"It will, no doubt, be interesting to the Saints to learn that the ship Liverpool, Captain Devonport, sailed from this port hence to New Orleans, on the 16th of January last, with seventy-seven souls, or sixty-two adults on board, including forty-five Saints or thirty-four adults, among whom were Hiram Clark and wife, Sister Woodruff and two children, E. F. Sheets and wife, and several families who have gone to join their friends in their journey across the Rocky Mountains to California. -- May an all wise Providence protect and guide them where they can enjoy the religion of Jesus Christ, for which they sacrifice their houses and homes, friends and native land -- suffering the fatigue and hardship of a long and tedious journey, rather than dwell in confusion with mobs, whose only aim is to destroy the lives and property of the Saints. . . ."
MS, 7:3 (Feb. 1, 1846), p.44
"THIRTY-SECOND COMPANY. -- Liverpool, 45 Saints. January 16th, 1846, the ship Liverpool, Captain Davenport, sailed from Liverpool for New Orleans with seventy-seven souls on board, including forty-five Saints, among whom were Hiram Clark and wife, Sister Phebe Woodruff and two children, Elijah F. Sheets and wife, and several families who went to join their friends in their journey across the Rocky Mountains.
This was the last company of British Saints that sailed for America before the emigration was temporarily suspended, because of the exodus of the Saints from Nauvoo."
Cont., 12:12 (Oct. 1891), p.450
"Fri. 16. [Jan. 1846] -- The ship Liverpool sailed from Liverpool, England, with 45 Saints, under the direction of Hiram Clark, bound for Nauvoo via New Orleans."
CC, p.28
(source abbreviations)