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Tiny Nauvoo, Touchstone for Mormons

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[December 06, 2007]  NAUVOO (AP) -- Mitt Romney's campaign for president hasn't exactly caught fire in the little river town that many Mormons consider a touchstone for their religion.

The "Mitt Rocks" T-shirts are selling pretty well at the Art Needlework Shop, but they can't compete with the "I Like Mormon Boys" shirts. Romney yard signs are practically nonexistent. Neighbors are chatting about sports and hunting, not Republican politics.

Durell Nelson is pleased to have a fellow Mormon running for president, but he hasn't decided whether to vote for Romney and he didn't attend when Romney held a rally just across the river in Iowa.

Nelson said some of his neighbors, like voters across the country, have doubts about Romney.

"I think the biggest fear among people I know is that church leadership would have a heavy sway in his life," said Nelson, 57, a landscape architect at Mormon historic sites. "That's a misconception."

It's one Romney will tackle head-on on Thursday. Losing ground as Iowa's leadoff caucuses approach, he plans a speech in Texas in which he'll discuss religion and how his faith would or wouldn't influence his presidency.

Nauvoo -- i'ts pronounced nah-VOO -- sits on the Mississippi River just across from the southeast corner of Iowa. A five-story white limestone building topped with a golden statue dominates the town -- a Mormon temple matching the one that church leaders built here more than 160 years ago.

The town has fewer than 1,100 permanent residents, about one-third of whom are Mormon. But tens of thousands of Mormons visit Nauvoo each year to see the temple and the spot a few miles away where church founder Joseph Smith was murdered by an anti-Mormon mob.

That was in 1844. Violent clashes continued, and in early 1846 thousands of Mormons fled Nauvoo and began the trip to Salt Lake City, where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is now based.

Residents say some ill will remains today, magnified by the normal friction in a small town dealing with waves of tourists. There's even a Nauvoo Christian Visitors Center dedicated to telling people that Mormons are not true Christians and are controlled almost totally by church officials.

"There's some feelings against the Mormons here," acknowledged Lee Ourth, a member of the City Council. "Some say, 'We ran them out once, we can do it again.'"

"Now, that's not from our brightest residents," he added quickly.

Nauvoo residents say the Republican presidential primaries haven't generated much interest here. Romney and his competitors aren't on people's minds even though neighboring Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucuses are less than a month away.

The people who seem most interested are the ones who fear Romney would be a puppet of Mormon church leaders if he were elected.

Romney has sought to win over evangelical Christians by emphasizing common ground.

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"I believe Jesus Christ is my savior. I believe in the Bible. I believe that liberty is a gift of God and not of government," Romney said last month. "I believe in serving other people, that it's part of a religious heritage."

As Massachusetts governor, Romney was not seen as being under the church's control. And official Mormon policy is to stay politically neutral and not endorse candidates.

But some stalwart Republican voters remain dubious.

Rocky Hulse, who runs the Christian Visitors Center with his wife, has written a book, "When Salt Lake City Calls," making the case that a Mormon president would have to put the church's needs ahead of the country's.

"This man's allegiance, first and foremost, is to what he has sworn in the temple," Hulse said.

In the 1840s, Nauvoo was home to thousands of Mormons who were brought there by Joseph Smith. That made it one of the largest cities in the west, not far behind Chicago. Operating under a state charter that gave them broad powers of self-governance, Mormons had their own militia, their own courts and enough votes to tip state elections.

The church's power -- and Smith's willingness to use it -- angered non-Mormons in the area. When Smith destroyed a newspaper that had criticized him, he was brought up on legal charges. While he was being held in a nearby town, a mob of 200 men stormed the jail and shot Smith and his brother to death.

Soon after, the Mormons began migrating west. Nauvoo dwindled and was just another dying river town until Mormon tourism took off. The new temple's opening in 2002 cemented Nauvoo's status as a major destination for Mormons.

The temple sits atop a bluff, gleaming in the sun. It can be seen for miles across the flat Iowa farmland of Lee County, which lies about 130 miles southeast of Des Moines.

Patrick Breen, the Iowa county's Republican chairman, said he hasn't seen any evidence that Romney's religion is costing him votes in the area. Romney is being received as warmly as the rest of the GOP field, he said.

But there are exceptions.

In the little Iowa town of Montrose, which was once a Mormon settlement and has streets aligned to offer a perfect view of the Nauvoo temple, Nikki Edwards said she was raised a Mormon but has since left the church.

"I don't agree with the religion," she said, "and I don't want to follow a president with those beliefs."

[Associated Press; By CHRISTOPHER WILLS]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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