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Walter Kirn@walterkirn Old news is more important than new news because new news is built on top of it. When you are renovating a structure you don't start with the roof but with the foundation. Let's go back and get the old stories right. Otherwise nothing will be right, from here on out.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Nauvoo editions

There were two editions of the Book of Mormon that Joseph Smith revised in Nauvoo. Both of them contain the cover page that states:

Translated by Joseph Smith

and

Carefully revised by the translator

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These statements refute the claims by SITH sayers (proponents of the "stone-in-the-hat" narrative that was published in Mormonism Unvailed in 1834 and revived in recent years by certain LDS scholars). The SITH sayers insist that Joseph did not really translate the engravings on the plates as he was commanded to do.

"you shall translate the engravings which are on the plates of Nephi..."

(Doctrine and Covenants 10:41)

Yet here Joseph not only identifies himself as the translator, he also explains that he "carefully revised" the text. If the text actually came from the "stone in the hat" instead, Joseph would not have any basis for "revising" the text. 

Nevertheless, prominent LDS scholars continue to claim that Joseph (and Oliver) deliberately misled everyone about the translation process. 

See, e.g., https://www.ldshistoricalnarratives.com/2026/04/thank-you-royal-skousen.html

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John Hajicek displayed originals of the two editions:



Two Nauvoo editions of the revised version of the Book of Mormon, 1840 and 1842. One printed by Joseph Smith and one printed by his brother Don Carlos Smith.

_____

Grok explains:

The 1840 and 1842 printings are not fully separate editions but closely related impressions of the same third major American edition of the Book of Mormon.

Background

  • The 1840 edition (third edition overall) was printed in Cincinnati, Ohio, by Shepard and Stearns for Ebenezer Robinson and Don Carlos Smith. Joseph Smith personally reviewed and revised the text (building on his 1837 work), making grammatical improvements, restorations from the printer’s manuscript, and some clarifications. Stereotype plates (metal printing plates) were created from this typesetting.
  • These plates were shipped to Nauvoo, Illinois, where further impressions (print runs) were made in 1840–1842 using the same plates.

Key Differences

The 1842 printing (sometimes called the fourth impression or Nauvoo 1842 issue) was a small run (around 640 copies) from the same stereotype plates as the 1840 edition, so the core text is virtually identical. The main differences are limited to the title page and minor production details:

  • Title page updates:
    • Date changed from 1840 to 1842.
    • "Joseph Smith, Junior" changed to "Joseph Smith" (dropping "Jr.") because Joseph Smith Sr. had died in 1840, and it was no longer necessary to distinguish father from son. (This change was later reversed in subsequent editions for clarity regarding the Eight Witnesses statement.)
  • Print quantity and rarity: The 1842 run was much smaller and is considered quite rare today.
  • Possible minor corrections: Joseph Smith continued light revisions into early 1842 (e.g., reading and correcting plates for errors that "escaped notice"). Any such changes would appear only in the 1842 impression, but they were limited and not extensive.

Summary Table

Aspect1840 Edition (Cincinnati/Nauvoo)1842 Impression (Nauvoo)
Text/ContentJoseph Smith's revisions (e.g., "white" → "pure" in 2 Nephi 30:6)Same as 1840 (same plates)
Title Page Date18401842
Joseph Smith Attribution"Joseph Smith, Junior""Joseph Smith" (Jr. dropped)
Print RunLarger (thousands across impressions)Small (~640 copies)
SignificanceLast major revision supervised by Joseph SmithFinal Nauvoo-era printing from 1840 plates

In short, if you compare the interiors side-by-side, they are essentially the same book. The 1842 version is best understood as a reprint/impression with a refreshed title page rather than a new edited edition. Later LDS editions followed other lineages (e.g., the 1841 British edition followed the 1837 text more closely), which is why some 1840 changes were temporarily "lost" until the 1981 edition restored them.

These details come from historical scholarship on Book of Mormon printing (BYU Studies, Joseph Smith Papers project, etc.). Rare original copies are collector items today.

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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.

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