CHRONOLOGY OF PAST EVENTS

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CHRONOLOGY OF PAST EVENTS LEADING TO THE WRITING OF THE LETTERS (Names of letter writers are boldfaced.) 1801 Asa and Abigail (Marks) Works, Mollie s paternal grandparents, are married. Their sons and daughters, whose birthdates follow, include Mollie s father as well as her aunts and uncles, those who raised her, taught her, and provided her homes. 1802 Joseph Tunnicliff Works, first child of Asa and Abigail Works, is born near Cooperstown, N.Y. After his first wife dies, he will leave his two children with her relatives and marry in Ohio. 1804 Abigail Works is born in Aurelius, N.Y. She will be the mother of George and Deborah Rockwell, two of Mollie s cousins who became important letter writers. June 7, 1806 Miriam Works is born in Aurelius, N.Y. She is Miriam ( Mollie s ) namesake and will marry Brigham Young and bear his first children, Elizabeth and Vilate. 1809 Adaline Works is born in Aurelius, N. Y. She will be the first of Mollie s paternal aunts to offer her a home, and she will become the mother of Joseph Bonney, Mollie s cousin and lifelong correspondent.

12 LETTERS TO M OLLIE June 23, 1811 August 22, 1814 May 19, 1815 May 25, 1816 Parthenia Works is born in Aurelius, N.Y. She will become the mother of Angeline and Amulek Boothe, two more of Mollie s cousins who become letter writers and friends. Angeline Works is born in Aurelius, N.Y. She will be most influential in raising Mollie, and she will become the mother of Grace Robinson, Mollie s cousin, a lifelong letter writer, and later the mother of Mollie s daughter-in-law. Jerusha Works is born in Aurelius, N.Y. She will become the mother of Charles Worden, Mollie s cousin and a Civil War soldier. Ebenezer Robinson is born in Floyd, N.Y. He will marry Angeline Works and father Grace Robinson. His work in the Mormon Church includes editing and publishing several Mormon newspapers and an edition of the Book of Mormon. He gave Mollie a home. 1819 Asa Daniel Works is born in Aurelius, N.Y. He will marry Deborah Malcolm and father Mollie and Perry Works. October 5, 1821 October 8, 1824 James Marks Works, the youngest of Mollie s uncles, is born in Aurelius, N.Y. He is in Nauvoo, Ill., at its end, and he will live in Brigham Young s home in Salt Lake City, Ut. In Port Byron, N.Y., Brigham Young, he a glazier, brickmaker, and Methodist at the time, marries Miriam Works, Mollie s aunt. 1826 Deborah Malcolm is born in New Jersey. She will come to Illinois with her sister, Rachel, and become Mollie s mother.

C HRONOLOGY OF PAST E VENTS 13 March 27, 1827 April 6, 1830 February 1, 1831 March 26, 1831 September 6, 1832 September 8, 1832 July 23, 1833 November 12, 1833 April 4, 1834 Near Hill Cumorah, N.Y., Joseph Smith, Jr., says he is visited by the Angel Moroni and is taught from the golden plates of the Book of Mormon. In Peter Whitmer s farmhouse near Fayette, N.Y., the Church of Christ, with the Bible and the Book of Mormon as its scripture, is legally established. Many of the Workses become early Mormons. In Kirtland, O., Joseph Smith, Jr., is welcomed by Sidney Rigdon s Campbellite congregation which has converted to Mormonism. Cousin Angeline, eldest child of Lorenzo Dow and Parthenia (Works) Boothe, is born in Cayuga County, N.Y. In Throopsville, N.Y., aunt Jerusha Works marries the widower John Worden, while her sister Angeline Works is a witness. Aunt Miriam (Works) Young dies in Mendon, N.Y. In Kirtland, O., cornerstones are laid for the first Mormon temple. Mormons move to Kirtland. In Rochester, N.Y., cousin Joseph, second son of Amasa and Adaline (Works) Bonney is born. Cousin George, fourth child of David and Abigail (Works) Rockwell, is born in Geauga County, O.

14 LETTERS TO M OLLIE October 16, 1835 December 13, 1835 March 27, 1836 May 26, 1836 Joseph Smith, Jr., baptizes Ebenezer Robinson in the Chagrin River near Kirtland, O. Angeline Works, Mollie s aunt and teacher, weds Ebenezer Robinson in Kirtland, O., Joseph Smith, Jr., performs the ceremony. Kirtland Temple is dedicated in the rain; Sidney Rigdon gives a dedicatory speech; George Morey, who will later influence where Mollie will live, is one of the doorkeepers. Cousin Amulek, third child of Lorenzo and Parthenia (Works) Boothe and writer of 15 letters, is born in Geauga County, O. 1836 Sidney Rigdon convinces church leaders that its name should be the Church of Christ of Latter-day Saints since the end times were at hand; Church founder David Whitmer insists the full name of Christ be included. December, 1836 Angeline Robinson and Amasa Bonney, among others, buy shares in the Kirtland (Anti) Bank(ing) Society, an unchartered Church bank that goes bankrupt. Ebenezer Robinson helps set type for Book of Mormon, second edition. Spring, 1837 April 17, 1837 May 1, 1837 Financial Panic of 1837 hits. Ebenezer and Angeline Robinson leave for Far West, near present-day Independence, Mo. the Zion, or gatheringplace, for Mormons. Asa Works and his family leave Aurelius, N.Y., for Kirtland, O., and then Far West, Mo.

C HRONOLOGY OF PAST E VENTS 15 January 12, 1838 July 4, 1838 August 6, 1838 August 30, 1838 October, 1838 October 25, 1838 October 26, 1838 October 30, 1838 November 1, 1838 April 15, 1839 Joseph Smith, Jr., and Sidney Rigdon flee Kirtland, O., for Far West, Mo. At Far West, a second Mormon temple is begun; a belligerent speech against Mormon persecutors by Sidney Rigdon angers non- Mormons. Mormons voting in a block sway a sheriff s election; a mob attacks; Mormons are wounded. Missouri Gov. Lilburn Boggs orders Maj. Gen. David Rice Atchison to raise 400 armed and equipped militia for action against the Mormons. A mob kills 30 Mormons at Haun s Mill, Shoal Creek, Mo. Armed Mormons, including George Morey, rout a Missouri mob at Crooked Creek, Mo. In a letter, Missouri Gov. Boggs orders the extermination of Mormons. Mormon Crooked Creek warriors, including George Morey, flee north to Iowa, through the Pleasant Plains area, later a home to Mollie and many of her letter writers. Far West Mormons surrender to Missouri militia; many Mormons, including Ebenezer Robinson, are taken prisoner. Bailed or escaped Mormon prisoners find refuge in and around Quincy, Ill.

16 LETTERS TO M OLLIE April 25, 1839 Church committee selects the former Commerce, Ill., renamed Nauvoo, in Hancock County, as the new Mormon gatheringplace. Ebenezer Robinson sends for his wife, her parents and their youngest sons to come from Far West, Mo., to Illinois. May, 1839 July, 1839 March 30, 1841 April, 1841 January 23, 1842 January 28, 1842 February 4, 1842 March 9, 1842 The Robinsons and Asa and Abigail Works are living in a loghouse on the banks of the Mississippi River in Nauvoo, Ill; Asa Daniel Works, 20, soon to be Mollie s father, stays near Quincy in Adams County, Ill. Ebenezer Robinson and Don Carlos Smith, brother of the Prophet, begin printing Times and Seasons, first Nauvoo newspaper. In Danbury, Conn., cousin Deborah Ann, the seventh child of aunt Abigail (Works) and uncle David Rockwell is born. She will live in Geauga County, O. In Nauvoo, the Robinson printing business is so successful he builds brick home and office. Asa Daniel Works and Deborah Malcolm, Mollie s parents, are married by Rev. Elijah Reed in Millville, Ill., near Quincy. Joseph Smith says God wants the Church to own Times and Seasons, Nauvoo s newspaper. Ebenezer Robinson sells printing business and home/office to Joseph Smith, Jr.; Robinsons are forced to take up temporary lodging with their good neighbor, Aaron Johnson. Asa and Abigail Works, Mollie s grandparents, receive a patriarchial blessing from Hyrum Smith, the Prophet s brother, in Nauvoo.

C HRONOLOGY OF PAST E VENTS 17 May, 1842 October, 1842 July 12, 1843 July 31, 1843 October 18, 1843 December, 1843 May, 1844 June 7, 1844 Ebenezer Robinson builds a row of 11 rental tenements on Kimball Street next to his friend Austin Cowles property in Nauvoo. Renters include Lorenzo and Parthenia Boothe, parents of cousins Amulek and Angeline, and Amasa and Adaline Bonney, parents of Joe. Countering newspaper reports, the Robinsons and others sign affidavits that only the marriage ceremony in the Mormon Doctrine and Covenants was known to them. Joseph Smith reveals his doctrine of spiritual wives (religious polygamy) to church leaders; Austin Cowles, father of Elvira, one of Smith s wives, resigns from the Nauvoo High Council. Robinsons leave for the eastern states on a Mormon mission, Angeline stopping in Ohio because of the death of her sister, Abigail (Works) Rockwell, mother of cousins George and Deborah. Mollie s grandfather, Asa Works, 78, with help from neighbor Aaron Johnson, applies for a Revolutionary War pension for his service at Battle of Monmouth; his pension is denied. In Nauvoo, Ebenezer and Angeline Robinson are taught the doctrine of spiritual wives by Hyrum Smith, brother of Joseph. Joseph Smith, Jr., announces his candidacy for President of U.S. First and only issue of Nauvoo Expositor is published, exposing details of how young women are enticed into becoming spiritual wives.

18 LETTERS TO M OLLIE June 10, 1844 June 18, 1844 June 24, 1844 June 27, 1844 Nauvoo Expositor press and copies are destroyed; editors flee to Carthage, Ill. The Ebenezer Robinsons and Sidney Rigdons leave for Pittsburgh, Pa., campaigning for presidential candidate Joseph Smith. Joseph and Hyrum Smith, John Taylor, and Willard Richards are jailed in Carthage for their own safety. A mob overpowers Carthage jail guards, killing Joseph and Hyrum Smith, and wounding Taylor. Farm families, fearing a Nauvoo army, flee to Quincy, Ill., where church bells ring warnings of possible Mormon revenge. Robinsons and Rigdons arrive in Pittsburgh, campaigning for Candidate Smith. Miriam Mollie Works is born in Millville (now Marblehead), Ill. August 8, 1844 February 15, 1845 January 28, 1846 Rigdon s plan for the future of Mormon Church, including high posts for Ebenezer Robinson, George Morey, and Austin Cowles, is defeated by the oratory of Brigham Young; Rigdon returns to Pittsburgh to found his own Mormon church. Robinson publishes its newspaper, The Latter Day Saints Messenger and Advocate. Asa Works, 83, Revolutionary War soldier and Mollie s grandfather, dies and is buried in Nauvoo, Ill. Abigail Nabby (Marks) Works, 75, Mollie s grandmother, is sealed as a spiritual wife to Brigham Young, once her son-in-law.

C HRONOLOGY OF PAST E VENTS 19 February 4, 1846 March 17, 1846 Spring, 1846 May, 1846 July 14, 1846 October 14, 1846 January 2, 1847 Federal troops, coming up the thawing Mississippi River to test Mormon allegiance in the matter of war with Mexico, are a strong incentive to many in Nauvoo to cross the river into Iowa, beginning the hand-cart and wagon trek west. Mollie s aunt, Parthenia (Works) Boothe, wife of Lorenzo and mother of Amulek and Angeline, dies in Nauvoo. Rigdonite Mormons buy a farm near Greencastle, Pa., for their New Jerusalem. Robinsons move to Greencastle, Pa., Ebenezer founding its first newspaper, Conococheague Herald. Abigail (Marks) Works, Mollie s paternal grandmother, dies of cancer; her youngest, James Marks, is the only Works left in Nauvoo to bury her. In Millville, Ill., Perry Works, Mollie s brother is born. Lorenzo Dow Boothe, father of cousins Amulek and Angeline, drowns while crossing the frozen Des Moines River in Iowa. Two children, cousins Amulek and Angeline, remain in Iowa while the rest of the family goes on to Utah. 1848 Adam Dennis marries Mollie s cousin Angeline Boothe, and they settle in northern Missouri. December 22, 1849 Cousin Grace, the only child of Angeline and Ebenezer Robinson, is born in Greencastle, Pa.

20 LETTERS TO M OLLIE 1851 King James Jesse Strang, leader of Mormon Strangites on Beaver Island, Mich., begins plural wife-taking; he is immediately rejected by Zenas Gurley, Sr., and other prominent members of the sect who begin prayer vigils to find a new leader. Winter, 1851-52 Especially harsh winter; cholera in Adams County, Ill. George Morey receives a letter praising the south central Iowa region, Hamilton Township, Decatur County; the Moreys, Keowns, Trumans, and Cowles prepare to move. January 18, 1852 January 23, 1852 June 12, 1852 September, 1852 Asa Daniel Works, 33, Mollie s father, a schoolteacher and farmer, dies; Mollie s mother, Deborah, is ill; the family moves in with Mollie s aunt Rachel (Malcolm) and uncle Samuel Stewart. Mollie s mother, Deborah (Malcolm) Works, makes her brother-in-law Samuel Stewart legal guardian of Perry and Mollie before she dies. Zenas Gurley leads others into signing resolutions against holy polygamy, declaring 19-yearold Joseph Smith III the true leader of the Mormons. Amasa and Adaline (Works) Bonney take the orphaned Mollie with them to Decatur County, Ia. 1854 Ebenezer Robinson buys 160 acres in Hamilton Township, Decatur County, Ia. April, 1855 The Robinsons take their niece Deborah Rockwell from Geauga County, O., to Iowa.

C HRONOLOGY OF PAST E VENTS 21 November 12, 1855 January 1, 1856 February, 1859 Cousin Joseph Bonney, son of Amasa and Adaline, marries Sarah Abigail Sallie Johnson in LaGrange, Mo. They will write many letters to Mollie. David Morey, 26, son of George Morey, marries Deborah Ann Rockwell, 14. Aunt Adaline (Works) Bonney dies. Her husband Amasa returns to New York; Mollie, homeless and 13, works for her cousin Deborah (Rockwell) Morey and their aunt Angeline (Works) Robinson. 1859 George Rockwell, after his wife dies, brings his two children west, leaving his oldest child with his sister, Deborah (Rockwell) Morey. April 6, 1860 May 6, 1860 September, 1860 November, 1860 December 9, 1860 December 24, 1860 Joseph Smith III, 27, accepts the leadership of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS). He is ordained by Zenas Gurley, Sr. and Joseph Briggs in Amboy, Ill. Joseph Bonney writes Mollie Letter #1 from LaGrange, Mo. David Morey moves his family to Illinois to be near the new church headquarters; Mollie, 16, is with her aunt and uncle Robinson in Decatur County, Ia. Abraham Lincoln is elected president. Deborah Morey writes Mollie Letter #2 from Amboy, Ill. South Carolina secedes from the Union.

22 LETTERS TO M OLLIE The first page and last insert, showing song lyrics and artwork, of Letter #17 from Charles Worden, Union soldier. Main Street of Pleasanton (formerly Pleasant Plains), Iowa, in 1914.