, Letter, Des Moines City, Hancock Co., IL, to JS, , Hancock Co., IL, 13 July 1841; handwriting presumably of ; one page; JS Collection, CHL. Includes map and dockets.
Single leaf measuring 12¼ × 8 inches (31 × 20 cm) and ruled with thirty-seven horizontal blue lines. The letter was written on the recto only. The letter was then trifolded twice in letter style, addressed, and sealed with a red adhesive wafer. The leaf has a tear caused by detachment of the wafer.
The document was docketed by , who served as JS’s scribe from December 1841 until JS’s death in June 1844 and served as church historian from December 1842 until his own death in March 1854. A second docket was added by Andrew Jenson, who began working in the Church Historian’s Office in 1882 and served as assistant church historian from 1897 to 1941. The letter has presumably remained in institutional custody since its receipt in 1841, when Richards docketed and filed it in JS’s office.
Jenson, Autobiography, 131, 133, 135, 141, 192, 389; Jenson, Journal, 9 Feb. 1891 and 19 Oct. 1897; Bitton and Arrington, Mormons and Their Historians, 44–52.
Jenson, Andrew. Autobiography of Andrew Jenson: Assistant Historian of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. . . . Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1938.
Jenson, Andrew. Journals, 1864–1941. Andrew Jenson, Autobiography and Journals, 1864–1941. CHL.
Bitton, David, and Leonard J. Arrington. Mormons and Their Historians. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1988.
Historical Introduction
On 13 July 1841, wrote to JS, referencing a previous conversation between the two of them and offering to sell him land in Des Moines City, Illinois, a few miles downriver from , Illinois. Allen, an early resident of , Illinois, founded Des Moines City in 1837, having arrived in the area as early as 1835. Throughout the 1830s and 1840s, he was heavily involved in efforts to improve the county’s infrastructure and commerce.
owed approximately $700 on lands he owned near Des Moines City and was concerned that these properties would revert to former ownership if he defaulted on his payments. He therefore solicited JS’s assistance to pay the money he owed on two large parcels of land, comprising approximately 120 acres. In exchange, Allen promised to allow members to settle indefinitely on those parcels and to give them access to adjoining farm lands on his property. In addition to providing an area for new immigrants to settle, Allen suggested that the location would allow the Saints to gain “a preponderance at the polls” in the Montebello precinct.
The letter’s lack of postal marks indicates that sent the letter, which included a drawing of the lots and the surrounding area, with an unnamed bearer to JS in . JS apparently received the letter and found Allen’s properties attractive. On 17 September 1841, JS and Allen executed a bond and deed in which JS agreed to pay $100 for one of the parcels—the forty-acre lot described in the letter.
Des Moines City was located in Section 6 of Township 5 North, Range 8 West in Hancock County and was about two miles north of Montebello, Illinois. Adolphus Allen laid out the town in 1837. The town was short-lived but existed until at least 1843, when Gustavus Hills, Alanson Ripley, and Robert Campbell captured it on a map of Hancock County. (Gregg, History of Hancock County, Illinois, 474; “Map of Hancock County, State of Illinois,” ca. 1843, CHL.)
Gregg, Thomas. History of Hancock County, Illinois, Together with an Outline History of the State, and a Digest of State Laws. Chicago: Charles C. Chapman, 1880.
“Map of Hancock County, State of Illinois,” ca. 1843. CHL.
Gregg, History of Hancock County, Illinois, 448, 474; Memorial of Adolphus Allen Praying Congress to Construct a Bridge over the Mississippi River at the Town of Des Moines, in Illinois, S. Doc. no. 290, 25th Cong., 2nd Sess. [1838]; Adolphus Allen, 4 Feb. 1841, Letter to the Editor, Western World (Warsaw, IL), 24 Feb. 1841, [1].
Gregg, Thomas. History of Hancock County, Illinois, Together with an Outline History of the State, and a Digest of State Laws. Chicago: Charles C. Chapman, 1880.
Memorial of Adolphus Allen, Praying Congress to Construct a Bridge over the Mississippi River at the Town of Des Moines, in Illinois, and That the Military Road from Chicago to Fort Leavenworth May Pass through Said Town. Senate doc. no. 290, 25th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1838).
Mortgage from Adolphus Allen, 17 Sept. 1841. At the time of the transaction, Allen did not yet possess the government patent confirming ownership of the larger, eighty-acre tract of land. In the bond, Allen authorized JS to redeem the larger tract on his behalf. In the event that JS was able to successfully pay the debt owed and thus redeem the land, Allen agreed to deed the land to JS and his heirs upon receipt of the government patent. (Bond from Adolphus Allen, 17 Sept. 1841.)
Page [1]
Des Moines July 13th. 1841
Dear Sir
The diagram below represents the land that I spoke to you about a few days since. It lies on a dry & beautiful ridge between two Streams & is skirte[d] on the north & South by timber. It is admirably calculated for a number of Settlers on the north & south borders with One Common field in the Centre which might be extended to 200 acres. (a few more Settlers here would give a preponderance at the polls, in this election precinct). There is a house with 2 rooms, a Barn with 2 stables, & a large corn house on the lot. this lot contains 80 acres. The other of 40 acres which is coloured, has about 20 acres of beautiful crowning priarie & 20 acres of timber, with a fine stream of water running through it. This lot covers a valuable coal bed which is very accessible. These two lots I purchasd at $1000. have paid $500. The residue with interest & cost amts to something short of $700— They are to be sold on the first monday in August next. Should it fall into the original owners hands, it cannot be had presume for 12 Dollars pr acre, as he has lamented much that he <had> sold it. The lot East of it I gave $10. pr acre for & the one West of the 40— A. Leving gave 10 Dollars pr acre for, with no improvements on. The title to this land is derived from government— (entered at ) If it can be saved by the , those who may settle on it can be accommodated with land to till adjoining it of mine— for any length of time.
With much respect Your humble servant
[Drawing of land described above; transcript of map notations follows]
Hancock County’s earliest settlements were established on the outskirts of the county’s timbered regions. The trees in the county mainly consisted of “black and white oak and hickory, with an undergrowth of red-bud, sassafras and hazel” on the county’s ridgelines. “Elm, linden, wild cherry and honey locust” trees grew “on the more level portions” of the region. (Gregg, History of Hancock County, Illinois, 198, 204, 206, 466.)
Gregg, Thomas. History of Hancock County, Illinois, Together with an Outline History of the State, and a Digest of State Laws. Chicago: Charles C. Chapman, 1880.
At the time he received this letter, JS was considering other settlement locations for the growing number of Latter-day Saint immigrants. However, settlement in Des Moines City offered certain political advantages: by relocating only twenty-five more eligible Latter-day Saint voters to the area, the Saints could obtain a democratic majority in the Montebello election precinct. Allen’s suggestion to buy his property came only three weeks after a group of citizens formally established an anti-Mormon political party in Warsaw, Illinois. During the highly contested Hancock County elections in August 1841, two anti-Mormon candidates took office, winning by 4 and 114 votes respectively. Allen’s offer of additional lands provided the Saints an opportunity to secure a majority in the Montebello precinct as well as a majority in Hancock County. (Historical Introduction to Letter from Calvin A. Warren, 31 Aug. 1841; “Anti-Mormon Meeting,” Warsaw [IL] Signal, 23 June 1841, [3]; “Address,” Warsaw Signal, 7 July 1841, [2]; “Anti-Mormon Nominations,” Warsaw Signal, 28 July 1841, [2]; “Hancock County Election,” Warsaw Signal, 11 Aug. 1841, [2]; see also News Item, Sangamo Journal [Springfield, IL], 20 Aug. 1841, [2].)
A geological survey of Illinois noted small outcroppings of coal in this portion of Hancock County, including a deposit “on the headwaters of Waggoner’s creek . . . that was worked to some extent in the early settlement of the county.” At the time the survey published its study in 1866, the coal deposit was relatively thin, only “twelve to fourteen inches thick” and was “strongly impregnated with iron pyrites,” making it impure and potentially volatile. (Worthen et al., Geological Survey of Illinois, 331–332; see also Hall and Whitney, Report of the Geological Survey of the State of Iowa, 1:190; and JS, Journal, 12, 14, 16 Jan. 1842.)
Worthen, A. H., J. D. Whitney, Leo Lesquereux, and Henry Engelmann. Geological Survey of Illinois. Volume 1, Geology. Springfield: Legislature of Illinois, 1966.
Hall, James, and J. D. Whitney. Report of the Geological Survey of the State of Iowa: Embracing the Results of Investigations Made during Portions of the Years 1855, 56 & 57. 2 vols. Des Moines: Legislature of Iowa, 1858.
Allen had borrowed approximately $1,000 from Nathaniel Allen of Troy, Pennsylvania, to pay for land in Illinois. (Hancock Co., IL, Deed Records, 1817–1917, vol. 11F, pp. 400–402, 10 Jan. 1839, microfilm 954,194, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)
Owner of land adjacent to Allen’s in the drawing. Steele arrived in Hancock County around 1830 and participated in the Black Hawk War. He served as justice of the peace for twenty-eight years and as county assessor for several terms. (Gregg, History of Hancock County, Illinois, 817.)
Gregg, Thomas. History of Hancock County, Illinois, Together with an Outline History of the State, and a Digest of State Laws. Chicago: Charles C. Chapman, 1880.
Likely John McFadon, owner of land adjacent to Allen’s in the drawing. McFadon owned large tracts of land throughout Hancock County. (Hancock Co., IL, Deed Records, 1817–1917, vol. 10E, pp. 461–462, 28 Aug. 1838, microfilm 954,194, U.S. and Canada Record Collection, FHL.)