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Letter from William Appleby, circa March 1842

Source Note

William Appleby

13 Aug. 1811–20 May 1870. Carpenter, millwright, schoolteacher, justice of the peace, judge, town clerk. Born near New Egypt, Monmouth Co., New Jersey. Son of Jacob Appleby and Mary Lukers. Married Sarah B. Price, 23 Oct. 1830, in Monmouth Co. Appointed justice...

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, Letter, [Recklesstown Township, Burlington Co., NJ], to [JS], [
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
, Hancock Co., IL, ca. Mar. 1842]. Featured version published in “Letter from W. J. Appleby. Esq.,” Times and Seasons, 2 May 1842, vol. 3, no. 13, 777–778. For more complete source information, see the source note for Letter to Isaac Galland, 22 Mar. 1839.

Historical Introduction

About March 1842, Latter-day Saint
William Appleby

13 Aug. 1811–20 May 1870. Carpenter, millwright, schoolteacher, justice of the peace, judge, town clerk. Born near New Egypt, Monmouth Co., New Jersey. Son of Jacob Appleby and Mary Lukers. Married Sarah B. Price, 23 Oct. 1830, in Monmouth Co. Appointed justice...

View Full Bio
, a resident of Recklesstown, New Jersey, wrote to JS expressing sympathy for the difficulties JS had endured and reporting on the state of the
church

The Book of Mormon related that when Christ set up his church in the Americas, “they which were baptized in the name of Jesus, were called the church of Christ.” The first name used to denote the church JS organized on 6 April 1830 was “the Church of Christ...

View Glossary
in
New Jersey

Located in northeast region of U.S. First European settlements made by Dutch, Swedes, and English, early 1600s. Admitted to U.S. as state, Dec. 1787. Population in 1830 about 321,000. Population in 1840 about 373,000. First Latter-day Saint missionaries preached...

More Info
.
1

Recklesstown Township (now Chesterfield) was located approximately thirty miles northeast of Philadelphia.


Appleby first learned of the church in 1838 and was
baptized

An ordinance in which an individual is immersed in water for the remission of sins. The Book of Mormon explained that those with necessary authority were to baptize individuals who had repented of their sins. Baptized individuals also received the gift of...

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, along with his wife, Sarah Price Appleby, in September 1840.
2

Appleby, Autobiography and Journal, 14, 23, 27, 39; Erastus Snow, Journal, Sept. 1840, 91; Letter from Orson Hyde, 28 Sept. 1840.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Appleby, William I. Autobiography and Journal, 1848–1856. CHL. MS 1401.

Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.

After being
ordained

The conferral of power and authority; to appoint, decree, or set apart. Church members, primarily adults, were ordained to ecclesiastical offices and other responsibilities by the laying on of hands by those with the proper authority. Ordinations to priesthood...

View Glossary
an
elder

A male leader in the church generally; an ecclesiastical and priesthood office or one holding that office; a proselytizing missionary. The Book of Mormon explained that elders ordained priests and teachers and administered “the flesh and blood of Christ unto...

View Glossary
by
apostle

Members of a governing body in the church, with special administrative and proselytizing responsibilities. A June 1829 revelation commanded Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer to call twelve disciples, similar to the twelve apostles in the New Testament and ...

View Glossary
Orson Hyde

8 Jan. 1805–28 Nov. 1878. Laborer, clerk, storekeeper, teacher, editor, businessman, lawyer, judge. Born at Oxford, New Haven Co., Connecticut. Son of Nathan Hyde and Sally Thorpe. Moved to Derby, New Haven Co., 1812. Moved to Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, ...

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in October, Appleby began preaching and baptizing in the vicinity of Recklesstown.
3

Appleby, Autobiography and Journal, 52–53.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Appleby, William I. Autobiography and Journal, 1848–1856. CHL. MS 1401.

In May 1841 Appleby visited
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
, Illinois, where he met with JS for the first time. Upon his return, Appleby presided over the
branch

An ecclesiastical organization of church members in a particular locale. A branch was generally smaller than a stake or a conference. Branches were also referred to as churches, as in “the Church of Shalersville.” In general, a branch was led by a presiding...

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of the church in Recklesstown and continued to proselytize in New Jersey and Delaware.
4

Appleby, Autobiography and Journal, 68–71, 96–97. Erastus Snow organized a branch in Recklesstown on 4 July 1841, during his second mission to the area. (Erastus Snow, Journal, 4 July 1841, 2.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Appleby, William I. Autobiography and Journal, 1848–1856. CHL. MS 1401.

Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.

In his letter to JS,
Appleby

13 Aug. 1811–20 May 1870. Carpenter, millwright, schoolteacher, justice of the peace, judge, town clerk. Born near New Egypt, Monmouth Co., New Jersey. Son of Jacob Appleby and Mary Lukers. Married Sarah B. Price, 23 Oct. 1830, in Monmouth Co. Appointed justice...

View Full Bio
reflected on the persecution JS and the church had experienced and offered a prayerful affirmation that he and the church would ultimately prevail. Appleby also recounted the progress of the church in
New Jersey

Located in northeast region of U.S. First European settlements made by Dutch, Swedes, and English, early 1600s. Admitted to U.S. as state, Dec. 1787. Population in 1830 about 321,000. Population in 1840 about 373,000. First Latter-day Saint missionaries preached...

More Info
, requested assistance in his efforts to preach to residents in the region, and reported on two families planning to migrate from New Jersey to
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
in April 1842.
The original letter has not been located, but its contents were published in the 2 May 1842 issue of the Times and Seasons. Though the published version does not include a date, external and internal evidence provides some indication of when the letter was written. In his letter
Appleby

13 Aug. 1811–20 May 1870. Carpenter, millwright, schoolteacher, justice of the peace, judge, town clerk. Born near New Egypt, Monmouth Co., New Jersey. Son of Jacob Appleby and Mary Lukers. Married Sarah B. Price, 23 Oct. 1830, in Monmouth Co. Appointed justice...

View Full Bio
mentioned a baptism he had performed “but a few weeks ago” in which he “broke the ice to do it.” This was likely a reference to a baptism that took place during winter 1841–1842 or early spring 1842. Appleby also noted that the Recklesstown branch of the church had 22 members and that the Recklesstown and Cream Ridge area had “something near two hundred members.” Minutes of a 6–10 April 1842
conference

A meeting where ecclesiastical officers and other church members could conduct church business. The “Articles and Covenants” of the church directed the elders to hold conferences to perform “Church business.” The first of these conferences was held on 9 June...

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held in
Philadelphia

Port city founded as Quaker settlement by William Penn, 1681. Site of signing of Declaration of Independence and drafting of U.S. Constitution. Nation’s capital city, 1790–1800. Population in 1830 about 170,000; in 1840 about 260,000; and in 1850 about 410...

More Info
note the Recklesstown branch had 26 members and the Cream Ridge and Recklesstown branches had a combined 166 members. This suggests that the letter was written sometime around the early April 1842 conference.
5

Philadelphia, PA, Minutes and Records, 6–10 Apr. 1842, 24.


Comprehensive Works Cited

Philadelphia, PA, Minutes and Records, 1840–1854. CCLA.

That
Appleby

13 Aug. 1811–20 May 1870. Carpenter, millwright, schoolteacher, justice of the peace, judge, town clerk. Born near New Egypt, Monmouth Co., New Jersey. Son of Jacob Appleby and Mary Lukers. Married Sarah B. Price, 23 Oct. 1830, in Monmouth Co. Appointed justice...

View Full Bio
’s letter appeared in the 2 May 1842 issue of the semimonthly Times and Seasons suggests that the letter was received in
Nauvoo

Principal gathering place for Saints following expulsion from Missouri. Beginning in 1839, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased lands in earlier settlement of Commerce and planned settlement of Commerce City, as well as surrounding areas....

More Info
sometime after the contents of the 15 April issue had been finalized. Letters from Saints in the Delaware River Valley usually took about two or three weeks to travel to Nauvoo, so it is likely that Appleby sent his letter sometime in March or possibly in early April. No response is known to exist, but the letter’s publication in the Times and Seasons indicates that JS believed that its contents should be shared with the church.

Footnotes

  1. [1]

    Recklesstown Township (now Chesterfield) was located approximately thirty miles northeast of Philadelphia.

  2. [2]

    Appleby, Autobiography and Journal, 14, 23, 27, 39; Erastus Snow, Journal, Sept. 1840, 91; Letter from Orson Hyde, 28 Sept. 1840.

    Appleby, William I. Autobiography and Journal, 1848–1856. CHL. MS 1401.

    Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.

  3. [3]

    Appleby, Autobiography and Journal, 52–53.

    Appleby, William I. Autobiography and Journal, 1848–1856. CHL. MS 1401.

  4. [4]

    Appleby, Autobiography and Journal, 68–71, 96–97. Erastus Snow organized a branch in Recklesstown on 4 July 1841, during his second mission to the area. (Erastus Snow, Journal, 4 July 1841, 2.)

    Appleby, William I. Autobiography and Journal, 1848–1856. CHL. MS 1401.

    Snow, Erastus. Journals, 1835–1851; 1856–1857. CHL. MS 1329, box 1, fds. 1–3.

  5. [5]

    Philadelphia, PA, Minutes and Records, 6–10 Apr. 1842, 24.

    Philadelphia, PA, Minutes and Records, 1840–1854. CCLA.

Asterisk (*) denotes a "featured" version, which includes an introduction and annotation.
*Letter from William Appleby, circa March 1842
Times and Seasons, 2 May 1842

Page 777

LETTER FROM
W[illiam] J. APPLEBY

13 Aug. 1811–20 May 1870. Carpenter, millwright, schoolteacher, justice of the peace, judge, town clerk. Born near New Egypt, Monmouth Co., New Jersey. Son of Jacob Appleby and Mary Lukers. Married Sarah B. Price, 23 Oct. 1830, in Monmouth Co. Appointed justice...

View Full Bio
. Esq.
Dear Brother:—It is with feelings of no ordinary kind, that I take my pen in hand, (aside from the bustle and cares of life) to communicate to you, thou servant and prophet of the most high, the pleasing and no doubt cheering intelligence of what the Lord of glory is doing in this part of the vineyard. When I take a retrospective view of the rise of the “
Church of Christ

The Book of Mormon related that when Christ set up his church in the Americas, “they which were baptized in the name of Jesus, were called the church of Christ.” The first name used to denote the church JS organized on 6 April 1830 was “the Church of Christ...

View Glossary
”
1

This was the name given to the church at its organization in April 1830. In 1834 church leaders changed the name to the Church of the Latter Day Saints. An 1838 revelation designated the church as “the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.” (Revelation, 6 Apr. 1830 [D&C 21:11]; Articles and Covenants, ca. Apr. 1830 [D&C 20:1]; Minutes, 3 May 1834; Revelation, 26 Apr. 1838 [D&C 115:4].)


in these last days, and reflect what scenes of persecutions, trials, distress, and bloodshed, the saints of God have been called upon to undergo, for the testimony of Jesus and his holy word; and especially when I think of you, (the trials you have endured, the tribulations you have waded through, the cold damp prisons you have lain in, the galling chains you have been loaded with, the fetters, and bands of iron that have encompassed your limbs, and all for the sake of eternal truth,)
2

JS was imprisoned in Ray County and Clay County, Missouri, from November 1838 to April 1839. JS described the deplorable conditions on multiple occasions. (See “Part 3: 4 November 1838–16 April 1839”; see also, for example, Letter to Isaac Galland, 22 Mar. 1839; and Bill of Damages, 4 June 1839.)


I am ready to exclaim, how long Oh! just, righteous, and eternal Father wilt thou suffer thy prophet and seer, to be persecuted, his life sought after, his name and character villified, traduced, calumniated, falsified and slandered, by wicked and designing men;
3

The phrase “wicked and designing men,” and similar phrases, appeared in contemporaneous documents, including some authored by Latter-day Saints. (See, for example, JS History, vol. A-1, 1; JS, “History of Joseph Smith,” Times and Seasons, 15 Mar. 1842, 3:726; Miller, Evidence from Scripture and History of the Second Coming of Christ, 255–256; and Abraham Lincoln, Speech at a Republican Banquet, Chicago, IL, 10 Dec. 1856, in Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, 2:384.)


Comprehensive Works Cited

Miller, William. Evidence from Scripture and History of the Second Coming of Christ, about the Year 1843; Exhibited in a Course of Lectures. Troy, NY: Kemble and Hooper, 1836.

The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. Edited by Roy P. Basler, Marion Dolores Pratt, and Lloyd A. Dunlap. 8 vols. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1953.

the emmisaries of Satan, but a soft still sweet voice whispers, “my grace is all sufficient for him;”
4

See 2 Corinthians 12:9; Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 548–549 [Ether 12:27]; Revelation, June 1829–B [D&C 18:31]; and Revelation, June 1829–E [D&C 17:8].


he is under my protecting care, and no power of hell and earth combined
5

See Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6:34].


shall ever be able to overcome him if he is faithful. (“They that live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.”)
6

See 2 Timothy 3:12.


And I pray my Heavenly Father in the name of Jesus, that you may be kept faithful unto the end, and may the saints by their faith and prayers always hold you up before our heavenly King,
7

See Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 154 [Mosiah 2:19].


that you may never fall, though your path should be continually beset with the “fowler’s snare;”
8

See Psalm 91:3.


though you should be called upon to undergo more trials, perplexities, griefs, sorrows, disappointments, tribulations and afflictions; and at last seal your testimony with the effusions of your own blood; for the glorious, triumphant and eternal truth that God has made you an instrument in revealing to the children of men. May you never falter, but meet it all with a triumphant smile, obtain the victory over all your enemies; death, hell, and the grave;—fall asleep in the arms of Jesus;—and receive the crown, which thus far you have so nobly and gallantly contended and fought for like a true soldier of the cross, and follower of the Lamb; even when death (with all its appalling forms) stared you in the face, it found you true, and immovable to the glorious—inspiring—heaven born truths that have been revealed to you; and which I your humble servant and brother in the bonds of the
everlasting covenant

Generally referred to the “fulness of the gospel”—the sum total of the church’s message, geared toward establishing God’s covenant people on the earth; also used to describe individual elements of the gospel, including marriage. According to JS, the everlasting...

View Glossary
am rejoicing in. May Israel’s God protect you, and his church, [p. 777]
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Source Note

Document Transcript

Page 777

Document Information

Related Case Documents
Editorial Title
Letter from William Appleby, circa March 1842
ID #
826
Total Pages
2
Print Volume Location
JSP, D9:312–318
Handwriting on This Page
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Footnotes

  1. [1]

    This was the name given to the church at its organization in April 1830. In 1834 church leaders changed the name to the Church of the Latter Day Saints. An 1838 revelation designated the church as “the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.” (Revelation, 6 Apr. 1830 [D&C 21:11]; Articles and Covenants, ca. Apr. 1830 [D&C 20:1]; Minutes, 3 May 1834; Revelation, 26 Apr. 1838 [D&C 115:4].)

  2. [2]

    JS was imprisoned in Ray County and Clay County, Missouri, from November 1838 to April 1839. JS described the deplorable conditions on multiple occasions. (See “Part 3: 4 November 1838–16 April 1839”; see also, for example, Letter to Isaac Galland, 22 Mar. 1839; and Bill of Damages, 4 June 1839.)

  3. [3]

    The phrase “wicked and designing men,” and similar phrases, appeared in contemporaneous documents, including some authored by Latter-day Saints. (See, for example, JS History, vol. A-1, 1; JS, “History of Joseph Smith,” Times and Seasons, 15 Mar. 1842, 3:726; Miller, Evidence from Scripture and History of the Second Coming of Christ, 255–256; and Abraham Lincoln, Speech at a Republican Banquet, Chicago, IL, 10 Dec. 1856, in Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, 2:384.)

    Miller, William. Evidence from Scripture and History of the Second Coming of Christ, about the Year 1843; Exhibited in a Course of Lectures. Troy, NY: Kemble and Hooper, 1836.

    The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. Edited by Roy P. Basler, Marion Dolores Pratt, and Lloyd A. Dunlap. 8 vols. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1953.

  4. [4]

    See 2 Corinthians 12:9; Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 548–549 [Ether 12:27]; Revelation, June 1829–B [D&C 18:31]; and Revelation, June 1829–E [D&C 17:8].

  5. [5]

    See Revelation, Apr. 1829–A [D&C 6:34].

  6. [6]

    See 2 Timothy 3:12.

  7. [7]

    See Book of Mormon, 1840 ed., 154 [Mosiah 2:19].

  8. [8]

    See Psalm 91:3.

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