However they could. Most often they moved by wagon pulled by oxen, mules, or horses. Those who were poor or alone traveled by handcart, on horseback, or on foot carrying their belongings in their arms.
The Mormons were searching for a place where they could practice their religion in peace and found that place in Utah.
I believe you are asking about Kirtland, Ohio. There was never a large Mormon settlement in any town called "Kirkland". The main body of Mormons began to move to Kirtland in 1831 after a large conversion took place there.
The Mormons were being persecuted in the Eastern United States, and they decided to move West to form their own settlement, where they would be free to live as they pleased and according to their own religious rules, free from persecution.
They continued to move from place to place until they found somewhere they could practice their religion free from persecution.
The Mormons traveled west in wagons, with handcarts and later by train.
since nomads move from place to place what form of art are they thought since nomads move from place to place what form of art are they thought
Yes! it does
After the Book of Mormon was found, people became angry. They martyred the Prophet Joseph Smith. Afterwards, persecution for the Mormons became worse, and they decided to move to Utah for a place to live without persecution.
Religious and political persecution forced the Mormons to move from several states in the east and midwest. In Illinois, their prophet Joseph Smith was murdered due to a political disagreement and the government asked the Mormons to leave in order to preserve the public peace. At this point they decided to move to a place that was largely uninhabited so that they could practice their religion in peace.
The Mormons originally had no desire to form their own religious community, but because of persecution began to seek to find a place where they could worship in peace away from outsiders.
Because it finds damp places and form molecules on it
The Mormons