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Celebrating Kirtland
Historic Site Rises Again
An
Exclusive Photographic Essay
Photography
by Scot Facer Proctor
Essay by Maurine Jensen Proctor
All Photographs Copyright 2003 Scot Facer Proctor
(Use of any photographs herein only by written permission of Meridian
Magazine)
click
on photos to enlarge
Part 2

Details of the Walter Rane painting.
Now, after decades of
research and five years of fund-raising and construction, Kirtland
has been reborn with many new sites restored. These include the
Newel K. Whitney home, the Johnson Inn, a mill, the only period
ashery in the United States, the red school house and a new visitors’
center.

The John Johnson Inn was
originally built in the mid-1820’s by Peter French and was
the first brick building in Kirtland. The reconstructed inn now
houses a small theater, exhibits on the legacy of Kirtland, and
a computer kiosk where visitors can search for their ancestors in
a database of about 1,800 families who lived in Kirtland in the
1830’s.
That bustling intersection
has vanished as the road has been moved around and beyond the site,
and where cars used to whiz by are bark-lined walking paths along
a stony brook and towering trees that lead to a working mill.

Newly-built Visitors
Center is the place to start a tour of the newly restored old Kirtland.
This meticulous, multi-million
dollar restoration project was made possible not just through the
Church’s efforts alone, but also with the private donations
of many individuals. President Hinckley noted that Bob Gay of Connecticut
handed him two checks, one for $25,000 and the other blank except
for his signature. Steve Young and Alan and Karen Ashton were among
many others thanked for their contributions.

Visitors are
welcomed by lovely landscaping and flowers in the newly restored
old Kirtland.
It is not just
buildings that are preserved or restored here, but memory itself.
Walk into the mill or the Whitney store, and the people and marvelous
light shed forth upon this place becomes vivid and tangible.

Entry to the
John Johnson Inn where visitors can search for their own family
names to see if they were residents of 1830’s Kirtland.
You can feel the power
of a people who out of their poverty built a temple where Christ
visited, who dusted off their paradigms and expanded into grander
views.
Steven L. Olsen who heads
the Church’s restoration efforts said, “The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is not in the business of historic
preservation per se. It is in the business of saving souls, in accordance
with our understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

The John Johnson Inn
was reconstructed to look very much like the original (based on
extent photographs of the original structure).
So, what does a historical
consciousness have to do with a religious identity? In many academic
and religious circles throughout America today, these two interests
are often seen as diametrically opposed. Yet for the Latter-day
Saints, the two are inextricably linked. Our core doctrines are
grounded in historical experience.”

View from the
John Johnson Inn of the south face of the
Newel K. and Elizabeth Ann Whitney home.
Olsen said,
“In some respects these historical sites are three-dimensional
witnesses to the history of this restoration.”

Looking through
the trees at the John Johnson Inn and the Newel K. and
Elizabeth Ann Whitney home
Sunday, May
18th President Hinckley toured the sites and dedicated them in an
emotional meeting that was broadcast by satellite to stake centers
throughout Ohio. He said Kirtland has been “sanctified by
the sacrifice of those who stopped here for a season, including
my own forebears…I think those (early Latter-day Saints) who
walked these roads could not have dreamed—although the prophet
spoke of it—of the marvelous expansion of this great work.”
Click
here to go to Part 3 of Celebrating Kirtland--Historic Site Rises
Again -- A Photo Essay
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© 2002 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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