Table of ContentsCollection OverviewCollection Inventory+/-
Biographical Note/Historical NoteContent DescriptionCollection UseAdministrative Information |
Collection Overview +/-
Collection Inventory +/- Box Folder Contents
box , folder : Correspondence
box 1, folder 1 : Marguerite Sinclair, 1940-1942 (USHS)
box 1, folder 2 : Marguerite Sinclair, 1943 (USHS)
box 1, folder 3 : Marguerite Sinclair, 1944-1945 (USHS)
box 1, folder 4 : Marguerite Sinclair, 1946-1948 (USHS)
box 1, folder 5 : Marguerite Sinclair and Elizabeth Lauchnor, 1949
(USHS)
box 1, folder 6 : Elizabeth Lauchnor and A. R. Mortensen, 1950
(USHS)
box 1, folder 7 : A. R. Mortensen, January-March 1951 (USHS)
box 1, folder 8 : A. R. Mortensen, April-May 1951 (USHS)
box 1, folder 9 : A. R. Mortensen, June-August 1951 (USHS)
box 1, folder 10 : A. R. Mortensen, September-October 1951
(USHS)
box 1, folder 11 : A. R. Mortensen, November-December 1951
(USHS)
box 1, folder 12 : A. R. Mortensen, 1952-1953 (USHS)
box 1, folder 13 : John James, A. R. Mortensen and Everett Cooley,
1958-1969 (USHS)
box 1, folder 14 : Director of WPA Utah Writers' Project
box 1, folder 15 : The Exploration of the Colorado River and
the High Plateaus of Utah in 187l-1872, 1948-1949
box 1, folder 16 : "The Changing Face of Salt Lake City,"
1958-1959
box 1, folder 17 : Todd I. Berens, with research notes,
1965-1970
box , folder : Drafts of Published and Unpublished Articles
box 2, folder 1- 2 : "The Deseret Alphabet," 1943
box 2, folder 3 : "The Administration of Indian Affairs in Utah,
1851-1858,"
Pacific Historical Review,
November 1948
box 2, folder 4 : "A Bibliography of the Churches of the Dispersion,"
Western Humanities Review, Summer
1953
box 2, folder 5 : "Miles Goodyear and the Founding of Ogden,"
Utah Historical Quarterly, July
1953; October 1953
box 2, folder 6 : "The Changing Face of Salt Lake City,"
Utah Historical Quarterly, July
1959
box 2, folder 7 : "The Changing Face of Salt Lake City,"
Utah Historical Quarterly, July
1959
box 2, folder 8 : "Utah Before the Mormons,"
Utah Historical Quarterly, Winter
1968
box , folder : Book reviews and related correspondence
box 2, folder 9 : Reviews and correspondence
box 2, folder 9 1: Leonard J. Arrington, "Great Basin Kingdom: An
Economic History of the Latter-day Saints."
Utah Historical Quarterly, April
1951
box 2, folder 9 2: Leroy R. Hafen, ed., "The Mountain Men and the Fur
Trade of the Far West, Vols. I and II."
Utah Historical Quarterly,
Spring 1966
box 2, folder 9 3: "Ibid., Vol. III."
Utah Historical Quarterly,
Summer 1967
box 2, folder 9 4: Klaus J. Hansen, "Quest for Empire: The Political
Kingdom of God and the Council of Fifty in Mormon History."
Utah Historical Quarterly, Fall
1967
box 2, folder 9 5: Stanley P. Hirshson, "The Lion of the Lord: A
Biography of Brigham Young."
Utah Historical Quarterly, Fall
1970
box 2, folder 9 6: Leroy R. Hafen, ed., "The Mountain Men and the Fur
Trade of the Far West, Vol. IV."
Utah Historical Quarterly, Fall
1971
box 2, folder 10 : Todd I. Berens, "A Bibliography of the Publications of
Dale Morgan;" other bibliographic material
box , folder : Works Progress Administration Material
box 3, folder 1 : Description of the WPA Collection and Inventory of
Historical Records Survey
box 3, folder 2 : Inventory of WPA Writers' Project Biography
Collection
box 3, folder 3 : Inventory of WPA Writers' Project Authors
Files
box 3, folder 4 : Inventory of WPA Writers' Project Subject
Files
box 3, folder 5 : Inventory of WPA Writers' Project Publications
File
box 3, folder 6 : Subject Heading List for WPA Clipping File
box 3, folder 7 : Miscellaneous Research Notes and Reports
box , folder : Typescript of the
Journal History of the
Church
box , folder : Newspaper Transcripts about the Mormons and the Far
West
box 4, folder 5 : Arkansas
box 4, folder 6 : Illinois, A-U, except
Springfield Register
box 4, folder 7 : Illinois,
Springfield Register
box 5, folder 1 : Illinois, V-Z
box 5, folder 2 : Indiana
box 5, folder 3 : Iowa
box 5, folder 4 : Massachusetts
box 5, folder 5 : Michigan
box 5, folder 6 : New Hampshire
box 5, folder 7 : New York
box 5, folder 8 : North Carolina
box 5, folder 9 : Ohio, A-C
box 5, folder 10 : Ohio, D-
Painesville Republican
box 5, folder 11 : Ohio,
Painesville
Republican-Z
box 5, folder 12 : Pennsylvania
box 5, folder 13 : Vermont
box 5, folder 14 : Washington, D.C.
box 5, folder 15 : Wisconsin
box 6, folder 1 : Missouri, A-M
box 6, folder 2 : Missouri, N-W
box 6, folder 3 : Missouri,
St. Louis Enquirer
box 6, folder 4 : Missouri,
Intelligencer,
1821-1823
box 6, folder 5 : Missouri,
Intelligencer,
1823-1830
box 6, folder 6 : Missouri,
St. Louis Union
box 6, folder 7 : Missouri,
Reporter
box 6, folder 8 : Missouri,
Republican, 1822-1823
box 6, folder 9 : Missouri,
Republican, 1824-1828
box 6, folder 10 : Missouri,
Republican, 1830-1850
box , folder : Deseret News
box 7, folder 1 : 1850
box 7, folder 2 : January-June 1851
box 7, folder 3 : July-December 1851
box 7, folder 4 : January-June 1852
box 7, folder 5 : July-December 1852
box 7, folder 6 : January-June 1853
box 7, folder 7 : July-December 1853
box 7, folder 8 : January-June 1854
box 7, folder 9 : July-December 1854
box 7, folder 10 : January-March 1855
box 7, folder 11 : April-June 1855
box 8, folder 1 : July-September 1855
box 8, folder 2 : October-December 1855
box 8, folder 3 : 1856
box 8, folder 4 : 1857-1859
box 8, folder 5 : l860
box 8, folder 6 : 1861-1900
box 8, folder 7 : 1901-1933
box 8, folder 8 : 1934-1941
box , folder : Miscellaneous Checklists, Transcripts and
Indexes
box 9, folder 1 : Deseret News Checklist, Vols
1-11
box 9, folder 2 : Deseret News Checklist, Vols
12-16
box 9, folder 3 : Deseret Evening News Checklist,
1868
box 9, folder 4 : Daily Union Vedette
Checklist
box 9, folder 5 : The Valley Tan
Checklist
box 9, folder 6 : Transcripts of National Archives Documents,
1852-1857
box 9, folder 7 : Transcripts of National Archives Documents,
1858-1859
box 9, folder 8 : Name Indexes of primary sources for the Far
West
Biographical Note/Historical Note +/-Western history abounds in colorful characters and episodes, but the story of Dale Morgan's triumph over crushing personal handicaps and limited formal training to become one of the West's most tireless researchers and prolific writers is one of the most inspiring stories to emerge from the region. As the author or editor of some forty books and one hundred scholarly articles, many of which are definitive studies, Dale Morgan's place among the first rank of Western historians seems uncontestable. A succession of tragic experiences in his youth seemed to predestine Morgan to dependency and obscurity. Born in Salt Lake City in 1914, Morgan suffered the loss of his father at age four, and his mother was faced with the prospect of raising four children on her meager salary as a schoolteacher. Poverty, though, was not to be his greatest handicap. At age fourteen, Morgan contracted spinal meningitis, which left him totally deaf. Through the help of skillful tutors and his mother, Morgan gradually learned to cope with his handicap and eventually even turned it, in some ways, into an advantage. Largely barred from oral communication, he immersed himself in the printed word. One of the hallmarks of Morgan's later writings was the almost uncanny breadth of reading and research upon which they were based. Also, his deafness freed him from external distractions and made it possible for him to pursue his work with a single-mindedness of which few are capable. Jobs were exceedingly scarce in the 1930s, and during his training at the University of Utah, Morgan carefully chose courses that would develop his most marketable skills -- primarily art and English courses. Ironically, those choices deprived him of training in history, which would become the field in which he made his enduring mark. Upon graduation (B.A. 1937) Morgan luckily found work as an editor on the Work Projects Administration (WPA) Writers Project in Utah. Before long, his writing skill and demanding research standards drew attention, and he became director of the project. Utah: A Guide to the State, which he produced in 1941, was widely acknowledged to be one of the best of the WPA state guides. During the World War II, Morgan worked for the Office of Price Administration in Washington, D.C. During his off hours, he pursued his research on Western history in the repositories of the national capitol. During the three years he spent in Washington, Morgan worked long hours to accumulate the huge file of notes and transcripts that supported many of his later publications. Of even broader importance, perhaps, was the bibliographic work he accomplished during that period. Primarily in the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library, Morgan began a union catalogue of publications by and about the Mormon Church during its first century, 1830-1930. The thousands of cards he assembled at that time, a gift to the Utah State Historical Society in 1952, eventually became the basis of the Historical Society's Union Catalogue and the core of A Mormon Bibliography, 1830-1930, completed by Chad Flake. It was also during the war that Morgan began the stream of publications that made his national reputation as a historian: The Humbolt, Highroad of the West (1943); The Great Salt Lake (1947); and the book that many regard as his masterpiece, Jedediah Smith and the Opening of the West (1953). In 1954, Morgan joined the staff at the Bancroft Library of the University of California at Berkeley. Though he continued, on his own time, to add to his torrent of publications on a variety of topics in Western history, the main fruit of his employment there was the series A Guide to the Manuscript Collections of the Bancroft Library (with George P. Hammond, 1963- ). As an exhaustive guide to one of the best manuscript collections relating to Western history, Morgan's Bancroft Guide ranks with A Mormon Bibliography as one of the indispensable bibliographic tools for scholars dealing in Western Americana. At the time of his death in 1971, Morgan had still not achieved the professional recognition that his record of first-rate publications deserved; some academics referred to him as a dilettante and an amateur. Partly, no doubt, his neglect resulted from his limitations in oral communication. Morgan's professional activity was almost solely confined to his research, publications and correspondence; he read only two papers at historical conferences in his entire career and never held office in a professional organization. Thus, he was cut off from much of the personal contact with colleagues which plays such a large role in professional advancement. Also, his lack of academic degrees and employment greatly retarded his acceptance by the community of historical scholars. He did receive however, two Guggenheim Research grants, was made a Fellow of the Utah State Historical Society and received the Distinguished Alumni award from the University of Utah. Those who became acquainted with Morgan, though, found him a charming personality, a loyal friend, and, in spite of his impressive accomplishments, the humblest of men. His letters reveal an intense scholar, but they also reveal a lively sense of humor and an unfailing concern for the personal well-being of his friends and colleagues. Content Description +/-This collection, together with those at the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Utah, is one of the three major collections of Dale Morgan papers. It consists of the files of correspondence, manuscript drafts, and other documents that the Utah State Historical Society accumulated during its association with Morgan over a period of almost thirty years. Besides some twelve linear centimeters of correspondence, the collection includes an exhaustive inventory of the WPA Collection now housed at the Society, and transcripts and checklists of numerous Eastern newspapers, Niles' Register, the Deseret News, and the Journal History of the Church. Researchers should also check other Morgan listings in the Society's Manuscript Catalogue, for this collection by no means exhausts the Dale Morgan holdings. The correspondence is arranged chronologically, with the exception of several groups of letters that were left intact as found: for example, the correspondence relating to the collection of documents on John Wesley Powell's exploration of the Colorado River, which Morgan edited for the Utah Historical Quarterly in 1948 and 1949, the correspondence relating to his "The Changing Face of Salt Lake City," which appeared in the same journal in 1959, and correspondence with Todd I. Berens from 1965 to 1970. The chronologically arranged correspondence reaches its greatest frequency in 1951, while Morgan was editing and completing for publication J. Roderic Korn's West From Fort Bridger. Readers approaching Morgan's correspondence for the first time will be stunned at the industry and energy of the man. His letters sometimes reach six or seven pages of single-spaced elite type, all of it as well reasoned and gracefully written as his books and articles. When one considers the bibliographic work and other research he was doing at the same time, in addition to his full-time government job, the labor he put into his correspondence seems superhuman. Several themes recur prominently in the correspondence, but none so dramatically as Morgan's burning devotion to the Utah State Historical Society and his earnest desire to see it achieve a strong financial base, adequate housing, an extensive library of books and manuscripts, and a professional staff. It would be only the slightest exaggeration, in fact, to say that during the 1940s, Dale Morgan in effect ran the Society from his Arlington, Virginia apartment. Thereafter, in the early 1950s, he provided such a prolific quantity of free advice and editorial services that he in effect constituted an extra staff member. Morgan's letters also reveal his masterful skill as a historian and his tenacious devotion to accuracy in even the minutest detail as well as his curiously limited conception of the nature of the historical process. History, to Dale Morgan, meant primarily geographical movement. Larger social forces and the role of personality did not entirely escape him, but he was always at his best when meticulously reconstructing the route followed by a mountain man or emigrant party. On occasion, though, Morgan let his passion for minutiae trap him into applying major emphasis to relatively minor points. Finally, Morgan's correspondence reveals his bright sense of humor. Upon being informed by Director A. Russell Mortensen of the Society's tentative plans in 1951 to move into the Kearns Mansion, Morgan wanted to know, "How fireproof is that place? And how sure could the Society be that its collection would be safe? A burned-up governor is easily replaced, but not so a library." (Morgan to Mortensen, 19 July 1951). Immediately following the correspondence is a collection of drafts of published and unpublished works, most of which appeared in the Utah Historical Quarterly. The manuscripts range in length from Morgan's two-part study of "Miles Goodyear and the Founding of Ogden" to several brief book reviews. Many of the drafts bear editorial marks and emendations that may prove useful to scholars interested in the evolution of Morgan's thought and style. At the end of that box is a folder containing a bibliography of Morgan's publications compiled by Todd I. Berens, and copies of the Morgan entries in the Historical Society's bibliography file. An exhaustive Morgan bibliography has yet to be assembled, but the items in that folder are a good place for Morgan researchers to begin. The rest of the collection -- by far the largest part -- consists mainly of research notes that Western historians will still find extremely useful. Box 3, for example, contains an exhaustive inventory of the WPA Collection, both the Historical Records Survey and the Writers' Project. Morgan's inventory is still the only finding aid for what is one of the potentially most useful research collections ever compiled for Utah history. The only similar collection that would rival the WPA files in compactness and variety for Utah historians is the Journal History of the Church, a monumental scrapbook of news items, letters, diary excerpts, and the like, which constitutes a daily history of the Mormon Church since its beginning. The Journal History, until recently, was much less accessible to scholars than it presently is, and Morgan's transcripts of it that fill Boxes 4 and 5 were thus more valuable at one time than they now are. Today, the Journal History is readily available on microfilm in several libraries. Boxes 6 through 11 contain the most useful items for students of Utah and Western history. They consist of extensive transcripts of newspapers in most Eastern states during the first half of the nineteenth century. Morgan excerpted from those papers virtually every significant reference to the Mormons and the Far West. There are also transcripts of Niles' Register, which was a magazine of general news similar to today's Time or Newsweek, and transcripts of Deseret News stories on domestic Utah events. The Deseret News transcripts are fairly detailed from 1850 to about 1861, then they become more sketchy until 1941. Finally, there are transcripts of the National Archives material assembled under Morgan's direction during the research for his article "The Administration of Indian Affairs in Utah, 1851-1858" (1948) checklists for two Utah newspapers, the Union Vedette and the Valley Tan, and name indexes for several important primary sources for Western history -- a monumental project Morgan began but did not live to complete. Given the absence of indexes for practically all of those publications, the transcripts found in this collection provide an invaluable research shortcut for scholars interested in virtually any topic in Western history during the first half of the nineteenth century. Also, most of the newspapers covered in this collection are available only through expensive travel or time-consuming inter-library loan procedures, so the Morgan transcripts are especially handy. Thus, the Dale Morgan papers rank high in research value among the Utah State Historical Society's manuscript collections. Besides revealing the mind, the craft, and the heart of one of the greatest Western historians, they make available to the scholar the fruits of Morgan's gargantuan research energies across a wide range of materials. Collection Use +/-Restrictions on Access: Restrictions on Access Administrative Information +/-Arrangement: Creator: Morgan, Dale Lowell, 1914-1971. Language: English. Sponsor: Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008 Quantity: 10 boxes (5 linear ft.) and 3 reels of microfilm Language of the Finding Aid: Finding aid written in Englishin Latin script EAD Creation Date: 1999. |