Nauvoo House

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See this page in the original 1992 publication.

Author: Holt, Helene

A revelation to Joseph Smith in January 1841 commanded the Saints to build both the Nauvoo Temple and the Nauvoo House, a hotel that would be "a delightful habitation for man, and a resting place for the weary traveler" (D&C 124:60). The Saints were not to isolate themselves from the world, but to provide attractive accommodations for strangers and tourists while they "contemplate the word of the Lord; and the corner-stone I have appointed for Zion" (D&C 124:23).

Joseph Smith donated the land for the Nauvoo House, and many Latter-day Saints purchased stock. The design of architects Lucien Woodworth and William Weeks called for an L-shaped brick building forty feet deep and three stories high. Construction began in the spring of 1841 and progressed (with interruptions) into 1845. Eventually, the work was discontinued in an effort to complete the Nauvoo Temple.

When the Saints left Nauvoo in 1846, the Nauvoo House walls were up above the windows of the second story. The large unfinished building on the south end of Main Street facing the Mississippi River became the property of Joseph Smith's widow, Emma Smith. Subsequently, Emma's second husband, Lewis C. Bidamon, tore down the extremities of the L-shaped structure and used their bricks to complete the central portion as a smaller hotel, variously known as the Bidamon House and the Riverside Mansion. He and Emma lived there from 1871 until they died. After Bidamon's death, the reorganized church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints purchased the Nauvoo House and still owns it.

Bibliography

Flanders, Robert Bruce. Nauvoo: Kingdom on the Mississippi, pp. 179-90. urbana, Ill., 1965.

Holzapfel, Richard N., and T. Jeffry Cottle. Old Mormon Nauvoo, 1839-1846. Provo, Utah, 1990.

Mulder, William. "Nauvoo Observed." BYU Studies 32 (Winter & Spring 1992):95-118.

Stobaugh, Kenneth E. "The Development of the Joseph Smith Historic Center." BYU Studies 32 (Winter & Spring 1992):33-40.


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