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| | Kirtland Temple - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Kirtland Temple continues to be used as a place of worship and education. |  | | Owned and operated by the Community of Christ, the house of worship was the first temple to be built by the Latter Day Saint movement (Mormonism). |  | | This faction also dissolved and most of the members who were in Kirtland eventually joined the Reorganization and the church now known as the Community of Christ. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirtland_Temple
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| | Kirtland Safety Society - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Kirtland Safety Society (KSS) was a quasi-bank organized in 1836 (and reorganized on January 2, 1837) by leaders and followers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. |  | | In late 1836, many recent LDS converts gathered in Missouri and Kirtland, Ohio. |  | | I hereby warn them to beware of speculators, renegades and gamblers, who are duping the unsuspecting and the unwary, by palming upon them, those bills, which are of no worth, here. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirtland_Safety_Society
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| | Our History - Kirtland |
 | | The Kirtland Temple, the "House of the Lord," was a significant spiritual and economic resource. |  | | Previous attempts to publish them in a book had failed, but in Kirtland, church members approved the collection and publication of these revelations and the theology and beliefs of the church in the Doctrine and Covenants. |  | | The welcome the missionaries received in Kirtland was to have important consequences for the young church. |
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http://www.cofchrist.org/history/kirtland.asp
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| | deseretnews.com Pres. Hinckley lauds rebirth of Kirtland |
 | | Also revealed in Kirtland was an expansion on the Christian doctrine of life after death, he said, giving Latter-day Saints a "gospel grammar" that sees death not as "an exclamation point or even a period. |  | | The faith's first temple was built, its priesthood quorums organized and the missionary effort for which it is known today had its genesis in Kirtland, the church's headquarters from 1831 to 1838. |  | | The financial carnage was an evil counter to the spiritual outpourings church leaders and members experienced in Kirtland, President Hinckley said, as land speculation and greed turned residents against their neighbors. |
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http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,505033987,00.html
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| | Cornelius Lott |
 | | Kir.tland, Ohio was designated as headquarters of the Church, and as many of the members as could, gathered there. |  | | When apostacy was rife in Kirtland and the powers of darkness seemed massed for its overthrow, the Prophet "to save the church" organized and sent forth a mission to Great Britian. |  | | In -1837 the Gospel Net of the Church gathered into its fold their family. |
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http://www.geocities.com/phillott/CORNELIUS.htm
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| | LDSGetaway.com :: L.D.S. Family Travels: Kirtland |
 | | About 300 members were living in the general area and with the arrival of the Prophet, Kirtland became the headquarters of the Church. |  | | Kirtland, sometimes called the “City of Faith and Beauty,” lies about 22 miles east of Cleveland in the northeast corner of Ohio. |  | | But of even greater importance were the many significant spiritual events that occurred in and around Kirtland during this important period in Church history. |
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http://www.ldspro.com/ldsgetaway/docs/ft/030530kirtland.asp
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| | The Story of the Mormons: From the Date of their Origin to the Year 1901 - Chapter V |
 | | Later enterprises at Kirtland, undertaken under the auspices of the church, included a steam sawmill and a tannery, both of which were losing concerns. |  | | But the speculation to which later Mormon authorities attributed the principal financial disasters of the church at Kirtland was the purchase of land and its sale as town lots.* The craze for land speculation in those days was not confined, however, to the Mormons. |  | | "We want the brethren from abroad to call on us and take stock in the Safety Society, and we would remind them of the sayings of the Prophet Isaiah contained in the 60th chapter, and more particularly in the 9th and 17th verses which are as follows:-- |
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http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/relg/historygeography/TheStoryoftheMormonsFromtheDateoftheirOrigintotheYear1901/chap18.html
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| | The Kirtland Temple, Kirtland Ohio. |
 | | "The Growth of the Mormon Church in Kirtland, Ohio." Ph.D. Dissertation, Indiana University, 1957. |  | | Petersen, Melvin J. "A Study of the Nature of and Significance of the Changes in the Revelations as Found in a Comparison of the Book of Commandments and Subsequent Editions of the Doctrine and Covenants." M.S. Thesis, Brigham Young University, 1955. |  | | "Cultural Crisis in the Mormon Kingdom: A Reconsideration of the Causes of Kirtland Dissent." Church History 49 (September 1980): 286-97. |
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http://www.kirtlandtemple.org/biblio.htm
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| | Mormon Biographical Registers |
 | | Became disaffected and left the Church in 1838. |  | | Assisted in writing dedicatory prayer for Kirtland Temple 1836. |  | | Was ordained an elder and then served a mission with Solomon Hancock until June 3, 1831, when he was ordained a high priest and second counselor to Bishop Partridge in Kirtland. |
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http://smithinstitute.byu.edu/resources/register/siMBRegisters.asp?alpha=C
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| | The Watchman Expositor: Disguising the Divide |
 | | The above description of events in Kirtland in connection with the Kirtland Safety Society is a portrait very sympathetic to Joseph Smith, and still it does not indicate that religious persecution drove the Mormons out of the area. |  | | In Missouri, where unquestionably the Mormons were driven from the state, their troubles were largely of their own making, and their opponents were not particularly religiously motivated. |  | | However, there does not appear to be any contemporaneous historical record indicating such persecution, nor any indication that his first vision was ever heard of by anyone, including Mormon church members, until after the New York period. |
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http://www.watchman.org/lds/disguisingthedivide.htm
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| | Joseph Smith's Kirtland Bank Failure |
 | | While it is common knowledge that Joseph Smith founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, few know of his attempt to found a bank in Kirtland, Ohio. |  | | It was difficult for them to comprehend that a man who claimed to have divine revelation in religious matters could fail so miserably in economic affairs.... |  | | For more information on the Kirtland Bank see our book The Mormon Kingdom, Vol. |
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http://www.utlm.org/onlineresources/josephsmithsbank.htm
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| | Church History c. 1831-1844, Ohio, Missouri, And Nauvoo Periods |
 | | Building the Kirtland Temple was of central importance to the Saints in the mid-1830's, so that they could receive there the promised blessings from on high before taking the gospel to the ends of the earth. |  | | Joseph Smith later taught that a primary purpose for the gathering of the faithful in any age was to build a house of the Lord wherein could be revealed the ordinances of his temple. |  | | In Hiram, Ohio, a rural farming community about thirty miles south of Kirtland, Joseph Smith worked on his inspired translation of the Bible (see Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible [JST]), a project that served him as a school. |
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http://www.lightplanet.com/mormons/daily/history/1831_1844/eom.htm
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| | The Story of the Church - The Panic of 1837 |
 | | Joseph Smith thought, as he later implied, that "an institution of the kind, established upon just and righteous principles" would be a "blessing not only to the church but the whole nation," and many another of the leading men of the church took stock and prominent part in organizing the affair. |  | | Had the people left these Saints alone there is no reason that I know of why the Kirtland Bank should not have existed to this time, and on as stable a basis as other banks.... |  | | Not only those interested in the Kirtland Bank, but bankers in general were under the ban. |
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http://www.centerplace.org/history/misc/soc/soc27.htm
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| | Wife number 19 by Ann Eliza Young, chapters 1-10 |
 | | They were naturally anxious to gather all their children into the fold, and they urged my father, with tearful, prayerful entreaties, to accompany them to the city of refuge prepared for the faithful followers of the Lord and His prophet Smith. |  | | To be sure, He had revealed the very same thing concerning Kirtland; it was there that he declared "He had established His name for the salvation of the nations." But according to the Prophet's later explanation. |  | | The Mormon Church, in its earliest days, cannot be fairly judged by the Mormon Church of the present time, which retains none of its early simplicity, and which seems to have lost sight entirely of the fundamental principles on which it was built. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/az2/arizonadry/truth/eliza.html
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| | Joseph Smith as a Prophet |
 | | However, the Call diary was not actually written until years later, from memory, and the manuscript of the HC dates only from 1845 (after JS's death), where the words of this prophecy appear only as an interlinear insertion which could only have been made after the Mormons actually arrived in Utah. |  | | Saints are to gather riches and purchase an inheritance to be called New Jerusalem, also called Zion, a place of refuge and safety, where the wicked will not come, and against which the wicked will refuse to battle. |  | | 3:443 Joseph Smith says it is "wisdom and according to the mind of the Holy Spirit" that the saints should invest in the Kirtland Safety Society. |
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http://www.helpingmormons.org/prophet.htm
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| | John Brooke - Refiner's Fire - Book Reveiw |
 | | The Kirtland Mormons fainted, spoke in tongues, healed the sick, interpreted lost languages, levitated, had visions of the future (and of ancient times) and received revelations directly from God. |  | | In the spring of 1836, the Prophet consecrated the first Mormon temple at Kirtland. |  | | In 1830-31 the Prophet Joseph gathered the first Mormon community at Kirtland, Ohio. |
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http://www.lds-mormon.com/refine.shtml
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| | The Five Sons of Jared and Charity Pratt |
 | | After the dedication of the Kirtland Temple in 1836, Heber C. Kimball gave Parley a double blessing: Thankful would bear a son and Parley would preach the gospel in Canada. |  | | But rebuked by John Taylor who vigorously pointed out that "if the work was true six months ago, it is true today," Parley went to the prophet in tears, begged forgiveness, and later, with renewed zeal went on a mission to New York with his new wife, Mary Ann Frost Stearns, and her four-year-old daughter. |  | | But the past two years were only a preface to the future; during the next few years, Church activity intensified for the Pratts. |
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http://jared.pratt-family.org/histories/fivesons.htm
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| | Crisis at Kirtland: Episode 4 Sec. 3 |
 | | In the eyes of many Mormon "covenant breakers," Newell's charge of an attempted murder plot issuing forth from the same mouth that was then condemning his own past followers as "covenant breakers" about to "feel the wrath of God," must have seemed more than a little probable. |  | | He was approached by the 33 year old Kirtland gunsmith, and probable former Smith bodyguard, to join in what was very likely termed a secret mission to save the entire Church from a forthcoming mob attack. |  | | In the spring of 1837, I left Boston for Kirtland, in all good faith, to assemble with the Saints, as I thought, and worship God more perfectly. |
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http://olivercowdery.com/hurlbut/SCrisis3.htm
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| | Newel K. Whitney (1795–1850) |
 | | I was told by a Mormon who left them, but retained his faith in the "Book of Mormon," that the Kirtland Safety Society Bank bills were used as currency in Utah, and the church authorities ordered my brother to counter-sign as many bills as gold-dust was deposited to redeem them. |  | | Joseph, who is said to have see him in vision, praying for his coming to Kirtland, recognized the part he was destined to play in the great drama of the latter days. |  | | Early convert (1830), Bishop (Kirtland and Nauvoo), Presiding Bishop (18471850). |
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http://www.saintswithouthalos.com/b/whitney_nk.phtml
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| | Mormon History Association |
 | | Born in Newry, Maine, in 1814, Perrigrine was converted to Mormonism in 1835 at age twenty-one and became an unwavering believer and obedient follower, serving seven missions, marrying eight women, fathering fifty-five children, settling the second community in Utah, and serving the Church throughout his adult life. |  | | For instance, he suggests that those who opposed control of temporal affairs by the church "in a religiously motivated (communal) plan to share with the poor were not prepared, either by political upbringing or religious maturity, to live [the plan.] In their concern over theocratic government, they appealed to the traditions of their political fathers. |  | | Among these is the statement from Perkins that it was apparently a faithful member of the church, Lyman Sherman, who burned the Kirtland print shop to the ground in 1838 (31). |
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http://mha.wservers.com/pubs/book_reviews.php?PHPSESSID=6506e7978f30635461c6...
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| | Gospel Doctrine: "Go Ye into All the World, and Preach My Gospel": Lesson 26 |
 | | But a spirit of apostasy gripped some of the leading elders of the Church, including some of the Kirtland Safety Society Officers. |  | | To be sure, this verse in DandC 112 is particularly directed at some of the ranking leaders bent on apostasy in Kirtland and Missouri referred to above. |  | | One hundred thousand dollars was stolen from the bank, unknown to the president or the cashier" (Wilson K. Anderson, in Studies in Scripture, Volume One: The Doctrine and Covenants, 413-14). |
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http://www.meridianmagazine.com/gospeldoctrine/dc/050621dc26.html
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| | Did Joseph Plot to Murder Grandison Newell? |
 | | In either case, statements by two apostles and other close associates no doubt undermined the Prophet's reputation, gave some Saints cause to leave the church, and hastened the church's departure from Kirtland. |  | | Joseph was eventually acquitted, but the testimony of church leaders and employees reveals how the seriously the Prophet's followers took his offhand remarksor was he really serious? |  | | Denton testified that in April or May, Davis (otherwise unknown) approached him about killing Newell at the Prophet's behest. |
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http://www.jfs.saintswithouthalos.com/arts/gn.htm
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| | assignment2 |
 | | During this time, most of the Saints (which is the term found in the Book of Mormon commonly used among members to describe the people of this religion) were forced to leave. |  | | As the violence against the Mormons escalated, it became unsafe for them to remain in Kirtland. |  | | Some incorrectly blamed Joseph Smith (the founding prophet or religious leader of the LDS Church) (Encarta Encyclopedia) for the problems associated with it. |
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http://www.louisville.edu/~jmpose01/assignment2.html
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| | Excerpt: The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power (20th century) |
 | | This has resulted in various religious communities regarding themselves as outside the ordinary definitions and expectations of society and of the world's leaders. |  | | To begin, by divine injunction since ancient times, God's disciples have seen themselves as "not of the world" (John 17:14). |  | | However, on occasion church presidents have personally benefitted from church finances by simply cancelling their indebtedness to church funds. |
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http://www.signaturebooks.com/excerpts/hier2.htm
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| | John Hyde's "Mormonism, Its Leaders" 3: Contents |
 | | Under the hands of the three witnesses of the Book of Mormon, all of whom subsequently apostatized, Brigham was ordained and set apart to his office. |  | | In the society of such women the Mormon youth stand abashed and terrified, like small children who, it is said, "ought to be seen but not heard." |  | | Not only is it unknown, but despised, and called "Gentilish affectation." To be esteemed by the people, all must be esteemed by the authorities. |
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http://thedigitalvoice.com/enigma/hyd1857c.htm
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| | On Kirtland, Ohio |
 | | The faithful saints started leaving for Missouri as fast as preparations could be made. |  | | The last group of 600 faithful Saints left in July 1838. |  | | The Church was organized in April 1830 in upstate New York, |
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http://members.aol.com/acadac/talks/k-ohio.htm
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| | Warren Parrish, General Authority |
 | | Alleging that Joseph had fallen from his divine calling as leader of the Church, Warren Parrish claimed the authority to lead it. |  | | He manifested the most bitter spirit and became the leader of the disgruntled group. |  | | Shortly after his return to Kirtland, or possibly while he was away, his wife Elizabeth died, the date being June 27, 1834. |
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http://personal.atl.bellsouth.net/w/o/wol3/parriw1.htm
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| | Legal and Judicial History |
 | | Courts and the law, rather than military force, became the means of enforcing Church capitulation to the mandates of the larger secular society. |  | | For the most part, this litigation has had little significance for the central mission of the Church or for issues of religious freedom. |  | | Compared with other large institutions in modern society, the Church has not been litigious. |
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http://www.lightplanet.com/mormons/daily/history/legal_judicial_eom.htm
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| | Lyman E. Johnson (1811-1856) |
 | | September 8, 1833 working with Orson again, holds two meetings in Bath, ordain Horace Cowan an elder, "and laid hands upon the little children and blessed them in the name of hte Lord, and administered the sacrament, and sealed up the Church unto eternal life." Orson leaves for Kirtland the next day. |  | | Saints Without Halos has no official connection with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. |  | | April 15, 1838 Stephen Burnett writes Lyman, "You state in your letter that you have lost six thousand dollars Kirtland paper." How he could have lost that much in Kirtland bank notes is a puzzle. |
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http://www.saintswithouthalos.com/b/johnson_le.phtml
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| | Kirtland |
 | | The Kirtland Period of the Church produced the first Mormon Money, thanks to the creation by the Church of the Kirtland Safety Society Bank. |  | | This type of Kirtlands were known as "Resigned Kirtlands" because the First Presidency of the Church at that time affixed their signatures to the 10 year old notes to revalidate them. |  | | When the Pioneers migrated to the Great Basin area 10 years later a number of Kirtland Safety Society Bank notes that were retained by the Church were reissued and resigned. |
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http://www.mormonmoney.com/Kirtland.htm
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| | Josiah Butterfield, General Authority |
 | | As the winds of apostasy swirled about Kirtland, he remained loyal to the Prophet and faithful to the Gospel. |  | | The brethren, who were thus deprived of their liberty, were discharged the next day by the court Sitting in Mansfield, as no bill was found against them. |  | | Following his baptism he moved to Kirtland, Ohio, about 1834 where he worked on the Kirtland Temple. |
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http://personal.atl.bellsouth.net/w/o/wol3/buttej1.htm
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| | Crisis at Kirtland: Episode 4 Sec. 2 |
 | | The preliminary hearing, held 3 June 1837 at the Painesville Methodist Church, was widely publicized and well attended. |  | | As the Kirtland Mormons were block-voting Democrats, Bissell and Perkins were their natural poltical allies. |  | | Newell might be the person to do it. |
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http://olivercowdery.com/hurlbut/SCrisis2.htm
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| | Zebedee Coltrin, General Authority |
 | | He was closely associated with the Prophet Joseph and has often testified to having been a witness of and participant in many marvelous spiritual manifestations. |  | | In 1836 he attended the School of Elders in Kirtland and was priviledged to attend the dedication of the Kirtland Temple in 1836. |  | | At the time of his death the Deseret News said editorially: "This respected and venerable man was one of the oldest members of the Church and was identified with many of its earliest incidents in the days of Kirtland. |
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http://www.gapages.com/coltrz1.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | There are also three folders addressing the Strangite, Cutlerite and Hedreckite religions that broke away from the L.D.S. Church after the death of Joseph Smith. |  | | 3-4 Max Parkin at the Temple Quarry near Kirtland. |  | | 7 A large gathering in front of the Kirtland Temple. |
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http://www.lib.utah.edu/spc/photo/p659/p0659.txt
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| | LDS info: The Kirtland Safety Society Anti-Banking Co. |
 | | One of the original Three Witnesses, David Whitmer, joined with other prominent church leaders in renouncing Joseph Smith as a fallen prophet over the anti-bank debacle. |  | | By this time, Smith had already spent every dollar he had buying up land around the Mormon community in Kirtland, hoping that a railroad would run a line somewhere across his property and make him rich. |  | | In all, the Prophet persuaded some 200 citizens to pool their assets to charter the Kirtland Safety Society Banking Company. |
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http://www.algonet.se/~daba/lds/abanking.htm
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| | 1837 Chronology |
 | | John Corrill named "an agent of the Church and Keeper of the Lord's Store House." |  | | At Sunday services in Kirtland, Wilford Woodruff finds "the same spirits of murmering, complaining, and of mutiny," that he witnessed on February 19. |  | | A high council is elected, as are members of the Quorum of the Twelve (including the Johnsons and John F. Boynton (h) who had been rejected by the Kirtland conference) <, bishopric, patriarch, keeper of the Lord's storehouse, presidents of seventies. |
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http://www.saintswithouthalos.com/c/1837.phtml
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| | Mormon leader fled after his bank failed |
 | | Smith and other church leaders left Kirtland to settle in Caldwell, Mo., causing a disintegration of the Mormon community in Ohio. |  | | Smith had moved to Kirtland in eastern Ohio in 1830 to escape persecution of his religious sect in New York. |  | | To see more documents/articles regarding this group/organization/subject click here. |
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http://www.rickross.com/reference/mormon/mormon97.html
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| | A Comparison of the LDS Articles of Faith with the Bible - Part 7 |
 | | In A Comprehensive History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints we read the following: |  | | Historians have noted however, that the reason the charter was denied is due to the fact that "there is no evidence to sustain the idea that it was even asked to grant one. |  | | Of all the early Mormon leaders, the inability to abide by the law of the land is best seen in the case of Joseph Smith. |
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http://www.concernedchristians.org/nocomparison_dc9.php
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| | Book of Mormon Witnesses |
 | | After their excommunication, each felt deep rejection, resulting, predictably, in their harsh criticisms of Church leadership. |  | | Yet each of the three was a respected and independent member of non-Mormon society, active in his community. |  | | After receiving revelation, the Three Witnesses felt they shared equally with Joseph Smith in foundational experiences, and their certainty about a past vision contributed to their inflexibility concerning future revelations. |
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http://www.lightplanet.com/mormons/basic/bom/witnesses_eom.htm
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| | History of the Church : Kirtland Era, 183138: LDSFAQ |
 | | History of the Church : Kirtland Era, 183138 |  | | History of the Church : Kirtland Era, 183138: LDSFAQ |  | | This study concludes that too much time has been spent evaluating the individuals involved in the Kirtland Bank and that these events must be viewed in historical context. |
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http://ldsfaq.byu.edu/view.asp?q=312
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| | History of the Church Volume 2 Contents. |
 | | The Ordinance of Washing of FeetVisions in the Kirtland TempleThe Prophet on Abolition. |  | | Chapter I: The Year Eighteen Hundred and Thirty-FourAffairs in Zion and Kirtland. |  | | Trial and Conviction of HurlburtEfforts in Behalf of the Redemption of ZionDissolution of the United Order of Zion and Kirtland. |
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http://www.antimormon.8m.com/hocindex2.html
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| | Lesson 4 |
 | | The failure of the Kirtland Safety Society hastened the disintegration of the Mormon community at Kirtland. |  | | Members were to deed their property to the Church and receive inheritances. |  | | When the state legislature refused to grant the charter, the church leaders decided to go into the anti-banking business. |
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http://www.suu.edu/ced/courses/hist3870/lesson4.htm
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| | BYU Studies-Products Details |
 | | The argument over the Kirtland Safety Society is typical of historical discussions in which much is made about the “facts” of a situation. |  | | It is as if the truth were somewhere “out there” and if we could somehow manage to separate fact from opinion, we would know what really happened. |  | | The purpose of this paper is to reexamine the story of the Kirtland Safety Society. |
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http://byustudies.byu.edu/productitem.asp?id=655&type=7
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| | Table of contents for Joseph |
 | | Reid L. Neilson The Kirtland Safety Society 27. |  | | Kent P. Jackson The Prophet's Nauvoo Teachings in Nauvoo 37. |  | | Craig K. Manscill "Let the City Far West Be a Holy and Consecrated Land" 28. |
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http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0511/2005010663.html
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| | Rust Rare Coin - Utah and Mormon Money Books |
 | | You will view pieces of history in the 300+ halftone photographs of coins, currency, stock certificates, and tokens, many of which are signed by early members and leaders of the church. |  | | From Kirtland, Ohio to Nauvoo, Illinois, and finally onto Salt Lake City, Utah, Mormon monetary history was researched and is brought to life on the pages of Mormon and Utah Coin and Currency. |
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http://www.rustcoin.com/book.htm
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| | Uncle Dale's Old Mormon Articles Gateway |
 | | A work-in-progress on the origin, rise and fall of the Mormons at Kirtland, 1830-1839; with special attention paid to the history of D. Hurlbut |  | | SidneyRigdon.com is dedicated to the life and times of Rev. Sidney Rigdon (1793-1876) and includes web pages for his Writings, Chronology/History, etc. |
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http://www.lavazone2.com/dbroadhu/oh/miscoh08.htm
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| | 1837 - encyclopedia article about 1837. |
 | | February 13 - Rowland Hill at a UK government inquiry into postal reform discloses the idea of carrying letters in a separate sheet which folded to become an envelope and the idea of "a bit of paper" which could be affixed to a letter to flag that postage had been paid. |  | | February 8 - Richard Johnson becomes the first Vice President of the United States chosen by the United States Senate |  | | February 11 - American Physiological Society organizes in Boston |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/1837
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| | BYU Studies - Subject Index |
 | | Forscutt, Mark H., and the Kirtland Temple suit of 1880, 25:3:111 |  | | See also Education; Gender equality; International Council of Women; Relief Society; Women |  | | See also Genealogical Department; Genealogical Society of Utah |
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http://byustudies.byu.edu/index/subject_index.asp?alpha=F
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