From Deseret News archives:

Nauvoo Temple — a vision of the past

Local residents and the media get tour before open house

Published: Thursday, May 16, 2002 12:17 p.m. MDT
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NAUVOO, Ill. — After six years of construction, much of it guarded at gunpoint by pioneer craftsmen, the LDS Church's original Nauvoo Temple was dedicated 156 years ago today as most of its constituency had already been forced to migrate West.

Yet its descendant stands today on the same plot and in much the same form as the original, greeting scores of reporters and cameramen here Wednesday for their first tour of the 113th operating temple to be built by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. While a new building welcomes them, it is the legacy of its predecessor that will draw hundreds of thousands of people — from all 50 states and 70 countries — to this tiny town in the coming weeks.

The cost of the original, in human terms, was incalculable, church leaders say. The monetary price tag for the new temple won't be disclosed, at least for now, said Elder Donald L. Staheli, who presided at a press conference Wednesday. Early cost speculation placed the price at $23 million, but many have speculated it was well over that simply because of its scope and the hands-on craftsmanship required. Its 54,000 square feet includes five floors and a basement on 3.3 landscaped acres.

Story continues below FACE="Verdana,Helvetica,Arial" SIZE="2">Additional information:
Web sites:

Deseret Book's Nauvoo Temple cam

NauvooNet visitor planning site

Related stories:

April 27: Nauvoo visitors urged to be polite

April 30: Temple impact reaches far

As construction has progressed, old attitudes have changed, say LDS leaders, who have publicly asked the influx of visitors expected for the six-week public open house that begins here Monday to be considerate of the town's 1,200 residents. They're working hard to keep the past "in the past," said Elder Staheli, who praised the "cooperation and support" of town leaders, including Mayor Tom Wilson.

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Members of the media are escorted into the 54,000-square-foot LDS temple in Nauvoo, Ill.

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