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A Short
List of a Long Topic: Mormon History, 1820-2000
by Richard
H. Cracroft
You'll
want to add these classic books on Mormon history to your home library.
Every Mormon
worth his or her salt (an historical allusion to the fact that Roman
soldiers were paid in ounces of valuable salt) is an authority
or at least a buff on some aspect of Mormon history. (Ask any
missionary conducting tours at Church History sites: the Elder or
Sister Tour Guide can not only tell the Mormon visitors by
their underwear necklines, but also by their eager attempts
to set the guide straight on "the way it really happened.") Mormon
history is vital and relevant and exciting because is a remarkable
record of both divine and human acts. The history of the Latter-day
Saints parallels the U.S. history of the winning of the West, and
both histories chronicle the great Westward Movement of people
across the Atlantic to the American eastern seaboard, and inland
to the Great Plains and out to the Rocky Mountains and beyond, making history
as they traveled. Consequently, American and Mormon historians have
plotted the history of the Mormon people in remarkable particulars,
from their New England origins through the Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Iowa periods, and the Western Exodus through the early
and later pioneer eras, the early 20th Century, the Great Depression
through World War II, and the late 20th Century-or, from
Joseph Smith's First Vision in 1820 right up through the recent
(and full-circle) laying of the cornerstones of the Nauvoo Temple.
The history of Mormonism comprises a rich and glorious saga.
There is, then,
a plethora of fine books delving into Mormon history. This month
I'm suggesting a handful of general histories that are important
enough that you might wish to consider adding some of them to your
personal libraries. Here goes:
General Histories:
--B.H. Roberts, A Comprehensive History of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, Century 1, 6 vols. (1912;1930;reprint,:BYU
Press, 1965). First published in The Times and Seasons and
The Millennial Star in 1842, during Joseph Smith's last years, and
continued later in the Deseret News, this remains an indispensable
source of LDS history. Then, choose one of the following:
-James B. Allen and Glen M. Leonard, The Story of the Latter-day
Saints (Deseret Book, 1992), an excellent one-volume chronological
history. Or:
--Leonard J. Arrington and Davis Bitton, The Mormon Experience:
A History of the Latter-day Saints (Alfred A. Knopf, 1979)--another
fine, one-volume history, which takes a more interpretive,
topical approach. Or perhaps:
-Dean Hughes' The Mormon Church: A Basic History--a very readable
history of the Church for young adults, engagingly written
by the author of the Children of the Promise series of historical
novels.
Other Important Period Histories:
-Richard L. Bushman, Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism
(UIllinois P, 1984). A prize-winning study of the early events
leading to the organization of the Church, written by a faithful
LDS scholar with a outstanding national reputation.
-Leonard J. Arrington, Great Basin Kingdom: An Economic History
of the Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900 (Harvard UP, 1958). This
is an essential book for your library, by the late dean of Mormon
historians. This book launched modern Mormon historical studies..
-James B.. Allen, Ronald K. Esplin, and David J. Whittaker,
Men with a Mission: The Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in the
British Isles, 1837-1841 (Deseret Book, 1992). This is an important
history of the Acts of the Apostles in founding the Church in Great
Britain.
-Thomas G. Alexander's Utah, The Right Place (Gibbs-Smith,
1996) is the "official centennial history" of the State of
Utah, and a good read; as is . . .
-Richard E. Bennett's Mormons at the Missouri, 1846-52: "And
Should We Die"(UOklahoma P, 1987). A fine study of the temporary
Mormon settlements along the Missouri River (Winter Quarters,
etc.).
-Or, what about Richard O. Cowan's The Church in the Twentieth
Century (Bookcraft, 1985)? or . . . , or . . . . I sit here,
restraining myself from listing at least two dozen fine histories which
light up my bookshelf and various periods and sub-periods of Mormon
and Utah, American and Canadian Western history. But, for our purposes
of listing some general LDS histories for your home libraries, let
this handful wet your bibliophilic whistles. Add your selections
to the list of biographies (November) and the works of Joseph Smith
(October) which you may wish to add to your library, and you'll
have a Christmas Wish List that you can stealthily drop at strategic
places-on pillows, car seats, in mail boxes, and at that seat of
all learning, the bathroom. But you'll need to hurry; "the time
is far spent, there is little remaining-until Christmas, that is.
Next month, I plan to stick my neck out further by listing
the "20 Best English Novels Which Every Well-Read Person Must
Have Read (and Own) In Order to be Admitted to the Celestial Kingdom."
If you have any "Musts" for such a list, e-mail me. In February,
I'll be doing the same audacious thing for the "20 Best American
Novels"-if I survive the January Furor! And in March, how about
"The 20 Best Religious Novels of All Time"? (Ben-Hur, The Robe,
etc.) In the meantime, have a Merry Christmas-usually defined as
snuggling up with a good book and a cuppa Postum on a cold winter's
evening!
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