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HR0793 |
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LRB093 21726 KEF 49525 r |
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| HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, 138 years ago Brigham Young and more than 20,000 |
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| members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were |
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| expelled from the State of Illinois after the Illinois General |
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| Assembly withdrew its charter for the city of Nauvoo, Illinois |
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| in Hancock County in 1844; and |
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| WHEREAS, During a period of seven years of Illinois |
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| history, from 1839 to 1846, Latter-day Saints built and |
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| developed the city of Nauvoo into the largest city in the State |
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| of Illinois and the tenth largest city in the nation; and |
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| WHEREAS, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints |
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| was established by Joseph Smith in Fayette, New York on April |
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| 6, 1830; and |
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| WHEREAS, The Mormon Prophet, Joseph Smith, led the |
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| community of Latter-day Saints from Fayette, New York to |
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| Kirtland, Ohio in 1831; and from Ohio to Independence, |
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| Missouri, in 1837; and |
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| WHEREAS, Joseph Smith, a strong anti-slavery advocate, led |
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| his community of some 15,000 Latter-day Saints to the |
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| Mississippi River town of Nauvoo, in Illinois, following their |
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| expulsion from the slave State of Missouri in 1839; and |
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| WHEREAS, Joseph Smith and the Latter-day Saints exercised |
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| enormous industry and effort in the development and growth of |
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| the town of Nauvoo, succeeding in creating a prosperous |
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| community in which they drained the local swamp lands and |
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| transformed them into productive agricultural and residential |
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| environments; and |
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| WHEREAS, Joseph Smith and the Latter-day Saints were given |
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| an extraordinary charter for the powers of home-rule by the |
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HR0793 |
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LRB093 21726 KEF 49525 r |
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| Illinois General Assembly to create and preside over their own |
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| court system and also to maintain their own military force, |
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| second in size only to the United States Army; and |
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| WHEREAS, Joseph Smith and the community of Latter-day |
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| Saints exercised extensive missionary activities which drew |
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| new Mormon settlers to the city Nauvoo, reaching a population |
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| of some 20,000 citizens by 1844; and |
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| WHEREAS, The prevailing economic conditions of the nation |
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| in general, and Illinois in particular, faced a downturn in the |
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| early 1840s, with the result that the rapidly growing |
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| population of Nauvoo faced drastic levels of unemployment |
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| without success in attracting needed industry; and |
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| WHEREAS, During the period of their residency in Nauvoo, |
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| Joseph Smith and his community of Latter-day Saints began as |
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| political Democrats, transferring their political allegiance |
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| to the Whig Party in both the elections of 1838 and 1840, |
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| before once again transferring their affiliations back to the |
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| Democratic Party in the election of 1842, until the |
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| establishment of the Reform Party by Smith in time for the |
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| election of 1844, when he began to seriously campaign for the |
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| office of President of the United States; and |
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| WHEREAS, The expression of political authority and power |
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| within the community of Latter-day Saints was seen by many |
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| citizens in Illinois as reason for caution and concern, seeing |
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| the control of local courts by Joseph Smith as autocratic, and |
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| interpreting the leverage and influence of the Mormon |
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| community's voting strength as an over influential and forceful |
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| voting bloc; and |
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| WHEREAS, Local religious customs among the Latter-day |
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| Saints began to be viewed with suspicion, bias and |
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| misunderstanding; and |
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HR0793 |
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LRB093 21726 KEF 49525 r |
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| WHEREAS, Following the destruction of a local anti-Mormon |
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| newspaper known as the Expositor, violence against the |
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| Latter-day Saint community increased; and |
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| WHEREAS, The Governor of the State of Illinois, Thomas |
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| Ford, called out the Illinois Militia to keep order; and |
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| WHEREAS, Governor Ford had the Prophet Joseph Smith and his |
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| brother, Hyrum Smith, jailed, on suspicion of complicity in the |
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| destruction of the Expositor, in the nearby town jail of |
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| Carthage, Illinois; and |
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| WHEREAS, A violent mob stormed the Carthage jail on June |
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| 27, 1844, causing the deaths of Joseph and Hyrum Smith; and |
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| WHEREAS, Between 1844 and 1845, violent acts against the |
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| community of Latter-day Saints increased in volume and |
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| intensity, demonstrated in such acts as the burning of crops, |
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| the destruction of homes and the threatened extermination of |
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| the entire Mormon population; and |
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| WHEREAS, Faced with the extremism against the community of |
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| Latter-day Saints, Brigham Young, the new leader of the Nauvoo |
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| community made plans to take his people out of Illinois; and |
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| WHEREAS, Beginning on February 4, 1846, Brigham Young began |
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| sending the community of Latter-day Saints out of their |
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| homeland of Nauvoo, Illinois across the frozen waters of the |
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| Mississippi River, in the largest forced migration in American |
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| history; and |
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| WHEREAS, Brigham Young made an exodus from the State of |
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| Illinois, leading tens of thousands of men, women and children, |
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| together with livestock and wagons that stretched across the |
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| expansive winter horizon for miles; and |
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HR0793 |
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LRB093 21726 KEF 49525 r |
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| WHEREAS, In this Mormon exodus, Brigham Young and the |
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| community of Latter-day Saints left behind their life in |
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| Illinois and the shining city that they had fashioned from both |
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| their faith and the hard work of their hands; and |
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| WHEREAS, Brigham Young and the community of Latter-day |
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| Saints set off in the midst of winter for Utah, some 1300 miles |
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| to the west; and |
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| WHEREAS, The severity of the winter placed on Brigham Young |
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| and the community of Latter-day Saints extreme hardships, |
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| trudging across the Iowa Plains to the far side of that state |
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| where they made a winter camp; and |
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| WHEREAS, In the Spring of 1847, Brigham Young and the |
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| community of Latter-day Saints began again their journey to |
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| Utah, beyond the Rocky Mountain Range, to the valley of the |
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| Great Salt Lake; and |
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| WHEREAS, On July 24, 1847, Brigham Young and the community |
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| of Latter-day Saints arrived in that valley following a trek of |
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| more than five months, journeying across the heart of the |
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| American continent, from the heartbreak of events in Nauvoo, |
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| Illinois to a place of far-western refuge; and |
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| WHEREAS, Within 50 years of their arrival in the territory |
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| of Utah, the community of Latter-day Saint became the 45th |
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| state in the Union on January 4, 1896; and |
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| WHEREAS, The community of Latter-day Saints grew from a |
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| population of 250,000 at the end of the 19th century to a |
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| population of more than 11 million people in our present day; |
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| and |
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| WHEREAS, The goodness, patriotism, high moral conduct, and |
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HR0793 |
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LRB093 21726 KEF 49525 r |
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| generosity of the community of Latter-day Saints has enriched |
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| the landscape of the United States and the world; and |
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| WHEREAS, The biases and prejudices of a less enlightened |
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| age in the history of the State of Illinois caused unmeasurable |
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| hardship and trauma for the community of Latter-day Saints by |
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| the distrust, violence, and inhospitable actions of a dark time |
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| in our past; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we |
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| acknowledge the disparity of those past actions and suspicions, |
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| regretting the expulsion of the community of Latter-day Saints, |
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| a people of faith and hard work.
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