Item Detail
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31203
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1
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8
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English
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Nauvoo Cemetery Record of William D. Huntington, Nauvoo Sexton
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Mormon Historical Studies
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2002
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3
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1
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Salt Lake City, UT
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The Mormon Historic Sites Foundation
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131-163
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"When John Butler first visited Commerce (later known as Nauvoo) he recalled, “I asked Brother Joseph what kind of a place it was. He said it was a low, marshy, wet, damp and nasty place, but that if we went to work and improved it, it would become more healthy and the Lord would bless it for our sakes.” The Prophet Joseph Smith also stated, “The name of our city (Nauvoo) is of Hebrew origin, and signifies a beautiful situation, or place, carrying with it, also, the idea of rest; and is truly descriptive of the most delightful situation. . . . This place has been objected to by some, on account of the sickness which has prevailed in the summer months.” Yet Joseph expressed his hope that such sickness could be “remedied by draining the sloughs on the adjacent islands in the Mississippi.” The Saints did drain the swampy terrain of Nauvoo, but the call of death continued. A Nauvoo cemetery record kept by William Dresser Huntington during the years 1839-1846, evidences that although malaria appears to be the most prevalent disease in Nauvoo, there were several other types of sickness and illness which brought many Nauvoo Saints to an early death." [Author Intorduction]
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Death at Mormon Nauvoo, 1843-1845
Disease and Sickness in Nauvoo
Illness and Mortality in Nineteenth-Century Mormon Immigration
Medicine and the Mormons : An Introduction to the History of Latter-day Saint Health Care
Nauvoo Deaths and Marriages, 1839-1845
Nauvoo Temple : A Story of Faith
On the Mormon Frontier : The Diary of Hosea Stout [1844-1861]
Sacred Places Volume 3 : Ohio and Illinois : A Comprehensive Guide to Early LDS Historical Sites