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      • Nauvoo, Illinois, was the headquarters of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1839 to 1846. Under prophetic leadership, Latter-day Saints worked together to build a faith-based community and a temple overlooking the Mississippi River.
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  1. Nauvoo National Historic District In the spring of 1839, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints established a new settlement on the banks of the Mississippi River in Illinois. The town was named Nauvoo - reportedly from a Hebrew word meaning beautiful place.

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    • Introduction
    • General Sources
    • Primary Source Collections
    • Politics and Theology
    • Mormon Political Reach
    • Religion and Nauvoo
    • Death of Joseph Smith
    • Databases For Further Research

    In 1839, a beleaguered, exiled group known as the Church of Latter Day Saints of Jesus Christ—also known as the Mormons—crossed the Missouri border into Jackson County, Illinois. Fleeing from years of violent persecution by non-Mormons, the Mormons set up the city of Nauvoo under the aegis of their prophet, Joseph Smith, the founder and first proph...

    The following sources provide broad, comprehensive perspectives on the Mormons and Nauvoo. Nauvoo: Kingdom on the Mississippi– Robert Bruce Flanders Flanders’ work explores Nauvoo as a settlement in its entirety. Flanders delves deeply into Nauvoo as both a political and a theological site, led by Smith, who acted as religious, political, and econo...

    Cultures in Conflict: A Documentary History of the Mormon War in Illinois– John E. Hallwas & Roger D. Launius Cultures in Conflicttakes a documentary, chronological approach to the conflict at Nauvoo through the use of many of the most important primary sources from both Mormon and non-Mormon perspectives. Hallwas and Launius attempt to present a c...

    God and the People: Theodemocracy in Nineteenth Century Mormonism– Patrick Q. Mason Mason’s article studies of the role of religion in Mormon politics. He follows the chronology of Mormon political views, pinpointing Navuoo as the site of a major transformation of Mormon earthly aspirations. The Mormons’ entry into politics, he argues, arose from t...

    The Mormons and Politics in Illinois Society: 1839-1844 – George R. Gayler In this article, Gayler thoroughly studies Mormon political movements and associations in Nauvoo. He argues that the violent reaction of non-Mormon Illinois citizens to the Mormons was a result of Mormon involvement and attitudes in politics, not of controversial religious o...

    Nauvoo Expositor – William Law et al. The Nauvoo Expositor is the first and only issue of a dissenting newspaper in Carthage, Illinois. The newspaper is an attempt by Mormons cast out of Joseph Smith’s society to expose the errors and heresies in Smith’s doctrine. It serves as a contemporary example of strife within the Mormon community about the v...

    Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith – Marvin S. Hill & Dallin H. Oaks This source is an attempt in secular scholarship to detail the circumstances and reasons behind the death of Joseph Smith through the lens of his accused murderers. The authors frame the death in terms of differing ideas of frontier democracy a...

    Church History Library The Church History Library is a database run by the Mormon Church that contains numerous print and digital resources recording Mormon history since its beginning. The library is, however, a comprehensive collection based in Utah: many of the archival materials may not be viewable online and many are print materials. The site ...

  3. Nauvoo National Historic District - Nauvoo, Illinois. In the spring of 1839, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints established a new settlement on the banks of the Mississippi River in Illinois. The town was named Nauvoo - reportedly from a Hebrew word meaning beautiful place.

  4. Jul 18, 2023 · Explore the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail across five states to see the 1,300-mile route traveled by Mormons who fled Nauvoo, Illinois, to the Great Salt Lake Valley in 1846-1847. Read More.

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  5. Through a series of introductory articles, discover the history of Nauvoo. From Main Street trades, the founding of the Relief Society, and the martyrdom at Carthage Jail, there are many things to learn about this city and community.

  6. Mar 28, 2023 · Nauvoo is the beginning of the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail, which stretches 1,300 miles (2,090 kilometers) from the Mississippi River across the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains to the Great Salt Lake Valley.

  7. Nauvoo Historic District is a National Historic Landmark District containing the city of Nauvoo, Illinois. The historic district is nearly coterminous with the City of Nauvoo as it was incorporated in 1840, but it also includes the Pioneer Saints Cemetery ( 40.5369°N 91.3507°W ), the oldest Mormon cemetery in the area, which is outside the ...

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