In force, Feb.[February] 1, 1841.
An ACT to incorporate the City of Nauvoo.
1
Boundaries of the city
Including the plats of Commerce and Nauvoo
Sec.[Section] 1. Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, represented in the General Assembly, That all that district of country embraced within the following boundaries, to-wit: beginning at the north-east corner of section thirty-one, in township seven north of range eight, west of the fourth principal meridian, in the county of Hancock, and running thence west to the north-west corner of said section, thence north to the Mississippi river, thence west to the middle of the main channel of the said river, thence down the middle of said channel to a point due west of the south-east corner of fractional section number twelve, in township six north, of range nine, west of the fourth principal meridian, thence east to the south-east corner of said section twelve, thence north on the range line between township six north and range eight and nine west to the south-west corner of section six, in township six north, of range eight west; thence east to the south-east corner of said section; thence north to the place of beginning, including the town plats of Commerce and Nauvoo, shall hereafter be called and known by the name of the “City of Nauvoo,” and the inhabitants thereof are hereby constituted a body corporate and politic by the name aforesaid, and shall have perpetual succession, and may have and use a common seal, which they may change and alter at pleasure.
Lots adjoining the city
Sec. 2. Whenever any tract of land adjoining the city of Nauvoo shall have been laid out into town lots and duly recorded according to law, the same shall form a part of the “City of Nauvoo.”

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Corporate powers
Sec. 3. The inhabitants of said city, by the name and style aforesaid, shall have power to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, defend and be defended, in all courts of law and equity, and in all actions whatsoever; to purchase, receive and hold property, real and personal, in said city, to purchase, receive and hold real property beyond the city for burying ground or for other public purposes for the use of the inhabitants of said city; to sell, lease, convey or dispose of property, real and personal, for the benefit of the city; to improve and protect such property, and to do all other things in relation thereto as natural persons.
City Council
Term of office
Quorum
Sec. 4. There shall be a city council to consist of a mayor, four aldermen and nine councillors, who shall have the qualifications of electors of said city, and shall be chosen by the qualified voters thereof, and shall hold their offices for two years, and until their successors shall be elected and qualified. The city council shall judge of the qualifications, elections and returns of their own members, and a majority of them shall form a quorum to do business, but a smaller number may adjourn from day to day, and compel the attendance of absent members under such penalties as may be prescribed by ordinance.
Officers to take oath
Sec. 5. The mayor, aldermen and councillors, before entering upon the duties of their offices, shall take and subscribe an oath or affirmation that they will support the Constitution of the United States and of this State, and that they will well and truly perform the duties of their offices to the best of their skill and abilities.
Annual election
Opening and closing polls
Certificates of election
Sec. 6. On the first Monday of February next, and every two years thereafter, an election shall be held for the election of one mayor, four aldermen, and nine councillors, and at the first election under this act, three judges shall be chosen viva voce by the electors present, the said judges shall choose two clerks, and the judges and clerks, before entering upon their duties, shall take and subscribe an oath or affirmation such as is now required by law to be taken by judges and clerks of other elections; and at all subsequent elections, the necessary number of judges and clerks shall be appointed by the city council. At the first election so held the polls shall be opened at nine o’clock, A.M., and closed at six o’clock, P.M., at the close of the polls the votes shall be counted, and a statement thereof proclaimed at the front door of the house at which said election shall be held; and the clerks shall leave with each person elected, or at his usual place of residence within five days after the election, a written notice of his election, and each person so notified, shall within ten days after the election take the oath or affirmation hereinbefore mentioned, a certificate of which oath shall be deposited with the recorder, whose appointment is hereafter provided for, and be by him preserved, and all subsequent elections shall be held, conducted and returns thereof
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made as may be provided for by the ordinances of the city council.
Qualification of voters
Sec. 7. All free white male inhabitants who are of the age of twenty-one years, who are entitled to vote for State officers, and who shall have been actual residents of said city sixty days next preceding said election, shall be entitled to vote for city officers.
Taxes for city purposes
Sec. 8. The city council shall have authority to levy and collect taxes for city purposes, upon all property, real and personal, within the limits of the city, not exceeding one half per cent, per annum upon the assessed value thereof, and may enforce the payment of the same in any manner to be provided by ordinance, not repugnant to the Constitution of the United States or of this State.
Additional officers
Sec. 9. The city council shall have power to appoint a recorder, treasurer, assessor, marshal, supervisor of streets, and all such other officers as may be necessary, and to prescribe their duties and remove them from office at pleasure.
Bonds of officers
Sec. 10. The city council shall have power to require of all officers, appointed in pursuance of this act, bonds with penalty and security, for the faithful performance of their respective duties, such as may be deemed expedient; and also, to require all officers appointed as aforesaid, to take an oath for the faithful performance of the duties of their respective offices.
Ordinances and by-laws
Vacancies how filled
Fines and forfeitures
Divided into wards
Sec. 11. The city council shall have power and authority to make, ordain, establish and execute all such ordinances, not repugnant to the Constitution of the United States or of this State, as they may deem necessary for the peace, benefit, good order, regulation, convenience and cleanliness of said city; for the protection of property therein from destruction by fire or otherwise, and for the health and happiness thereof, they shall have power to fill all vacancies that may happen by death, resignation or removal, in any of the offices herein made elective; to fix and establish all the fees of the officers of the said corporation not herein established; to impose such fines, not exceeding one hundred dollars for each offence, as they may deem just, for refusing to accept any office in or under the corporation, or for misconduct therein; to divide the city into wards; to add to the number of aldermen and councillors, and apportion them among the several wards, as may be most just and conducive to the interests of the city.
Power to license auctions, &c[etc]
Sec. 12. To licenses, tax, and regulate auctions, merchants, retailers, grocers, hawkers, pedlars, brokers, pawn brokers and money changers.
Police
Proviso
Sec. 13. The city council shall have exclusive power within the city, by ordinance, to license, regulate and restrain the keeping of ferries; to regulate the police of the city; to impose fines, forfeitures and penalties for the breach of any ordinance, and provide for the recovery of such fines and for-
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feitures, and the enforcement of such penalties, and to pass such ordinances as may be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the powers specified in this act: Provided, Such ordinances are not repugnant to the Constitution of the United States or of this State; and in fine to exercise such other legislative powers as are conferred on the city council of the city of Springfield, by an act entitled "An act to incorporate the city of Springfield, approved February third, one thousand eight hundred and forty."
Ordinance when in force
Sec. 14. All ordinances passed by the city council shall within one month after they shall have been passed, be published in some newspaper printed in the city, or certified copies thereof be posted up in three of the most public places in the city.
How proven
Sec. 15. All ordinances of the city may be proven by the seal of the corporation, and when printed or published in book or pamphlet form, purporting to be printed or published by authority of the corporation, the same shall be received in evidence in all courts or places without further proof.
City council to act as justices of peace
Sec. 16. The mayor and aldermen shall be conservators of the peace within the limits of said city, and shall have all the powers of justices of the peace therein, both in civil and criminal cases, arising under the laws of the State; they shall as justices of the peace within the limits of said city, perform the same duties, be governed by the same laws, give the same bonds and security as other justices of the peace, and be commissioned as justices of the peace in and for said city by the Governor.
Jurisdiction of mayor
Appeals
Municipal court
Proviso
May grant writs
Sec. 17. The mayor shall have exclusive jurisdiction in all cases arising under the ordinances of the corporation, and shall issue such process as may be necessary to carry said ordinances into execution and effect, appeals may be had from any decision or judgment of said mayor or aldermen, arising under the city ordinances, to the municipal court, under such regulations as may be presented by ordinance. Which court shall be composed of the mayor or chief justice, and the aldermen as associate justices, and from the final judgment of the municipal court to the circuit court of Hancock county, in the same manner as appeals are taken from the judgments of justices of the peace: Provided, That the parties litigant shall have a right to a trial by a jury of twelve men in all cases before the municipal court. The municipal court shall have power to grant writs of habeas corpus in all cases arising under the ordinances of the city council.
Terms of court
Sec. 18. The municipal court shall sit on the first Monday of every month, and the city council at such times and place as may be prescribed by city ordinance. Special meetings of which may at any time be called by the mayor or any two aldermen.
Marshal to execute process
Duties of marshal
Sec. 19. All process issued by the mayor, aldermen, or municipal court shall be directed to the marshal, and in the
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execution thereof he shall be governed by the same laws as are or may be prescribed for the direction and compensation of constables in similar cases. The marshal shall also perform such other duties as may be required of him under the ordinances of said city, and shall be the principal ministerial officer.
Duty of recorder
Sec. 20. It shall be the duty of the recorder to make and keep accurate records of all ordinances made by the city council, and of all their proceedings in their corporate capacity; which record shall at all times be open to the inspection of the electors of said city, and shall perform such other duties as may be required of him by the ordinances of the city council, and shall serve as clerk of the municipal court.
Private property may be taken
Sec. 21. When it shall be necessary to take private property for opening, widening, or altering any public street, lane, avenue or alley, the corporation shall make a just compensation therefor to the person whose property is so taken, and if the amount of such compensation cannot be agreed upon, the mayor shall cause the same to be ascertained by a jury of six disinterested freeholders of the city.
Jurors to assess damages
Sec. 22. All jurors empanneled to enquire into the amount of benefits or damages that shall happen to the owners of property so proposed to be taken, shall first be sworn to that effect, and shall return to the mayor their inquest in writing, signed by each juror.
In case of malconduct of mayor
Sec. 23. In case the mayor shall at any time be guilty of a palpable omission of duty, or shall wilfully and corruptly be guilty of oppression, malconduct or partiality in the discharge of the duties of his office, he shall be liable to be indicted in the circuit court of Hancock county, and on conviction he shall be fined not more than two hundred dollars, and the court shall have power, on the recommendation of the jury, to add to the judgment of the court, that he be removed from office.
May establish a university
Officers of university
Powers
Proviso
Sec. 24. The city council may establish and organize an institution of learning within the limits of the city for the teaching of the arts, sciences and learned professions, to be called the “University of the city of Nauvoo,” which institution shall be under the control and management of a board of trustees, consisting of a chancellor, registrar, and twenty-three regents, which board shall thereafter be a body corporate and politic, with perpetual succession, by the name of the “Chancellor and Regents of the University of the City of Nauvoo,” and shall have full power to pass, ordain, establish, and execute all such laws and ordinances as they may consider necessary for the welfare and prosperity of said university, its officers and students: Provided, That the said laws and ordinances shall not be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States or of this State, and Provided, also, That the trustees shall at all times be appointed by the city council, and shall have all the powers and privileges for the advancement of the cause of education
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which appertain to the trustees of any other college or university of this State.
Militia, name of
Court marital
Proviso
Military duty
At disposal of mayor and Governor
Proviso
Sec. 25. The city council may organize the inhabitants of said city subject to military duty into a body of independent military men, to be called the "Nauvoo Legion," the court martial of which shall be composed of the commissioned officers of said legion, and constitute the law making department, with full powers and authority to make, ordain, establish and execute all such laws and ordinances as may be considered necessary for the benefit, government, and regulation of said legion: Provided, Said court martial shall pass no law or act repugnant to, or inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States, or of this State, and, Provided, also, That the officers of the legion shall be commissioned by the Governor of the State. The said legion shall perform the same amount of military duty as is now, or may be hereafter required of the regular militia of the State, and shall be at the disposal of the mayor in executing the laws and ordinances of the city corporation, and the laws of the State, and at the disposal of the Governor for the public defence, and the execution of the laws of the State, or of the United States, and shall be entitled to their proportion of the public arms, and, Provided, also, That said legion shall be exempt from all other military duty.2
Exempt from road labor
Street labor in city 3 days
Sec 26. The inhabitants of the “City of Nauvoo” are hereby exempt from working on any road beyond the limits of the city, and for the purpose of keeping the streets, lanes, avenues, and alleys in repair, to require of the male inhabitants of said city, over the age of twenty-one and under fifty years, to labor on said streets, lanes, avenues, and alleys, not exceeding three days in each year; any person failing to perform such labors when duly notified by the supervisor, shall forfeit and pay the sum of one dollar per day for each day so neglected or refused.
Punishment of offenders
Sec. 27. The city council shall have power to provide for the punishment of offenders, by imprisonment in the county or city jail, in all cases when such offenders shall fail or refuse to pay the fines and forfeitures which may be recovered against them.
Sec. 28. This act is hereby declared to be a public act, and shall take effect on the first Monday of February next.
Approved, December 16, 1840.
1Sidney H. Little introduced SB 3 to the Senate on November 27, 1840, and the Senate referred it to the Committee on the Judiciary. The committee reported back on December 5 and recommended an amendment, to which the Senate concurred. The Senate passed the bill on December 9. The House of Representatives passed the bill on December 12. The Council of Revision approved the bill on December 16 and the act became law.
Journal of the House of Representatives (Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1940), 95, 101, 110;Journal of the Senate (Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1840), 23, 45, 61, 77, 80, 89.
2The Senate passed an amendment on December 5, 1840, that altered much of the language in section 25.
Journal of the Senate (Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1840), 45.

Printed Document, 6 page(s), Laws of the State of Illinois, Passed by the Twelfth General Assembly (Springfield, IL: William Walters, 1841), 52-57, GA Session: 12-2,