, Letter, , New York Co., NY, to JS, [, Hancock Co., IL?], 22 Nov. 1839. Featured version copied [between late Nov. 1839 and Apr. 1840] in JS Letterbook 2, pp. 77–79; handwriting of ; JS Collection, CHL. For more complete source information, see the source note for JS Letterbook 2.
Historical Introduction
On 22 November 1839, wrote a letter to JS requesting permission to print the Book of Mormon and other publications in . Along with his brother , Pratt was traveling to by way of , , , and New York City. In New York City, they reunited with fellow , , , , and , as well as several other of the church who accompanied the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on their mission.
After apprising JS of the church’s status in , , and , indicated that members in those states needed church publications, including copies of the Book of Mormon and the church’s hymnal. Pratt had experience printing church publications, including the 1837 edition of the Book of Mormon. JS held the copyrights to both the Book of Mormon and the hymnbook and was designated in a November 1831 revelation to act as part of a group of stewards over the publications of the church. Recent events had demonstrated the vigor with which JS guarded his responsibility to oversee church publications. In October 1839, JS presided over a general of the church that directed that an unauthorized edition of the hymnal published by , a church member in , be “utterly discarded” and “that a new edition of Hymn Books be printed immediately.” Pratt may have wanted to avoid a similar situation by seeking permission to print more church-authorized publications.
At the time wrote this letter, JS was en route to . Pratt sent the letter—endorsed in a postscript by , of the —to , Illinois, instead of to Washington. Pratt either was unaware of JS’s planned trip to the nation’s capital when he wrote the letter or opted to have church leaders in Commerce forward the information to JS rather than allow the letter to sit in a Washington post office awaiting JS’s arrival.
received the letter in and communicated to JS both the contents of ’s letter and his own responses to Pratt and . Even before receiving this letter, JS and other church leaders were apparently already aware of the Book of Mormon shortage in ; a newspaper reported that JS traveled through , Illinois, in November 1839 carrying several copies of the Book of Mormon “destined, no doubt, for converts recently made in New York.” In his reply to Pratt, Hyrum Smith wrote that though copies of the Book of Mormon were needed throughout the country, he could not “give any encouragement for the publication of the same, other, than at this place [Commerce] or, where it can come out under the immediate inspection of Joseph and his councillors, so, that no one may be chargeable with any mistakes that may occur.”
The original letter is apparently not extant. The version featured here was copied into JS Letterbook 2 by in late 1839 or early 1840.
Pratt, Autobiography, 327–328. Parley P. Pratt had been in Detroit for two weeks visiting family after spending six days ministering to “several small branches of the Church” located “within part of a day’s journey of Detroit.” Though a group of church missionaries, including Pratt, had first preached in the Buffalo, New York, area in September 1830 and Pratt had preached in that city while en route to Canada in 1836, he did not record the details of any interaction with church members there on this 1839 journey. Pratt arrived in New York City by 24 October 1839. (Woodruff, Journal, 24 Oct. 1839.)
Pratt, Parley P. The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt, One of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Embracing His Life, Ministry and Travels, with Extracts, in Prose and Verse, from His Miscellaneous Writings. Edited by Parley P. Pratt Jr. New York: Russell Brothers, 1874.
Woodruff, Wilford. Journals, 1833–1898. Wilford Woodruff, Journals and Papers, 1828–1898. CHL. MS 1352.
Pratt, Parley P. The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt, One of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Embracing His Life, Ministry and Travels, with Extracts, in Prose and Verse, from His Miscellaneous Writings. Edited by Parley P. Pratt Jr. New York: Russell Brothers, 1874.
See Collection of Sacred Hymns [1835], ii. In 1829 JS took steps to obtain a copyright for the Book of Mormon, but he may not have completed the process. Nevertheless, JS asserted his copyright authority for the Book of Mormon on at least one occasion in 1830 when a newspaper editor printed passages of the book without JS’s permission. (Copyright for Book of Mormon, 11 June 1829.)
News Item, Wisconsin Enquirer (Madison), 9 Nov. 1839, [2]. At this time, approximately eight thousand copies of the Book of Mormon had been printed in two editions. However, not all of those copies were in circulation, as an undisclosed number were destroyed in a fire in the Kirtlandprinting office on 15 January 1838. In December 1839, the Nauvoohigh council reported to the Times and Seasons that several missionaries traveling throughout the country requested church publications “of all kinds” and that the high council resolved to reprint thousands of new copies of the Book of Mormon and hymnbook. (Crawley, Descriptive Bibliography, 1:29–32, 66–68; “Sheriff Sale,” Painesville [OH] Telegraph, 5 Jan. 1838, [3]; Prospectus for the Elders’ Journal, 30 Apr. 1838; News Item, Times and Seasons, Dec. 1839, 1:25.)
Wisconsin Enquirer. Madison, Wisconsin Territory. 1838–1840.
Crawley, Peter. A Descriptive Bibliography of the Mormon Church. 3 vols. Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1997–2012.
Health and peace be unto you from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. We are well, and greatly prospered in the Lord, after all our tribulation. The Churches in these parts are prospering greatly and are firm in faith and increasing in numbers continually. the in and Brooklyn now numbers from 150 to 300 members and additions are being made every week. A general was held in this on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week present, were . . Elds , Layne, , Brown, Benidict and present were A[ddison] Everett Br Birge and Bro Van◊◊elver; many of the Church in the region round about, were represented, Several hundred members in all, and mostly increasing— great doors are open for preaching. and crowded houses are the order of the day. I have also received letters from and from , with joyful accounts of the spread of the work of the Lord. You would now find Churches of the Saints in , in , in Brooklyn in in , in , in . On and in various other places all around us.
The learned have frequently come forward for debate and have as frequently retired from the field confounded. the people are astonished and have given up that Mormanism as they call it will finally prevail.
Our meetings are now held Three times every Sabbath in Columbian Hall, Grand Street, a few doors East of the Bowery, it is very central and one of the best places in the city, it will hold nearly one thousand people and is well filled with attentive hearers; has a good Hall well fitted up in where stated meetings are held, several every week, and crowded audiences In short the truth is spreading more rapidly than ever before, in every direction, far and near. There is a great call for our Books. I am now reprinting the “Voice of Warning” [p. 77]
The Times and Seasons provided a similar description of the general growth of the church in the eastern United States. (Editorial, Times and Seasons, Apr. 1840, 1:90.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Pratt traveled through Michigan on his way to New York City. He traveled to Maine as a missionary in 1835. (Pratt, Autobiography, 139, 327.)
Pratt, Parley P. The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt, One of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Embracing His Life, Ministry and Travels, with Extracts, in Prose and Verse, from His Miscellaneous Writings. Edited by Parley P. Pratt Jr. New York: Russell Brothers, 1874.
Pratt served a mission in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey in 1837 and may have maintained correspondence with various church members. (Pratt, Autobiography, 184, 188, 328.)
Pratt, Parley P. The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt, One of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Embracing His Life, Ministry and Travels, with Extracts, in Prose and Verse, from His Miscellaneous Writings. Edited by Parley P. Pratt Jr. New York: Russell Brothers, 1874.
Columbian Hall was located at 263 Grand Street in New York City and was frequently used for temperance society meetings at this time. (See, for example, Hassert, Journal of the Proceedings of the Grand Division of the Sons of Temperance of the State of New-York, 268.)
Hassert, Luke. Journal of Proceedings of the Grand Division of the Sons of Temperance of the State of New-York, and Jurisdiction Thereunto Belonging: From the Formation of the Order, September 29, 1842, to the Close of the Annual Session of October 1844. Together with Statistical Tables, Showing the Progress of the Order. New York City: Piercy and Reed, 1845.
Benjamin Winchester identified this Philadelphia meeting hall as “one of the commissioner’s Hall[s].” In 1918 a historian described the hall as “a three-story brick building standing on the east of Third Street, about midway between Tammany (Buttonwood) and Green streets. It was the officers’ quarters of the military barracks, erected by the Provincial Government, in 1757.” (Benjamin Winchester, Philadelphia, PA, 10 Feb. 1840, Letter to the Editor, Times and Seasons, May 1840, 1:104; Smith, “History of the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Branch,” 361.)
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
Smith, Walter W. “History of Philadelphia Branch.” Journal of History 12 (Jan. 1919): 111–118.
Parley P. Pratt, A Voice of Warning, and Instruction to All People; or, An Introduction to the Faith and Doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ, of Latter Day Saints, 2nd ed. (New York: J. W. Harrison, 1839). The reprinting Pratt mentioned here was the tract’s second edition. This work provided a succinct explanation of the faith and doctrine of the church, offered an account based largely on biblical prophecies of the church’s founding and growth, and warned of the apocalyptic destruction that would befall unprepared and impenitent men and women in the near future. Voice of Warning was one of the most widely circulated tracts used by the church in the nineteenth century. Pratt made several substantive changes in the second edition, apparently in response to criticism from JS on a few topics. (Givens and Grow, Parley P. Pratt, 103–120, 167–168.)
Pratt, Parley P. A Voice of Warning and Instruction to All People, Containing a Declaration of the Faith and Doctrine of the Church of the Latter Day Saints, Commonly Called Mormons. New York: W. Sanford, 1837.
Givens, Terryl L., and Matthew J. Grow. Parley P. Pratt: The Apostle Paul of Mormonism. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.