Saturday, November 10, 2012

Print Shop



When John Taylor purchased his home, he also purchased the properties on both sides.  The one on the left was a store but since he was the editor of the newspaper, he thought it would be a good place to move the print shop. 

It had been in the basement of a building down the street, but it was so small, cold, and damp that people were getting sick.  In fact, Don Carlos Smith had come down with pneumonia and died while working there.  That property now belongs to the Community of Christ Church and has not been restored but you can see how small it was.

 
Originally, the print shop was on the second floor.  It must have taken a lot of work to get those big heavy printing presses up there, but there is a door up there on the back side.
 
 
Two newspapers were printed here in Nauvoo.
 
 
 The "Nauvoo Neighbor"  was a weekly paper, similar to our little hometown newspaper, and had announcements of meetings, practical advice, poems, stories, and national and world news.
 
The "Times and Seasons" was the official church publication, similar to the "Ensign" of today.  It included counsel from Church leaders, letters from missionaries, literary works, and accounts of revelations received by the Prophet.
 
The print shop also did custom jobs like printing handbills and flyers.
 
Doing a tour of the print shop is really fun because you get to do a demonstration of how the printing process worked. 
 
They would only work on one paragraph at a time, and make a "proof" so they could read it and make any corrections that needed to be made, then move on to the next paragraph.  We relate this to repenting of our little mistakes every day - before they turn into big ones. 
 
 
 
There are a lot of terms that we use all the time but I had no idea they came from the printing business.  For example:  Upper case letters were stored in an "upper case" - lower case letters were stored in a "lower case". 
 
 

 

 
A "ding bat" is a pretty little thing that takes up space.
 
 
"Furniture" (little blocks of wood - not tables and chairs) and "spacers" are used to hold the type in the "chase" (cut to the chase) and the "quoin key" tightens it all up (quoin a phrase).
 

 
Everything has to be secured in the "chase" upside down and backwards.
 
 
When it's ready, you carry it to the press and "lay it to rest" on the "coffin".
 
 
 Use a "dauber" to dab ink onto the type.
 
 
 
Put a damp sheet of newsprint paper over it and fold the "frisket" down over the "tympan".  Roll it all under the "platen" and pull the lever to lower the "platen".  The paper is pressed against the inked type to make an impression. 
 
 
 
Then, raise the "platen", roll it back, lift the "frisket" and take the sheet of paper off, hang it up to dry for 24 hours or so, and then start all over with the reverse side. 
 
 
And don't forget to mind your "p's & q's" or they'll end up looking like "d's & b's".
 

 
 


 
 
 



 


Friday, November 2, 2012

"Bootiful Nauvoo"

"Bootiful Nauvoo"


Halloween has never been my favorite holiday, but Nauvoo really knows how to do it up right.  And they don't even do it on the actual date, they do it on the last Saturday in October. 

First, missionaries donate candy and then help bag it up ahead of time.  Then for the week before the big event, the mission greenhouse is turned into a giant pumpkin carving factory.  There are some really amazing artists in town and they draw some simple and some more complicated designs on over 500 pumpkins and then missionaries and townspeople come for several days whenever they have a little "free time" to carve the pumpkins.

 
 








 
 
 
Then they loaded them all up on flatbed trucks.
 
 
Then someone spends all day Saturday lining the streets uptown with all the pumpkins.
 
Saturday night there were people selling food up and down the street but we gave away our previously bagged up candy . . .
 
 
. . . and the best tasting kettle corn in the entire universe.  
 
 
Our Elders made it in a big pot right there on the street.
 
 
 
Then there was a parade - lots of kids and adults in costumes. 
 
 
 


 
I loved the cute little train.
 
 
And Micky and Minnie.
 
 
 And our very own missionary "crazy band".
 
 

 
 But best of all were the pumpkins.  They were everywhere.  Pumpkins lined both sides of the street for several blocks.  This is just a small sample.
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
We didn't have time to get around to all of them because we had a performance of Rendezvous afterward, but here's one that Elder K. carved - the Count from Sesame Street (on the left).
 
 





Besides the 500 plus pumpkins we helped to carve, the artists carved some special ones for an auction.  I'm not sure what the auction was for, but the pumpkins were amazing. 
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
And my favorite.
 
 
It was a very enjoyable holiday, and we will get to do it again next year - just before we go home. 
 
HAPPY HALLOWEEN from BOOTIFUL NAUVOO. 





 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 








Sunday, October 14, 2012

John Taylor Home



John Taylor was the third prophet and president of the church.  He worried about purchasing these three properties because he didn't want people to think that he was trying to "build himself up".  He was not a materialistic person - he relied on the Lord for everything.  But the opportunity came up and the store (to the left - his home is in the middle, the post office is to the right) would be very convenient for a printing office and he was the editor of the newspaper.  Also, purchasing the properties would "keep them out of the hands of the enemy".

This is a very beautiful home, and the very first site I served in when we first came to Nauvoo.  Just inside the front door is a beautiful staircase and sitting area where we wait for guests.


 In the parlor, we find things that remind us of John Taylor and his interests.
 
 
 
The organ is not of the Nauvoo period - it dates about 1865 - but it reminds us of his love for music.  He had a beautiful tenor voice and he sang to the prophet, Joseph Smith, at Carthage the night before he was martyred.
 
 
There is a cane by the fireplace to remind us that he used his cane to try to protect Joseph & Hyrum when the mobs stormed up the stairs at Carthage, and was shot and wounded trying to defend them.
The writing desk reminds us of his love of writing.  He was the editor of the newspapers here in Nauvoo, "The Wasp", whose name was changed to "The Nauvoo Neighbor" and "The Times & Seasons".  There are also pictures of him.  The one above the fireplace was when he was the 3rd prophet and president of the church in Salt Lake City.  The one above the couch is the age he was when he lived here in Nauvoo.


 
In the kitchen we tell that the Taylors were only able to live in this beautiful home for a few months before they were forced to leave.  When they first came to Nauvoo, they lived across the river in Montrose.  John was called on a mission so his wife, Leonora, and the children lived in a little barracks room only 20 x 20 feet square.  She said it had one window, a door that was falling off its hinges, and so many holes in the walls that a little skunk came in and slept with them every night. 
 
 
Upstairs in the children's room we tell a story about the little rocking horse.  According to family tradition, one of the children was very upset that the horse had to be left behind.  Knowing the danger of returning, under cover of night, John came back to get the horse.  They tied it to the wagon and took it all the way to Utah.  Later, the family donated it to the church to be displayed in this room.  We relate this father's love to the love of our Heavenly Father.  He too, wants us to be happy.
 
 
Sorry it's so hard to see, but in the middle of the top picture there is a shaving stand that belonged to John Taylor.  Notice how narrow the closets are, but this was a pretty fancy home to even have closets.  In this room we tell that when the Saints were forced to leave, John knew that he had to close down the newspaper, so he wrote one final editorial.  We quote part of it . . .
 
My favorite part is "we will suffer wrong rather than do wrong".  So many people who come here ask how the Saints were able to just walk away and leave their beautiful city.  Why didn't they stay and fight?  Because they were peaceful people - they just wanted a safe place to worship as they wished.  And remember that they had just survived a government sanctioned "extermination order" in Missouri.  Fighting would not have helped.
 
 
And that is exactly what they did.