Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1844–1845

http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/lucy-mack-smith-history-1844-1845/1

Source Note

Lucy Mack Smith, History, 1844–1845; handwriting of Martha Jane Knowlton Coray and Howard Coray; 240 pages, with miscellaneous inserted pages; CHL.

Note: Lucy Mack Smith, the mother of Joseph Smith, dictated this rough draft version of her history to Martha Jane Knowlton Coray (with some additional scribal help from Martha’s husband, Howard) beginning in 1844 and concluding in 1845. In 1845, the Corays inscribed a fair copy of the history under Lucy’s direction.

History – Appendix 3

Brief Chronology of the Joseph and Lucy Mack Smith Family

(Emphasis on Joseph Smith Jr.’s Life)

1771-1856

New England

1771 July 12 Joseph Smith Sr. born in Topsfield, Mass.

1775 July 8 Lucy Mack born in Gilsum, N.H.

1796 Jan 24 Joseph Smith and Lucy Mack married at Tunbridge, Vt.

1797 Loss of firstborn son of the Smiths.

1798 Feb 11 Birth of Alvin.

1800 Feb 9 Birth of Hyrum.

1802 Spring Move to Randolph, Vt.

1803 Winter Move back to the Tunbridge farm (early in the year).

1803 May 17 Birth of Sophronia.

1803 Spring Loss of the Tunbridge farm.

1803 Summer Move to Royalton, Vt.

1803 Fall Move to Sharon, Vt. Rent farm from Solomon Mack.

1804 July 10 Birth of Emma Hale at Harmony, Pa.

1805 Dec 23 Birth of Joseph Jr.

1806/7 Move to Tunbridge.

1808 Mar 13 Birth of Samuel Harrison.

1808/9 Move to Royalton, Vt.

1810 Mar 13 Birth of Ephraim.

1810 Mar 24 Death of Ephraim.

1811 Mar 13 Birth of William.

1811 Apr First in series of seven visions received by Joseph Smith Sr. (1811-19).

1811 Summer Move to Lebanon, N.H.

1812 July 28 Birth of Catharine.

1812/13 Typhoid fever epidemic. All Smith children contract the disease.

1813 Joseph Jr.’s leg operation.

1814 Move from Lebanon, N.H., to Norwich, Vt.

1814 Fall Complete crop failures for the Smiths in Norwich.

1815 Complete crop failures for the Smiths in Norwich.

1815 Newspaper reports of good land available in western N.Y.

1816 Mar 25 Birth of Don Carlos.

1816 June Crops are killed by series of untimely ice storms. “Year without a summer.”

1816 Fall Move from New England to Palmyra, N.Y. (could be Jan. 1817).

New York/Pennsylvania

1817 Smiths purchase 100 acres of virgin forest land two miles south of Palmyra.

1818 Fall Smiths move into small cabin at north end of their Manchester property.

1819 Dec 23 Joseph Jr. turns fourteen years old.

1819/20 Attempted assassination of Joseph Jr.

1820 Spring Joseph Jr.’s first vision

1821 July 18 Birth of Lucy.

1822 Alvin begins construction on frame house at Manchester farm.

1823 Sept 21 Moroni’s first visit to Joseph Jr.

1823 Sept 22 Joseph Jr. views the plates for the first time.

1823 Nov 19 Death of Alvin.

1824 Sept 22 Moroni meets with and teaches Joseph Jr. at Hill Cumorah.

1825 Sept 22 Moroni meets with and teaches Joseph Jr. at Hill Cumorah.

1825 Oct Joseph Jr. hires with Josiah Stowell and works in Harmony, Pa.

1825 Dec Smith family loses farm by fraud and become tenants on their own land.

1826 Joseph Jr. works most of the year for Josiah Stowell and Joseph Knight Sr.

1826 Sept 22 Moroni meets with and teaches Joseph Jr. at Hill Cumorah.

1827 Jan 18 Marriage of Joseph Jr. to Emma Hale at S. Bainbridge, N.Y.

1827 Jan Joseph and Emma move in with the Smiths at the Manchester farm.

1827 Sept 22 Joseph Jr. obtains the plates from the angel Moroni.

1827 Dec Joseph and Emma move to Harmony. Martin Harris gives them $50.

1828 Feb 27 Martin Harris takes facsimile transcript to New York City.

1828 Apr 12 Martin Harris begins work as scribe for Joseph in translation of plates.

1828 June 14 Martin Harris takes 116 manuscript pages from Harmony to Palmyra.

1828 June 15 Birth and death of Joseph and Emma’s first son, Alvin.

1828 June/July Loss of 116 manuscript pages. Joseph loses privileges of translation.

1828 Sept 22 Joseph receives plates again from angel Moroni. A scribe is promised.

1829 Apr 5 Oliver Cowdery arrives in Harmony, Pa.

1829 Apr 7 Oliver Cowdery begins services as scribe to Joseph in translation process.

1829 May 15 John the Baptist confers Aaronic Priesthood upon Joseph and Oliver.

1829 Late May Restoration of Melchizedek Priesthood by Peter, James, and John.

1829 June Joseph and Oliver move to Fayette, N.Y., to Peter Whitmer Sr. home.

1829 June 11 Copyright of Book of Mormon obtained.

1829 June Three Witnesses see angel, plates, and hear the voice of God.

1829 June Eight Witnesses view and handle the ancient plates.

1829 Aug 25 Martin Harris signs agreement of mortgage to printer E. B. Grandin.

1829 Sept Printing process begins for Book of Mormon.

1830 Jan 2 Abner Cole begins illegally publishing parts of the Book of Mormon.

1830 Jan Cole’s illegal activities are put to a stop.

1830 Jan Palmyra citizens agree not to purchase copies of Book of Mormon.

1830 Mar 26 Book of Mormon goes on sale at Palmyra Bookstore.

1830 Apr 6 Legal organization of the Church at the home of Peter Whitmer Sr.

1830 June Revelations of Moses given-translation of the Bible begun.

1830 June 30 Samuel Harrison Smith leaves as first official missionary of the Church.

1830 Summer Joseph Sr. and Don Carlos go on mission to extended Smith family.

1830 Fall Joseph Sr. goes to debtor’s prison for a month.

1830 Fall Oliver Cowdery, Parley Pratt, and companions leave for Lamanite mission.

1830 Fall Great numbers join the Church in northern Ohio, including Sidney Rigdon.

1830 Fall Smith family moves from Manchester cabin to Waterloo, N.Y.

1830 Dec 10 Sidney Rigdon and Edward Partridge arrive in Waterloo.

1830 Dec Commandment given (D&C 37) to gather to Ohio.

Ohio/Missouri

1831 Feb 1 Joseph and Emma arrive at Kirtland, Ohio. Stay with Whitneys.

1831 Feb 9 Law of the Church given (D&C 42).

1831 Mar Joseph and Emma move to Isaac Morley farm.

1831 Apr Lucy Mack Smith and group of eighty Saints depart N.Y. for Ohio.

1831 Apr 30 Joseph and Emma’s twins, Thaddeus and Louisa, are born and die.

1831 Apr 30 Julia Murdock passes away in childbirth with twins.

1831 May 9 Joseph and Emma adopt Murdock twins (Joseph Murdock and Julia)

1831 May Lucy Mack Smith and group arrive in Kirtland.

1831 June Joseph Jr. and company start for Jackson County, Mo.

1831 Aug 2 Foundation of Zion laid in Kaw Township, Jackson County, Mo.

1831 Aug 3 Place for the temple dedicated by Joseph Jr.

1831 Sept 12 Joseph and Emma move to John Johnson farm in Hiram, Ohio.

1832 Feb 16 Vision of the three degrees of glory given.

1832 Mar 24/25 Joseph and Sidney are mobbed, beaten, tarred, and feathered.

1832 Mar 30 Joseph Murdock Smith, eleven months old, dies from exposure.

1832 Apr 1 Joseph Jr. leaves for Mo.

1832 June Joseph Jr. arrives back from trip to Mo.

1832 Sept 12 Joseph and Emma and Julia move to Newel K. Whitney store in Kirtland.

1832 Oct Joseph and Newel Whitney travel to Albany, New York City, and Boston.

1832 Nov 6 Joseph Smith III born at Kirtland.

1832 Dec 25 Revelation on war given (D&C 87).

1832 Dec 27 Beginning of the “Olive Leaf” given (D&C 88). Balance given Jan 1833.

1833 Jan 23 School of the Prophets begins in Kirtland.

1833 Feb 27 Revelation known as the Word of Wisdom given at Kirtland (D&C 89).

1833 Mar 18 First Presidency organized.

1833 July 2 Translation of the Bible “completed.”

1833 July 23 Cornerstone for Kirtland Temple laid.

1833 Oct 5 Joseph Jr. leaves on proselyting mission to Canada.

1833 Nov 4 Joseph Jr. returns to Kirtland.

1833 Nov 25 News received in Kirtland of expulsion of the Saints from Jackson County.

1834 Feb 17 High council is organized at Kirtland (D&C 102).

1834 May 5 Joseph Jr. leaves as leader of Zion’s Camp.

1834 June 19 Arrival of Zion’s Camp in Clay County, Mo.

1834 Aug 1 Joseph Jr. returns to Kirtland.

1835 Feb 14 Organization of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.

1835 Feb 28 Organization of the Quorum of the Seventy.

1835 Mar 28 Revelation on priesthood given (D&C 107).

1835 July Egyptian mummies purchased from Michael Chandler.

1836 Mar 27 Kirtland Temple dedication (D&C 109).

1836 Apr 3 The Savior, Moses, Elias, and Elijah come to the temple (D&C 110).

1836 May 17 Mary Duty Smith, grandmother of the Prophet, arrives in Kirtland.

1836 May 27 Grandmother Mary Duty Smith dies; Sidney Rigdon gives funeral address.

1836 June 20 Joseph and Emma’s Frederick G. W. born at Kirtland.

1837 Fall Apostasy in Kirtland grows rapidly.

1838 Jan 12 Joseph Jr. and Sidney Rigdon ride at midnight to escape danger in Kirtland.

1838 Mar 14 Joseph and Emma arrive in Far West, Mo.

1838 June 2 Joseph and Emma’s Alexander Hale born at Far West, Mo.

1838 Aug 6 Election held at Gallatin, Mo.-riot ensues.

1838 Oct 25 David Patten, President of the Twelve, shot and killed at Crooked River.

1838 Oct 27 Extermination order issued by Governor Lilburn W. Boggs.

1838 Oct 30 Haun’s Mill massacre.

1838 Oct 31 Joseph, Hyrum, and others surrender to Missouri militia at Far West.

1838 Nov 1 Joseph, Hyrum, and others sentenced to be shot. Doniphan intervenes.

1838 Nov 13 Birth of Joseph Fielding Smith, son of Hyrum and Mary Fielding Smith.

1838 Dec 1 Joseph, Hyrum, and others imprisoned at Liberty Jail.

1839 Feb 7 Emma and the children leave Far West for Ill.

1839 Feb Joseph Sr., Lucy Mack Smith, and extended family begin trek for Ill.

1839 Mar Revelations received in Liberty Jail (D&C 121, 122, and 123).

1839 Apr 6 Joseph and other prisoners taken from Liberty Jail to go to Daviess County.

1839 Apr 15 On way to Boone County on change of venue, Joseph and others allowed to escape.

1839 Apr 22 Joseph and Hyrum are reunited with their families at Quincy, Ill.

Nauvoo

1839 May 1 Joseph purchases the first lands for the Church in Ill.

1839 May 10 Move to Commerce, Ill., later called Nauvoo (Hancock County).

1839 July 22 Joseph arises from bed of sickness and gives blessings to the sick.

1839 Oct 29 Joseph leaves for Washington, D.C., to present grievances to the president.

1839 Nov Times and Seasons is published at Nauvoo, Ill.

1839 Nov 28 Joseph arrives in Washington, D.C.

1839 Nov 29 Joseph visits President Martin Van Buren: “Your cause is just . . .”

1839 Dec Joseph visits Saints in Philadelphia and N.J.

1840 Mar 4 Joseph arrives in Nauvoo from Washington, D.C., trip.

1840 June 13 Joseph and Emma’s Don Carlos born at Nauvoo.

1840 Sept 14 Death of Joseph Sr.

1840 Dec 16 Charter for city of Nauvoo, Nauvoo Legion, and university granted.

1841 Feb 4 Joseph commissioned as lieutenant-general of Nauvoo Legion.

1841 Apr 6 Cornerstone laid for the Nauvoo Temple.

1841 June 4 Arrested on old Missouri charges.

1841 June 9 Two-day trial begins at Monmouth, Ill., before Judge Stephen Douglas.

1841 Aug 7 Death of Don Carlos.

1841 Aug 15 Death of Joseph and Emma’s Don Carlos.

1841 Nov 8 Dedication of baptismal font in Nauvoo Temple.

1842 Jan 15 Joseph spends time correcting proof for new edition of the Book of Mormon.

1842 Feb 6 Stillborn son of Joseph and Emma.

1842 Mar 15 Joseph becomes editor of Times and Seasons.

1842 Mar 17 Female Relief Society of Nauvoo organized with Emma as president.

1842 May 4 Temple endowment is introduced in this dispensation.

1842 May 19 Joseph elected mayor of Nauvoo.

1842 Aug 8 Joseph arrested for alleged complicity in Boggs assassination attempt.

1842 Aug Joseph goes into hiding.

1842 Fall Emma and children ill. Emma nearly dies.

1842 Dec 26 Second arrest in Boggs case.

1843 Jan 5 Acquitted in Boggs case.

1843 Jan 18 Joseph and Emma celebrate sixteenth wedding anniversary with guests.

1843 May 28 Sealed to Emma for time and eternity.

1843 June 13 Joseph leaves Nauvoo to visit relatives at Dixon, Ill.

1843 June 23 Arrested by Missouri and Illinois officers disguised as missionaries.

1843 June 30 Arrives back in Nauvoo.

1843 July 1 Discharged by Nauvoo court.

1843 Aug 31 Joseph and Emma move into new residence, Nauvoo Mansion.

1843 Sept 28 Joseph introduces fulness of priesthood ordinances.

1844 Jan 29 Elected candidate for United States presidency.

1844 Feb 20 Instructions given to Twelve to investigate place of refuge for the Saints.

1844 Apr 7 Joseph delivers King Follett discourse.

1844 May 17 Nominated for U.S. presidential candidate at Nauvoo convention.

1844 June 7 Nauvoo Expositor published.

1844 June 10 Joseph, as mayor, orders destruction of Expositor press.

1844 June 18 Nauvoo placed under martial law.

1844 June 22 Joseph, Hyrum, Willard Richards, O. P. Rockwell cross Mississippi River.

1844 June 25 Joseph and Hyrum surrender at Carthage to face Expositor riot charge.

1844 June 27 Death of Hyrum and Joseph Jr. at Carthage Jail.

1844 July 30 Death of Samuel Harrison.

1844 Nov 17 Birth of David Hyrum Smith, son of Joseph and Emma.

1846 Feb 4 Saints begin exodus from Nauvoo to the West.

1847 Dec 23 Emma marries “Major” Lewis C. Bidamon at Nauvoo.

1856 May 14 Lucy Mack Smith dies, having spent her last three years with Emma.

History of Joseph Smith by His Mother

By Lucy Mack Smith

Having attained my 67th year, and being afflicted with a complication of diseases and infirmities, many of which have been brought upon me by the cruelty of an ungodly and hard-hearted world and do many times threaten to put a period to my early existence, I feel it a privilege as well as my duty to give (as my last testimony to a world from whence I must soon take my departure) and account, not exclusively of my own manner of life from my youth up, but after saying somewhat concerning my ancestors, as well as myself, to trace carefully up, even from the cradle to the grave, the footsteps of some whose life and death have been such as are calculated to excite an intense curiosity in the minds of all who ever knew them personally or shall hear of them hereafter. And inasmuch as none on earth is so thoroughly acquainted as myself with the entire history of those of whom I speak, I have been induced by these and other considerations to assume the task of not only tracing them during their windings and vicissitudes of a life checkered with many ills, but likewise to give a sketch of their forefathers and the dealing of God with them also.

The Revised and Enhanced History of Joseph Smith by His Mother

https://ldsmag.com/article-1-2543/

By Scot and Maurine Proctor

Editors’ Note: To prepare for the Doctrine & Covenants year of study in gospel doctrine, Meridian will offer you in the weeks to come short excerpts from Lucy Mack Smith’s history of her prophet son Joseph. Considered by scholars to be one of the premier source documents about the restoration, Lucy’s story reads like a novel as she paints vivid pictures of the men and women whose lives were carved out by the significant events. She is fluent and insightful, enduring and passionate as she tells stories we find nowhere else in Church history. You become, as one reader said, “a fly on the wall in the Smith family kitchen” reading Lucy’s story. Few can read this story without feeling poignant emotion for Joseph’s life and death.

Lucy Mack Smith’s history has been available for generations, edited by Martha Jane Knowlton Coray. For the revised and enhanced edition, however, we went back to Lucy’s original raw notes which surfaced again in the late 60’s in the Church archives. Based on these notes, we re-edited a new edition which was much closer to Lucy’s own voice and includes important scenes and soliloquies taken from the original. We also added over 600 footnotes and 100 photographs of the places Joseph knew well to put the story in context.

If there is one book to make you compelled toward Church history during this Doctrine & Covenants study year, this would be it. In this first of a series, we give you the background on how Lucy Mack Smith’s biography came to be. Next week we discuss the controversy that once surrounded it.

It was the bleak midwinter of 1844-45, only months since her sons Joseph and Hyrum had been murdered by a gloating mob in Carthage Jail, when Lucy Mack Smith sat down to tell her life story to a twenty-three-year-old scribe named Martha Jane Knowlton Coray. Lucy was sixty-nine years old, afflicted, as she said, “by a complication of disease and infirmities” and still aching with loss. In the fall of 1840 she thought she had experienced the most misery she would ever know. She recalled: “I then thought that there was no evil for me to fear upon the earth more than what I had experienced in the death of my beloved husband. It was all the grief which my nature was able to bear, and I thought that I could never again be called to suffer so great an affliction as this.” But time had proven her wrong. Her nature would be called upon to bear more. On a June night in 1844, word had come to Nauvoo that her two sons had been murdered and thirty-three days later another son, Samuel, would languish and die of complications arising from being chased on horseback by the mob. Of her six sons who had lived to maturity, five were gone, and with the exception of some sons-in-law, Lucy’s family was reduced to widows and fatherless children.

These weren’t her only losses. Once her son Joseph had received a heavenly vision ahd had learned that he was the prophet to restore the gospel in the latter days, trial had plagued Lucy. She had lost her farm in New York; she had seen her husband imprisoned; she had trudged through an incessant rain on the way to Missouri that reduced her to near death; she had seen soldiers whoop and holler as they dragged her sons to jail with a death sentence on their heads. Of the endless grief, she said, “I often wonder to hear brethren and sisters murmur at the trifling inconveniences which they have to encounter…and I think to myself, salvation is worth as much now as it was in the beginning of the work. But I find that ‘all like the purchase, few the price will pay.’”

It was a woman who not only was willing to pay the price for her religious convictions, but already had, who sat down with the scribe that winter in Nauvoo. Thus, her history rings with sincerity and deeply-felt emotion. However much others may have doubted and harangued her son Joseph, Lucy had no doubt that he was exactly what he claimed himself to be-a prophet. She had a remarkable story to tell and she told it remarkably-with passion, candor, and fluency. Apart from anything else,, it would be a wonderful story for generations of readers, but beyond that, it gives a personal glimpse of Joseph Smith seen nowhere else. Here is Joseph dealing with excruciating pain during a crude operation on his leg, sick with misery at Martin Harris’s loss of the 116 pages, laying a cloak down on the hard floor night after night to give someone else is bed in Kirtland. Through Lucy’s recollections, we enter the Smith family home, hear their conversations, watch a young prophet beginning to understand that he has a profound destiny. It is a rare thing to have a sustained narrative from the mother of a man who was had such a significant impact on the world.

What’s more, we come to know Joseph better in these pages because we come to know Lucy. To understand his mother is to understand something more about the son. They share the same native flair for expression, the same courage in the face of opposition. They are both high-spirited, deeply loyal to their beliefs, hardworking and intelligent. Most of all, they share a passion to understand who God is and what he expects of them. When Lucy was a young married woman, sick and apparently dying, she made a covenant with God: “I covenanted with God that if he would let me live, I would endeavor to get that religion that would enable me to serve him right, whether it was in the Bible or wherever it might be found.” For Lucy, this began an intense search for the true religion that is echoed in her son’s similar yearnings. Joseph is certainly a product of the mother and home from which he came.

The Preliminary Manuscript
It is not entirely clear who motivated the creation of Lucy Mack Smith’s history. In January 1845, she wrote to her son William that she was constantly answering questions on “the particulars of Joseph’s getting the plates, seeing the angels at first, and many other things which Joseph never wrote or published,” and she had “almost destroyed her lungs giving recitals about these things.” She “now concluded to write down every particular.” In her rough preface to the work she also states that she has been induced to write because “none on earth is so thoroughly acquainted as myself with the entire history of those of whom I speak.” But it is also evident that at the same period Church historian Willard Richards and his staff were working on the Church history up to Joseph’s death and they gave encouragement to Lucy to supply the background only she could give. In that same letter to William, she said, “I have the by council of the 12 undertaken a history of the family that is my father’s family and my own.”

At any rate, sometime in the early winter, Mother Smith approached Martha Jane Knowlton Coray to be her scribe.


Martha Jane’s husband, Howard remembered the event: “In the fall of 1844, I procured the Music Hall for a school room: it was large enough to accommodate 180 students and I succeeded in filling the room. Sometime in the winter following, Mother Smith came to see my wife about getting her to help write the history of Joseph, to act in the matter only as her, Mother Smith’s amanuensis. This my wife was persuaded to do; and so dropped the school.”

Ailing or not, Lucy wanted to get this history down, and it appears that she dictated her story to Martha through that winter, who wrote it with clear penmanship, excellent spelling, and little punctuation. Of course, whenever a second person is involved in a work the question arises. What part of the product reflects the personality and style of the author and what part the influence of the scribe? Martha Jane supplies the answer to this. She wrote Brigham Young that because of her practice of note taking, “this made it an easy task for me to transmit to paper what the old lady said, and prompted me in undertaking to secure all the information possible for myself and children….Hyrum and Joseph were dead, and thus without their aid, she attempted to prosecute the work, relying chiefly upon her memory, having little recourse to authentic statements whose corresponding dates might have assisted her.” …

Thus, what Martha wrote down appears to be the raw, unedited Lucy, a reflection of her intellect and heart. What she expressed was her life as she saw it and the part that her family had played in bringing forth the Book of Mormon and the restored religion. It was not originally what it has long been titled, History of Joseph Smith by His Mother, Lucy Mack Smith. It was instead, “The History of Mother Smith, by Herself,” a family history, a story of drama, spiritual adventure, and pathos, but most of all a personal story. Thus, without hesitation, she shared intimate details probed feelings and made assessments, felt free to soliloquize. She was frank, for instance, to say that she looked forward to standing at the bar of God, where after a lifetime of persecution, justice will finally reign and her persecutors will be brought to task. And though she shared her suffering, she was not full of self-pity, but rather grateful to be the mother of a prophet and part of a transcendent work…

During 1845, Howard Coray turned over his school to others and joined his wife, Martha Jane, in a labor to revise the Preliminary Manuscript. Howard had been one of Joseph Smith’s clerks, whose assignment included compiling the official historical record of the Church. Together they substantially revised the Preliminary Manuscript. This was not merely a job of correcting grammar or changing and clarifying confusing chronologies. It has been suggested that “about one-fourth of the revised manuscript is not in the preliminary draft, while approximately ten percent of the earlier manuscript is omitted from the revised manuscript.” What was added in the revision was information designed to make it a more balanced and complete history, as well as expand the information on Joseph Smith’s own version of the First Vision and Moroni’s first visit were included. Additional information was added from “The History of Joseph Smith” published earlier in the Times and Seasons. Gaps were filled, necessary explanations added. While Mother Smith was probably frequently consulted during the entire composition, and she clearly gave her approval to the final version, certainly her biggest contribution had already passed.

It is not surprising, then, to observe that while the revised version had strengths lacking in the Preliminary Manuscript, it is also further from Lucy’s own voice. The Corays deleted many of her soliloquies, they axed intimate details of family life and affectations, they sometimes avoided emotions, they polished her phrases. Unfortunately, comparing the Preliminary Manuscript with the revised version, it is clear that this is not always a favor. The Corays’ edits led to a more fussy, formal speech pattern than Lucy is given to. Ironically, their changes sound old-fashioned to the modern ear, as opposed to Lucy’s more direct speech. But it is the moving from Lucy’s perceptions and feelings that is the greater loss.

The work of revision appears to have been finished by the end of 1845, for on the afternoon of November 19, 1845, the Twelve discussed the need to “settle with Brother Howard Coray for his labor in compiling” Lucy’s history, and a settlement was made in January 1846. The Twelve’s financial support and long interest in the project certainly made them feel that the Church had a vested interest in it.

Though Lucy was anxious that the manuscript be published, the end of 1845 found the Church with two other projects that consumed the energies and resources of the Saints. Their enemies had never let off the persecution. They had formed “wolf packs” to hunt the Saints; they had burned homes beyond Nauvoo, sending a flood of refugees into the city; they had harassed the Twelve with lawsuits and now Nauvoo had been turned into a workshop to build wagons to flee the city. Packing to leave everything they owned while they continued to build a temple absorbed the Saints that winter, and Lucy’s manuscript naturally took a backseat.