JS, Letter, , OH, to , , NY, 22 Feb. 1831; sent copy; handwriting of ; signature of JS; one page; JS Collection, CHL.
Single unlined leaf measuring 11¾ × 8 inches (30 × 20 cm). Includes address in handwriting of and postal markings in handwriting of on verso. Folding and evidence of a wax or wafer seal (now missing) indicate this letter is the sent copy. Because virtually all of ’s papers are nonextant, the existence of this letter is unusual. The letter was probably kept by someone other than Harris from an early time. Given the pattern of other surviving manuscripts in the Knight family, it is possible that Harris, following instructions in the letter, forwarded this letter to whose family then preserved the letter. The letter was copied into the Journal History, indicating that it was likely at the Historian’s Office sometime in the beginning of the twentieth century.
Historical Department, Journal History of the Church, 22 Feb. 1831; see also Bergera, “Commencement of Great Things,” 23–39.
Historical Department. Journal History of the Church, 1896–. CHL. CR 100 137.
Bergera, Gary James. “The Commencement of Great Things: The Origins, Scope, and Achievement of the Journal History of the Church.” Mormon Historical Studies 4, no. 1 (Spring 2003): 23–39.
Historical Introduction
In this letter, JS requested that come to as soon as possible. JS and a few other church members from had already migrated to the , Ohio, area, arriving by early February 1831. Harris was directed to secure a place for himself to settle and to find a place for the other New York church members who would follow. The letter instructs Harris concerning the move without giving any explanation, indicating that he was already aware of the 2 January 1831 revelation instructing believers to remove to Ohio. The letter also appears to refer to a revelation dictated earlier in the month directing “that the of my Church should be called to gether.” JS instructed Harris to “inform the Elders” in the area to come to Kirtland immediately “by of the Lord.” Harris responded quickly, arriving in Kirtland by 12 March, only seventeen days after this letter was postmarked in Ohio.
According to the Painesville Telegraph,Harris arrived in Ohio “last Saturday 12 March 1831 from the bible quarry in New-York.” (News Item, Painesville [OH] Telegraph, 15 Mar. 1831, [3], italics in original.)
I send you this to inform you that it is nec[e]ssary for you to come here as soon as you can in order to choose a place which may be best adapted to the circumstances of yourself and breatheren in the east to settle on as you may choose any place which may best suit yourselves any where in this part of the country so as to be as compact as possable and as you will be better capable of able to make a choice choice than we it is better for you to come before the rest of the breathren that when they come they may have places to go to you will also bring or cause to <be> brought all the books, as the work is here breaking forth on the east west north and south, you will also inform the which are there that all of them who can be spared will come here without delay if possable this by of the Lord as he has a great work for them all in this our inheritence.
We have received the laws of the Kingdom since we came here and the Disciples in these parts have received them gladly. You will see that old s family are taken care of and sent on You will send to and have either or to come immediatly or both if they can be spared.
You will not sell the books for less than 10 Shillings
A 9 February 1831 revelation mentioned the importance of emigrating church members “obtaining places that they may be together as much as can be” and directed that “every Church Shall be organized in as close bodies as they can be.” JS may have intended that members from both the Palmyra/Manchester and Colesville areas in New York maintain their existing communities by settling in separate compact groups once they arrived in Ohio. The members from Colesville, who arrived in Ohio in May 1831, settled together in Thompson on land offered by Leman Copley for that purpose. (Revelation, 9 Feb. 1831 [D&C 42:1–72]; see also Porter, “Study of the Origins,” 296–311; and Historical Introduction to Revelation, 20 May 1831 [D&C 51].)
Porter, Larry C. “A Study of the Origins of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the States of New York and Pennsylvania, 1816–1831.” PhD diss., Brigham Young University, 1971. Also available as A Study of the Origins of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the States of New York and Pennsylvania, 1816–1831, Dissertations in Latter-day Saint History (Provo, UT: Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History; BYU Studies, 2000).
After traveling to Ohio, Martin Harris returned to New York for a brief period. In May 1831, according to a New York newspaper account, he was among “several families, numbering about fifty souls” who had left “for the ‘promised land.’” (“Mormon Emigration,” Wayne Sentinel [Palmyra, NY], 27 May 1831, [3].)
Wayne Sentinel. Palmyra, NY. 1823–1852, 1860–1861.
Although a September 1830 revelation declared that the promised city of Zion would be built “among the Lamanites,” a 2 January 1831 revelation promised the New York members a “land of promise” for their “inheritance” and commanded them to “go to the Ohio.” Sidney Rigdon wrote from New York to his associates back in Ohio: “The Lord has made known unto us, some of his great things which he has laid up for them that love him, among which the fact (a glory of wonders it is) that you are living on the land of promise, and that there is the place of gathering . . . and [God] has given it to us and our children, not only while time lasts, but we shall have it again in eternity, as you will see by one of the commandments, received day before yesterday.” In contrast, an April 1831 letter from Thomas B. Marsh to his sister and her husband conveyed a belief that the movement from New York to Ohio was a temporary one and that the location of the New Jerusalem was yet to be revealed. Marsh wrote: “The Lord caleth for all to repent & take upon them the name of Ch[rist] & assemble at Ohio speedely & thare our Hevenly Father will tell us what we shall next do, perhaps it will be to take our march to the Grand preraras [prairies] in the Missouri teretori [territory] or to the shining mountains which is 1500 or 2000 miles west from us how soon this will be we do not know in fact we know nothing of what we are to do save it be reveild [revealed] to us but this we know a City will be built in the promised Land.” (Revelation, Sept. 1830–B [D&C 28:9]; Revelation, 2 Jan. 1831 [D&C 38:18–20, 32]; Howe, Mormonism Unvailed, 111, italics in original; Thomas B. Marsh and Elizabeth Godkin Marsh to Lewis Abbott and Ann Marsh Abbott, [ca. 11 Apr. 1831], Abbott Family Collection, CHL.)
Howe, Eber D. Mormonism Unvailed: Or, A Faithful Account of That Singular Imposition and Delusion, from Its Rise to the Present Time. With Sketches of the Characters of Its Propagators, and a Full Detail of the Manner in Which the Famous Golden Bible Was Brought before the World. To Which Are Added, Inquiries into the Probability That the Historical Part of the Said Bible Was Written by One Solomon Spalding, More Than Twenty Years Ago, and by Him Intended to Have Been Published as a Romance. Painesville, OH: By the author, 1834.
Abbott Family Collection, 1831–2000. CHL. MS 23457.
A shilling was a New York state regionalism meaning twelve and one-half cents. Thus, Martin Harris was being told not to sell copies of the Book of Mormon for less than $1.25, which was approximately twice as much as an entire day’s wage for a common laborer at the time. Harris, who in 1829 mortgaged his farm to pay for the printing of the Book of Mormon, had made a legal agreement with JS to receive proceeds from the sales of the books equal to his investment. According to a later account by Henry Harris, the original price for the Book of Mormon, fourteen shillings or $1.75, was set by revelation. Martin Harris later told Henry Harris that another revelation later reduced the price to ten shillings. JS’s final remark in this letter to Martin Harris may have been the basis of Martin’s conversation with Henry. Pomeroy Tucker, in his later criticism of Martin Harris’s pecuniary interest in the Book of Mormon, also claimed that Harris had been told through revelation that “the new Bible should in no instance be sold at a less price than ‘ten shillings.’” (“Shilling,” in American Dictionary; Margo, Wages and Labor Markets in the United States, 67, table 3A.5; Wright, Industrial Evolution of the United States, 217; Agreement with Martin Harris, 16 Jan. 1830; Henry Harris, Affidavit, Cuyahoga Co., OH, [ca. Nov. 1833], in Howe, Mormonism Unvailed, 251–252; Tucker, Origin, Rise, and Progress of Mormonism, 55.)
An American Dictionary of the English Language: Intended to Exhibit, I. the Origin, Affinities and Primary Signification of English Words, as far as They Have Been Ascertained. . . . Edited by Noah Webster. New York: S. Converse, 1828.
Margo, Robert A. Wages and Labor Markets in the United States,1820–1860. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000.
Wright, Carroll D. The Industrial Evolution of the United States. Meadville, PA: Flood and Vincent, Chautauqua-Century Press, 1895.
Howe, Eber D. Mormonism Unvailed: Or, A Faithful Account of That Singular Imposition and Delusion, from Its Rise to the Present Time. With Sketches of the Characters of Its Propagators, and a Full Detail of the Manner in Which the Famous Golden Bible Was Brought before the World. To Which Are Added, Inquiries into the Probability That the Historical Part of the Said Bible Was Written by One Solomon Spalding, More Than Twenty Years Ago, and by Him Intended to Have Been Published as a Romance. Painesville, OH: By the author, 1834.
Tucker, Pomeroy. Origin, Rise, and Progress of Mormonism: Biography of Its Founders and History of Its Church. New York: D. Appleton, 1867.