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corner   Home    USA    Illinois    Nauvoo    Wilford Woodruff Home
Wilford Woodruff Home, Nauvoo, Illinois, USA
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The Wilford Woodruff Home in Nauvoo
Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress,
Prints and Photographs Division

Wilford Woodruff, fourth president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, began work on this home after returning from one of his missions to England. He worked intermittently on the home between his missions abroad. With his attention to detail, he recorded in his journal that he searched through his entire supply of bricks to find the best ones for the front wall of the home.1

Aware of the effect of his absences on his family while he was engaged in missionary service, in 1843 Elder Woodruff wrote, "I desired to have a house for my family to abide in and be comfortable in my absence."2 In an attempt to ensure that his family was comfortable, Elder Woodruff built a working fireplace in each room.3

However, after its completion in 1845, the Woodruff family was not able to live in the home long because of the Saints' exodus from Nauvoo. He sold the home in the middle of April 1846 in order to make preparations to go west. While leaving Nauvoo, Elder Woodruff recorded, "I looked upon the Temple and City of Nauvoo as I retired from it and felt to ask the Lord to preserve it as a monument of the sacrifice of his Saints. "4

The Wilford Woodruff home was the first home in Nauvoo to receive architectural renovation, being completed in 1969.5 Today it is open to visits and displays many of Wilford and Phoebe Woodruff's possessions.


SOURCES


1 Loren C. Dunn, "Introduction to Historic Nauvoo," BYU Studies, Vol. 32, 1992, 30.

2 Scott G. Kenney, ed. "Wilford Woodruff's Journals: 1833-1898" (Midvale, UT: Signature Books, 1983), 2:233.

3 Dunn, 30.

4 Kenney, 3:49.

5 Dunn, 30.

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