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By William D. Russell1
On Friday night, September 27, at the 2002 Annual Meeting of
the John Whitmer Historical Association in Nauvoo, a celebration of the
Association's 30th anniversary was held, at which this brief history was
presented. As best I can tell, the John Whitmer Historical Association began in
the summer of 1954, when University of Missouri graduate students
Barbara and Bill Higdon were in Houston
for the summer. Barbara was working on her dissertation on public speaking in
early Mormonism.2 The two of them began thinking about the need for a
historical organization that would be independent of the administration of what
was then the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS). They
drafted a proposed constitution for such an organization and sent it to the
First Presidency, which at that time consisted of Israel A. Smith and his two
counselors F. Henry Edwards and W. Wallace Smith. The First Presidency replied
that they would take the matter under advisement.3 The Higdons did not hear
any more from the Presidency on the matter.
One year later, Graceland
College hired Bob Flanders and Alma
Blair to teach history. They ended up sharing the freshman level Latter Day
Saint History course that Roy A. Cheville had taught for years. In 1960 Paul
Edwards joined the Graceland faculty to teach history
and philosophy. He, too, had an interest in church history. At one point Paul
applied for the Church Historian's position and in the interview he suggested
that an independent historical organization be created. Edwards recalls that
President W. Wallace Smith said that would not be necessary.4 The Higdons
came on board the Graceland faculty in 1963, so the
numbers of faculty interested in church history was growing.
Meanwhile, at RLDS headquarters in Independence
in 1965 Dick Howard replaced the retiring Charles A. Davies as Church
Historian. Dick had an M.A. in history from the University
of California at Berkeley
and was the first professionally trained RLDS Church Historian. He also had an
interest in creating an independent historical society and discussed the idea
occasionally with the First Presidency.5
During the 1960s there was developing what was soon called
"The New Mormon History"-- research and publication which was more
professional and attempted to be more neutral than the previous tendency to
write either "faithful history" or "anti-Mormon history."
The movement can be seen as starting before 1960 in works such as Fawn Brodie, No Man Knows My History (1945), Juanita
Brooks, The Mountain Meadows Massacre
(1950), Thomas O'Dea, The Mormons, (1957)
and Leonard Arrington, Great Basin
Kingdom
(1958). By the mid-1960s a flood of professional historical writing began to
appear, including Bob Flanders’ Nauvoo:
Kingdom on the Mississippi (1965), Klaus Hansen, Quest for Empire (1967) and others.
This professionalization of church history and the rapid
growth of the number of scholars interested in the field led to the creation,
in 1965, of the Mormon History Association (MHA), led by Leonard Arrington. Soon
Bob Flanders was involved in MHA and Dick Howard attended the annual meeting in
San Diego in 1969 where he received
MHA's annual "best book" award for his Restoration Scriptures: A Study of Their Textual Development
(Herald House). In 1971 Paul and Lyman Edwards, Dick Howard, Mark McKiernan,
and Bill Russell attended the annual MHA meeting in Provo
where McKiernan gave a paper on William Smith.
In 1970 the quarterly journal Courage: A Journal of History, Thought, and Action came into being,
with Paul Edwards and Barbara Higdon on the nine-member Editorial Committee.
Most of the people mentioned here so far contributed articles, reviews,
letters, or editorials published in Courage,
which provided an avenue for publishing historical articles and reviews. It was
felt, however, that a historical society would stimulate more research and
publications in the area. So on September, 1972, thirty years ago this month,
fifteen people gathered at the home of Dick and Barbara Howard, for a meeting
that can appropriately be regarded as the birthday of the John Whitmer
Historical Association.
Thus our 30th anniversary recognition tonight. The people
who attended were, alphabetically: Alma Blair, Paul Edwards, Bob Flanders,
Barbara Higdon, Dick and Barbara Howard, Larry Hunt, the late Warren Jennings,
the late Gerald Kruse (former Graceland librarian), the late Mark McKiernan, a
young kid working for Dick Howard named William Grant McMurray, Gordon Mesley,
Bill Russell, Geoff Spencer, and Pat Spillman.6 Barbara Howard prepared a
succulent repast, which might appropriately be referred to as the John Whitmer
Association's "First Supper." The group decided not to become part of
the RLDS professional association roundtable, but instead "should be an
independent not-for-profit corporation organized along the lines of typical
societies of professional historians."7
My level of brilliance can be demonstrated by the fact that
I moved that we call our new organization the "John C. Bennett Historical
Association." Sadly, I failed to acknowledge that I had received
"light" on this matter, and my motion died for lack of a second. Then
some less imaginative soul, Warren Jennings to be precise, suggested "the
John Whitmer Historical Association." The two main reasons why this motion
carried the day is that John Whitmer was the first Church Historian, and
secondly, that his name is not controversial and not associated with one of the
two largest Mormon churches to the exclusion of the other. Maybe a third,
unspoken reason was that John Whitmer resisted when the President of the Church
tried to control his history.
Officers and a steering committee were chosen that night,
with Bob Flanders chosen to serve as the first President of the Association and
Paul Edwards the Vice President for Program, to plan the first annual meeting
in Nauvoo, September, 1973. Barbara Higdon was chosen as Vice President for
Membership and Mark McKiernan, Secretary-Treasurer. It was considered very
important that historians from among the Brighamites be included among the
leadership of the Association. A Board of Directors was chosen which included
Davis Bitton of the University of Utah
and Stanley Kimball of Southern Illinois University. The late Richard Poll at Western
Illinois University
was often involved in these early meetings. Interestingly, to my knowledge Dick
Poll is the only LDS person ever to have been the guest preacher at the Sunday
morning worship service at the Campus Congregation at Graceland.
His Dialogue article discussing
"Iron Rod and Liahona Saints," republished in the Saints' Herald,8
stimulated the invitation to speak at Graceland.
The first Board of Directors included the four officers,
plus Davies Bitton, Stan Kimball, Dick Howard, Alma Blair, Warren A. Jennings,
William Russell, and Gordon Mesley. A steering committee was appointed which
consisted of the four officers plus Dick Howard. The steering committee met in Springfield,
Missouri at Flanders'
home on November 24-25, 1972,
and laid out a preliminary set of procedures and goals.9 The following six
objectives were agreed upon:
1. To create a professional association that is
predominantly Midwestern in focus, taking advantage of the associational and
friendship networks of persons of RLDS background.
2. To collect and preserve publications,
documents, manuscripts, and other valuable materials relating especially to the
history of the Reorganization.
3. To facilitate communication among the various
persons and agencies that serve the generic Mormon historical community: the
LDS Church Historian's office, the RLDS Church Historian's office, the Mormon
History Association, various public and private libraries that have and collect
Mormon materials, especially in the Midwest, and the persons who write Mormon
history, especially the history of the RLDS, the churches of the dispersion,
and the early Midwest period of Mormon history.
4. To draw into the fellowship of the
association persons who may share many of its concerns, but not be themselves
members of the Reorganized Church
-- especially such persons who live in the Midwest.
5. To infuse the spirit of renewal in the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and in the larger
fellowship of Christians, into the work of the historians of Mormonism and the
perspective which they carry to their work.
6. To enhance and facilitate the marvelous and
fruitful association which has developed in the past few years with many
friends in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.10
Committees were formed for creating articles of association,
and other duties needed to get the historical society under way.
Among the Past Presidents of the Association are LDS members
Linda Newell and Jessie Embry. And then there is Michael Riggs. How should he
be classified? As LDS? UCC--Unitarian Considering Christ? Community of Christ
fellow traveler? God only knows, and She will inform Michael when he arrives at
the pearly gates. The only LDS historian to serve as Editor of the journal is
Jessie L. Embry, but a number have served on the Editorial Committee. In order
of service, they are Michael Quinn, Lorie Stromberg, Valeen Avery, Ron Esplin,
Carol Cornwall Madsen, Gregory Prince, Jessie Embry, Martha Sonntag Bradley,
and Newell Bringhurst. During the first seven years of the journal's existence
(1981-1987) Grant McMurray and Peter Judd served on the Editorial Committee,
with Peter serving as Editor for volumes 6 and 7. Grant and Peter no doubt
gained valuable experience to prepare them for their current roles as members
of the First Presidency of the Community of Christ.
There have been many LDS historians who have given papers at
our Annual Meetings. We have also had active participants from among the
Strangites and persons outside the Mormon fold. Among the non-Mormons who have
presented major papers at our meetings have been Jan Shipps, Larry Foster,
Mario DePillis, Paul Jones, Kenneth Winn, and Susan Curtis.
President Flanders presided over the first annual meeting
held here in Nauvoo in September, 1973. The last full weekend in September has
been the regular meeting time throughout our history. If October 1 falls on a
Saturday or Sunday, the meeting is held the previous weekend. We have had only
one exception, that occurring in 1987 when an important church event was taking
place that weekend which involved quite a few members of our Association.
At that first annual meeting in Nauvoo in 1973 Bob Flanders
delivered our first Presidential Address. Jan Shipps presented her
"Prophet Puzzle" paper on Joseph Smith, which has often been cited by
other scholars in the twenty-nine years since its delivery. The demise of Courage in 1973 after a short life of
eleven issues in three years took away a major opportunity to publish in the
field of RLDS history, although the beginning of the Mormon History
Association's annual Journal of Mormon
History the next year gave some opportunity for Whitmer papers to be
published. Jan Shipps, "The Prophet Puzzle," was the lead article in
the first issue in 1974.11 Other Whitmer lectures which were published in
those early issues of the Journal of
Mormon History were written by Larry Hunt (1977),12 Nancy Hiles Ishikawa
(1979),13 Dick Howard (1980),14 Newell Bringhurst (1981),15 and Paul
Shupe (1983).16
Three prominent John Whitmer founders - Mark McKiernan, Alma
Blair, and Paul Edwards -- fostered cooperation between RLDS and LDS historians
by their publication of The Restoration Movement, a collection of thirteen
essays, six authored by RLDS historians and the other seven by some of the
finest LDS historians -- James Allen, Leonard Arrington, Davis Bitton, Klaus
Hansen, T. Edgar Lyon, Max Parkin, Larry Porter and D. Michael Quinn.17
In the spring of 1974 John Whitmer, in cooperation with the Graceland
history faculty, began an annual spring "Restoration History Lecture
Series," which lasted until 1990. Many of the prominent LDS historians
gave lectures in this series, including Leonard Arrington, Jim Allen, Dick
Poll, Maureen Beecher, Melvin Smith, Chas Peterson, Doug Alder, Stan Kimball,
David Buerger, Linda Newell, and Carol Cornwall Madsen. One of the first
lecturers was Arrington, who, when he came on stage, saw Dick Howard in the audience.
Leonard jumped off the stage (a three foot drop) and enthusiastically greeted
Howard. His contagious personality no doubt changed the attitudes of those
students who might have been leery of this Mormon in our midst. Soon the spring
series included lectures in Independence
as well as Lamoni. Two outstanding Graceland students
presented their history senior seminar papers in the spring series -- Susan
Curtis (1977) and Paul Shupe (1981). Their papers were published later in the John Whitmer Historical Association Journal
and the Journal of Mormon History.18
Since 1978 John Whitmer has sponsored a banquet in
Independence the night before World Conference officially begins.19 Dick
Howard's assistant, William Grant McMurray, was beginning to show promise and
was asked to speak at the first banquet in 1978.20 Ironically, McMurray chose
to speak on the issue of succession in the Presidency of the church. At that
1978 World Conference Wallace B. Smith would be succeeding his father as
President, the first time an RLDS President had retired rather than serving
until his death. Eighteen years later McMurray would himself succeed Wallace B.
Smith as President of the Church, becoming the first non-Smith to lead the
church. In 1980 the pre-conference banquet speaker was F. Henry Edwards, who
had been a member of the RLDS First Presidency from 1946 until 1966 and the
author of volumes 5-8 of the official history of the church.21 Other speakers
have included Ruth Draper, Saint Paul School of Theology professor Paul Jones,
and LDS scholars Valeen Avery, Michael Quinn, Allen Roberts, Phillip Barlow,
and both Paul and Lavina Anderson.
At our September, 1986 annual meeting we were given a tour of
the Kirtland Temple by Jeffrey Don Lundgren, who in a little more than three
years would become, at least for the moment, the most well-known of all participants
in John Whitmer programs.22 By 1981 there had been so many good papers
delivered at Whitmer meetings that it was deemed important to publish an annual
journal. Over the years significant financial assistance came from George Smith
and from Tom Morain. Tom arranged a three-way partnership between Living
History Farms in Des Moines, Graceland
College, and the John Whitmer
Association, which benefited John Whitmer financially. These two men helped
secure a firm financial base for the journal.
Today our endowment fund is over $100,000 and has been used
for other purposes in addition to the journal. In recent years, for example, we
have created scholarships to help young historians become involved by attending
meetings and presenting papers. John Whitmer also has begun a monograph series,
with two monographs published: Marjorie Newton, Hero or Traitor: A Biography of
Charles Wesley Wandell (1992) and Gregory A. Prince, Having Authority: The Origins and Development of Priesthood During the
Ministry of Joseph Smith (Independence Press, 1993).23 Each year we give
awards for the annual "best book" and the "best article,"
and other special awards from time to time. I was privileged to be honored with
"The True Believer Comeback of the Year" award in 1985, presented by
Awards Chairman Grant McMurray and President Dick Howard. To date, no other
member of the Association has received this coveted award.
The Association determined at the outset to be independent
of the church. During the first twelve years Dick Howard declined several invitations
to be President of the Association, feeling that the image of independence from
the church would be stronger if the Church Historian were not the John Whitmer
President during the early years. Dick's 1983 article in the journal was an
example of cooperation between the church and the Association, in this case on
the sensitive issue of polygamy, Non-Mormon historian Larry Foster had given a
paper on polygamy at the 1977 Mormon History Association meeting at Kirtland,
as part of the preliminary work on his important book, Religion and Sexuality.24 Bill Higdon, ordained an apostle in
1974, attended Foster's session. Upon his return to Independence,
Higdon urged President W. Wallace Smith to call a meeting to discuss this
matter, as Higdon felt that if news of Foster's research and conclusions spread
among church members they might be very troubled, and church leaders needed to
be prepared to deal with it. Soon a meeting was called which was attended by
President Smith, his son Wallace B. Smith, who at that time was slated to
become President of the Church one year later, in April, 1978, as well Clifford
Cole, President of the Council of Twelve, Presiding Bishop Francis E. (Pat)
Hansen, and Church Historian Dick Howard. As a result of that meeting Howard
was asked to research the subject and produce a document that could be used to
educate the members of the church.
In early November, 1982 Howard submitted a paper to
President Wallace B. Smith, who decided to share copies of it with all members
of the Joint Council (which consisted of the 18 men who made up the First Presidency,
the Presiding Bishopric, and the Council of Twelve) and with the members of the
History Commission, an advisory group established by the Church Historian and
the First Presidency. Copies were sent on the same day to these people. The
History Commission reviewed it on December
5, 1982, at a meeting held at Graceland
College in Lamoni,
Iowa. The Joint Council discussed it the
next day in Independence. "The
consensus of the Commission meeting at Lamoni was that the paper was too mild.
The Joint Council generally felt the paper was too radical," recalls Dick
Howard.25 In January, 1983 Howard had several sessions with the First Presidency
regarding his paper, with Paul Edwards, very recently the new President of the
Temple School, also in attendance. By the end of January the paper had received
the editorial input of several church officials, and the final revision was
what Dick Howard recalls as a "painful compromise."26 He recalls
that some of his nine conclusions were tempered and a section on "common
sense" was deleted.27
President Smith thought the paper Dick produced should be
published, but didn't want to publish it in the Saints' Herald, the official RLDS publication. The John Whitmer
Historical Association was asked if they would publish it. Clare Vlahos was the
Editor that year and agreed. Dick's paper was published in volume 3 (1983),
with the volume being released on the same day, September 24, 1983, that Dick presented
the paper to our annual meeting, held that year at the Walnut Gardens RLDS
Congregation in Independence.28 Dick Howard's 1983 publication is an
important incident in the history of our church. With this article the official
Church Historian, after consultation with the First Presidency and other top
church officials, acknowledged the fact that we cannot excuse Joseph Smith, Jr.
from involvement in polygamy. We can't blame it on Brigham anymore, after more than
a century of accusations. Therefore it seems that when we publish the second
edition of Paul Edwards' official history of the church,29 Dick Howard's 1983
John Whitmer publication should be discussed in the text and cited in the
chronology of important events, even though it would have been a better paper
if it hadn't been subjected to political considerations in the editorial
process. And the footnote should be to the 1983 John Whitmer Historical
Association Journal rather than to its later republication in Restoration
Studies III in 1986.30
Shortly after Dick Howard's article appeared in our journal,
Richard Price published a full page ad in the Independence Examiner "correcting" the errors in Howard's
article. In response to Price, the First Presidency distanced itself from
Howard's article by issuing a press release noting that the John Whitmer Historical Association Journal
was not an official publication of the church and its authors do not reflect official
church positions.31 Dick might be said to have felt he was "left hanging,
slowly twisting in the wind," to borrow a phrase from the Watergate episode.
Our Association has been known to sometimes fall short of
the expectations contained in our bylaws. For example, Tom Morain was reappointed
Membership Committee chairperson in 1987 and 1988 despite protesting that he
had done absolutely nothing in that role in 1986 and 1987.32 Once at an
annual business meeting the Executive Secretary of the Association was unable
to take any minutes because he spent the whole time trying the find the minutes
of the previous business meeting held one year earlier.
Any organization is bound to have some internal conflicts,
as members have differing ideals and objectives for the group. Possibly the main
internal conflicts have been over whether the Association has been sufficiently
independent of the church. Writings that were critical of high church officials
and prestigious Whitmer members have not always been appreciated. Also an
article by David Buerger on Mormon infallibility was rejected by our Editor out
of a concern not to offend the LDS Church.
There has sometimes been a tendency to ask the same old John
Whitmer insiders to give papers at meetings, and some think we tend to meet in
or close to Independence too often,
rather than taking the effort to include new people and go to new places for
our meetings. So far, we have not ventured outside the Midwest
for an annual meeting. A majority of our annual meetings have been held in the Independence
area, at Graceland College
or in Nauvoo. We have met twice each at Kirtland, Plano,
and St. Louis. Other meetings have
taken place at Council Bluffs,
Shenandoah, and Des Moines, Iowa.
The average attendance at our annual meetings has been around 100, out of a
membership that has remained fairly stable at around 400.
Finally, I would be very happy if you would write or email
me (Graceland University,
1 University Place, Lamoni,
IA 50140
or russell@graceland.edu) with any
corrections or expansions upon any of the material in this brief history,
and/or any recollections that might be useful in a future expanded history of
the Association.
1 Conversations with and emails from Richard P. Howard,
Barbara Higdon, Paul M. Edwards, William T. Higdon, Wallace B. Smith and
Barbara Bernauer, were very helpful in reconstructing the early history of the
Association. The author wishes to thank these people for their invaluable
assistance.
2 Barbara McFarlane Higdon, Preaching in the Latter
Day Saint Church,
1830-1846 (University of Missouri dissertation, 1941).
3 Barbara Higdon, email to Bill Russell, July 9, 2002.
4 Paul Edwards, email to Bill Russell, August 16, 2002.
5 Richard P. Howard to William D. Russell, May 8, 1981, p. 2.
6 "Historical Society Formed," Saints' Herald
119 (December 1972):58-59; Howard to Russell, May 8, 1981.
7 "The Origin of the John Whitmer Historical
Association," The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 1 (1981):
63. This brief, informal, unsigned history of the Association was written by
this author upon the request of Imogene Goodyear, the first editor of the
journal.
8 Richard D. Poll, "What the Church Means to People
Like Me," Dialogue: A History of Mormon Thought 2:4 (Winter 1967):107-117;
reprinted in the Saints' Herald 115 (October 15, 1968):699-700, 705-06, and in
Dialogue 34:1&2 (Spring/Summer 2001): 11-21.
9 "The Origin of the John Whitmer Historical
Association," John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 1 (1981):63.
Gordon Mesley's last name was misspelled in this article.
10 Ibid.
11 Jan Shipps, "The Prophet Puzzle: Suggestions
Leading Toward a More Comprehensive Interpretation of Joseph Smith,"
Journal of Mormon History 1 (1974):3-20.
12 Larry E. Hunt, "Frederick Madison Smith: The
Formative Years of an RLDS President," Journal of Mormon History, 4
(1977):67-89.
13 Nancy Hiles Ishikawa, "Alice
Smith Edwards: The Little Princess," Journal of Mormon History, 6
(1979):61-74.
14 Richard P. Howard, "Joseph Smith's First Vision:
The RLDS Tradition," Journal of Mormon History, 7 (1980):23-29.
15 Newell G. Bringhurst, "Charles B. Thompson and the
Issues of Slavery and Race," Journal of Mormon History 8 (1981):37-47.
16 Paul Shupe, "Indulging in Temperance: Prohibition
and Political Action in the RLDS Church,"
Journal of Mormon History 10 (1983):21-33.
17 McKiernan, F. Mark, Alma R. Blair, and Paul M. Edwards,
eds., The Restoration Movement: Essays in Mormon History (Lawrence, Kansas:
Coronado Press, 1973) One essay had two authors. The RLDS historians who contributed
articles in this collection were, in addition to McKiernan, Blair, and Edwards:
Robert Flanders, Warren Jennings, and William Russell.
18 Susan Curtis Mernitz, "Palmyra
Revisited: a Look at Early Nineteenth Century America
and the Book of Mormon," John Whitmer Historical Association Journal 2
(1982):30-37; Paul Shupe, "Indulging in Temperance and Political Action in
the RLDS Church,"
Journal of Mormon History 10 (1983):21-33.
19 "The Origin of the John Whitmer Historical
Association," 64.
20 W. Grant McMurray, "'True Son of a True Father:'
Joseph Smith III and the Succession Question," Restoration Studies I
(1980):131-145.
21 F. Henry Edwards, "Engagement with Church
History," John Whitmer Historian Association Journal 1 (1981):30-33.
22 In April, 1989, Lundgren, a former Kirtland
Temple tour guide, murdered a
family of five who were followers of his. He is now on Ohio's
Death Row in Mansfield. Two books
have been written on the subject: Pete Earley, Prophet of Death: The Mormon
Blood-Atonement Killings (New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1991) is
reasonably-well done. Cynthia Stalter Sasse and Peggy Murphy Widder, The
Kirtland Massacre: The True and Terrible Story of the Mormon Cult Murders (New
York: Donald I. Fine, Inc., 1991) could have been written without looking
beyond the newspapers and the papers in the prosecutor's office.
23 Marjorie Newton, Hero or Traitor? A Biography of
Charles Wesley Wandell (Independence: Independence Press, 1992); Gregory A.
Prince, Having Authority: The Origins and Development of Priesthood During the
Ministry of Joseph Smith (Independence: Independence Press, 1993).
24 Lawrence
Foster, Religion and Sexuality: Three American Communal Experiments in the
Nineteenth Century (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981).
25 Richard Howard, email to Bill Russell, August 24, 2002.
26 Richard Howard, email to Bill Russell, August 24, 2002.
27 At the September
27, 2002 thirtieth anniversary celebration, Richard Howard offered
this information in response to a question regarding ways in which his paper
had been watered down by church officials prior to publication.
28 Richard P. Howard, "The Changing RLDS Responses to
Mormon Polygamy: A Preliminary Analysis," John Whitmer Historical
Association Journal 3 (1981):14-29. .
29 Paul M. Edwards, Our Legacy of Faith: A Brief History
of the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints (Independence: Herald
Publishing House, 1991).
30 Richard P. Howard, "The Changing RLDS Response to
Mormon Polygamy: A Preliminary Analysis," Restoration Studies III
(1986):145-162. In the bibliography of his Legacy of Faith Edwards cites this
1986 reprint rather than Howard's original 1983 publication of the article.
31 Wallace B. Smith, email to Bill Russell, September 2, 2002.
32 Tom Morain to Les Gardner, February 28, 1988.
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