Blaine: 
Joseph Smith (not Jo, or Joe--only known by such among his enemies, who wished to trivialize him in the eyes of others)
had the full backing of the city fathers of Nauvoo, Illinois.   Joseph was a duly elected Mayor, and had the support of an
overwhelming majority of the citizens of Nauvoo. 
 
Judy:
the following is a local history from Nauvoo.net - what do you mean 'city fathers?' They were all Mormon and JS was their prophet - who was going to run against him?
 
When the Mormon Prophet Joseph Smith and the Latter-Day Saints arrived in Commerce Illinois they were simply searching for a place to call home, free to practice their religion and raise their families. Needing a large tract of land for the many Latter-Day Saints that had wagon-trained from Missouri, Joseph Smith purchased the unwanted and uncultivated swampland that lay between Commerce and the mighty Mississippi RiverThe Mormons designed and developed a breathtaking "public works" project to rid the newly-purchased land of the swamp that covered much of it. The Mormons created a massive drainage system that soon cleared the area. This system was an incredible undertaking, requiring thousands of hard labor hours and precise planning on the part of the Mormons. But, the Mormons were used to hard work in their travels. This drainage system is still in use today.

Soon Commerce Illinois was renamed Nauvoo. The name is from the old Hebrew word for "beautiful place." Not long after the name change took effect, Nauvoo received a special charter of incorporation from the state legislature of Illinois. This charter gave the elected leaders of Nauvoo far-reaching rights, including the right to raise a militia for defense. Missionaries from the group were spread wide and far. Some were in the southern United States while others were in Europe spreading their faith. Converts came to Nauvoo by the hundreds from places near and far. By 1844 Nauvoo was the largest city in Illinois with a population in excess of 12,000, as large as Chicago. The industrialist Mormons built a thriving city where once there was nothing. The Mormons began construction of a massive physically imposing structure of limestone; it was called the Nauvoo Temple and it stood 128 feet long, 88 feet wide and was capped with a tower that measured 82 feet from the ground. It was a magnificent structure that stood as the crown jewel of Nauvoo. You could see it perched on the highest spot in Nauvoo for miles around.
Blaine:
He was elected after his predecessor, John C. Bennet, a slanderer and adulterer,  was deposed.   The Editors of the Expositor were a small minority of apostates and troublemakers, using the free press as an excuse to slander the good names of upstanding citizens, and stir up contention.  
 
Judy:
The Nauvoo Net says that on 7 June 1844 William Law who was second in charge was the Editor of the Nauvoo Expositor and he is the same William Law who lost his wife to Joseph Smith's penchant for adultery.
 
Blaine:
The city council was simply trying to prevent these evil men from stirring up more hatred of the Haun's Mill variety.  They were in every sense justified in destroying the press. 
 
Judy:
Looks to me like this is the pot calling the kettle black.
 

Reply via email to