191]
In preparation for the church's second conference, Smith also dictated his most significant revelation since the Articles and Covenants of the Church of Christ.[194] The revelation contained grand eschatological themes, and stated that the "elect" would be "gathered in unto one place, upon the face of this land" in anticipation of the Tribulation.[195]
At the church's second conference, dated September 26, 1830, the church discussed Page's revelations, and Page agreed to renounce his seer stone and his revelations. Smith then dictated a series of revelations chastising David Whitmer[196] and calling several missionaries.[197]
Mission to the "Lamanites" and recruitment of Sidney Rigdon
editIn October 1830, after the Second Conference, Smith dispatched Oliver Cowdery on his mission to the "Lamanites".[198] Cowdery was accompanied by Parley P. Pratt,[199] a recent convert who had been a missionary for the Disciples of Christ in Amherst, Ohio.[200] On their way to the "Lamanites", the missionaries passed by Kirtland, Ohio, where there was a Disciples of Christ congregation, and converted its minister Sidney Rigdon and about 20 members of his congregation.[201] Then Cowdery's delegation continued toward their destination of the "Lamanites" west of the Mississippi River.[note 20]
Meanwhile, Rigdon traveled the opposite direction from Ohio to Fayette, New York to see Smith, arriving in December 1830.[202] To mark the occasion, Smith dictated a revelation directed to Rigdon[203] comparing Rigdon with John the Baptist, stating that like John, Rigdon had previously "baptized by water unto repentance, but they received not the Holy Ghost".[204] But now, when Rigdon would baptize, they would "receive the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands, even as the apostles of old".[204] Furthermore, Rigdon was to watch over Smith, that Smith's "faith fail not", and as long as Smith was faithful, he would have the "keys" to reveal all the "mysteries" of God that had previously been "sealed".[205] If Smith was not faithful, God would "plant [another] in his stead".[205]
In the absence of Cowdery, Rigdon became Smith's new scribe,[206] and Smith dictated to Rigdon what Smith said was a translation of the Prophecy of Enoch, a "lost book" referred to in the Book of Jude.[207] The project of translating the "sealed" mysteries of God was soon postponed, however,[208] as a revelation in late December 1830 indicated that the church headquarters was to move from Fayette to Kirtland to await Oliver Cowdery's return there from his mission to the "Lamanites".[208]
Notes
edit- ^ A section of the Book of Mormon, apparently written in June 1829, would later refer to this collection of John the Apostle's writings as having been "sealed up to come forth in their purity" in the end times (1 Nephi 14:26).
- ^ There is no record of Cowdery ever attempting the translation of an ancient document after the spring of 1829.
- ^ The date of this revelation (now D&C 10) was listed as May 1829 in the Book of Commandments and the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants, and remains so in the edition published by the Community of Christ. In 1902, however, LDS editor B. H. Roberts felt that the date should be changed to the summer of 1828, and that date is found in the most recent editions published by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Scholars disagree as to whether Roberts's change is consistent with the evidence (Bushman 2005, p. 579 note 63).
- ^ David Whitmer lived with his parents in a rural area about two miles (3 km) from the village of Waterloo, and 27 miles (43 km) from Palmyra (Van Horn 1881).
- ^ Oliver Cowdery had met Whitmer in Palmyra, and he and Samuel Harrison Smith had stayed at the Whitmer home in early April 1929 on their way to Harmony, and Cowdery had been corresponding with Whitmer about his experiences in translating (Van Horn 1881). In addition, Whitmer knew Smith's parents, who had used the Whitmers as a way-point to stay overnight during their trip from Manchester to Palmyra, and had discussed the golden plates (Smith 1853, p. 132).
- ^ The Copyright Act of 1790, in effect until 1831, required the author or proprietor of a book to deposit the title page with the clerk of the local United States district court prior to publication. See 1 Stat. 124, § 3.
- ^ According to Smith's mother, this trip was prompted by news that Smith had completed the translation of the plates(Smith 1853, p. 138).
- ^ David Whitmer later stated that the angel showed them "the breast plates, the Ball or Directors, the Sword of Laban and other plates" (Van Horn 1881; Kelley & Blakeslee 1882; see also Smith 1835, p. 171).
- ^ Because of a foreclosure on their Manchester property, the Smith family was then living in a log cabin technically in Palmyra (Smith 1883, p. 14; Berge 1985).
- ^ Some commentators find in the Book of Mormon anti-Masonic references [citation needed].
- ^ Gilbert, the typesetter, disputed that there had been a suspension of publication saying that because Harris "had given security for the full amount agreed upon for printing, before the work was commenced ... there was no delay because of financial embarrassment."
- ^ The revelation also commanded, "Release thyself from bondage. Leave thy house and home, except when thou shalt desire to see them" (Phelps 1833, p. 42, XVI:38–39). It was about this time that Harris and his wife separated (Tucker 1867, p. 54).
- ^ Harris eventually satisfied the $3,000 printing bill by selling a portion of his land when payment came due in early 1831 (Tucker 1867, pp. 54–55).
- ^ In March 1829, Smith had dictated a revelation in the voice of the Lord stating that Smith "has a gift to translate the book, and I have commanded him that he shall pretend to no other gift, for I will grant him no other gift" (Phelps 1833, p. 10, 4:2). Nevertheless, Smith apparently did not understand this as a limitation on his ability to receive revelation.[citation needed]
- ^ Witnesses refer to these events as taking place in Manchester, but at the time, Smith's family was living in a log cabin located just north of the Manchester border in Palmyra, although their farm was still located in Manchester (Berge 1985).
- ^ The attorneys were John S. Reid and James Davidson (Roberts 1902, p. 89)
- ^ The factual accuracy of this second-hand account by Addison Everett has been questioned, as there are some anachronisms.[citation needed] For example, Everett incorrectly understood the 1830 trial to have taken place in 1829 during the translation of the Book of Mormon.
- ^ That one of Page's revelations predicted the location of the "New Jerusalem" is a generally accepted inference, based on Smith's history and the responsive revelation. See, e.g., Joseph Fielding Smith (1946) Church History and Modern Revelation. (Salt Lake City: LDS Church), 1:125n.
- ^ According to David Whitmer, several men other than Joseph Smith had the gift of prophecy in the early days of the Church of Christ, including Ziba Peterson, Hiram Page, Oliver Cowdery, Parley P. Pratt, Orson Pratt, Peter Whitmer, Christian Whitmer, John Whitmer, and himself (Whitmer 1887, p. 32).
- ^ Although the intended destination was west of the Mississippi, where Andrew Jackson had recently relocated several Native American tribes, the delegation didn't make it that far.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ "Gospel Topics", Book of Mormon Translation, LDS Church
- ^ a b Harris 1859, p. 169
- ^ a b Smith 1853
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 110
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 260
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 255
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 109
- ^ Harris 1859, p. 164
- ^ Harris 1859, pp. 167–168
- ^ Harris 1859, pp. 168–169
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 113; Roberts 1902, p. 19
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 113
- ^ a b Harris 1859, p. 170
- ^ Porter 1971, pp. 132–34
- ^ a b Howe 1834, p. 264
- ^ a b Howe 1834, p. 264; Jessee 1976, p. 3
- ^ Mather 1880, p. 201
- ^ a b c Smith 1879
- ^ a b Roberts 1902, p. 19
- ^ Howe 1834, pp. 270–271
- ^ a b c Jessee 1976, p. 4
- ^ Stevenson 1882; Howe 1834, pp. 264–65
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 266
- ^ Booth 1831a
- ^ Shipps (1985, pp. 15, 153); Bushman (2005, p. 63)
- ^ Bushman (2005, pp. 63–66); Remini (2002, pp. 57–58)
- ^ Howe (1834, pp. 269–72) (Anthon's description of his meeting with Harris). But see Vogel (2004, p. 115) (arguing that Anthon's initial assessment was likely more positive than he would later admit).
- ^ Easton-Flake & Cope (2020, p. 129)
- ^ (Lapham 1996)
- ^ Hadley 1829; Jessee 1976, p. 3
- ^ Jessee 1976, p. 3
- ^ Howe 1834, pp. 270–272
- ^ Smith 1830b, p. 1
- ^ Stevenson 1882, p. 86
- ^ Cole 1831
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 14
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 20
- ^ Smith 1835, sec. 36, v. 41
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 116
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 117
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 20; Smith 1853, pp. 117–118
- ^ a b Smith 1853, p. 118
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 269
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 118–121
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 122–123
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 267
- ^ Phelps 1833, sec. 2:5
- ^ McKune 1879
- ^ a b Lewis & Lewis 1879
- ^ a b Porter 1969, p. 332
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 125
- ^ a b Smith 1853, p. 126
- ^ Smith 1832, p. 5; Phelps 1833, 9:1, p. 22
- ^ Phelps 1833, 9:10, p. 25
- ^ Phelps 1833, ch. III, p. 9
- ^ Bidamon 1996
- ^ Blair 1979
- ^ Whitmer 1887, p. 12
- ^ Howe 1834, pp. 264–265
- ^ Howe 1834, p. 265
- ^ Phelps 1833, ch. IV, pp. 10–13
- ^ Phelps 1833, 4:3—4:4, pp. 10—11
- ^ Phelps 1833, 4:4, pp. 11–12
- ^ Phelps 1833, 4:4, 4:8, pp. 11–12
- ^ a b Cowdery 1834, p. 14
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 128–29
- ^ Jessee 1976, p. 5; Roberts 1902, p. 47
- ^ Phelps 1833, 5:5, 5:11, pp. 15—16
- ^ Phelps 1833, 6, p. 18
- ^ a b Phelps 1833, 8, pp. 20–21
- ^ Phelps 1833, 9:2, p. 22
- ^ Phelps 1833, 9:1, p. 22
- ^ Phelps 1833, 9:10–11, p. 25
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 40
- ^ Cowdery 1834, p. 15
- ^ Cowdery 1834, pp. 15–16
- ^ Roberts 1902, 1:39
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 131; Roberts 1902, 1:44
- ^ a b Smith 1853, p. 132
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 132–135
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 135
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 135–37
- ^ a b c Roberts 1902, p. 48
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 137
- ^ a b c Van Horn 1881
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 137, 143
- ^ Hart 2003; Van Horn 1881
- ^ Jessee 1970, pp. 10–11
- ^ Smith 1830b, title page 2
- ^ a b Gilbert 1892
- ^ Tucker 1867, pp. 50–51
- ^ Tucker 1867, p. 51
- ^ Gilbert 1892; Tucker 1867, pp. 51–52
- ^ Tucker 1867, pp. 36–37
- ^ Phelps 1833, 9:10–11, p. 25; Jessee 1970, p. 13
- ^ See letter from Oliver Cowdery to Hyrum Smith dated June 14, 1829, quoting the language of this revelation. Joseph Smith letterbook (22 November 1835 to 4 August 1835) 5-6. Commentators generally agree that this letter references the revelation. See, e.g., Larry C. Porter, "Dating the Restoration of the Melchizedek Priesthood", Ensign, June 1979, p. 5.
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 37
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 138
- ^ a b Roberts 1902, p. 51
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 51–53
- ^ a b Roberts 1902, pp. 54–55; Smith 1830b, appendix
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 57
- ^ a b Smith 1830b, appendix
- ^ a b c Roberts 1902, p. 59
- ^ a b Grandin 1829
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 141
- ^ Hadley 1842
- ^ a b Weed 1884, p. 1:359; Tucker 1867, p. 52
- ^ Tucker 1867, p. 52
- ^ a b Harris 1829
- ^ Gilbert 1892; Roberts 1902, p. 71
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 142
- ^ Hadley 1829
- ^ Spalding 1829
- ^ O'Reilly 1829
- ^ Howe 1829
- ^ Foote 1829
- ^ Pry 1829
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 142–143
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 142–145
- ^ a b Smith 1829
- ^ a b c d Whitmer 1887, p. 31
- ^ Cole 1830a, 1830b, 1830c
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 148
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 149–150
- ^ Smith 1853, p. 150
- ^ a b c Early Mormon Documents, 2: 540.
- ^ Smith 1830a
- ^ Smith 1853, pp. 150–151
- ^ Jessee 1976, p. 5; Phelps 1833, p. 39
- ^ a b c d e Jessee 1976, p. 5
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 42, XVI:36–37
- ^ Grandin 1830
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, p. 37), quoting Moses 1:3
- ^ Bushman (2005, pp. 132, 142); Givens & Hauglid (2019, p. 32)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, pp. 32–33)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, p. 31)
- ^ Bushman (2005, p. 133); Givens & Hauglid (2019, pp. 31–32)
- ^ Hill (1977, p. 131); Givens & Hauglid (2019, p. 32)
- ^ Bushman (2005, p. 138)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, pp. 37–38)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, p. 73)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, pp. 39–41)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, pp. 47–48)
- ^ Bushman (2005, pp. 138–41)
- ^ Givens & Hauglid (2019, pp. 57–60)
- ^ Bushman (2005, pp. 133–34)
- ^ Cowdery 1829; Whitmer 1887, p. 32
- ^ Phelps 1833, XV:3–4, p. 35
- ^ a b Cowdery 1829
- ^ a b Cole 1829
- ^ Whitmer 1887, p. 32
- ^ Page 2003
- ^ Whitmer 1887
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 39, sec. XVI
- ^ Phelps 1833, pp. 43–46, secs. XVII–XXII
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 45, sec. XXII
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 46, sec. XXII
- ^ a b Tucker 1867, p. 59
- ^ a b Tucker 1867, p. 58
- ^ Smith 1844; Smith 1883, p. 14; Jessee 1976; Tucker 1867, p. 58
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 78
- ^ Whitmer 1887, p. 33
- ^ a b c Roberts 1902, p. 81
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 47, sec. XXIII
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 81; Tucker 1867, pp. 59–60
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 81–83; Roberts 1902, p. 83
- ^ a b c Roberts 1902, p. 84
- ^ a b Howe 1831
- ^ Cowdery 1830
- ^ Cole 1830d
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 82–83
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 83
- ^ a b c Roberts 1902, p. 98
- ^ a b Smith 1842, p. 936
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 86–87
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 88
- ^ Walters 1974, p. 124
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 89–90
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 90–96
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 97
- ^ Everett 1882, p. 5
- ^ Phelps 1833, pp. 55–57, ch. XXV
- ^ Phelps 1833, pp. 55–57, XXV:5, 10, 28
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 104
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 59, XXVII
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 58, XXVI:8
- ^ a b Roberts 1902, p. 105
- ^ a b c d Roberts 1902, p. 108
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 60, XXVIII
- ^ a b c d e Booth 1831b
- ^ a b Roberts 1902, p. 110
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 109
- ^ Phelps 1833, XXIX, pp. 61–67
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 61
- ^ Phelps 1833, XXXI, p. 69
- ^ Phelps 1833, XXXII–XXXIV, pp. 69–72
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 118
- ^ Smith 1835, LIV, p. 184
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 121
- ^ Roberts 1902, pp. 121–124
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 128
- ^ Phelps 1833, XXXVII, pp. 75–77
- ^ a b Phelps 1833, p. 76
- ^ a b Phelps 1833, p. 77
- ^ Phelps 1833, p. 76
- ^ Roberts 1902, p. 132
- ^ a b Phelps 1833, XXXIX, pp. 79–80
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