Mom and I had a busy morning as we began our day. We had our morning devotional and prayers after getting up early, and started off on our walk. Only this morning, we had a special assignment to clean the sign boards on the trail of hope along Parley Street. Here is the history from the Church records;
The Trail of Hope: Exodus from Nauvoo
Art and early Church members’ words can help us imagine what the pioneers felt when they were forced from Nauvoo.
At
the final dedicatory service for the Nauvoo Illinois Temple on June 30,
2002, President Gordon B. Hinckley (1910–2008) asked those in
attendance to walk down Parley Street to the waterfront on the
Mississippi River. Though it was a hot, humid day, President Hinckley
asked everyone to imagine that it was a bitter cold day in February
1846. That summer evening, more than one thousand Latter-day Saints
walked down Parley Street, now referred to as the Trail of Hope.
Today
those who visit Nauvoo can also walk the Trail of Hope and imagine that
it is a bitter cold day in February and how the pioneer Saints felt
when they looked back at the temple for the last time. Plaques line the
Trail of Hope with quotations from pioneers who left Nauvoo on that
February day or during the following months.1 They help us imagine what it was like.
Mary
Field Garner, 10 years old when the mob drove her family to leave
Nauvoo in September 1846, tells how her family hurried to pack food,
cooking utensils, clothing, and bedding. With the bread dough risen and
ready to bake, Mary’s mother simply took it with them to bake after they
crossed the river.
During
one of the earlier crossings of the river, a boat sank, and Hosea Stout
recounts how several Saints were tossed in the cold and unrelenting
waves.
Describing
some of the pioneers’ first camps, Gilbert Belnap states that some had
only a sheet drawn over a few poles to make a tent. He remembers hearing
the crying of children and the groaning of those sick with fever.
Zina H.
Jacobs Young gave birth to a baby boy after traveling about 80 miles
west. She says she did not mind the hardship because her life had been
preserved and her baby was so beautiful.
Some
Saints were unable to go west. Martha Ann Smith was five when she said
good-bye to her dear but feeble grandmother Lucy Mack Smith, who shed
bitter tears knowing it was the last time she would see her son Hyrum’s
family.
George Q. Cannon
Down Parley Street, by Glen Hopkinson, may not be copied; portrait of George Q. Cannon
courtesy of Church History Museum
Bathsheba W. Smith
I Swept the Floor and Gently Closed the Door, by Glen Hopkinson, may not be copied;
portrait of Bathsheba W. Smith by Lee Greene Richards
Newel Knight
Margaret Judd Clawson
Farewell, Nauvoo, by Glen Hopkinson, may not be copied
B. H. Roberts
Illustration by J. Ken Spencer
This was a wonderful opportunity for mom and I to read all the plaques as we cleaned them off. We got home just about 7:30am and got ready for our assignments for the day. Mom went to the Post Office and I went to the Browning Gun shop. Take a look at the Nauvoo postmaster today:
Who can resist mailing their letters here? |
Blowing kisses to an "unsuspecting" photographer! |
The mail-room receiving area |
Some goods sold in the Post Office in the 1840's |
I worked at the Browning Gun shop and I had a very special family come in. I just wish I could have taken their picture. The oldest son came in first at about lunch time. I found out he was heading out to Columbia in South America in two weeks to begin his mission. We had a wonderful time and at one part of the tour I have a chance to testify of the temple blessings because one of Jonathan Browning's daughters died after living for six weeks. He, Jonathan Browning, worked hard to help finish the temple and receive his endowment, along with his wife, and had the faith that he and his family would be together again. This young man seemed touched by the faith of Jonathan Browning.
He left the site but said he would probably be back with his dad. They did come back and during the tour with the father and son, I notice that the father had such a bright countenance. His light literally shined as we were going through the shop. Then, I found out that this young man had a sister who had just passed away from a brain tumor. The father related the story to me, and I was touched by their faith and their hope and their desire to be reunited with their sister/daughter in the coming times. They would continue to live their lives in such a way as to qualify to see her again. I was grateful for this experience today.
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