Latter-Day Saints messages

Latter-Day Saints messages we invite others to come unto christ by helping them receive the restord gospel through faith

25/05/2026

One day we will look back and asked ourselves questions
Let’s make good decisions today

24/05/2026

I Will Walk with Jesus

1. Jesus walked in wisdom. Jesus grew in truth,
Showing love to God and man while in His youth.
Jesus wants to guide me. Jesus shows the way,
Calling me to come and walk with Him each day.
As I walk with Jesus to my home above,
He will bless me with His Spirit and fill me with His love,
Change my heart forever and help me clearly see.
I will walk with Jesus, and He will walk with me.

2. I can grow like Jesus. I will try each day—
Promising to walk His path and there to stay.
Standing by my Savior, safe within His care,
Step by step I’ll follow, and His love I’ll share.
As I walk with Jesus to my home above,
He will bless me with His Spirit and fill me with His love,
Change my heart forever and help me clearly see.
I will walk with Jesus, and He will walk with me.

3. I will trust in Jesus. I will hear His call.
He will never leave me, even when I fall.
Jesus gives me power, lifts and comforts me,
Helping me to live and grow eternally.
As I walk with Jesus to my home above,
He will bless me with His Spirit and fill me with His love,
Change my heart forever and help me clearly see.
I will walk with Jesus, and He will walk with me.

In the days ahead, the world will continue to grow more confusing, distracting, and spiritually challenging. That is why...
23/05/2026

In the days ahead, the world will continue to grow more confusing, distracting, and spiritually challenging. That is why the constant companionship of the Holy Ghost is no longer just a blessing it is a necessity. Without the guiding, directing, comforting, and sustaining influence of the Spirit, it becomes difficult to discern truth from deception, peace from fear, and light from darkness.

As disciples of Jesus Christ, we must learn to seek the companionship of the Holy Ghost daily through sincere prayer, scripture study, repentance, obedience, and faithful covenant keeping. The Spirit strengthens us when we feel weak, comforts us during trials, warns us of danger, and testifies of truth in moments when the world offers uncertainty.

Heavenly Father does not intend for us to face these latter days alone. Through the gift of the Holy Ghost, we can receive personal revelation, spiritual strength, comfort, wisdom, and peace beyond worldly understanding. The Savior lovingly invites us to draw nearer to Him so we may recognize the voice of the Spirit more clearly amid the noise of the world.

No matter how difficult life becomes, those who strive to remain worthy of the companionship of the Holy Ghost will find guidance, hope, protection, and spiritual confidence. In a world filled with confusion, the Spirit will continue to lead faithful disciples safely back to Jesus Christ.

22/05/2026

First Vision Accounts

Joseph Smith recorded that God the Father and Jesus Christ appeared to him in a grove of trees near his parents’ home in western New York State when he was about 14 years old. Concerned by his sins and unsure which spiritual path to follow, Joseph sought guidance by attending meetings, reading scripture, and praying. In answer, he received a heavenly manifestation. Joseph shared and documented the First Vision, as it came to be known, on multiple occasions; he wrote or assigned scribes to write four different accounts of the vision.

Joseph Smith published two accounts of the First Vision during his lifetime. The first of these, known today as Joseph Smith—History, was canonized in the Pearl of Great Price and thus became the best known account. The two unpublished accounts, recorded in Joseph Smith’s earliest autobiography and a later journal, were generally forgotten until historians working for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints rediscovered and published them in the 1960s. Since that time, these documents have been discussed repeatedly in Church magazines, in works printed by Church-owned and Church-affiliated presses, and by Latter-day Saint scholars in other venues.1 In addition to the firsthand accounts, there are also five descriptions of Joseph Smith’s vision recorded by his contemporaries.2

The various accounts of the First Vision tell a consistent story, though naturally they differ in emphasis and detail. Historians expect that when an individual retells an experience in multiple settings to different audiences over many years, each account will emphasize various aspects of the experience and contain unique details. Indeed, differences similar to those in the First Vision accounts exist in the multiple scriptural accounts of Paul’s vision on the road to Damascus and the Apostles’ experience on the Mount of Transfiguration.3 Yet despite the differences, a basic consistency remains across all the accounts of the First Vision. Some have mistakenly argued that any variation in the retelling of the story is evidence of fabrication. To the contrary, the rich historical record enables us to learn more about this remarkable event than we could if it were less well documented.

Accounts of the First Vision
Each account of the First Vision by Joseph Smith and his contemporaries has its own history and context that influenced how the event was recalled, communicated, and recorded. These accounts are discussed below.

1832 Account. The earliest known account of the First Vision, the only account written in Joseph Smith’s own hand, is found in a short, unpublished autobiography Joseph Smith produced in the second half of 1832. In the account, Joseph Smith described his consciousness of his own sins and his frustration at being unable to find a church that matched the one he had read about in the New Testament and that would lead him to redemption. He emphasized Jesus Christ’s Atonement and the personal redemption it offered. He wrote that “the Lord” appeared and forgave him of his sins. As a result of the vision, Joseph experienced joy and love, though, as he noted, he could find no one who believed his account. Read the 1832 account here.

1835 Account. In the fall of 1835, Joseph Smith recounted his First Vision to Robert Matthews, a visitor to Kirtland, Ohio. The retelling, recorded in Joseph’s journal by his scribe Warren Parrish, emphasizes his attempt to discover which church was right, the opposition he felt as he prayed, and the appearance of one divine personage who was followed shortly by another. This account also notes the appearance of angels in the vision. Read the 1835 account here.

1838 Account. The narration of the First Vision best known to Latter-day Saints today is the 1838 account. First published in 1842 in the Times and Seasons, the Church’s newspaper in Nauvoo, Illinois, the account was part of a longer history dictated by Joseph Smith between periods of intense opposition. Whereas the 1832 account emphasizes the more personal story of Joseph Smith as a young man seeking forgiveness, the 1838 account focuses on the vision as the beginning of the “rise and progress of the Church.” Like the 1835 account, the central question of the narrative is which church is right. Read the 1838 account here.

1842 Account. Written in response to Chicago Democrat editor John Wentworth’s request for information about the Latter-day Saints, this account was printed in the Times and Seasons in 1842. (The “Wentworth letter,” as it is commonly known, is also the source for the Articles of Faith.)4 The account, intended for publication to an audience unfamiliar with beliefs of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is concise and straightforward. As with earlier accounts, Joseph Smith noted the confusion he experienced and the appearance of two personages in answer to his prayer. The following year, Joseph Smith sent this account with minor modifications to a historian named Israel Daniel Rupp, who published it as a chapter in his book, He Pasa Ekklesia [The Whole Church]: An Original History of the Religious Denominations at Present Existing in the United States.5 Read the 1842 account here.

Secondhand Accounts. Besides these accounts from Joseph Smith himself, five accounts were written by contemporaries who heard Joseph Smith speak about the vision. Read these accounts here.

Arguments Regarding the Accounts of Joseph Smith’s First Vision
The variety and number of accounts of the First Vision have led some critics to question whether Joseph Smith’s descriptions match the reality of his experience. Two arguments are frequently made against his credibility: the first questions Joseph Smith’s memory of the events; the second questions whether he embellished elements of the story over time.

Memory. One argument regarding the accounts of Joseph Smith’s First Vision alleges that historical evidence does not support Joseph Smith’s description of religious revival in Palmyra, New York, and its vicinity in 1820. Some argue that this undermines both Joseph’s claim of unusual religious fervor and the account of the vision itself.

Documentary evidence, however, supports Joseph Smith’s statements regarding the revivals. The region where he lived became famous for its religious fervor and was unquestionably one of the hotbeds of religious revivals. Historians refer to the region as “the burned-over district” because preachers wore out the land holding camp revivals and seeking converts during the early 1800s.6 In June 1818, for example, a Methodist camp meeting took place in Palmyra, and the following summer, Methodists assembled again at Vienna (now Phelps), New York, 15 miles from the Smith family farm. The journals of an itinerant Methodist preacher document much religious excitement in Joseph’s geographic area in 1819 and 1820. They report that Reverend George Lane, a revivalist Methodist minister, was in that region in both years, speaking “on Gods method in bringing about Reformations.”7 This historical evidence is consistent with Joseph’s description. He said that the unusual religious excitement in his district or region “commenced with the Methodists.” Indeed, Joseph stated that he became “somewhat partial” to Methodism.8

Embellishment. The second argument frequently made regarding the accounts of Joseph Smith’s First Vision is that he embellished his story over time. This argument focuses on two details: the number and identity of the heavenly beings Joseph Smith stated that he saw. Joseph’s First Vision accounts describe the heavenly beings with greater detail over time. The 1832 account says, “The Lord opened the heavens upon me and I saw the Lord.” His 1838 account states, “I saw two Personages,” one of whom introduced the other as “My Beloved Son.” As a result, critics have argued that Joseph Smith started out reporting to have seen one being—“the Lord”—and ended up claiming to have seen both the Father and the Son.9

There are other, more consistent ways of seeing the evidence. A basic harmony in the narrative across time must be acknowledged at the outset: three of the four accounts clearly state that two personages appeared to Joseph Smith in the First Vision. The outlier is Joseph Smith’s 1832 account, which can be read to refer to one or two personages. If read to refer to one heavenly being, it would likely be to the personage who forgave his sins. According to later accounts, the first divine personage told Joseph Smith to “hear” the second, Jesus Christ, who then delivered the main message, which included the message of forgiveness.10 Joseph Smith’s 1832 account, then, may have concentrated on Jesus Christ, the bearer of forgiveness.

Another way of reading the 1832 account is that Joseph Smith referred to two beings, both of whom he called “Lord.” The embellishment argument hinges on the assumption that the 1832 account describes the appearance of only one divine being. But the 1832 account does not say that only one being appeared. Note that the two references to “Lord” are separated in time: first “the Lord” opens the heavens; then Joseph Smith sees “the Lord.” This reading of the account is consistent with Joseph’s 1835 account, which has one personage appearing first, followed by another soon afterwards. The 1832 account, then, can reasonably be read to mean that Joseph Smith saw one being who then revealed another and that he referred to both of them as “the Lord”: “the Lord opened the heavens upon me and I saw the Lord.”11

Joseph’s increasingly specific descriptions can thus be compellingly read as evidence of increasing insight, accumulating over time, based on experience. In part, the differences between the 1832 account and the later accounts may have something to do with the differences between the written and the spoken word. The 1832 account represents the first time Joseph Smith attempted to write down his history. That same year, he wrote a friend that he felt imprisoned by “paper pen and Ink and a crooked broken scattered and imperfect Language.” He called the written word a “little narrow prison.”12 The expansiveness of the later accounts is more easily understood and even expected when we recognize that they were likely dictated accounts—an easy, comfortable medium for Joseph Smith and one that allowed the words to flow more easily.

Changes to the Book of MormonIn 1829, Egbert B. Grandin’s staff in Palmyra, New York, began production on printing the B...
22/05/2026

Changes to the Book of Mormon

In 1829, Egbert B. Grandin’s staff in Palmyra, New York, began production on printing the Book of Mormon. For first editions of books, printers at the time usually received handwritten manuscripts from authors and supplied editorial changes like punctuation, spelling, and grammar while setting the type. For this project, Joseph Smith’s assistant and scribe, Oliver Cowdery, created a copy of the original manuscript for the typesetter, John Gilbert, to use. This “printer’s manuscript,” like the original, contained very little punctuation and some inconsistencies in spelling. The printer’s manuscript also contained minor discrepancies relative to the original manuscript. In typesetting the book, Gilbert supplied punctuation and paragraph divisions. The first edition of the Book of Mormon had no verse numbering.

Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery prepared a second edition in 1837. Their approach in updating the Book of Mormon resembled how publishers of the Bible at the time improved editions for English readers. Publishers and readers commonly understood that production errors could creep into the typesetting process for any book, so publishers often provided prefaces assuring readers of their efforts to catch and repair any inconsistencies noticed in earlier editions. Over two months in 1837, Joseph and Oliver approached the first edition of the Book of Mormon with similar intentions, introducing over a thousand minor corrections in the second edition as well as a few important clarifications. For instance, they adjusted references about Jesus in 1 Nephi rendered in the manuscripts and 1830 edition as “the mother of God,” “the Eternal Father,” and “the Everlasting God” to “the mother of the Son of God,” “the Son of the Eternal Father,” and “the Son of the everlasting God,” respectively. Joseph and Oliver’s preface stated, “Individuals acquainted with book printing, are aware of the numerous typographical errors which always occur in manuscript editions. [This text] has been carefully re-examined and compared with the original manuscripts, by elder Joseph Smith, Jr. the translator of the book of Mormon, assisted by the present printer, brother O. Cowdery.”

The last edition of the Book of Mormon supervised by Joseph Smith was the third edition published in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1840. The work of the third edition began with Ebenezer Robinson, who used a copy of the second edition with revisions marked in pencil by Joseph Smith. One important change in the third edition corrected the language describing Nephites as a “white and delightsome people” to a “pure and delightsome people.” Because some future editions of the Book of Mormon based their text on the second edition of 1837, uncorrected verbiage persisted until the 1981 edition reverted the text to Joseph Smith’s 1840 correction. Robinson used stereotype plates in preparing the third edition for print. This technology allowed for multiple reprintings, a first for the Book of Mormon. With stereotyped plates in hand, Joseph Smith treated the book as more or less secure for the foreseeable future, and he deposited the original manuscript of the Book of Mormon in a cornerstone of the Nauvoo House in 1841.

Since the third edition in 1840, other editions and dozens of reprintings based on the 1837 and the 1841 European editions introduced minor changes to the Book of Mormon. The 1879 edition prepared by Orson Pratt featured shorter chapters and numbered verses that have remained the standard through all subsequent editions. The 1920 edition prepared by the Scriptures Committee of the Church, a group of five Apostles chaired by George F. Richards, standardized the titles of books (like Third Nephi and Fourth Nephi) within the Book of Mormon, divided the text into a two-column layout, and added chapter summaries and a pronunciation guide.

Despite its many cross-references, the 1920 edition was still typeset separately from English editions of the Bible. In the 1970s, the Scriptures Publication Committee chaired by Elder Thomas S. Monson launched a review of the Bible, Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price to produce a complete edition of the standard works. The committee consulted the original and printer’s manuscripts and previous editions of the Book of Mormon to identify and track typographical and semantic variants. Some human errors were corrected, like straight having been confused for strait (words with the same sound but with different meanings), and formation in the printer’s manuscript having been typeset as foundation in 1 Nephi 13. The committee also rediscovered and incorporated Joseph Smith’s revisions in the 1840 edition. The 1981 edition introduced a new layout across the standard works and featured updated cross-references, chapter headings, and reference materials.

Both scriptures committees in 1920 and in the 1970s consulted the work of scholars who had examined source texts and printed editions available in their respective times. Such scholarship accelerated in 1988 with the Book of Mormon Critical Text Project, eventually headed by Royal Skousen, a professor of linguistics and English language at Brigham Young University. Skousen’s work to identify all changes across Book of Mormon texts, whether editorial or accidental, unearthed scribal patterns in the manuscripts and variants across printed editions, which led to a flowering of scholarship on the text of the Book of Mormon. In 2001, the Joseph Smith Papers Project began collecting and presenting all of Joseph Smith’s surviving papers, including his contributions to the Book of Mormon. The modern archival work and documentary editing practices of this project furthered the study of the Book of Mormon and its history, making available yet more documentation of changes to the Book of Mormon than before.

The physical deterioration of the English printing masters of the 1981 edition prompted urgent production of a new edition. The resulting 2013 edition took the occasion to correct lingering typographical inconsistencies, like standardizing instances of first-born to firstborn in 2 Nephi 2, 4, and 24, and correcting minor typographical errors like becoming as Gods to becoming as gods in Alma 12:31 and the peoples’ to the people’s in Helaman 13:17.

Emerging digital publishing technologies also brought new formats for digital publication. Software offered readers keyword-searching, reference links, and scripture-marking tools, as well as over a hundred language options. In 2022, the Book of Mormon app further enhanced digital functionality, linking the text to multimedia and other digital content and providing instant sharing capabilities.

22/05/2026

American Indians

During the century before the Church was organized, the American Indian population in North America declined by about four hundred thousand as a result of warfare, exposure to disease, and the disruption of Indigenous economies caused by new settlers from Europe. At the same time, the European American population grew by over five million. In 1800 most colonial settlements remained within five hundred miles of the Atlantic Coast, but white settlers soon pressed westward across North America. This expansion led to tense encounters between Indians and white settlers.

By the early 1800s, Indian nations had engaged in centuries of trade, diplomacy, military alliances, and conflicts with European American settlers, and many tribes had signed treaties guaranteeing access to territory and resources. But in 1830 the United States Congress passed a law that permitted the removal of various tribes to territories west of the Mississippi River. Protestant churches sponsored missions to the displaced Native groups, hoping that gospel preaching would improve Indian relations. But Indian removal caused immense disruption and suffering and led to further conflict.

Indian-Pioneer Encounters in the 1830s and 1840s
The Book of Mormon was published the same year the Indian Removal Act passed. It gave Church members a different perspective on the past history and future destiny of American Indians. The early Saints believed that all American Indians were the descendants of Book of Mormon peoples, and that they shared a covenant heritage connecting them to ancient Israel. They often held the same prejudices toward Indians shared by other European Americans, but Latter-day Saints believed Native Americans were heirs to God’s promises even though they now suffered for once having rejected the gospel. This belief instilled in the early Saints a deeply felt obligation to bring the message of the Book of Mormon to American Indians.

Within months of the founding of the Church in 1830, Latter-day Saint missionaries journeyed to Indian Territory, on the borders of the United States. Parley P. Pratt reported that William Anderson (Kik-Tha-We-Nund), the leader of a group of Delaware (Lenape) who had relocated to the area near Independence, Missouri, warmly received the missionaries, and an interpreter told Oliver Cowdery that the “chief says he believes every word” of the Book of Mormon. However, a government agent soon barred them from further evangelizing among Indians in the area because they had not secured proper authorization. Latter-day Saint interactions with American Indians remained sparse for the next few years, though Pratt and others still spoke of a day when Indians would embrace the Book of Mormon.

Joseph Smith preaching to American Indians.
Amid troubles in Missouri during the 1830s, Church leaders were cautious about contact with local Native groups, having been accused by their enemies of using missionary work to cultivate sedition among the Indians. During the 1840s, Joseph Smith and the First Presidency sent missionaries to the Sioux (Dakota), Potawatomi (Bodéwadmi), Stockbridge (Mahican), and other Indian peoples residing in Wisconsin and Canada. Delegations from the Sauk (Asakiwaki) and Fox (Meskwaki) tribes met in Nauvoo with Joseph Smith, who told them of the Book of Mormon and plans to raise up a New Jerusalem. Two years later, Potawatomi leaders asked Joseph and the Latter-day Saints to lend aid and join an alliance of confederated tribes. Joseph declined but assured them the Book of Mormon could light the way toward peaceful relationships. After Joseph’s death, the Council of Fifty, under Brigham Young’s leadership, discussed a broader alliance with Indian nations but ceased diplomatic efforts in 1846 in order to organize the Saints’ migration west.

Utah’s Native Peoples and the Latter-day Saint Pioneers
As Church President, territorial governor, and territorial superintendent of Indian affairs, Brigham Young pursued a peace policy to facilitate the Saints’ settlement in areas where Indians lived. Latter-day Saints learned Indian languages, established trade relations, preached the gospel, and generally sought accommodation with Indians. Peaceful accommodation between Indians and Latter-day Saints was both the norm and the ideal. But, despite Brigham Young’s constant effort to broker lasting agreements, his peace policy emerged unevenly and was inconsistently applied. These two cultures—European and American Indian—had vastly different assumptions about the use of land and property and did not understand each other well. These misunderstandings led to friction and sometimes violence between the peoples.

The two largest clashes between Latter-day Saints in Utah and local Indian groups later came to be known as the Walker War (1853–54) and the Black Hawk War (1865–72). They began as skirmishes between Latter-day Saint militias and principally Ute Indians that escalated into larger-scale conflicts. Violence between Latter-day Saints and Indians abated as disease and starvation severely reduced Indigenous populations living in the Intermountain West and United States federal action confined many Indians to reservations.

Indian Missions and Student Programs
Despite intermittent conflict, Church leaders remained committed to bringing the message of the Book of Mormon to Native Americans and established proselytizing missions and farms. These efforts introduced the gospel and provided education and food for Indians in Utah and Arizona. Missionaries during the second half of the 19th century visited Catawba (Yeh Is-Wah H’reh), Goshute (Kutsipiuti), Hopi (Hopituh Shi-nu-mu), Maricopa (Piipaash), Navajo (Diné), Papago (Tohono O’odham), Pima (Akimel O’otham), Shoshone (Newe), Ute (Nunt’zi), and Zuni (A:shiwi) peoples forced by settler expansion to live on Indian reservations scattered throughout the American West. Thousands of northwestern Shoshones in the 1870s were baptized and eventually formed the Washakie Ward, which was led by the first American Indian bishop in the Church, Moroni Timbimboo. Rather than move to reservations, many Utes from central Utah settled in Indianola in Sanpete County, where they built up a vibrant branch and a Relief Society, with an Indian woman serving in the presidency. Over 1,200 Papago, Pima, and Maricopa Indians in southern Arizona joined the Church in the 1880s, establishing a ward that later contributed to the building and dedication of the Mesa Arizona Temple. In South Carolina, most of the Catawba Nation received baptism. About 65 years later, Catawba chief Samuel Taylor Blue spoke in general conference. “I have tasted the blessing and joy of God,” he testified. “I have seen the dead raised; I have seen the sick whom the doctors have given up, through the administration of the Elders they have been restored to life. My brothers and sisters, beyond a shadow of a doubt I know that this gospel is true.”

Chief Washakie (seated, center front) and other Shoshone men.
Latter-day Saint outreach to American Indians continued into the 1930s and 1940s with the expansion of missions in Arizona and New Mexico. These missions alerted Church leaders to adverse conditions on the Southwest Indian reservations, and they began to consider alternatives to direct proselytizing, feeling, as Spencer W. Kimball later expressed, an obligation to help their covenant siblings. In the 1950s a student placement program emerged in which Latter-day Saint families hosted Indian students during school semesters. In addition, Brigham Young University offered scholarships with the goal of increasing American Indian enrollment. By the time the Indian Student Placement Program came to a close around the year 2000, some 50 thousand American Indian students had been sponsored.

American Indians today continue to face difficulties as a result of centuries of conflict and displacement. Larry Echo Hawk, a member of the Pawnee Nation, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs, and current General Authority Seventy, spoke in 2007 of the challenges he and his ancestors have faced. “That is a painful history,” he stated, adding that “the pain was not limited to one generation.” Nevertheless, he found strength in the Book of Mormon’s promises and expressed his hope that America’s native peoples will live up to the vision articulated by President Spencer W. Kimball, becoming powerful leaders in their communities and nations.

22/05/2026

American Civil War

On Christmas Day 1832, Joseph Smith received a revelation about a coming conflict between the Northern and Southern United States over the question of slavery. The war would begin, the Lord declared, in South Carolina, and it would eventually lead to warfare among “all nations.” At that time, a crisis had arisen over South Carolina’s refusal to honor recent federal tariffs, and many Americans worried that the situation could intensify into a civil war. The government averted civil war at that time, but contention over slavery persisted, deepening the social, political, and economic divide between the Northern and Southern United States.

During the 1860 presidential election, many politicians and voters in the Southern states viewed Abraham Lincoln’s candidacy as a threat to the institution of slavery. When Lincoln won the election, some Southern states, beginning with South Carolina, declared their independence from the Union and formed a separate government called the Confederacy. After Lincoln’s inauguration in 1861, a standoff at Fort Sumter, South Carolina, erupted into armed conflict when a Confederate brigade fired on the fort. Lincoln called for volunteers to suppress the rebellion, and the remaining Southern states began to side with either the Confederacy or the United States. European nations observed the onset of this war with interest, and some opened diplomatic channels with the Confederacy, hoping to intervene in the war on the South’s behalf. Battles between the United States and the Confederacy multiplied while the conflict dragged on for years. The United States eventually looked for additional recruits that included 179,000 African American men, many of them former slaves, to fight against the Confederacy.

Fort Sumter.
Latter-day Saints were continuing to heed the prophetic call to gather to Zion in the American West and thereby largely avoided the conflict. Some branches remained in areas caught in the war, bringing a few Saints into both sides of the conflict. In 1861, Brigham Young sent some Church members on a mission to raise a cotton supply near St. George, Utah. The mission became a modest producer of cotton after the Confederacy embargoed the commodity. As the war progressed, Lincoln’s War Department called upon Young to muster a volunteer army unit to protect postal deliveries, telegraph systems, and travelers on the overland trail. In response, Young’s counselor Daniel H. Wells, who also served as the commanding general of Utah’s militia, assigned Lot Smith to command a cavalry company that totaled just over 100 soldiers. Smith’s cavalry company served for four months in 1862.

The surrender of Confederate General Robert E. Lee in Virginia in April 1865 effectively ended the Civil War. The war ultimately cost the United States over 700,000 lives, the most in any conflict in American history. The major outcome of the war was the end of legalized slavery and the emancipation of African American slaves.

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