Manuscripts
Journal of Hosea Stout, vol.8, [microform]: 1829-1889
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Journal of Hosea Stout, vol.8, [microform]: 1829-1889
Manuscripts
Microfilm of the Journal of Hosea Stout, Vol. 8, 1829-1889. Divided into four parts. Part I includes letters to and from Stout and the Capps family, Stout's wives Surmantha and Louisa, Allen J. Stout, Benjamin Jones, William Fowler, Thomas Smith, John Larkey, Major General Wilson Law, Hyrum Smith, Willard Richards, Charles C. Rich, Parley Pratt, John Taylor, Brigham Young, and various letters related the Nauvoo Legion. It also contains proclamations and certificates regarding Stout's elections to the Representative Assembly for the Utah Territory and related events, as well as a family record of births, marriages, and deaths. Part II includes Stout's phonographical chart book and items related to the Nauvoo Legion. Part III includes references to Stout from the Journal History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1838-1889). Part IV consists of family reminiscences of Stout by L. Lee. Includes a detailed index of contents. The reel also contains a printed biography of Stout.
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![Stout family correspondence [microform] : 1836-1859](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Frail.huntington.org%2FIIIF3%2FImage%2F22APN45Y980T%2Ffull%2F%5E360%2C%2F0%2Fdefault.jpg&w=750&q=75)
Stout family correspondence [microform] : 1836-1859
Manuscripts
Microfilm of 29 letters sent to or by Hosea Stout and his brother Allen Stout between 1836 and 1859. Recipients of letters from Hosea Stout include his wife Louisa Stout, his sisters Surmantha and Anna Stout, and his brother Allen Stout. Letters to Hosea Stout were written by Brigham Young, Allen Stout, Willard Richards, and Stout's cousins Daniel B. Capps in Grainger County, Tennessee, and Thomas Smith. There is also correspondence between Allen Stout and Benjamin Jones, William Fowler, John and Lydia Larkey, and John and Sarah Capps. The letters, which are not in chronological or alphabetical order on the reel, were sent from Illinois, Utah, Arkansas, California, Missouri, Tennessee, and Iowa. Some notable items include a letter from Hosea to his sister Anna in which he writes that he had failed in getting a school and that "it appears that misfortune comes upon me at every attempt to make an honest living" (Apr.5, 1832). A letter to Hosea from his cousin Daniel B. Capps asks for a description of the Mormons, as Capps had heard some disconcerting stories about them, although he concludes that "I do not want you to think this is a reprimand against you for joining their society, for it is not" (June 6, 1839). A series of letters to Louisa Stout from 1852-1853 describe Hosea's mission to Iron County, include portions of a journal he kept while traveling to Los Angeles and sailing to Monterey Harbor and ultimately San Francisco to arrange for passage to Hong Kong, and his dissatisfaction with the Mormon mission work in San Francisco ("We can do nothing here among the Chinese"). There is also a letter from Allen Stout informing Hosea of Louisa's death in childbirth while he was serving on a mission in Hong Kong (Apr.11, 1853), and a letter from Brigham Young to Stout while he was still in Hong Kong in which Young writes of troubles in Utah with "Walker and his band of Utes," who had murdered Brother Kill, John Dixon, John Quayle, and William Walton, terrorized the populations of Springfield and settlements in Sanpete County (including causing the abandonment of Salt and Summit Creeks) and fled into the mountains. Young also writes that many new Mormon immigrants have been arriving, of the Temple Block wall construction, and of Stout's family living with Allen Taylor after Louisa's death (Sep.30, 1853).
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Hosea Stout autobiography
Manuscripts
This is a typescript of the autobiography written by Hosea Stout in 1845 for the Eleventh Quorum of Seventies in Nauvoo, Illinois. In it he describes the early period of his life from his childhood to his service in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He includes his move from Illinois to Missouri to join the Mormons in Caldwell County as well as providing details about his participation in the Battle of Crooked Creek, covering the attack, the death of David Wyman Patten (ca. 1800-1838), and the escape of the Mormons into Iowa
mssHM 66521
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Diary and family record of May Hunt Larson [microform]: 1894-1942
Manuscripts
Microfilm of a diary and genealogical and family record kept by May Hunt Larson. The diary, identified as Journal No.2, was kept at Snowflake, Arizona, from 1897-1907. In it May records her daily activities, her attendance of church and suffrage meetings, and news on family members and acquaintances. The second volume, identified as Journal No.1 and dated 1894, contains a detailed family history and genealogy. The family history includes a detailed memoir covering the years 1866-1896. It also includes a history of Jefferson Hunt, with references to his service in the Nauvoo Legion and Mormon Battalion, as well as copied biographies of various family members including John Hunt, Happylona Sanford Hunt, Sarah Jane Crosby Hunt, Belle Hunt Flake, Mons Larson, and Louisa Barnes Pratt. The genealogy in the volume goes through 1942.
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![Autobiography of Peter Wilson Conover [microform] : before 1892](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Frail.huntington.org%2FIIIF3%2FImage%2F22APN4DRK6L1%2Ffull%2F%5E360%2C%2F0%2Fdefault.jpg&w=750&q=75)
Autobiography of Peter Wilson Conover [microform] : before 1892
Manuscripts
Microfilm of a typescript of Peter Wilson Conover's autobiography. Conover writes of his ancestry, his childhood in Kentucky, his father's decision to move north "on account of slavery," his life in Illinois, his experiences in the Illinois Militia under General Whitesides, with whom he marched to Wisconsin and along the Mississippi to capture an unidentified man and send him to Washington, and of his conversion to Mormonism. Conover also writes of working on the Nauvoo Temple, of joining the Nauvoo Legion, of meeting Joseph Smith at Rock River in 1843 and escorting him back to Nauvoo, of mob violence in Illinois, of moving to Iowa and Missouri, of the death of his wife in childbirth in 1847 and his decision to travel west, of becoming a captain in the Jefferson Hunt Company, and of his experiences in the Black Hawk and Walker Wars.
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![Record of orders, returns, and court martials of 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, Nauvoo Legion [microform]: 1857-1858](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Frail.huntington.org%2FIIIF3%2FImage%2F22APN4DHT85M%2Ffull%2F%5E360%2C%2F0%2Fdefault.jpg&w=750&q=75)
Record of orders, returns, and court martials of 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, Nauvoo Legion [microform]: 1857-1858
Manuscripts
Microfilm of a typescript of the Nauvoo Legion record book, kept in Salt Lake City from 1857-1858. The typescript was made from the original by Brigham Young University in 1946. The majority of the volume consists of orders and instructions given by Brigadier General Franklin D. Richards to Legion officers, including Jesse P. Harmon, Thomas Callister, A.H. Raleigh, John Bennion, Samuel Bennion, James Ferguson, Jonathan Pugmire, James G. Willis, David Pettigrew, Heman Hyde, John Cottam, John Rowberg, A.L. Fullmer, Reddin A. Aldre, K.W. Richards, and George D. Grant. It also includes detailed battalion-by-battalion charts, including lists of names with ranks, supplies given, remarks on duties, and other notes.
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