An Indefatigable Dane
Pursues the Past
By
Davis Bitton
The importance of keeping
a record of historical events in the Church is mentioned
several times in the early revelations. That this was
accomplished, however imperfectly, is due in large measure
to the single-minded determination of individuals whose
names are no longer remembered by most people. Such a
one was Andrew Jenson.
Born in 1850, Andrew Jenson was only four years old when
his parents were converted in Denmark.
So he was raised in the Church. He began keeping a personal
diary when he was thirteen years old and kept it faithfully
until his death at the age of ninety-one.
In 1866, the family sailed
from Denmark
and crossed the plains to Utah.
Andrew tried various jobs, working as a farmer, a railroad
laborer, a cowboy, and a miner in the Bingham
Canyon mine and smelter. He made
some additional money by selling lithographs. At age 22,
he was called as a missionary to Denmark.
While there, he wrote a history of the Aalborg
conference and occasional articles in the Skandinaviens
Stjerne. He found that he
enjoyed historical writing.
After two years, Andrew returned
to Utah, married,
and worked on a farm. He decided to translate the History
of Joseph Smith into Danish and, showing resourcefulness,
managed to sign up 900 subscribers who agreed to pay ten
cents a month. The resulting work was bound into a book
in 1879.
After serving another two-year
mission to Denmark,
Andrew began publishing Morgenstijernen,
a historical magazine in the Danish language. This time
he found more than 2,000 subscribers. After publishing
four volumes between 1881 and 1885 (totaling 960 pages),
Jenson followed the request of Church authorities and
changed it to an English publication, The Historical
Record, for the next five years (totaling 1,135 pages).
In this periodical — in both its Danish and English volumes
— he included biographies of early leaders, histories
of settlements, organizations, and missions, chronologies,
documents, and private journals and personal histories.
Jenson thought he had found
his calling and in 1886 wrote to President John Taylor
asking for employment in the Church Historian’s Office.
Disappointed when he was turned down, he proceeded to
write a history of the Salt Lake Stake in 1887. He was
employed part-time at fifty dollars a month and instructed
to write histories of all the stakes of the Church. He
also began compiling a Church chronology, first published
serially in The Historical Record and then as a separate
book, later revised and updated. All earnings went to
the Church Historian’s Office fund.
In 1889, Andrew began traveling
to different stakes and missions. Each time he would examine
records, interview old-timers and current leaders, and
peruse personal journals. Some of these records he took
with him when he returned to Salt Lake City.
Faced with the huge practical
question of how best to organize this material, Jenson
started to arrange his notes and clippings in a scrapbook
or expandable binder, which could be updated on subsequent
visits or as additional materials were acquired. In this
way, he compiled a "manuscript history" for
each ward and stake in the Church.
Impressed by such dedication,
apostle and Church Historian Franklin D. Richards gave
Jenson a blessing to be a "historian in Zion."
In 1891, he was "ordained" as a historian and
his allowance raised to $100 per month. In 1897, he became an Assistant Church
Historian and, except for a brief interruption of about
two years, had this title until his death.
Even as he continued traveling
and compiling, Jenson expanded these duties by launching
a "Journal History of the Church." A monumental
compilation of primary source material, this record was
organized the same as Jenson’s ward and stake histories
so that it could be conveniently added to as new material
came to his attention.
Andrew Jenson also collected
information for biographies of Church leaders. Published
as Latter-day Saints’ Biographical Encyclopedia,
this work eventually reached four volumes. As if he didn’t
have enough to do, he wrote a History of the Scandinavian
Mission (1927) and a highly useful Encyclopedic
History of the Church (1941), with separate articles
on the auxiliaries, programs past and present, and many
separate towns and settlements, all alphabetically arranged.
At the end of each year,
Jenson tallied his activities. At the end of 1934, for
example, he wrote: "During the year I traveled, almost
exclusively in the interest of Church history, about 4,850
miles, namely, 2,800 by rail, 1,055 by automobile, and
1,000 by airplane. I spoke in public 90 times, including
17 regular sermons, 25 lectures on Church history in English
and ten in Danish, nine Sunday School talks, seven funeral sermons, ten illustrated lectures,
and six after-dinner speeches."
Andrew Jenson had a distinctive
appearance. Tall and thin, with close-cropped hair, rimmed
glasses, starched white collar, and black string tie,
he was easily recognized. At least with this description
a missionary in the Eastern States Mission in the late
1920s was able to spot Jenson in a crowded railway station.
All told, Jenson traveled
an incredible one million miles — twice around the world,
crossing the Pacific Ocean four times, the Atlantic
thirteen times. He visited every Latter-day Saint mission
except South Africa. He served ten missions for the Church,
including a three-year term as president of the Scandinavian
Mission (1909-1912). He gave an estimated six thousand
addresses, thus educating a whole generation in historical
matters. He died in 1941.
Today, professional historians
are employed by our church universities. Family history
and university libraries employ archivists who gather
material. Employees of the Family and Church History Department
visit different parts of the world and gather documents
and oral history. But the work among the nations, tongues,
and peoples of the world is vast and multilayered. In
many different settings, countless personal histories
tell of opposition and problems, miracles of healing and
divine inspiration, and the power of faith to overcome.
Is there not room for new
Andrew Jensons? Without official
calling perhaps but with the encouragement of their file
leaders, dedicated members with a vision of what needs
to be done might save from oblivion priceless records
and testimonies from Madagascar to Mongolia, from Fiji
to Malta, from France to Korea, from Mississauga to Vina
del Mar, from Blackfoot, Idaho, to Lagos, Nigeria.