We have exciting speakers
lined up for MHA meetings this next spring. Both Laurel Thatcher
Ulrich and Dell Upton study aspects of Material Culture or Cultural
Landscapes -- Laurel the value of common objects and Dell architecture
and landscapes. Both provide rich avenues for the exploration of
the religious lives of the LDS people, the ways they patterned their
lives as they built communities, churches, and established home
lives in tangible landscapes. Dell Upton says, “I see architecture
primarily as a means for shaping society and culture and for annotating
social action by creating appropriate settings for it, and the kinds
of questions I ask have to do with the role of architecture in the
social and intellectual evolution of societies and in the formation
of self.”
The more
urban landscape of Provo City and the rural countryside of Sanpete
County will provide us with ample material to consider as we widen
the focus of this conference to include an aspect of history we
have neglected in the past -- material culture and cultural landscapes
--along with our regular retinue of biography, social and religious
history, and local history. These more traditional types of history
-- social and intellectual, political and economic weave through
approaches which center on culture and are contextual looking at
broad currents and holistic views. Cultural landscapes represent
a continuum that includes the built environment and the common objects
human beings made and perhaps valued in the past.
Martha Sonntag Bradley
MHA President
Before moving to the
University of Virginia a couple of years ago, Dr. Dell Upton taught
architectural history at the University of California, inspiring
an entire generation of historians to look at landscapes in a new
way. His book, "Holy Things and Profane," is described as setting
new “standards for architectural history, for the study of
material culture,” and by another critic as “The finest
study ever done of early American religious architecture.”
The American Quarterly describes the way it portrays architecture
“as the physical embodiment of a certain time, place and society.”
According to one perspective, Upton’s work “builds a
social history of the effect people and the built environment have
on one another.” He describes this saying, “I look at
the ways people physically engage the world and the way that shapes
the sense of who they are, very literally their selves.”
Dr. Laurel Thatcher
Ulrich is the Phillips Professor of Early American History at Harvard
University. Formerly a professor of American History at the University
of New Hampshire, her many publications include: "Good Wives: Image
and Reality in the Lives of Women in Northern New England, 1650-1750";
"A Midwife’s Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard Based on her
Diary, 1785-1812"; and most recently "Homespun." It is this most recent
book that has the most relevancies to this conference. In "Homespun"
Ulrich demonstrates how ordinary objects reveal larger themes and
a picture of economic and social structures, and how material culture
reveals identities, relationships, and in turn creates its own history.
Richard Bushman writes of this work, “With her usual magic,
Laurel Ulrich finds the world in small pieces of evidence. Slavery,
Indians, international commerce, class, revolution, gentility all
are woven in the fabrics she describes. Moreover, she finds these
weavers, spinners, and embroiderers creating a culture of homespun
later to be memorialized in the formation of American identity.”
In ways different
metaphors are windows we can use to reach into the distant past,
the material landscape of Central Utah promises to enrich our understanding
of the Mormon past.
Plans Move Forward
for Killington, Vermont
2005 Conference
During a recent trip
to Killington, Vermont and Boston, Massachusetts, Larry and Alene
King finalized many of the plans for the 2005 conference in Killington.
The conference is designed to commemorate the 200th birthday of
Joseph Smith and will be held May 26-29, 2005.
Larry and Alene report that in order to complete all the arrangements,
details must be worked out at least two years in advance of any
conference. Lester Corwin who lives in South Royalton, a short
distance from Killington, has agreed to act as Local Arrangements
chair with able assistance from Council member, Lola Van Wagenen
who lives just outside of Burlington. Don Cannon, who will be
MHA President during the conference, spent nine years of his career
in the New England area and significantly adds to the knowledge
base of putting together a meaningful conference. Susan Rugh of
BYU has agreed to act as Program chair.
All in all the conference will be another once in a life time
opportunity. Plan now to attend. Spread the word to friends and
colleagues.
Larry, Alene King & Lola Van Wagenen
Fort Ticonderoga, New York
Notice of
Forthcoming
Mountain Meadows Book by Ronald W. Walker
The book "Tragedy at Mountain Meadows" continues
to work its way toward publication. Co-authors Glen M. Leonard,
Director of the LDS Museum in Salt Lake City, Richard E. Turley,
Jr., Managing Director of the LDS Family and Church History Department,
and Ronald W. Walker, Professor of History at Brigham Young University
plan publication in 2004. The book is being issued by Oxford University
Press.
Mountain Meadows Memorial
“The
book will have the advantage of the largest collection of primary
and secondary sources yet used on the topic,” said Turley.
“Our purpose is to consult all resources, wherever they may
be found, whatever their content.” Pursuing the goal of comprehensiveness,
researchers for the book have collected material throughout the
United States, and according to Turley, he and his co-authors still
want more. “We continue to look for additional items,”
he said, “and invite anyone having relevant diaries or records
unavailable in repositories to let us know. We are convinced that
there is important material still out there.” Information
may be sent to Brian Reeves, (Telephone: 801-240-5488), Church Archives,
50 East North Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84150-3800.
The
hope of "Tragedy at Mountain Meadows" is to provide the “cultural
catharsis” that only full disclosure of facts can provide,
says co-author Glen M. Leonard. “It is not enough to collect
facts, the story must be honestly told in a balanced and evenhanded
way.”
Leonard, Turley, and Walker have recently presented papers on the
topic of the Massacre at the Mormon History Association and the
Mountain Meadows Association. Leonard and Turley are also slated
to present papers at this year’s annual meeting of the Western
History Association at Fort Worth, Texas in October.
Mark Scherer Elected
JWHA President
Mark A. Scherer, MHA Council member, was elected
President of the John Whitmer Historical Association September
27, 2003. Mark lives in Independence, Missouri and is currently
the Community of Christ historian and coordinator for their Church
Heritage Team. Included in his responsibilities as church historian
are teaching in the Graceland Master of Arts in Religion program
at the Community of Christ seminary, gathering oral histories,
and supervising the church’s archives, museum, artifacts
management program, and jurisdictional history program. He enjoys
exploring and making sense of the past, reading, playing golf,
and being with his family. He and his wife Rita have two sons,
Brett and Bryan.
Past MHA President Jan Shipps also was elected
President Elect and will succeed Mark in 2004. Our congratulations
to Mark and Jan.
Mark Scherer
Who’s doing
What!
John Whitmer Historical Association
Conference, 2003
Through the weekend
of September 25-28, 2003, the John Whitmer Historical Association
met in Excelsior Springs, Ray County, Missouri, at the Lake Doniphan
Retreat Center. Centered in the geographic context of the Far West
era of church history, the conference theme was “Mormon Response
to the Culture of Violence on the American Frontier.” The
conference explored the many facets of violence on the American
frontier, as the Mormons were both victims of, and contributors
to, the hostile environment.
Several MHA members participated in the conference
including Jan Shipps on “Telling the Whole Story of Mormonism;”
A panel by William Hartley, Steven LeSueur, Alex Baugh, and D.
Michael Quinn discussing “Missouri Mormon Danites;”
H. Michael Marquardt on “Judge Austin A. King’s Preliminary
Hearings: Joseph Smith and the Mormons on Trial;” and Todd
Compton on “The Wrong Indians: Jacob Hamblin and Mormon-Navajo
Violence.”
On Saturday afternoon, nearly 100 conference
attendees took a bus tour to the Battle of Crooked River site,
the Charles C. Rich and Pierce Hawley properties, and Haun’s
Mill historic site. At these locations conferees observed geography
and heard site papers that offered a clearer understanding of
the difficult circumstances of both life and death that the early
saints encountered in those times.
Charles C. Rich Cabin
Awards Presented:
Special
Award to Dan Vogel for the five volume “Early Mormon
Documents,” published by Signature Books. Best Article Award to D. Michael Quinn for his
article on “National Culture, Personality and Theocracy in
the Early Mormon Culture of Violence,” published in the 2002
Nauvoo Conference Special Edition, John Whitmer Historical Association
Journal. Best Book Award to Will Bagley for his book, “Blood
of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows,”
published by the University of Oklahoma Press. Lifetime Achievement Award to Richard P. Howard
for his significant contribution to a large body of work characterized
by sound scholarship and his encouragement to others to engage in
historical research.
Richard P. Howard receiving JWHA’s Lifetime
Achievement Award from Awards chair Bill Russell
Sunstone
The Salt Lake Sunstone
Symposium was held August 13-16, 2003 at the Sheraton City Centre
Hotel. Under the direction of Dan Wotherspoon, Sunstone Executive
Director, over 800 people were in attendance to the four day conference.
Included in the many presentations given were several on Mormon
history such as:
“Conflict in the Quorum:
Orson Pratt, Brigham Young, Joseph Smith” a panel of John
Hatch, Michael J. Stevens and H. Michael Marquardt reviewing
Gary Bergera’s book by the same name.
“The LDS Church and Community
of Christ: Clearer Differences, Closer Friends” by William
D. Russell.
“The Man Behind the Discourse:
King Follett – ‘One of Those Who Bore The Burden’”
by Joann Follett Mortensen.
“The Quorum of the Anointed”
by Devery S. Anderson
“National Culture, Personality,
and Theocracy in the Early Mormon Culture of Violence”
by D. Michael Quinn.
“The Dead Lee Scroll:
A Forensic Analysis of the John D. Lee Scroll” by George
Throckmorton and Steven Mayfield.
“William Hooper Young
and the Murder of Anna Pulitzer” by Ardis Parshall.
Other sessions that may be of interest
to MHA members were tributes to Stan Kimball and Dean May: “Celebration of a Joyful Soul” by a panel of Maureen
Ward, Douglas Bowen and Curt Bench; “Dean May: ‘Just
Born Friendly’” by Judi Dushku and Colleen McCannell.
Anyone desiring a tape on these or any other session can contact
the Sunstone office at 801-355-5926 or carol@sunstoneonline.com.
Keokuk Conference Commemorates
1853 LDS Outfittings
(by Bill Hartley)
Mormon Immigrant Camp, Keokuk, Iowa
More than 100 historians, history
buffs, local citizens, and LDS Church members from Nauvoo participated
in a June 27-28, 2003, Lee County History Symposium based at Keokuk,
Iowa’s Holiday Inn Express. (Keokuk is about 12 miles south
of Nauvoo and across the river.) The conference featured history
papers, a small wagon train, and dedication of 3 new historic markers
and a pavilion with history displays. Events were designed to commemorate
the sesquicentennial of the 1853 Mormon encampment at Keokuk.
In 1853, the LDS
annual emigration outfitted at Keokuk rather than in the Council
Bluffs area. From April-through-July, 2,548 Saints, almost all Europeans,
formed into 10 wagon trains there, using 360 wagons. Among them
was the first large company of Scandinavians journeying to Zion.
While camped at Keokuk, the emigrants helped construct the city’s
streets.
Dr. Loren Horton delivered
the Friday night keynote address, “Iowa in 1853–the
Context for the Encampment.” Three BYU professors presented
papers: Dr. Fred Woods discussed “Mormon Maritime Migration
from England to Keokuk in 1853”; Bill Hartley told about “Mormons
Crossing the Plains to Salt Lake City in 1853,” and Dr. Susan
Easton Black shared fascinating insights about Keokuk attorney James
M. Wood, who was a legal counsel for Joseph Smith. Des Moines Register
artist Matt Chatterley shared information about artist Frederick
Piercy, who was in the 1853 Keokuk encampment, wrote about it, and
drew it for his now-famous book, "The Route from Liverpool to Great
Salt Lake City (1855)." Three LDS members from Nauvoo did presentations:
Joseph Johnstun, about the 1846 daguerreotype of Nauvoo; Mike Tripp
regarding Isaac Galland and LDS in Iowa, and Shalisse Johnstun about
women on the Mormon Trail. Local historians presented insights about
religions in Keokuk at the time (Doug Atterberg), Mark Twain and
Keokuk (Jack Meister), and early currencies in Iowa Territory (Tom
Gardner). Some of the papers are being published in the fall issue
of Mormon Historical Studies.
Mid-afternoon on
Saturday three covered wagons and a Nauvoo brass band rolled from
Rand Park to Triangle Park, where an historic marker/wayside panel
about “Mormon Immigrants’ Camp, 1853” was dedicated.
Activities then moved 7 miles north to Montrose’s Riverfront
Park, where two new wayside panels were dedicated: “Fort Des
Moines, 1834-1837,” and “Mormon Settlements in Lee County,
1839-1846.” Then, 3/4 mile north of Montrose, a new pavilion,
with a fine view of Nauvoo, was dedicated in Linger Longer Park.
It contains panels telling about Nauvoo and about the LDS trek to
Utah.
The Mormon Historic
Sites Foundation helped support the commemoration and fund the historic
markers (and, in the spirit of 1853 Saints, helped Keokuk install
curbing at Triangle Park). Bob Clark, representing the foundation,
participated in the events.
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
The board of Dialogue
has announced the appointment of new editors for their journal.
Replacing Neal and Rebecca Chandler, whose term has expired, are
Karen Marguerite Moloney and Levi S. Peterson.
Western History Association
The annual
Western History Association Conference was held October 8-11, 2003
in Fort Worth, Texas. The conference theme is “The Boundless
West: Imagery and Popular Culture of the American West.”
Under
the direction of MHA Council Member, Brian Cannon the Mormon History
Association sponsored a session entitled, “The Principle of
Plurality: Mormon Polygamy in Nineteenth-Century Utah”, chaired
by Thomas G. Alexander, Brigham Young University. Kathryn Daynes
presented on “Forging Mormon Society: Polygamy and Assimilation.”
Lowell “Ben” Bennion, Humboldt State University, presented
on “Polygamy’s Contribution to ‘Utah’s Best
Crop’ in Cedar City, 1860-1880.” Finally, Sarah Barringer
Gordon, University of Pennsylvania, presented on “Legal Process
and Punishment: Criminal Prosecution of Polygamists in Utah Territory.”
B. Carmon Hardy, California State University, Fullerton, provided
comment on these papers.
Also presenting papers were Richard E.
Turley, Jr., William P. MacKinnon and Glen Leonard under the banner
of “American Violence and the Mountain Meadows Massacre.”
The session was chaired by Jan Shipps with Richard Maxwell Brown as
Commentator.