Authorization for Hyrum Smith and Isaac Galland, 15 February 1841–B
Source Note
JS, Authorization, , Hancock Co., IL, for and , 15 Feb. 1841; handwriting of ; two pages; JS Collection, CHL.
Single leaf measuring 12½ × 7¾ inches (32 × 20 cm). Embossed in the upper left corner is a decorative star and the insignia of D. & J. Ames, a Springfield, Massachussetts, paper mill established by brothers David and John Ames in 1828. The paper is ruled with thirty-four blue lines (now faded). The letter was written on the front and back of the leaf; the document was folded in quarters horizontally, presumably for filing.
This document was included in a Church Historian’s Office inventory from circa 1904. By 1973 it had been included in the JS Collection at the Church Historical Department (now CHL). The inventory and inclusion in the JS Collection indicate the document has remained in continuous institutional custody.
Whiting, “Paper-Making in New England,” 309; Gravell et al., American Watermarks, 235.
Whiting, William. “Paper-Making in New England.” In The New England States: Their Constitutional, Judicial, Educational, Commercial, Professional and Industrial History, edited by William T. Davis, vol. 1, pp. 303–333. Boston: D. H. Hurd, 1897.
Gravell, Thomas L., George Miller, and Elizabeth Walsh. American Watermarks: 1690–1835. 2nd ed. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2002.
“Index to Papers. In the Historians Office,” ca. 1904, 6, Historian’s Office, Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904, CHL; see also the full bibliographic entry for JS Collection, 1827–1844, in the CHL catalog.
Historian’s Office. Catalogs and Inventories, 1846–1904. CHL. CR 100 130.
Historical Introduction
On 15 February 1841 in , Illinois, JS dictated an authorization to his clerk , attesting to the official appointment of and to serve as for the . A 19 January 1841 revelation directed Galland and Hyrum Smith to “accomplish the work that my servant Joseph shall point out,” and JS provided a document assigning power of attorney to the two men on 1 February 1841.
The authorization for and attested to their character and endorsed their mission. Although Hyrum Smith had long been part of the church’s leadership and was probably familiar to most members of the church in the eastern , Isaac Galland, a resident of in 1839, was probably not. Galland had been praised by the a month earlier in the Times and Seasons for selling his lands in Iowa Territory to the church for the Saints to settle. Galland had also reached out to local politicians, seeking confirmation that the Saints would find safety and equal treatment in Iowa Territory.
After and received their authorization, their subsequent business in the eastern initially seemed to revolve around sales of stock in the to support its construction; they were also authorized to solicit donations for the planned in and to enter land transactions on behalf of the church. As they traveled, the primary focus of their activities soon became land exchanges—they met with and urged church members in and to trade their lands for lots in Nauvoo where they could relocate. These exchanges represented efforts to meet impending debt payments on the church’s 1839 purchase of land in from . According to a financial report of JS’s agents written in January 1841, the first interest payment of $3,000 was due Hotchkiss.
With few liquid assets, church leaders decided to use titles to land they acquired from members in the eastern to repay . The properties gained would be transferred to Hotchkiss and his land syndicate, and these land-for-land transactions would cover debt payment and even help facilitate the gathering of the Saints to . This system of exchange had also been employed when received land titles from JS and the church to cover the remaining debt on the church’s land purchases in . Because Galland was familiar with the process, he was likely able to aid the church with similar agreements.
The authorization featured here was directed to a general audience and to church members. A second authorization addressing only the Saints was created the same day in the handwriting of , and another clerk for JS, , made a retained copy. Because these authorizations have nearly identical content, the authorization with broader applicability is featured here. The featured version is in Coray’s handwriting, but the inclusion of Thompson’s name as clerk makes it likely that this version is also a retained copy made by Coray of the original, which is no longer extant.
Revelation, 19 Jan. 1841 [D&C 124:63–79]. During the first two weeks of February 1841, Isaac Galland and Hyrum Smith received $97,550 worth of stock in the Nauvoo House in five installments from George Miller and John Snider, who were members of the association organized to oversee the construction of the Nauvoo House. The stock certificates were intended to be sold to members of the church in the eastern United States. (Hyrum Smith and Isaac Galland, Receipt, Nauvoo, IL, to George Miller and John Snider, 15 Feb. 1841, JS Collection, CHL. For more information on the Nauvoo House, see Joseph Smith Documents from February through November 1841.)
Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.
This matches evidence from the extant copies of the other authorization: the original is in Robert B. Thompson’s hand, and a retained copy is in Howard Coray’s handwriting. (JS, Authorization, Nauvoo, IL, for Hyrum Smith and Isaac Galland, 15 Feb. 1841, JS Collection, CHL.)
Smith, Joseph. Collection, 1827–1846. CHL. MS 155.
Page [2]
to their chief joy and who feel interested in the prosperity of the kingdom, strengthen the hands of these our beloved bretheren for their mission andworkare is of vast importance not only to the Saints in this place but to the Saints of the most High throughout the world for according to the recent instructions which have been received from our Heavenly Father great and important works have to be accomplished and great preparations have to be made for “the thousa[n]ds of Mannassah and the ten thousands of Ephraim” We hope the Saints will be moved upon to assist to their utmost those who in their poverty and under the most unpropitious circumstances have succeeded in laying the foundation for this the corner stone of that the work may continue to prosper untill the Kings and Nobles of the earth shall come to the glory and exaltation of Zion
Given under our hands at the City of this fifteenth day of February in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty one: