
Nauvoo Temple - Nauvoo, IL
N 40° 33.030 W 091° 23.089
15T E 636760 N 4490113
The LDS Nauvoo Temple, originally erected in 1846, was rebuilt to original specifications in 2002, in Nauvoo, Illinois.
Waymark Code: WMJY8K
Location: Illinois, United States
Date Posted: 01/15/2014
Views: 4
The book, The Nauvoo Temple: Jewel of the Mississippi, written by Susan Easton Black, with photography by John Telford, describes the history of the LDS Nauvoo Temple.
"In grateful remembrance of yesteryear when the Saints of God labored in the boggy marshlands of the Mississippi to erect a temple, The Nauvoo Temple: Jewel of the Mississippi. Read of the Latter-day Saints' determination to finish the temple in the very hour of their extremity. Visualize their accomplishments and joy in the culmination of their legacy - a Restoration of the House of God." SOURCE
"The Nauvoo Illinois Temple stands on a high bluff overlooking a bend in the Mississippi River. The majestic building is a faithful reproduction of the original Nauvoo Temple built by Mormon settlers in the 1840s and destroyed by arson fire in 1848 and tornado-force winds in 1850." SOURCE
"The Nauvoo Temple was the second temple constructed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, commonly known as the Mormons. The church's first temple was completed in Kirtland, Ohio, United States, in 1836. When the main body of the church was forced out of Nauvoo, Illinois, in the winter of 1846, the church attempted to sell the building, finally succeeding in 1848.
In 1937, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints reacquired the lot on which the original temple had stood. The Church built a temple on the original site whose exterior is a replica of the first temple, but whose interior is laid out like a modern Latter-day Saint temple. On 27 June 2002, a date that coincided with the 158th anniversary of the deaths of Joseph and Hyrum Smith, the temple was dedicated as the Nauvoo Illinois Temple." SOURCE