JS, License, , Caldwell Co., MO, for , 19 Jan. 1839; printed form with additions in handwriting of ; notation by ; two pages; Ella M. Bennett Collection, CHL. Includes docket.
Single leaf measuring 3 × 8 inches (8 × 20 cm). The right edge of the recto has the square cut of manufactured paper. The top, bottom, and left edges have been unevenly cut. The license was folded for filing, and “G. Snows | License” was docketed on the verso, possibly by . The license remained in the possession of Snow’s descendants until 1986, when it was donated to the Historical Department of the LDS church.
Acquisition Sheet and Instrument of Gift, 20 Dec. 1986, in Case File for Ella M. Bennett Collection, CHL.
Bennett, Ella M. Collection, 1834–1910. CHL.
Historical Introduction
In January 1839, received a new ’s attesting to his office and his good standing in the . Snow was appointed as an elder in winter 1834, and in 1836 he was as a . Although Snow already possessed an elder’s license, church members passed a resolution at an April 1838 conference in , Missouri, specifying that priesthood officers should obtain new licenses, signed by a member of the and the general church recorder. All licenses previously issued would be considered invalid following the conference.
Circumstances did not permit to obtain a new license until early 1839. He was in , Ohio, at the time of the April 1838 conference and did not arrive in until fall. By that time, the conflict with anti-Mormon vigilantes had disrupted the First Presidency’s ability to issue new licenses. Although JS and his counselors in the First Presidency were incarcerated during the winter in , Missouri, general church recorder resumed producing routine documents such as priesthood licenses in late December 1838. On 19 January 1839, Robinson completed and issued the following license to Snow in . Likely in Robinson’s capacity as the First Presidency’s scribe, he signed JS’s name on his behalf.
Gardner Snow, Autobiographical Sketch, 1874, in Patriarchal Blessings, 124:3; Quorums of the Seventy, “Book of Records,” 20 Dec. 1836, 10.
Patriarchal Blessings, 1833–. CHL. CR 500 2.
Record of Seventies / First Council of the Seventy. “Book of Records,” 1837–1843. Bk. A. In First Council of the Seventy, Records, 1837–1885. CHL. CR 3 51, box 1, fd. 1.
Following Snow’s arrival in Missouri with the Kirtland Camp in October 1838, he temporarily settled in Adam-ondi-Ahman before the state militia forced him and other Saints to relocate to Caldwell County in late November 1838. (Kirtland Camp, Journal, 13 Mar. and 2 Oct. 1838; Robert Wilson, Adam-ondi-Ahman, MO, to John B. Clark, 14 Nov. 1838, copy; Robert Wilson, Keytesville, MO, to John B. Clark, 25 Nov. 1838, copy, Mormon War Papers, MSA; Gardner Snow, Autobiographical Sketch, 1874, in Patriarchal Blessings, 124:3.)
Kirtland Camp. Journal, Mar.–Oct. 1838. CHL. MS 4952.
In March 1836, members at a church conference resolved that a clerk should record licenses in a record book “and that said recording clerk be required to endorse a certificate under his own hand and signature on the back of said licences, specifying the time when & place where such license was recorded, and also a reference to the letter and page of the Book containing the same.” Although Robinson wrote on Snow’s license that it was recorded on page 47 of License Record Book, December 1837–May 1862, the last copied license was recorded in September 1838 on page 32. When Robinson resumed issuing licenses in December 1838, he apparently did not simultaneously copy the new licenses into the record book, opting instead to create a list of issued licenses, including the name, office, date of issuance, and page number, on the flyleaf of the record book. The list suggests that Robinson anticipated recording Snow’s license in the book on page 47, but he apparently was unable to do so given the Saints’ exodus from the state. (Minutes, 3 Mar. 1836; General Church Recorder, License Record Book, 32.)