At a Society meeting, Hellen Davies said that the Mormons had told her that that was not the house and that the house off of Seneca Street was the house. So I went for a walk and closely read the historic marker in the triangle.
So did Brigham live in both houses? Seeing as he was the leader of the LDS church and they are the leaders in ancestry research, I checked to see if they had anything. In a website, they point at the yellow house as the house. I asked a friend who had written a book about Brigham and his New York days and he said that he never found out which was which. To confuse matters I found an article that said that the house Brigham lived in was owned by David B Smith and it had been sold to someone who moved it and turned it into a summer kitchen. I sort of let it go at this point.
So when I was researching another topic: "what was the origin of the term Nauvoo?", I came across more BY info. Many use to refer to the upper section of Pine Street as Nauvoo, so why? Is it because BY lived there? And the Mormons named a town in Illinois Nauvoo. Was this because of Port Byron? Then I stumbled across this from 1907.
So after this, the search was on. Further searching found this article from 1902-1904.
So we are left with many questions still;
Did BY live on the corner of Pine and South?
Did BY build and live in the yellow house off Seneca Street?
Was this house moved?
What are the actual dates of BY time in Port Byron?
Getting back to Nauvoo, if the written record is to be believed, the use of Nauvoo predates Brigham Young's arrival in Port Byron, so it may be that he took the name with him as he moved west. Nauvoo means "To be beautiful", which BY may have found in Illinois, or it may have reminded him of Port Byron.
Just to complete the story, at least for this blog post, here is the plaque that sits at the corner of Pine and Main.
I cautioned my corespondent in California to be careful and asked if she was able to determine what was what, we here would be interested in a answer.
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