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Day in the Life

Sep 2, 1858

Journal Entry

September 02, 1858 ~ Thursday

2nd I spent the morning in budding my peach orchard
I spent the remaining part of the day in the Historians
office
revising history. I spent the evening with President
Young in company with G. A. Smith H. C. Kimball & D. H. Wells
& others till 9 oclok

People

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Young, Brigham
1 Jun 1801 - 26 Aug 1877
3301 mentions
Apostle, Family
Wells, Daniel Hanmer
27 Oct 1814 - 24 Mar 1891
773 mentions
Apostle
Smith, George Albert
26 Jun 1817 - 1 Sep 1875
1380 mentions
Apostle, Missionary
Kimball, Heber Chase
14 Jun 1801 - 22 Jun 1868
1402 mentions
Apostle

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Quotes

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it is our duty to live our religin & to set a good example before all men & watch & pray that we enter not into temptation.
~ Wilford Woodruff

Related Documents

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Letter to William Wines Phelps from Wilford Woodruff and George A. Smith, 2 September 1858
G. S. L. City, . Elder W. W. Phelps Dr Bro: We recieved your note of Sept 11th. complaining of a [illegible] in the history of Lyman Wight, that he considered [illegible] transgression for selling land in Jackson Co. We would be very sorry to publish any thing that is not correct, and especially to injure the char- acter or feelings of any of our brethren, but the History of Joseph Smith Feby. 5th, 1858 stresses that "Elder Lyman Wight stated, that he considered all other accu- sations of minor importance compared to their selling their lands in Jackson county; that they (Phelps and Whitmer) had set an example which all the Saints were liable to follow. He said that it was a hellish principle, and that they had flatly denied the faith in so doing." Now, whether the fact was so, or not, is not the point at issue, but the above shows that Lyman considered it was so, and that is all that is stated; and as this history was compiled while you were one of the Historians, we consider the written authority sufficient reason for our declining to publish a contradic- tion of the statement and particularly as it now leaves "Lyman to lie on his own hook."

Sep 2, 1858