JS, Letter, , Hancock Co., IL, to , [, Wayne Co., IL], 8 Aug. 1840. Featured version copied [probably ca. 8 Aug. 1840] in JS Letterbook 2, pp. 176–178; handwriting of ; JS Collection, CHL. For more complete source information, see the source note for JS Letterbook 2.
Historical Introduction
On 8 August 1840, JS wrote from , Illinois, to in , Illinois. JS was responding to three letters Bennett had sent reminding JS and that he had offered to assist the during their difficulties and declaring that he intended to join with them in Nauvoo. This 8 August letter states it was in response to a 25 July 1840 letter from Bennett, but JS’s lengthy paragraph on the environment, location, and population of Nauvoo as well as the postscript indicate that JS was also responding to Bennett’s letters of 27 and 30 July. Bennett did not receive this response from JS before writing another letter on 15 August.
The original letter is apparently not extant. copied it into JS Letterbook 2, probably around the time the letter was written.
Yours of the 25th. Ultimo addressed to & myself is received for which you have our thanks and to which I shall feel great pleasure in replying. Although I have not the pleasure of your acquaintance, yet from the kindness manifested towards our people when in bondage and oppression, and from the the frank and noble mindedness br[e]athed in your letter, I am brot, to the conclusion that you are a friend to suffering humanity & Truth.
To those who have suffered so much abuse and borne the cruelties and insults of wicked men so long on account of those principles which we have been instructed to teach to the world a feeling of sympathy and kindness is something like the refreshing breese and cooling stream at the present season of the year and are I assure you duly appreciated by us
It would afford me much pleasure to see you at this time place, and from the desire you express in your letter to move to this place I hope I shall soon have that satisfaction.
I have no doubt but you would be of great service to this community in practicing your profession as well as those other abilities of which you are in possession. Since to devote your time and abilities in the cause of truth and a suffering people may not be the means of exalting you in the eyes [p. 176]
JS may have forgotten that he had apparently met Bennett eight years earlier. William E. McLellin noted in his journal that he spent 11 January 1832 “talking with a Mr Bennett a Campbellite Priest. I took him on my slay and Thursday and Friday I brought him to Hiram [Ohio] to see Jos & Sidney, Friday eve he talked considerable with Br Joseph.” (McLellin, Journal, 11–13 Jan. 1832, 13; see also Smith, Saintly Scoundrel, 56.)
McLellin, William E. Journal, 18 July–20 Nov. 1831. William E. McLellin, Papers, 1831–1836, 1877–1878. CHL. MS 13538, box 1, fd. 1. Also available as Jan Shipps and John W. Welch, eds., The Journals of William E. McLellin, 1831–1836 (Provo, UT: BYU Studies; Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994).
Smith, Andrew F. The Saintly Scoundrel: The Life and Times of Dr. John Cook Bennett. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1997.
In all three of Bennett’s July 1840 letters to JS and Rigdon, Bennett referred to having written JS during the “Mormon War” in Missouri—probably during early 1839. No correspondence from Bennett to JS prior to his 25 July 1840 letter has been located. (Letters from John C. Bennett, 25, 27, and 30 July 1840; Bennett, History of the Saints, 14; Proclamation, 15 Jan. 1841.)
Bennett, John C. The History of the Saints; or, an Exposé of Joe Smith and Mormonism. Boston: Leland and Whiting, 1842.
In spite of Bennett’s repeated expressions of interest in continuing to practice medicine after moving to Nauvoo, little evidence suggests he was an actively practicing physician during his years there. (Letters from John C. Bennett, 25 and 27 July 1840; Smith, Saintly Scoundrel, 65.)
Smith, Andrew F. The Saintly Scoundrel: The Life and Times of Dr. John Cook Bennett. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1997.