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Tip: Clicking on this title will return you to your last location (same location as back arrow).  You can use the quick menu at the bottom of each page to reach major sections of the website!

 

Mormon Menu

   Index
   History
   Nauvoo Exodus
   First Ferry
   Grand Encampment
   Mormon Battalion
   Nauvoo War Victims
   Cold Spring Camp
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   Winter Quarters I
   Florence Grist Mill
   Second Ferry
   Winter Quarters II
   Advance Company
   Mormon Trail
   Kanesville
   Kanesville Tabernacle
   Winter Quarters III
   Continued Passing
   Winter Quarters IV
   All on one page

Joseph Smith - 1805-1844 - Mormon founder.
Joseph Smith

 

Brigham Young - 1801-1877 Early Mormon leader.
Brigham Young

Background

 
History.

The Mormon church was founded in 1830 in upper state New York.  Joseph Smith under divine instruction organized the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in a small log-cabin.  When persecutions started, Joseph led church members to Kirtland, Ohio*

Not long after arriving in Kirtland, church headquarters was established in Jackson County, Missouri (Independence).

Soon local residents in Jackson County started a new wave of persecution that continued until the Mormons moved north into Illinois.  The persecution was so extreme that government got involved when the Governor of Missouri issued an 'Extermination Order' requiring the State Militia to either drive the Mormons out of Missouri or exterminate them.

In the middle of Winter, they were expelled from their lands, without compensation for homes or property.  The saints gathered at a desolate area in Illinois on the eastern side of the Mississippi River.  A place that no one else cared for provided a safe haven from persecution but not from mosquitoes and disease when grounds thawed to reveal the forsaken swamp they had camped on.

Be as it may, the hearty Mormons would make something out of the area and started to drain the swamp, build cabins, plant crops, re-establish the church headquarters, and gather other members of their faith.  Soon businesses started, commerce followed amongst the Mormons, and they felt safe from persecution.  The city was named Nauvoo, meaning beautiful city*.  It rivaled in size to Chicago at the time.  What had brought them there seemed inexplicable but it only strengthened their faith.  Peaceful and content, the Mormons started work on a temple.  Finally, they had a place they had built with their own hands. a home, a peaceful and beautiful place they were proud of.

T.O.C.           Next

 

 

 

Mormon Cemetery
Mormon Cemetery
"Winter Quarters"

 

 

Click to visit the Kanesville Tabernacle page of places to visit on the Latter-day Saints website.
Kanesville Tabernacle
"Early Mormon Tabernacle"

 


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