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Through the
Camera Lens
The Dawning of a New Day in Nauvoo, Part 3
by Scot Facer
Proctor

Across the street
from the temple to the southeast is a small sculpture garden dedicated
to the Smith family, with this D.J. Bawden piece of the Prophet
Joseph at the center. Joseph is facing the Nauvoo Temple.

Despite our
dreams and visions of how Nauvoo looked in those early times (1839-1846)
a good portion of the city was graced by homes like this. There
were as many as 300 brick structures in those days and the rest
were frame homes, log cabins and sundry shelters for the burgeoning
population.

I'm always attracted
to the 19th century glass as depicted here at the entrance of the
Lyon Drug Store in old Nauvoo. Every entrance to restored sites
in Nauvoo seems to say, "Welcome! Come on in!"

I think about
Lucius and Lucy Scovil in Nauvoo and how their little bakery must
have wafted the most scrumptious smells into the air each working
morning. I love this little bakery.

For years I
photographed and studied the Cultural Hall in Nauvoo trying to conjure
up images of the Nauvoo temple. The windows were somewhat similar
and part of the structure of this building would just strike a familiar
chord in my heart.

I think it's
hard to pin me down to committing to my favorite building in Nauvoo
(okay, so now it's the temple). But if I go through the thousands
of images I have shot over the years of Nauvoo I think I have a
leaning for the Seventies Hall. I love this angle because it captures
the peace of Nauvoo, the architecture, the setting, and the serenity.
The trees in the distance are on the Iowa side of the great river.

I can't go to
Nauvoo without visiting the home of Sarah Melissa Granger Kimball.
I even love to say her full name each time I talk about her home.
The original ideas for the formation of the Relief Society were
formed in this little home. This home pre-dates the Nauvoo homes
by a few years and stood here to greet the Saints as they arrived
in 1839.
Click
here to go on to Part 4 of
The Dawning of a New Day in Nauvoo.
(All
photographs Copyright 2002 Scot Facer Proctor)
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© 2002 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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