As birthplace of the Prophet Joseph Smith, Palmyra New York is a second Mecca for Mormons. And so it was a must see for us.
The main room and kitchen.
The parent's bedroom.
In the loft where the Smith children slept.
The Fields
Across the Smith's field on the hill top now sits the Palmyra Temple.
The second Smith family home, they built in 1825, about a hundred yards from the first house.
The main Kitchen.
The dining room.
The pantry.
The second Smith family home in the middle of the trees. The barn to the right and the barrel making house to the left.
The barrel making house. This is where Joseph hid the plates from thieves.
On the path to the sacred grove, one section of the forty acre wood lot the Smith's owned.
Eric and Pearce.
In the sacred grove. Eric and Pearce.
Pearce and Wendi.
Wendi, Eric and Pearce.
Pearce finds a place to rest.
My tired boy.
In front of the Palmyra Temple.
The Hill Cumorah Pageant is performed here, outdoors for seven nights in July. The script is ten short stories taken from the Bible and the Book of Mormon. I have seen it several times as a kid and teen. It's truly magical. My parents made the pageant our reward for reading the Book of Mormon every morning as a family throughout the year.
The Memorial on Hill Cumorah.
Eric and Pearce.
The parent's bedroom.
In the loft where the Smith children slept.
The Fields
Across the Smith's field on the hill top now sits the Palmyra Temple.
The second Smith family home, they built in 1825, about a hundred yards from the first house.
The main Kitchen.
The dining room.
The pantry.
The second Smith family home in the middle of the trees. The barn to the right and the barrel making house to the left.
The barrel making house. This is where Joseph hid the plates from thieves.
On the path to the sacred grove, one section of the forty acre wood lot the Smith's owned.
Eric and Pearce.
In the sacred grove. Eric and Pearce.
Pearce and Wendi.
Wendi, Eric and Pearce.
Pearce finds a place to rest.
My tired boy.
In front of the Palmyra Temple.
The Hill Cumorah Pageant is performed here, outdoors for seven nights in July. The script is ten short stories taken from the Bible and the Book of Mormon. I have seen it several times as a kid and teen. It's truly magical. My parents made the pageant our reward for reading the Book of Mormon every morning as a family throughout the year.
The Memorial on Hill Cumorah.
Eric and Pearce.
We traveled back into Palmyra to visit the restored Grandin Printing Press that published the first addition of the Book of Mormon in 1830.
This is where the assembly began. Each and every letter was individually placed backwards. A tad more tedious than modern print shops.
The ink and press.
Pages were hung to dry.
A pulley system brought pages down to the main level for binding.
All individual pages were strung together.
Bounded pages were glued.
Leather covers were made for each book.
The fire heated the embossing tools that imposed the front of each leather cover.
Embosed and finished. They repeated this process five thousand times. Now I know why the BOM's publication is considered a miracle. Thank the the mortgage of Martin Harris's farm.
Wendi, Pearce, Eric, Grant and Amy in Grandin's book shop. Grandin did not sell any of his first addition Book of Mormons in his time. But, in 2007, one of Grandin first addition Book of Mormons were sold at auction for 108,000 dollars.
The ink and press.
Pages were hung to dry.
A pulley system brought pages down to the main level for binding.
All individual pages were strung together.
Bounded pages were glued.
Leather covers were made for each book.
The fire heated the embossing tools that imposed the front of each leather cover.
Embosed and finished. They repeated this process five thousand times. Now I know why the BOM's publication is considered a miracle. Thank the the mortgage of Martin Harris's farm.
Wendi, Pearce, Eric, Grant and Amy in Grandin's book shop. Grandin did not sell any of his first addition Book of Mormons in his time. But, in 2007, one of Grandin first addition Book of Mormons were sold at auction for 108,000 dollars.
We had a great day of site seeing and were all ready to move on to our next destination...Cooperstown. We drove several hours to find this little town in the middle of no where. And why would we go to the middle of no where? Well, because the Baseball Hall of fame calls this out of the way town it's home. We pulled up to our hotel, a restored Victorian house, and crawled into bed. Pearce slept like a rock.
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