When
Historians Gather
By Davis Bitton
JoAn
and I have just attended the annual meeting of the Mormon
History Association in Killington, Vermont. Before describing
this meeting, let us review the history of historical associations.
As
part of the seventeenth-century scientific revolution in Europe,
scholars found it advantageous to organize. The Royal Society
of London was the first and greatest, but not the only, of
the new organizations. In the Society’s transactions, articles
were published by contributors from near and far. If you
were a scientist, professional or amateur, you would probably
want to keep up with the activities of others by studying
the latest reports of findings from Scotland, from France,
from Poland. Scientists engaged in similar research could
correspond with each other.
Thus
was set in motion a process by which the physical sciences
organized themselves. As time went on, separate organizations
were established for biologists, astronomers, zoologists,
and many others, proliferating in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries until now hundreds of such organizations exist.
The
layman may not know that other disciplines also organized
themselves, including history. At first these took the form
of antiquarian societies, often regional or local, and their
number grew in all European countries. Then national historical
societies appeared and with the professionalization and specialization
that characterized the discipline from the end of the nineteenth
century through the twentieth, the number of historical societies,
like their scientific counterparts multiplied.
When
the Mormon History Association was organized at San Francisco
in 1965, it was simply one manifestation of the founding of
new historical societies that was occurring nationally and
internationally. But those of us who participated in the
organization were excited. We felt we were doing something
that would have lasting importance.
As
envisioned by its founders, the Mormon History Association
would promote the cause of research, writing, and disseminating
Mormon history. Not sponsored by the LDS Church or by a university,
it would welcome all those, church members or not, who were
pursuing historical research in Mormon history or who were
just interested in learning. Meetings would be held and papers
presented and critiqued. The MHA would not, we hoped, become
a vehicle for anti-Mormons, but neither would it serve as
a proselytizing tool. Professional standards would be insisted
upon.
Leonard
Arrington, Eugene Campbell, Richard Poll, S. George Ellsworth–those
serving as presidents for the first few years were the deans
of Mormon historical studies, respected scholars in their
own right.
Historians
from the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints (now Community of Christ) joined in, participated
in giving papers, served as officers in the Association, and
even presided as president. Non-Mormon scholars interested
in Mormon history also joined in and made valuable contributions.
Lasting friendships were formed.
Can
it be that forty years have passed since the foundation?
Some leading participants have died, many new historians and
buffs have joined, and a periodical, Journal of Mormon
History, is now published three times a year.
The
days when MHA meetings consisted of one session or two or
three sequential sessions are over. I think fondly of those
days when you could hear every paper presented, and when the
group was small enough to allow forming acquaintanceship with
all who attended the meetings. Just as well pine for the
old five and dime store or the corner drug store as for such
a simple, intimate association. Better to enjoy the lively,
booming MHA of the present with its multiple concurrent sessions.
At
the meeting this year in Vermont, about six hundred people
attended. A bus tour was provided for those who came early.
Another bus tour on Friday afternoon took almost everyone
to Royalton, Tunbridge, of course Sharon, the birthplace of
Joseph Smith, and other places whose names resonate in the
early history of the Smith family. The verdure seemed to
extend forever through the hilly country. Beautiful, yes,
but one can imagine how difficult it might be to make a living
from the soil alone.
I
cannot give an adequate description of the richness of the
meetings without listing every session and every paper. Since
I did not attend all of these sessions, I can only offer examples,
but they may help to provide a sense of the electricity in
the air.
Two
of the sessions were devoted to music. One featured songs
from the 1844 Bellows Falls hymnal, beautifully performed
by Frederic Chrislip and Paul Griswold from Oneanta, New York.
The
other focused on hymns penned by Eliza R. Snow. Intelligent
commentary placed her works in a context, recognized their
frequent lapses, but also praised those that achieved excellence.
LDS students and academics from the Boston area sang now forgotten
songs. Finally, commenting on the previous speakers were
Tona Hangen, of Brandeis University, and the renowned Laurel
Thatcher Ulrich, of Harvard University. What a feast! Where
else, I asked myself, could one have this experience?
An
example of the wide variety of presentations was Bryher Pennells,
an experienced school teacher from Kent, England. Having
played a significant role in providing materials on Mormon
history for the English school system, she gave examples of
how the subject is treated there. One had to wonder how many
American students could intelligently respond to the essay
questions used there.
Following
what has now become the standard procedure, an invited scholar
with expertise in American religious history, this time Charles
L. Cohen, of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, gave an
insightful address on the construction of Mormon identity
linked to the house of Israel. At a luncheon meeting our
speaker was J. Kevin Graffagnino, director of the Vermont
Historical Society.
Awards
were bestowed for best book, best article, best paper by a
student, best documentary work, and others. One way of encouraging
serious work in Mormon history is to recognize excellence.
An
unexpected treat at the Saturday dinner meeting was the appearance
of Vermont’s governor and first lady. The governor greeted
us, recognized the importance of Vermont to the rise of Mormonism,
and encouraged us to return. MHA president Donald Q. Cannon
delivered the annual presidential address on “Joseph Smith
and the Globalization of Mormonism.”
Naturally,
since 2005 is the bicentennial of Joseph Smith’s birth, many
participants spoke of him. I attended a session where Mark
McConkie and Joseph Fielding McConkie spoke, the former on
Joseph’s unusual but effective leadership style (“making correct
principles work”), the latter on teachings that were strikingly
different from the other religions of the time but that were
greeted enthusiastically by the Saints.
At
a plenary session, Richard L. Bushman’s paper on “The Inner
Joseph Smith” gave an insightful view of the dynamics between
the Prophet and his father. We are all looking forward to
the appearance in the fall of Richard’s full-scale biography,
Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling.
If
other attenders at the convention were like me, they were
frustrated by the necessity of choosing between equally enticing
talks offered concurrently during the same hour. Long ago
I learned to think of these gatherings as smorgasbords. You
pick and choose. If one paper does not interest you or rubs
you the wrong way, simply choose something else. Some of
the papers have been summarized by Carrie Moore, reporter
for the Deseret Morning News. No doubt many of them
will eventually be published.
On
Sunday morning, with the MHA convention drawing to its close,
buses carried many people to Sharon, the Prophet’s birthplace
in 1805. Others traveled by car. We enjoyed the grounds,
admired the monument that was erected in 1905, and attended
a devotional in the chapel. Featured speaker was LDS Church
Historian Elder Marlin K. Jenson. Appropriate for the setting
and for a church authority, Elder Jenson spoke feelingly about
the blessings he had experienced in his own life, thanks to
teachings and principles restored by Joseph Smith.
If
participating in some of the ongoing historical research on
Mormon history entices you, you might consider joining the
MHA. Dues are reasonable, and in return you receive the issues
of the Journal of Mormon History. Many who do not
find it possible to attend the conventions like to “keep up”
with historical scholarship by joining the Association. Details
can be found at the official website–www.mhahome.org.
Another
organization doing significant work is the Mormon Historic
Sites foundation. Not content with words alone, this organization
has played a central role in the mapping, refurbishing, and
restoration of Mormon historic sites, including Palmyra, Kirtland,
and in Salt Lake City This is the Place Heritage Park and
Deseret Village. A valuable benefit of membership is receiving
the periodical Mormon Historical Studies, every issue
of which contains at least one article of great interest.
For further information see
Not
everyone is interested in history. But those who enjoy history
and the expansion of awareness its study produces have little
reason to complain about an insufficiency of articles and
books. In my experience, one of the most satisfying ways
of keeping up with the ferment of ongoing research is to
join historical associations, read their journals, and when
possible attend their conventions.