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The Joseph Smith Mansion House in Nauvoo, Illinois is a large residence first occupied by Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement. Smith used the house as a personal home, a public boarding house, a hotel, and as a site for the performance of temple ordinances.
The Mansion House as seen from the Joseph Smith Homestead. Photo (2008) by Kenneth Mays. After the martyrdom of the Prophet and his brother in Carthage, the bodies of Joseph and Hyrum were displayed in the Mansion House for the Saints to view.
They are buried in a small family cemetery plot just across Main Street, west of the old log home that Joseph lived in when he first came to Nauvoo. Emma Smith lived in the Mansion House until 1871. Then she moved into the Nauvoo House, where she died in 1879.
The Nauvoo House in Nauvoo, Illinois, was to be a boarding house that Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, and his followers began constructing in the 1840s. The boarding house was never completed, but the structure was later converted into a residential home and renamed the Riverside Mansion.
2 sty 2013 · Since the Nauvoo House was years from completion, the church built a graceful, two-story home on the northeast corner of Main Kenneth Mays, The Mansion House in Nauvoo, Ill., is where Joseph Smith and his family lived for about the last 10 months of the Prophets life.
29 mar 2024 · Joseph Monsen, senior manager historic sites, shows a hidden escape door in the Joseph and Emma Smith Mansion House in Nauvoo, Illinois, on Wednesday, March 27, 2024. Photo by Jeffrey D. Allred, courtesy of Church News.
In 1841 a group of investors, led by Joseph Smith, began a joint-stock company to build a massive hotel called the Nauvoo House. Slowly over the course of the next few years, the building began to take shape.