Item Detail
-
30704
-
0
-
10
-
English
-
The Nauvoo Music and Concert Hall : A Prelude to the Exodus
-
BYU Studies
-
2019
-
58
-
3
-
Provo, UT
-
Brigham Young University
-
58-77
-
Although it is little known today, the Nauvoo Music and Concert Hall was an important part of Nauvoo’s cultural history. Joseph Smith designated a spot for it near the temple, the spiritual landmark of the city. The Saints completed the building after Joseph Smith’s death, with funds raised by the Nauvoo Music Association. Many musical concerts were given to packed crowds, and the building was used for meetings of the Apostles, the Seventies, and women’s groups. That the Saints living on the American frontier would care to build a large hall that was acoustically designed for music performance is evidence of the value they placed in cultural refinement. The Saints had to abandon Nauvoo, but the events in that hall affirmed the Saints’ love of music that continues today.
-
'All Things Move in Order in the City' : The Nauvoo Diary of Zina Diantha Huntington Jacobs
'A Perfect Estopel' : Selling the Nauvoo Temple
History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Period I : History of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, by Himself
Kingdom on the Mississippi Revisited
Mormonism and Music : A History
Mormons, Opera, and Mozart
Nauvoo : A Place of Peace, a People of Promise
On the Potter's Wheel : The Diaries of Heber C. Kimball
Policing in Mormon Nauvoo
Thomas Bullock Nauvoo Journal