Footnotes
Monaghan, “New Mormon Letter,” 85–86.
Monaghan, Jay. “A New Mormon Letter.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 40, no. 1 (Mar. 1947): 85–86.
Footnotes
By July, Don Carlos Smith wrote Granger and mentioned he had heard Granger’s health was finally improving, but Granger died the next month. (Don Carlos Smith, Nauvoo, IL, to Oliver Granger, Kirtland, OH, 11 July 1841, Don Carlos Smith, Letters to Oliver Granger, 1841, CHL; Obituary for Oliver Granger, Times and Seasons, 15 Sept. 1841, 2:550.)
Smith, Don Carlos. Letters to Oliver Granger, 1841. CHL.
Times and Seasons. Commerce/Nauvoo, IL. Nov. 1839–Feb. 1846.
In July 1841, Horace Hotchkiss, a major creditor to the First Presidency for land purchased in Illinois, informed JS that Galland had never arrived in Connecticut to settle debts with Hotchkiss and his partners and that Galland had already left for the western United States. (Letter from Horace Hotchkiss, 24 July 1841.)
During their efforts to found a banking venture known as the Kirtland Safety Society, JS, Sidney Rigdon, and Oliver Cowdery commissioned banknote plates to be produced by the New York engraving firm Underwood, Bald, Spencer & Hufty in late 1836. By June 1837 the founders of the Kirtland Safety Society had defaulted on their debt, and the engraving firm took legal action to obtain payment. (See Kirtland Safety Society Notes, 4 Jan.–9 Mar. 1837; and Transcript of Proceedings, 16 Apr. 1839, Underwood et al. v. Rigdon et al. [Geauga Co. C.P. 1839], Final Record Book X, pp. 34–36, Geauga County Archives and Records Center, Chardon, OH.)