From Deseret News archives:
LDS temple fuels jump in Nauvoo's tourism
Fellow Latter-day Saints Mark and Holly Gold also made the long drive from Utah to western Illinois again this summer to revisit ground they consider sacred, built on by church founders who were chased west more than a century-and-a-half ago amid waves of violence.
"People see so many Utah plates here they probably think everyone from out there has to make a pilgrimage," joked Whipple. "They don't, but a lot do."
Up to 630,000 visitors a year have flooded this town of just 1,100 people since 2002, when The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints opened the towering, five-story Nauvoo LDS Temple that draws both LDS and non-LDS from around the world some to gaze only at the outside, since only the most devout LDS Church members are allowed to enter.
The lavish temple, with a tower and spire 165 feet high, has fueled a more than tenfold tourism jump in Nauvoo, officials say. Other attractions, including the home and grave of church founder Joseph Smith, drew only about 50,000 visitors a year before plans for the temple fanned interest in 1999.
Crowds thinned slightly after the opening-year rush, officials say, but remain well above 500,000 visitors a year, pumping $22 million into the region's economy in 2005 alone.
"Economically, this area has seen some tough times. Tourism has become that saving grace for Nauvoo and Hancock County," said Rustin Lippincott, executive director of the Nauvoo Tourism Office.
Residents say fears have waned that the parade of tourists might forever disrupt their quiet little town above a bend of the Mississippi River, not far from Keokuk and Fort Madison, Iowa.
"It's good for town; it's good for business," said Mary Fernetti, who has owned a needlework and souvenir shop in downtown Nauvoo since 1985.
David Miller, a downtown business owner and president of the Nauvoo Chamber of Commerce, agrees.
"When visitors slid a bit after the first couple of years, it made people feel like this wasn't going to be a town overrun. These people like their quiet, rural way of life," Miller said.
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