Lds church History Timeline



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May 29

  • Thomas Sharp tells readers of the Warsaw Signal that he would not be surprised to hear of Joseph Smith's death by violent means in a short time.

Late Spring

  • William Law resolves to make Joseph Smith's polygamy public and files a lawsuit against him for living in an open state of adultery with Maria Lawrence, one of his plural wives. In a Sunday sermon, Joseph comments on the irony of being accused of committing adultery and having seven wives when he can only find one, although in reality he has married at least thirty-four women.

June 7

  • The apostate conspirators publish the first issue of the Nauvoo Expositor, edited by non-Mormon Sylvester Emmons. It accuses Joseph Smith of teaching vicious principles, practicing whoredoms, advocating so-called spiritual wifery, grasping for political power, preaching that there are many gods, speaking blasphemously of God, and promoting an inquisition.

June 8

  • The Nauvoo city council meets in a long session to discuss the identity of the Nauvoo Expositor's publishers and their intent. Sylvester Emmons, its editor, is suspended from the council.

June 10

  • The Nauvoo city council meets again. Using famous English jurist William Blackstone as its authority and having examined various municipal codes, it rules that the Nauvoo Expositor is a public nuisance in that it slanders individuals in the city, and that if nothing is done to stop it, the anti-Mormons will be aroused to mob action. Mayor Joseph Smith orders city marshal John Greene to destroy the press, scatter the type, and burn any remaining newspapers.

  • Joseph Smith's order is carried out within hours. Orrin Porter Rockwell kicks down the door of the printing office and the press is destroyed, but the entire building is accidentally razed as well. This, unlike the legal destruction of the published issues of the libelous newspaper, is seen as a violation of property rights.

June 12

  • In the Warsaw Signal, Thomas Sharp calls for all citizens to arise and wage war and extermination against the “infernal devils”, the Mormons, to avenge the robbing of property and rights.

June 13-14

  • The publishers of the Nauvoo Expositor go to Carthage and obtain a warrant against the Nauvoo city council on charge of riot, but Joseph Smith and the other council members are released following a habeas corpus hearing before the Nauvoo municipal court. This further arouses the angry public. Also, even though there have been twenty similar destructions of printing presses in Illinois over the previous two decades, the Church's enemies claim this incident violates freedom of the press.

June 18

  • Joseph Smith places Nauvoo under martial law.

June 22

  • Joseph and Hyrum Smith realize they are the ones the citizens want, so to protect the other Saints they leave with Willard Richards and Orrin Porter Rockwell and cross the Mississippi River in a leaky skiff, taking most of the night to reach the other side. They intend to go west among the Native Americans and look for a place for the Church.

June 23

  • A posse arrives in Nauvoo to arrest Joseph and Hyrum Smith, but does not find them. It threatens the Saints with an invasion of troops if they do not give themselves up, and return to Carthage.

  • Some brethren go to see Joseph Smith and argue that the mobs will drive them from their homes despite his departure. Joseph says that if his life is of no value to his friends it is of none to himself, and he and Hyrum make plans to return to Nauvoo and submit to arrest the next day.

  • In Nauvoo, Hyrum marries his daughter Lovina to Lorin Walker, and Joseph spends a final evening with his family. He wants to speak to the Saints once more but there is not enough time.

June 24

  • At 6:30 a.m., Joseph and Hyrum Smith, John Taylor, and fifteen other members of the Nauvoo city council set out on horseback for Carthage, accompanied by Willard Richards and a number of other friends. Joseph pauses at the temple site and remarks that this is the loveliest place and best people under the heavens, and little do they know the trials that await them. He tells the assembled Saints that his work is finished and he is willing to die for them so that the city and its inhabitants will not be destroyed.

  • The group arrives at a farm four miles west of Carthage, where they meet a company of sixty mounted Illinois militia who present an order from Governor Ford for all the Nauvoo Legion's state arms to be surrendered. At Captain Dunn's request, Joseph returns to Nauvoo to forestall any resistance and sends a note to the governor in Carthage explaining his delay. He prophesies that he is going like a lamb to the slaughter but is calm as a summer's morning, and if they take his life his innocent blood will cry from the ground for vengeance.

  • In Nauvoo, Joseph Smith directs that three small cannons and about two hundred firearms be turned over to the militia. This revives agonizing memories of the Mormon disarmament that preceded the Missouri massacre. He bids farewell to his family again, and leaves for Carthage at six in the evening.

  • Five minutes before midnight, Captain Dunn and the militia ride into Carthage with Joseph and Hyrum Smith and the other Nauvoo city council members as voluntary captives. The town is in a riotous state, with mobs of irate townsmen and farmers and more than fourteen hundred unruly militia including the local Carthage Greys. Captain Dunn manages to safely place the prisoners in the Hamilton House hotel, and Governor Ford calms the crowd by announcing that Joseph will be paraded before the troops the next day.

June 25

  • Joseph Smith and the others surrender to constable David Bettisworth on the original charge of riot, and almost immediately Joseph and Hyrum are charged with treason against the state of Illinois for declaring martial law in Nauvoo.

  • At eight thirty in the morning, Governor Ford orders the troops to the public ground where he addresses them. He tells them the prisoners are dangerous men and perhaps guilty, but are now in the hands of the law, which must take its course. This only incites the soldiers to greater rage. Joseph and Hyrum are then paraded before the troops, who shower them with vulgar insults and death threats.

  • At four o'clock a preliminary hearing is held before Robert F. Smith, a justice of the peace who is also captain of the Carthage Greys and active in the anti-Mormon party. He releases each member of the Nauvoo city council on five hundred dollar bonds and orders them to appear at the next term of the circuit court. Most of them then leave for Nauvoo, but Joseph and Hyrum Smith remain for an interview with Governor Ford.

  • A constable appears with a commitment to prison signed by Judge Smith to hold Joseph and Hyrum in jail until they can be tried for treason. Joseph and his lawyers protest that the mittimus is illegal, since there was no mention of that charge at the hearing, but the governor says he cannot interrupt a civil officer in the discharge of his duty. The Carthage Greys hustle Joseph, Hyrum, and eight of their friends, including John Taylor and Willard Richards, through a drunken crowd to Carthage Jail. It turns out to be the safest place in town.

June 26

  • A hearing is held for Joseph and Hyrum Smith on the charge of treason, and they are required to remain in custody until another hearing can be held in three days. Governor Ford promises to take them with him when he goes to Nauvoo because some brethren have complained that they will not be safe in Carthage without him.

  • In the jail, Joseph Smith spends the afternoon dictating to his scribe, Willard Richards, while Dan Jones and Stephen Markham whittle at the warped door with a penknife so it can be latched securely to prepare against possible attack.

  • Willard Richards, John Taylor, and Dan Jones spend the night with Joseph and Hyrum Smith. They pray together and read from the Book of Mormon, and Joseph bears his testimony to the guards.

  • As Joseph Smith and Dan Jones are lying on the floor, Joseph asks Dan if he is afraid to die. Dan replies that he is not and asks if that time has come, but Joseph says he will yet see Wales, his native land, and fulfill the mission appointed him before he dies.

  • About midnight several men surround the jail and start up the stairs to the prisoner's room. When they hear the prisoners moving inside, they hesitate. Joseph Smith calls out that they are ready for the assassins and would as willingly did now as at daylight. The mob retreats.

June 27

  • Joseph Smith sends Dan Jones to inquire of the guards the cause of the disturbance last night. Frank Worrell, officer of the guard and one of the Carthage Greys, says they have had too much trouble bringing Joseph here to let him ever escape alive, and unless Dan wants to die as well he had better leave before sundown.

  • Joseph Smith sends Dan Jones to inform Governor Ford of what Worrell has told him. On the way, Dan sees an assemblage of men and hears their leader making a speech, saying that their troops will be discharged and pretend to follow orders and leave town, but as soon as Governor Ford and the McDonough troops have left for Nauvoo in the afternoon they will return and kill Joseph and Hyrum even if they have to tear the jail down. The crowd gives three cheers.

  • Dan Jones tells Governor Ford all that he has heard and urges him to place more trustworthy guards, but the governor says he is worrying about nothing and that the people are not that cruel. Dan says his only remaining desire is that the Almighty will preserve his life to a time and place where he can testify that the governor has been warned of the danger. Outside, Chauncey L. Higbee warns him that they are determined to kill Joseph and Hyrum and that he had better leave to save himself.

  • Joseph Smith writes a letter to Emma, sending his love to the children and all his friends. He writes another letter to well-known lawyer Orville H. Browning asking him to come and defend him. Soon afterward all his friends aside from Willard Richards and John Taylor are forced to leave the jail.

  • Governor Ford violates his promise by leaving for Nauvoo without Joseph and Hyrum. He takes Captain Dunn's Dragoons from McDonough County, the only troops who have demonstrated neutrality in the affair, and leaves a company of Carthage Greys to guard the jail. In Nauvoo he delivers a speech claiming that an atonement must be made for the crime of destroying the Nauvoo Expositor press and placing the city under martial law, and that the public is afraid because the Saints have too many firearms.

  • Colonel Levi Williams of the Warsaw militia reads to his men the governor's orders to disband, but Thomas Sharp addresses them and calls for them to march east to Carthage. Shouts follow for volunteers to kill the Smiths, and some of the men obscure their identities by smearing their faces with mud and gunpowder.

  • Joseph Smith gives Hyrum a single-shot pistol and prepares to defend himself with a six-shooter smuggled in by Cyrus Wheelock. John Taylor sings the hymn “A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief”, one of Joseph Smith's favorites, to comfort the depressed brethren.

  • At four in the afternoon the guard at Carthage Jail is changed, so that Frank Worrell is in charge.

  • A few minutes after five, an armed mob storms Carthage Jail and begins shooting through the door as Willard Richards and John Taylor attempt to ward them off with their canes. Hyrum is shot in the face and dies. Joseph discharges six shots through the door, but is then shot four times as he attempts to jump out the window, giving as his last words a Masonic cry of distress that may be directed towards other Masons in the mob. John Taylor is wounded with four shots, and it is unclear whether his pocketwatch saves him from being shot in the heart or simply breaks on the windowsill. He crawls under the bed for protection.

  • At Joseph Smith's death, the Church has two stakes, three missions, 26,246 nominal members, and one temple.

  • Willard Richards, who has only had a bullet graze his ear, drags the wounded John Taylor into the next room, deposits him on straw, and covers him with an old filthy mattress. He expects to be killed at any moment, but is surprised when the mob flees and leaves him alone with his dead and wounded comrades.

  • Joseph and Hyrum Smith's brother Samuel, having heard about death threats to them, arrives in Carthage physically exhausted from being chased by mobbers. The exertion and fatigue causes him to contract a fever. He helps Willard Richards move the bodies of his martyred brothers into the Hamilton House. After a coroner's inquiry, Elder Richards writes to the Saints at Nauvoo that they are dead.

June 28

  • The bodies of Joseph and Hyrum Smith are placed on separate wagons, covered with branches to shade them from the sun, and driven to Nauvoo by Willard Richards, Samuel Smith, and Artois Hamilton. There they are met by a great assemblage.

June 29

  • The bodies of Joseph and Hyrum Smith lie in state in the Mansion House while thousands of people silently file past the coffins. They are then buried in secret in the basement so that those who want to collect a reward for Joseph's head cannot find the remains. A public funeral is held and caskets filled with sand are buried in the Nauvoo cemetery.

  • A conference is held in Boston, Massachusetts, with seven Apostles present – Elders Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, Orson Hyde, William Smith, Orson Pratt, Wilford Woodruff, and Lyman Wight.

July 1

  • Elder Wilford Woodruff and at least four other Apostles, not yet aware of Joseph Smith's death, attend the Massachusetts state convention in Boston. A fight breaks out and the police are called in, but Brigham Young says it has still done them good in Boston.

July 2

  • Elder John Taylor, wounded in Carthage Jail, returns to Nauvoo. Throughout the month he improves steadily but remains bedridden.

July 8

  • Elder Parley P. Pratt is the first of the Twelve to return to Nauvoo from his mission in the eastern United States.

  • The New York Weekly Herald gives a garbled account of the martyrdom of Joseph and Hyrum Smith and concludes “Thus ends Mormonism.”

July 30

  • Samuel Smith, brother of Joseph and Hyrum Smith, dies of the fever contracted while running from a mob.

August 3

  • Sidney Rigdon arrives in Nauvoo from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania claiming that he should be appointed as “guardian” of the Church. In the absence of most of the Twelve, he makes some inroads with his claim.

August 15

  • The Times and Seasons publishes a transcript of Joseph Smith's King Follett Discourse reconstructed from Thomas Bullock's shorthand notes and William Clayton's longhand notes, both contemporaneous.

Fall

  • The Seventies Hall is dedicated. Its first floor is filled with beautiful pews and a pulpit, while the second contains an office, a small museum, and a library of 675 volumes.

November 17

  • Emma Smith gives birth to David Hyrum Smith.

1845

April


  • Parley P. Pratt publishes the proclamation to the world's leaders from the Quorum of the Twelve that was commanded four years earlier but delayed by other demands and difficulties. It testifies of preparations for the Second Coming and the gathering of Israel, and that as the work of God progresses no one can remain neutral toward his Kingdom, and this polarization will result in Armageddon. It concludes with a plea to rulers and people of the United States to cease hindering the Saints, saying that if they will help instead their great national blessings will continue.

October 5

  • General Conference is held in the assembly room of the Nauvoo Temple.

December

  • Having heard vague reports about violence against the Church in Illinois, and fearing for the safety of his family, Elder Noah Rogers returns to Nauvoo from Tahiti.

December 10

  • Endowments commence in the Nauvoo Temple.

1846

February 4



  • The first covered wagons cross the Mississippi River to begin the trek westward.

February 7

  • The final endowments are given in the Nauvoo Temple.

February 8

  • The Nauvoo Temple is informally dedicated by Brigham Young prior to leaving for the west.

April 30

  • The Nauvoo Temple is privately dedicated by Joseph Young, Senior President of the Seventy.

May 1

  • The Nauvoo Temple is officially dedicated by Elder Orson Hyde.

July 16

  • Ezra T. Benson is ordained an Apostle.

September 24

  • At a church conference, Elders Addison Pratt and Benjamin Grouard bring together 866 members from ten branches in islands of the Pacific.

November

  • Elder Addison Pratt leaves the Pacific islands for the United States, hoping to return with more missionaries.

1847

January 14



  • Brigham Young receives a revelation about how to organize the westward journey and how the pioneers should conduct themselves. It later becomes Section 136 of the Doctrine and Covenants.

April 15

  • The Pioneer Company begins its trek west.

July 24

  • The first pioneers arrive in the Salt Lake Valley. This day is henceforth celebrated annually in Utah as Pioneer Day.

July 28

  • The Salt Lake Temple is announced.

December 27

  • The newly reorganized First Presidency is sustained in the Kanesville Tabernacle in Council Bluffs, Iowa, with Brigham Young as President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

1848

June 9


  • A wave of seagulls arrives and devours the crickets, then vomits them up in a river and comes back for more until they are gone. Though not considered miraculous by any of its contemporaries, this becomes known in later years as the “Miracle of the Seagulls”, despite the fact that it involves natural seagull behavior and does not actually save many of the pioneers' crops.

October

  • Oliver Cowdery, who was excommunicated a decade earlier, humbly submits himself to the Church for rebaptism in Kanesville, Iowa.

October 9

  • The interior of the abandoned Nauvoo Temple is burned by an arsonist.

1849

February 12



  • Charles C. Rich, Lorenzo Snow, Erastus Snow, and Franklin D. Richards are ordained Apostles.

February 13

  • Brigham Young says that the Africans, “Cain's seed”, have been cursed with blackness and prohibited from the priesthood. Whether this marks the beginning of the priesthood ban or whether it started earlier is unknown, and the reaction of black priesthood holders such as Elijah Abel is likewise unknown.

1850

  • A pair of British soldiers who have joined the Church the previous year, George Barber and Benjamin Richey, bear their testimonies to members of the Plymouth Brethren in Calcutta, India. Because they are not well-informed about church doctrine and do not have priesthood authority, they ask church authorities back in England to send someone to perform baptisms.

May 27

  • A tornado demolishes three of the abandoned Nauvoo Temple's exterior walls.

June 25

  • The first missionaries, including Elder Lorenzo Snow, arrive in Genova, Italy. Over the next three years, 221 people are baptized and organized into three branches.

November 24

  • The Swiss Mission is created. Elder Lorenzo Snow sets apart one of his companions, Thomas B.H. Stenhouse, as its first president.

1851

  • Lorenzo Snow sends Elder Hugh Findlay to Bombay (now Mumbai), India. He immediately faces opposition from the established Protestant sects, the press, and military officers and chaplains, and it takes him nearly six months to baptize his first six converts.

  • A city in Utah is christened Fort Louisa (later Parowan) in honor of Louisa Beaman, who is erroneously believed to be Joseph Smith's first plural wife.

  • The Old Tabernacle on Temple Square begins construction.

February 15

  • Elder Orson Hyde publishes a letter in the Millennial Star defining the Church's position on slavery, saying that it will respect the laws of the land and not interfere between slaves and their masters.

June

  • Sent from England by G.B. Wallace, Elder Joseph Richards arrives in Calcutta, India, baptizes and ordains several and helps establish the “Wanderer's Branch”. He soon has to return home because he had obtained passage under contract as a sail maker and cannot find a replacement.

July

  • At Pulehu, Maui, Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii), Elder George Q. Cannon baptizes the first Hawaiian convert.

December 25

  • Elder William Willes, sent by Lorenzo Snow, arrives in Calcutta, India and finds only six members without leadership. Though most of them are British, a native Indian convert named Anna informs him that a whole church of Indian Episcopalian Christians will desire baptism as soon as arrangements can be made in regard to their social position and so forth.

1852

  • The French government banishes the missionaries from Tahiti.

January 4

  • While addressing the Utah territorial legislature on the slavery issue, Brigham Young declares in the name of Jesus Christ that any man having one drop of the seed of Cain, meaning African ancestry, cannot hold the priesthood.

March 24

  • There are now twelve European and twenty Indian members in Calcutta, India.

April 6

  • In Calcutta, India, William Willes baptizes eleven local men who have come from a distant village. Three of them are soon ordained to the Aaronic Priesthood.

April 9

  • President Brigham Young gives the first of several controversial sermons in which he declares that Adam is our Father and our God, who came to Earth with one of his wives and took on mortality, and the only God with whom we have to do. Though presented as a doctrine, this becomes known as the Adam-God theory.

August
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