Register of the Juanita Leone Leavitt Pulsipher Brooks Papers,

Table of Contents

Collection Overview

Collection Inventory+/-

Biographical Note/Historical Note

Content Description

Collection Use

Administrative Information

Collection Overview +/-

Title: Juanita Leone Leavitt Pulsipher Brooks Papers
Dates: 1928-1981 (inclusive)
Collection Number: Mss B 103
Summary: Historian. Correspondence, diaries, research notes, manuscripts, speeches. Correspondence is arranged chronologically and includes many significant correspondents: Nels Anderson, LeRoy Hafen, Austin Fife, Dale Morgan, Charles Kelly, Stanley S. Ivins, Gustive O. Larson and many others. Covers entire professional writing career, 1934-1971. The large sections of unpublished manuscripts are arranged alphabetically. A parallel group of manuscripts by other authors are ordered alphabetically by author. Beginning with box 14 are a set of diaries, biographical notes and autobiographies of many southern Utah pioneers. These were collected and transcribed during the 1930s. Her notes on various other subjects, newspaper clippings, and miscellaneous materials compose the final ten boxes. See register for detailed listing.
Repository: Utah State Historical Society

Collection Inventory +/-

Box Folder Contents
box , folder : Correspondence
box 1, folder 1 : 1923-1935
box 1, folder 2 : 1936
box 1, folder 3 : 1937
box 1, folder 4 : 1938-1940
box 1, folder 5 : 1941
box 1, folder 6 : 1942-1943
box 1, folder 7 : 1944
box 1, folder 8 : January-April 1945
box 1, folder 9 : May-August 1945
box 1, folder 10 : September-December 1945
box 1, folder 11 : January-April 1946
box 1, folder 12 : May-August 1946
box 1, folder 13 : Sep-December 1946
box 2, folder 1 : January-April 1947
box 2, folder 2 : May-August 1947
box 2, folder 3 : September-December 1947
box 2, folder 4 : January-April 1948
box 2, folder 5 : May-September 1948
box 2, folder 6 : October-December 1948
box 2, folder 7 : January-May 1949
box 2, folder 8 : June-August 1949
box 2, folder 9 : September-December 1949
box 2, folder 10 : January-June 1950
box 2, folder 11 : July-December 1950
box 2, folder 12 : January-February 1951
box 2, folder 13 : March-July 1951
box 2, folder 14 : August-December 1951
box 3, folder 1 : 1952
box 3, folder 2 : January-July 1953
box 3, folder 3 : August-December 1953
box 3, folder 4 : January-July 1954
box 3, folder 5 : August-December 1954
box 3, folder 6 : 1955
box 3, folder 7 : January-Feb 1956
box 3, folder 8 : March 1956
box 3, folder 9 : April-July 1956
box 3, folder 10 : August-December 1956
box 3, folder 11 : 1957
box 4, folder 1 : January-June 1958
box 4, folder 2 : July-December 1958
box 4, folder 3 : January-July 1959
box 4, folder 4 : August-December 1959
box 4, folder 5 : January-June 1960
box 4, folder 6 : July-December 1960
box 4, folder 7 : January-June 1961
box 4, folder 8 : July-October 1961
box 4, folder 9 : November 1961
box 4, folder 10 : December 1961
box 4, folder 11 : January 1962
box 4, folder 12 : February-March 1962
box 4, folder 13 : April-July 1962
box 5, folder 1 : August-September 1962
box 5, folder 2 : October 1962
box 5, folder 3 : November-December 1962
box 5, folder 4 : January-February 1963
box 5, folder 5 : March-April 1963
box 5, folder 6 : May-July 1963
box 5, folder 7 : August-October 1963
box 5, folder 8 : November-December 1963
box 5, folder 9 : January-February 1964
box 5, folder 10 : March-April 1964
box 5, folder 11 : May-June 1964
box 5, folder 12 : July-December 1964
box 6, folder 1 : January-July 1965
box 6, folder 2 : August-December 1965
box 6, folder 3 : January-February 1966
box 6, folder 4 : March-April 1966
box 6, folder 5 : May-June 1966
box 6, folder 6 : July-September 1966
box 6, folder 7 : October-December 1966
box 6, folder 8 : January-March 1967
box 6, folder 9 : April-June 1967
box 6, folder 10 : July-December 1967
box 6, folder 11 : January-August 1968
box 6, folder 12 : September-December 1968
box 7, folder 1 : January-May 1969
box 7, folder 2 : June-July 1969
box 7, folder 3 : August-December 1969
box 7, folder 4 : January-March 1970
box 7, folder 5 : April-December 1970
box 7, folder 6 : 1971
box 7, folder 7 : 1972
box 7, folder 8 : 1973
box 7, folder 9 : 1974-1978
box 7, folder 10 : n.d.
box 7, folder 11 : n.d.
box , folder : Diaries
box 7, folder 12 : Juanita Brooks, 1933-1936
box , folder : Eulogies and tributes
box 8, folder 1 : Brimhall, Dean R.
box 8, folder 2 : Bruhn, Arthur F.
box 8, folder 3 : Cox, V. Loraine
box 8, folder 4 : Cox, Warren
box 8, folder 5 : Fordham, Karl
box 8, folder 6 : Gubler, Archie
box 8, folder 7 : Harrison, Gladys
box 8, folder 8 : Huntsman, S. Ralph
box 8, folder 9 : Jarvis, Mabel
box 8, folder 10 : Johnson, Annie C.
box 8, folder 11 : Louie?
box 8, folder 12 : McIntire, Edith Brooks Cottam
box 8, folder 13 : Romney, Roxie S.
box 8, folder 14 : Thurston, Mrs.
box 8, folder 15 : Woodbury, Jillyn
box 8, folder 16 : Woodbury, John T.
box , folder : Speeches
box 8, folder 17 : "Climb, Each His Mountain"
box 8, folder 18 : "The Dixie Project"
box 8, folder 19 : "Dixie Vignettes"
box 8, folder 20 : "High Levels of Leadership"
box 8, folder 21 : Jacob Hamblin Home Dedication
box 8, folder 22 : "John D. Lee"
box 8, folder 23 : "The Look Ahead"
box 8, folder 24 : "The Role of Woman in a Changing World"
box 8, folder 25 : "The 'Seeing Eye' in Reading History"
box 8, folder 26 : "The Settlement of Dixie"
box 8, folder 27 : "That Untravell'd World" (ULA Convention), 18 Mar 1961
box 8, folder 28 : "Why I Am a Democrat"
box 8, folder 29 : "Women In the Arts" and Two Untitled Speeches on Women
box 8, folder 30 : Three Inspirational Addresses
box 8, folder 31 : Speech at USU Summer School
box , folder : Manuscripts
box 8, folder 32 : "Across the Nevada Desert"
box 8, folder 33 : "The Adventures of a Sheriff's Wife"
box 8, folder 34 : "And One Other Man"
box 8, folder 35 : "The Arizona Strip"
box 8, folder 36 : "Backgrounds for Mormon Social Security"
box 8, folder 37 : "Beyond the Stars"
box 8, folder 38 : "A Bit of Switzerland in the Desert"
box 8, folder 39 : "A Bonanza For Writers"
box 8, folder 40 : "But Thinking Makes It So"
box 8, folder 41 : "Camp Floyd"
box 8, folder 42 : "The Challenge of the Centennial"
box 8, folder 43 : "Clear, Cool Water"
box 8, folder 44 : "A Close-up on Polygamy"
box 8, folder 45 : "A College Education: What I Think It Has Done For Me"
box 8, folder 46 : "The Contract"
box 8, folder 47 : "The Davidson Tragedy"
box 8, folder 48 : "Dudley Obeys Counsel"
box 8, folder 49 : "The First One Hundred Years"
box 9, folder 1 : Fawcett Family
box 9, folder 2 : "Governor Lee and the Schools of Utah"
box 9, folder 3 : Bloomington and Central Wards
box 9, folder 4 : "I Help to Enforce the Law"
box 9, folder 5 : "I Know What It Is Like to be Dead"
box 9, folder 6 : "I Married a Family"
box 9, folder 7 : "An Incident in the Life of Juanita Leavitt and Leonard Ernest Pulsipher"
box 9, folder 8 : "Indian Relations on the Mormon Frontier"
box 9, folder 9 : "Indian Relations on the Mormon Frontier" [draft]
box 9, folder 10 : "Jack Weston: Desert Outlaw"
box 9, folder 11 : "Jacob Hamblin: Peacemaker and Missionary to the Indians"
box 9, folder 12-13 : "Jacob Hamblin: Apostle to the Lamanites"
box 9, folder 14 : Jacob Hamblin
box 9, folder 15 : "Jest A Copyin' -- Word F'r Word"
box 9, folder 16 : "John D. Lee"
box 9, folder 17 : "LDS Problems in Education (As I See Them)"
box 9, folder 18 : "The LDS Welfare Plan in St. George Stake"
box 9, folder 19 : "Let Us Be United"
box 9, folder 20 : "Life Beautiful"
box 9, folder 21 : Essays Published in Lore of Faith and Folly, ed. Thomas E. Cheney, Juanita Brooks, and Austin E. Fife
box 9, folder 22 : "Lucy"
box 10, folder 1 : "The Lying-in Room"
box 10, folder 2 : "The Mail"
box 10, folder 3 : "Mariah Huntsman Leavitt: Midwife of the Desert Frontier"
box 10, folder 4 : "Mormon Healing of Animals"
box 10, folder 5 : "The Mormons in Carson County, Utah Territory"
box 10, folder 6 : "The Mormon Pioneer Speaks Through His Records"
box 10, folder 7 : "Mormon Social Security in the Balance"
box 10, folder 8 : "The Mountain Meadows: Historic Stopping Place on the Spanish Trail"
box 10, folder 9 : "My Tom Sawyer Town: Bunkerville, Nevada"
box 10, folder 10 : "Old Toab"
box 10, folder 11 : "Old Tubucks"
box 10, folder 12 : "On the Bus"
box 10, folder 13 : "On the Ragged Edge: The Life and Times of Dudley Leavitt"
box 10, folder 14 : "Our Wandering Children"
box 10, folder 15 : "The Outsider"
box 10, folder 16 : "Pictures in Stone"
box 10, folder 17 : "A Place of Refuge: Backgrounds of Panaca, Nevada"
box 10, folder 18 : "Please Arise"
box 10, folder 19 : "Polygamy at Short Creek"
box 10, folder 20 : "Power to You!"
box 10, folder 21 : "Quicksand and Cactus" (fragment)
box 10, folder 22 : "Religion in the Pursuit of Happiness"
box 10, folder 23 : "A Report on the History and Uses of the Green River From the Point Where it Enters the State of Utah to Its Confluence with the San Rafael"
box 10, folder 24 : Book reviews
box 10, folder 24 1: Gloria Griffin Cline, Exploring the Great Basin
box 10, folder 24 2: Norman F. Furniss, The Mormon Conflict
box 10, folder 24 3: Charles S. Peterson, Take Up Your Mission
box 10, folder 25 : "A Romance of the Trail"
box 10, folder 26 : "Samuel Reber, Sr."
box 10, folder 27 : "Sang-Froid"
box 10, folder 28 : "Saved From the Flame"
box 10, folder 29 : "Selah"
box 10, folder 30 : "The Sentinel of Kodachrome Flat"
box 10, folder 31 : "Short Creek: Arizona's Grand Pre"
box 10, folder 32 : "Short Creek's Latest 'Raid'"
box 10, folder 33 : "Side-lights on the Mail Service in St. George and Southern Utah"
box 11, folder 1 : "Sins of Omission in Presenting Mormon History"
box 11, folder 2 : "The Southern Indian Mission"
box 11, folder 3 : "So You've Married a Family"
box 11, folder 4 : "The St. George Temple"
box 11, folder 5 : "St. George, Utah"
box 11, folder 6 : "St. George, Washington County, Utah"
box 11, folder 7 : "St. George, Utah: A Community Portrait"
box 11, folder 8 : "Suggestions For a Guide Tour of St. George"
box 11, folder 9 : "Ten Days in the County Hospital"
box 11, folder 10 : "That Mountain Meadows Thing Again"
box 11, folder 11 : "That Untravell'd World"
box 11, folder 12 : "This is Your Life: Mary Hafen Leavitt"
box 11, folder 13 : "To See Life Steadily and See It Whole"
box 11, folder 14 : "Trippingly Off the Tongue"
box 11, folder 15 : "The Unmarried Woman and Polygamy"
box 11, folder 16 : "Two Gun Man"
box 11, folder 17 : "Unsatisfied"
box 11, folder 18 : "Western History as a Basis for Fiction"
box 11, folder 19 : "What Will the Neighbors Say?"
box 11, folder 20 : Utah Historical Quarterly Articles on Utah's Dixie
box 11, folder 21 : Papers Written for University of Utah English Courses
box , folder : Manuscripts by other authors
box 11, folder 22 : Alter, J. Cecil, "Utah Culture"
box 11, folder 23 : Anderson, Nels, "An Introductory Note to a Skeptical Friend"
box 11, folder 24 : Anderson, Nels, "Utah's Unemployment Problem"
box 11, folder 25 : Arrington, Leonard J., "Review of A Mormon Chronicle"
box 11, folder 26 : Arrington, Leonard J., "The Secularization of Mormon History and Culture"
box 11, folder 27 : Arrington, Leonard J., "Trends in Mormon Economic Policy"
box 11, folder 28 : Atkin, Rudger C., "My Classification as a Cattle Man"
box 11, folder 29 : Banfield, E. C., "Western County"
box 11, folder 30 : Acceptance Speech, USHS Annual Meeting
box 11, folder 31 : Brooks, Walter S., "Research Paper on Early Recreation in Utah's Dixie"
box 11, folder 32 : Bush, Alfred L. and Klaus W. Hansen, "Notes Toward a Definition of the Council of Fifty"
box 11, folder 33 : Caldwell, Gaylon L., "The Development of Mormon Ethics"
box 11, folder 34 : Christensen, Harold T., "Isms of Mormonism"
box 11, folder 35 : Christmas, Robert A., Poems
box 12, folder 1 : Coleman, Evans, "Missionary Reminiscences"
box 12, folder 2 : Coleman, Evans, Miscellaneous MSS on Thatcher, Arizona and Other Topics
box 12, folder 3 : Fife, Austin E. and Alta S., "Mormon Folk Songs"
box 12, folder 4 : Fife, Austin E., Miscellaneous Folklore Manuscripts
box 12, folder 5 : Fifield, Allen, "Lansford W. Hastings: His Influence in the Settlement of Utah"
box 12, folder 6 : Fifield, Allen, "Wagons East Across the Sierras"
box 12, folder 7 : Fitzgerald, John W., "Heaven's Waiting Here Below," (Poem); "Religion and Politics," and "The Race Problem in the Mormon Church as Seen By an LDS Chaplain"
box 12, folder 8 : Gardner, B. Delworth, N. Keith Roberts, and E. Boyd Wennergren, Analysis of Ezra Taft Benson's speech, "We Must Become Alert and Informed"
box 12, folder 9 : Graff, Lucy R. and Owen Sanders, Poems
box 12, folder 10 : Hite, Cass, "The Trail of Sixty Snows"
box 12, folder 11 : Hutchins, Robert H., "The Organization and Subject Matter of General Education"
box 12, folder 12 : Ivins, Stanley S., "The Moses Thatcher Case"
box 12, folder 13 : Jarvis, Mabel, Pageants
box 12, folder 14 : Jarvis, Mabel, Miscellaneous WPA essays
box 12, folder 15 : Jensen, Edgar M., "The Contribution of Religious Experience to Art"
box 12, folder 16 : Johnson, LaVell, "The Last Homesteaders"
box 12, folder 17 : Johnson, LaVell, "McCornick, 1919-1929"
box 12, folder 18 : Jones, Wesley M., Miscellaneous studies of the Book of Mormon
box 12, folder 19 : Kimball, Spencer W., "Thy Son Liveth"
box 12, folder 20 : Kraut, Ogden, Letter to Elder Mark E. Peterson
box 12, folder 21 : Kraut, Ogden, "The Little Known Discourse"
box 12, folder 22 : Lambert, A. C., "First Principles in Administration"
box 12, folder 23 : Lambert, A. C., "The Great Dilemma"
box 12, folder 24 : Lambert, A. C., "The Localism of Joseph Smith's Revelations"
box 12, folder 25 : Lambert, A. C., "Religion is Emotion"
box 12, folder 26 : Lambert, A. C., Miscellaneous Manuscripts
box 12, folder 27 : Larson, Don, "A Short History of the Scandinavian Mission"
box 13, folder 1 : Luce, Ray, "Jesse C. Little and the Mormon Emigration to the West"
box 13, folder 2 : Lyman, Albert R., "Josephine C. Wood -- Nurse of the San Juan Frontier"
box 13, folder 3 : Marston, Otis R., "Dock," "Water Transport on the Green River in Utah"
box 13, folder 4 : Mathias, O. Boyd, "The Mormon Church and Its Negro Doctrine"
box 13, folder 5 : Meyer, George A., "A Critique of 'Mormonism and the Negro'"
box 13, folder 6 : Miles, George E., Speech
box 13, folder 7 : Miller, Albert E., "Early Homes in St. George"
box 13, folder 8 : Morley, Blythe and Dale L. Morgan, Reviews of Virginia Sorensen's The Evening and the Morning
box 13, folder 9 : Mulder, William, "Mormonism and Literature"
box 13, folder 10 : Nelson, Victor Pershing, "Education -- The Way to an Abundant Life"
box 13, folder 11 : Nicholes, Joseph K., "The Love of Truth"
box 13, folder 12 : Olson, Sigurd F., "The Meaning of Wilderness"
box 13, folder 13 : Peterson, Levi S., "Juanita Brooks, the Mormon Historian as Tragedian"
box 13, folder 14 : Rea, Ralph R., Acceptance Speech at Mountain Meadows Monument
box 13, folder 15 : Rice, Leonard, "The Back To Jackson County Tradition"
box 13, folder 16 : Roberts, B. H., "A Parallel"
box 13, folder 17 : Sandgren, Edward A., "Story of Our Hymns"
box 13, folder 18 : Sangiovanni, Susanna Rogers, "An Incident in the Life of Susanna Rogers Sangiovanni"
box 13, folder 19 : Stern, Norton B., "California Jewish History: An Annotated Bibliography"
box 13, folder 20 : Walker, Joseph, Miscellaneous Manuscripts on Southern Utah History
box 13, folder 21 : Whipple, Walt, "The Lost Ten Tribes"
box 13, folder 22 : Whitaker, John M., "Gems, Notes, Lessons, Measurements in Religious Education"
box 13, folder 23 : Wight, Edgar L., "Latter-day Saint Colonization in Canada"
box 13, folder 24 : Williamson, Edward, "Kaskaskia"
box 13, folder 25 : Williamson, John Wesley, Book reviews of John Doyle Lee
box 13, folder 26 : Woodbury, Angus M., "Ecological Aspects of Health and Disease"
box 13, folder 27 : Woodbury, Angus M., Miscellaneous Mormon Notes
box 13, folder 28 : Woodbury, Grace, "Peaceful Co-existence with a Scientist"
box 13, folder 29 : Zucker, Louis C., "The Jews of Salt Lake City -- Our Background"
box 13, folder 30 : (MWP), "Additions to Brodie, No Man Knows My History
box 13, folder 31 : Anon, "Culture" [Pageant Script]
box 13, folder 32 : Anon, "First Picture" [Pageant Script]
box 13, folder 33 : Anon, "Governor's Report on the Status of Women in Utah" (1964)
box 13, folder 34 : Anon, "Is This the Place?" [Pageant Script]
box 13, folder 35 : Anon, "The Skarin Books," and "Revelation -- True or False?"
box 13, folder 36 : Anon, "Why the Chimes Rang"
box 13, folder 37 : Anon, "The Aiken Massacre"
box 13, folder 38 : Anon, "Some Frontier Folklore Connected With Birth"
box 13, folder 39 : Anon, "Instrumental Music in Utah" and "Civic Music"
box , folder : Pioneer diaries and autobiographies
box 14, folder 1 : Adams, William
box 14, folder 2 : Andrus, James
box 14, folder 3 : Andrus, Manomas Lavina Gibson
box 14, folder 4 : Arthur, Christopher Jones
box 14, folder 5 : Ashworth, William B.
box 14, folder 6 : Atkin, Henry T.
box 14, folder 7 : Averett, Elijah
box 14, folder 8 : Averett, Martha Alexander
box 14, folder 9 : Averett, Murray Elijah
box 14, folder 10 : Barton, William Penn
box 14, folder 11 : Bastian, Jacob
box 14, folder 12 : Bean, George W.
box 14, folder 13 : Bentley, Richard
box 14, folder 14 : Bigler, Henry William
box 14, folder 15 : Bingham, Thomas Sr. and Jr.
box 14, folder 16 : Black, Amelia T.
box 14, folder 17 : Black, Joseph S.
box 14, folder 18 : Bleak, Alice Louisa Barlow
box 14, folder 19 : Bleak, Jane Thompson
box 14, folder 20 : Bodilly, Robert
box 14, folder 21 : Boston, Lucy M.
box 14, folder 22 : Bowler, Francis Joseph
box 14, folder 23 : Bracken, William Albert
box 14, folder 24 : Branch, Jane Blake
box 14, folder 25 : Bridgeforth, Ruffin
box 14, folder 26 : Bringhurst, Mary J.
box 14, folder 27 : Bulkley, Newman Summers
box 14, folder 28 : Bunker, Edward and Elethra Calista
box 14, folder 29 : Burgess, Melancthon Wheeler
box 14, folder 30 : Butler, John Lowe
box 14, folder 31 : Canfield, Lyman
box 14, folder 32 : Canfield, Maratha
box 14, folder 33 : Carroll, Charles Negus and Kezia Giles
box 15, folder 1 : Carter, Sophronia
box 15, folder 2 : Chaffin, Lewis Rice
box 15, folder 3 : Chaffin, Sarah M.
box 15, folder 4 : Clark, Albert DeLorma and Mary Ann Brown
box 15, folder 5 : Coates, Benjamin Franklin
box 15, folder 6 : Coleman, Prime Thornton
box 15, folder 7 : Cottam, Thomas
box 15, folder 8 : Cox, Martha, Warren and Dell
box 15, folder 9 : Craig, Mrs.
box 15, folder 10 : Cropper, Thomas Waters
box 15, folder 11 : Crosby, Jesse W.
box 15, folder 12 : Crosby, Lena Albertina Mathis
box 15, folder 13 : Day, Thomas
box 15, folder 14 : Defrieze, Lady Mary Ventom
box 15, folder 15 : Edwards, Esias
box 15, folder 16 : Empey, William Adam
box 15, folder 17 : Eyring, Deseret Fawcett
box 15, folder 18 : Eyring, Henry
box 15, folder 19 : Farnsworth, Moses Franklin
box 15, folder 20 : Fawcett, George W.
box 15, folder 21 : Fawcett, Hannah
box 15, folder 22 : Fawcett, William
box 15, folder 23 : Flanigan, William Wallace and David Alma
box 15, folder 24 : Flinn, William
box 15, folder 25 : Flint, Dr. Thomas
box 15, folder 26 : Forsyth, Thomas
box 15, folder 27 : Gardner, Robert Jr.
box 15, folder 28 : Gates, Jacob Forsbery
box 15, folder 29 : Gifford, Samuel H.
box 15, folder 30 : Gifford, Samuel K.
box 15, folder 31 : Hammond, William Wallace
box 15, folder 32 : Hardy, Heber Herbert and Betsey Leavitt
box 15, folder 33 : Hardy, Josiah Guile
box 15, folder 34 : Harris, Lynndyl Aaron
box 15, folder 35 : Haskell, Thales Hastings
box 15, folder 36 : Higbee, Mrs., Roan Spilsbury, Mrs. Slack, Mr. and Mrs. David McMullin, Wilma Hartman
box 15, folder 37 : Hirschi, David
box 15, folder 38 : Hobson, Jesse
box 15, folder 39 : Houston, James and Thomas
box 15, folder 40 : Huggins, Dr. Silas Gardner
box 15, folder 41 : Humphreys, Charles E.
box 15, folder 42 : Hunt, Elizabeth Vaughan
box 15, folder 43 : Jarvis, Bingham
box 15, folder 44 : Jarvis, George Frederick
box 15, folder 45 : Jarvis, Heber
box 16, folder 1 : Jepson, James Jr.
box 16, folder 2 : Judd, Zadie and Mary Minerva Dart
box 16, folder 3 : Kimball, Lucy Walker
box 16, folder 4 : Lake, George
box 16, folder 5 : Lang, William
box 16, folder 6 : Larson, Mons
box 16, folder 7 : Laub, George
box 16, folder 8 : Leany, Hyrum
box 16, folder 9 : Leavitt, Mary Ella Huntsman
box 16, folder 10 : Leavitt, Mary Hafen
box 16, folder 11 : Leavitt, Sarah S.
box 16, folder 12 : Lee, William
box 16, folder 13 : Lightner, Mary Elizabeth Rollins
box 16, folder 14 : Little, James A.
box 16, folder 15 : Lund, Brigham James
box 16, folder 16 : Lyman, Amasa M.
box 16, folder 17 : Macfarlane, John M.
box 16, folder 18 : Mansfield, Ephraim M. and Mary Ann Mansfield Bentley
box 16, folder 19 : Marlow, Elizabeth Jane Stratton
box 16, folder 20 : Martineau, James H.
box 16, folder 21 : Mathis, Wallace B.
box 16, folder 22 : McAllister, John D. T.
box 16, folder 23 : McAllister, William J. F.
box 16, folder 24 : McIntire, William Patterson
box 16, folder 25 : McQuarrie-Odlum Families
box 16, folder 26 : Miller, Albert E.
box 16, folder 27 : Miller, Henry W.
box 16, folder 28 : Mills, Elvira Pamela
box 16, folder 29 : Moss, David Omison
box 16, folder 30 : Musser, Mary Elizabeth White
box 17, folder 1 : Neibaur, Alexander
box 17, folder 2 : Nelson, Lydia Ann Lake
box 17, folder 3 : Nielsen, John
box 17, folder 4 : Nielson, Peter Sr.
box 17, folder 5 : Nixon, Hannah Isabell Fawcett
box 17, folder 6 : Orton, Joseph
box 17, folder 7 : Pace, James
box 17, folder 8 : Pace, Susan Amelia Clark
box 17, folder 9 : Peterson, Ansine M.
box 17, folder 10 : Pitkin, George Orrin
box 17, folder 11 : Platt, Benjamin
box 17, folder 12 : Pulsipher, John
box 17, folder 13 : Pulsipher, John
box 17, folder 14 : Pymm, John Donald
box 17, folder 15 : Rees, Martin and Jane Williams
box 17, folder 16 : Richards, Mary Ann Parker
box 17, folder 17 : Richards, Samuel W.
box 17, folder 18 : Rogers, George Thomas
box 17, folder 19 : Rogerson, Lydia Holmes Fuller
box 17, folder 20 : Rothrock, George A.
box 17, folder 21 : Roulet, Juliet
box 18, folder 1 : Rowley, Ann Jewell
box 18, folder 2 : Savage, Levi Mathers
box 18, folder 3 : Schmutz, John and Clorinda Schlappi
box 18, folder 4 : Schmutz, Susanna Stutzenegger
box 18, folder 5 : Searce, William
box 18, folder 6 : Seegmiller, Charles W. and Mary Ann Platt
box 18, folder 7 : Sessions, Peregrine
box 18, folder 8 : Smith, Charles
box 18, folder 9 : Smith, Joseph Stanford
box 18, folder 10 : Smith, Ruth
box 18, folder 11 : Snow, Edward Hunter
box 18, folder 12 : Snow, Joseph S.
box 18, folder 13 : Snow, Mary Alice Gardner
box 18, folder 14 : Spillsbury, Arilla Wilson
box 18, folder 15 : Sproul, Andrew
box 18, folder 16 : Staheli, Franklin
box 18, folder 17 : Staheli, John
box 18, folder 18 : Standley, Michael
box 18, folder 19 : Stout, Allen Joseph
box 18, folder 20 : Stucki, Samuel
box 18, folder 21 : Syphus, Edward Henry and Eleanor Amanda Beebe
box 18, folder 22 : Theobald, William
box 18, folder 23 : Turnbow, Samuel
box 18, folder 24 : Warrell, Thomas
box 18, folder 25 : Wheatly, Mordecai
box 18, folder 26 : Whipple, John Lytle
box 18, folder 27 : Whitehead, A. R.
box 18, folder 28 : Whitehead, Clara Myrtle Watson
box 18, folder 29 : Whitehead, George F.
box 18, folder 30 : Winsor, Anson P.
box 18, folder 31 : Winsor, Sarah Alydia Terry
box 18, folder 32 : Winters, Mary Ann Stearns
box 18, folder 33 : Woodbury, Frances Goodard
box 18, folder 34 : Woodbury, John Stillman
box 18, folder 35 : Woodbury, John T.
box 18, folder 36 : Wooley, Edwin G.
box 18, folder 37 : Wooley, Flora Snow
box 18, folder 38 : Young, Alfred Douglas
box 18, folder 39 : Fragments of Pioneer Diaries and Autobiographies
box , folder : Family and Genealogical Records
box 19, folder 1-4 : Leavitt Family Notes and Records
box 19, folder 5-9 : Pulsipher Family Notes and Records
box 19, folder 10-18 : George Brooks Notes and Records
box 20, folder 1-18 : William Brooks Notes and Records
box 20, folder 19- 20 : Juanita Brooks Personal Records
box 20, folder 21 : Grant LeRoy Brooks
box 20, folder 22-23 : Robert Gordon Brooks
box 20, folder 24 : Llewellyn Albert Brooks
box 20, folder 25-26 : Miscellaneous Family Records
box 21, folder 1-10 : Genealogical Records
box , folder : Legal and financial records
box 21, folder 11-23 : Legal Records
box 21, folder 24-25 : Financial Records
box , folder : Primary sources
box 22, folder 1 : Territorial Militia Orders, Muster Rolls, etc., 1857-1858
box , folder : Research Notes
box 23-24, folder : St. George and Washington County
box 25, folder 1-4 : St. George and Washington County
box 25, folder 5-15 : John D. Lee and the Mountain Meadows Massacre
box 26-27, folder : John D. Lee and the Mountain Meadows Massacre
box 28, folder 1-5 : Mormon Battalion Mission
box 28, folder 7-13 : Jacob Hamblin
box 28, folder 14-19 : William H. Dame
box 28, folder 20-21 : Isaac C. Haight
box 29, folder 1-6 : Hosea Stout
box 29, folder 7-10 : Thomas D. Brown
box 29, folder 11-17 : Jews in Utah and Idaho
box 30, folder 1 : Indians and Mormon-Indian Relations
box , folder : Miscellaneous notes and papers
box 31, folder 1 : The Alamo Massacre
box 31, folder 2 : Atkin, William
box 31, folder 3 : Babbitt, Almon Whiting
box 31, folder 4 : Bishop's Court Minutes
box 31, folder 5 : Book Reviews
box 31, folder 6 : Branch, William Henry
box 31, folder 7 : Cannon at St. George
box 31, folder 8-9 : Census Notes
box 31, folder 10 : Council of Fifty
box 31, folder 11 : Cowdery, Overstreet, Bullwinkle
box 31, folder 12 : Danites
box 31, folder 13 : Democratic Politics
box 31, folder 14 : Durrant, John Henry
box 31, folder 15 : Fort Bridger (Wyoming)
box 31, folder 16 : Hancock, Mosiah Lyman
box 31, folder 17 : Fish, Joseph
box 31, folder 18 : Gill, George Washington
box 31, folder 19 : Gunnison, Lt. J. W.
box 31, folder 20 : Heywood, Martha Spence
box 31, folder 21 : Horne, Joseph to Wilford Woodruff
box 31, folder 22 : Johnson, Benjamin to Josiah F. Gibbs
box 31, folder 23 : Jarman, W.
box 31, folder 24 : Kanab, Early History of
box 31, folder 25 : Linton, Louisa to Captain Lynch
box 31, folder 26 : Marston, Otis R. "Dock" to Juanita Brooks
box 31, folder 27 : Miller, Reuben
box 31, folder 28 : Mowry, Lt. Sylvester
box 31, folder 29-30 : Musser, A. Milton
box 32, folder 1 : Name Index to Bleak, Annals of the Southern Utah Mission
box 32, folder 2-3 : Negro Doctrine of Mormon Church
box 32, folder 4 : Parowan, Colonization of
box 32, folder 5 : Patriarchal Blessings
box 32, folder 6 : Pectol, George
box 32, folder 7-11 : Polygamy
box 32, folder 12 : Quotable Material
box 32, folder 13 : Rich, Charles C.
box 32, folder 14 : Silver Reef
box 32, folder 15 : Smith, Emma
box 32, folder 16 : Songs and Poems
box 32, folder 17 : St. George Temple
box 32, folder 18 : Sumner, Jack
box 32, folder 19 : "Unrest at Dixie College"
box 32, folder 20 : Walker, Charles L.
box 32, folder 21 : Wheeler, Lt. George M.
box 32, folder 22 : Young, John
box 32, folder 23 : Young Men's Historical Club
box 33-35, folder : Notes and papers (unarranged)
box 36-37, folder : Newspaper clippings
box 38-39, folder : Article offprints
box , folder : Materials located in the vault
box 40, folder : Miscellaneous bound volumes, offprints, clippings and photographs
box 41, folder : Published materials

Biographical Note/Historical Note +/-

Juanita Leavitt Pulsipher Brooks was born in Bunkerville, Nevada in 1898. She is the granddaughter of Dudley Leavitt, one of the first pioneers of Utah's "Dixie," and is related by blood or marriage to many of the other families who settled that region. Her early interest in the history of her family and the region in which they lived developed and expanded to become her life's work, and today she is considered the foremost authority on the history of southern Utah.

Although Mrs. Brooks has made her reputation as a historian, most of her formal education was in the field of English language and literature. After graduating from Virgin Valley High School in Bunkerville in 1916, she attended Dixie Junior College in St. George, Utah, then Brigham Young University, from which she graduated with a Bachelor's degree in 1925. She returned to Dixie to teach English and serve as Dean of Women from 1925-1933, but took the school year of 1928-1929 to complete her Master's degree at Columbia University.

Her first marriage lasted only a year, ending in 1920 when her husband, Ernest Pulsipher, died of throat cancer. She acquired a son from that marriage, and completed her entire college and graduate work in spite of her encumbrances as a widowed mother. The experience forced upon her a high degree of discipline, a discipline that made possible her later career as a historian, for she wrote most of her later outpouring of books, articles, and edited documents while caring for a large family. Rising well before daylight, she wrote for several hours before preparing breakfast for her family, then crowded in whatever writing time she could during busy days as a housekeeper and active church woman.

Her domestic responsibilities increased in 1933 when she quit teaching at Dixie to marry the local sheriff, William Brooks. In addition to her son, Brooks had four sons from a previous marriage, and together they had four more children.

Juanita Brooks's career as a historian developed during the years 1933-1950, a period which began with her project of collecting and transcribing manuscript diaries and other sources in southern Utah and culminated with the publication by Stanford University Press of her classic study of The Mountain Meadows Massacre. The manuscript collecting project grew out of her earlier interest in the history of her region, but began in earnest when sociologist Nels Anderson, who lived at the time across the street from the Brooks family in St. George, suggested that Federal funds from New Deal relief programs might be available. Mrs. Brooks secured funds first from the Federal Emergency Relief Administration and later from the Works Progress Administration's Historical Records Survey to pay for several typists who worked in an office in her spare bedroom. Will Brooks' position as the man who knew everyone in Washington County opened many doors for his wife on her manuscript collecting forays. Before long the quantity and quality of the work done on her project began to attract wider attention. One of the most fruitful results of the reputation Mrs. Brooks acquired during the project was a deep and long lasting friendship with Dale L. Morgan, who was at the time director of the WPA Federal Writers' Project and beginning to attract national attention as a first-rate historian with a consuming zeal for accuracy, an appetite for hard work, and a graceful literary style -- all qualities that came to characterize Mrs. Brooks' work as well.

During the 1930s an almost constant stream of writing began to flow from Mrs. Brooks' typewriter, practically all of which demonstrated an unparalleled depth of acquaintance with the sources for southern Utah history and an equally unparalleled objectivity and maturity of interpretation. But it was the appearance in 1950 of The Mountain Meadows Massacre that established her beyond question as a historian of the first rank. Her interest in that dark episode of Utah history dated from her girlhood acquaintance with Nephi Johnson, one of the central participants, and a terrifying scene at the side of his deathbed, where he deliriously recalled that day. During the intervening years, she quietly began to collect notes and sources relating to the massacre, and her book, particularly in its revised version (1962) remains the definitive account.

The thesis of the book, which blames the heightened passions of the Mormon Reformation, the Utah War and the over-reaction of the stake leadership at Cedar City for the massacre rather than Brigham Young (as skeptical Gentiles had always suspected) or John D. Lee (whom the Mormon church allowed to suffer alone as a scapegoat to avoid further investigation), would seem to have been a moderate, reasonable statement. For southern Utah Mormons, though, who had avoided all discussion of the event for almost a century, the book pricked sensitive folk and family memories, and Mrs. Brooks, even though she was a loyal and active Mormon before and since, suffered considerable ostracism in her community.

A great deal of her research for The Mountain Meadows Massacre took place during a long association with the Henry E. Huntington Library as a manuscript collector and later as a researcher. Her acquaintance with the John D. Lee sources at that institution and with the Lee family led her to follow her Meadows Massacre book with a biography of John Doyle Lee: Zealot--Pioneer Builder--Scapegoat (1961). She has also edited for publication the diaries of Lee, Thomas D. Brown, Hosea Stout, and other important pioneers of southern Utah.

During the 1950s Mrs. Brooks returned to teaching at Dixie College in addition to devoting a large part of her time to the numerous requests to speak at academic functions and meetings of historical societies. During the 1960s she held a staff position at the Utah State Historical Society while she edited the Hosea Stout diary. Although she has been retired in St. George for several years, she still publishes occasionally. Recent publications were manuscripts written many years ago and published with the editorial assistance of others, such as her biography of Jacob Hamblin and her autobiography, Quicksand and Cactus.

1898 Born in Bunkerville, Nevada. 1919Married Leonard Ernest Pulsipher; he would die just over a year later. 1925Received bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University. 1933 Married William "Will" Brooks, sheriff of Washington County, Utah. 1930sWorked part-time for the Works Progress Administration's Historical Records Survey, and for the Huntington Library, San Marino, California. 1940sBegan collecting and transcribing pioneer manuscripts and diaries. 1942Biography of her grandfather, On the Ragged Edge: the Life and Times of Dudley Leavitt published. 1950Mountain Meadows Massacre published. 1955Co-edited A Mormon Chronicle: the Diaries of John D. Lee, 1848-1876. 1961Biography of John D. Lee, John Doyle Lee: Zealot, Pioneer, Scapegoat, published. 1970 William Brooks died. 1973Elected to honorary life membership in the Western History Association. 1978Awarded the Charles Redd Prize in Humanities and Science by the Utah Academy of Science, Arts and Letters. 1989Died.

Content Description +/-

The papers of Juanita Brooks come to the Utah State Historical Society as a result of an informal commitment of long standing. They constitute an extraordinarily rich collection, representing as they do the accumulation of correspondence, manuscripts and collected sources from a long, busy, and distinguished career.

The first seven boxes contain correspondence, which is in some ways the most interesting and significant part of the collection, for it shows the development of her thinking as a historian and the course of her friendships with numerous other scholars, both amateur and professional. The correspondence has been arranged chronologically, with undated and fragmentary items at the end of the series.

During her life as an active member of the Mormon church, and especially after she achieved fame as a historian, Juanita Brooks was in considerable demand as a speaker. The first series in Box 8 consists of notes or texts of eulogies or tributes given at funerals or other special occasions. The second series in Box 8 is notes or texts of speeches given on various other occasions. Also in Box 8 begins a long series of unpublished manuscripts, some of which eventually found their way into print, but many of which were simply written and laid aside or rejected by various editors. The series continues to the midst of Box 11.

The next series, which continues through Box 13, consists of manuscripts sent to Mrs. Brooks by other authors. These essays are arranged alphabetically by author, with anonymous items at the end of the series. Boxes 14 through 18 contain a staggering series of pioneer diaries and autobiographies collected by Mrs. Brooks throughout her career. The series is arranged alphabetically by author.

Boxes 19 through 21 contain family records and genealogical materials relating to the Brooks, Leavitt, and Pulsipher families. The folders are labeled according to the family, person, or type of record they contain. The series includes patriarchal blessings, certificates of marriage and ordination, family group sheets, and notes assembled by Mrs. Brooks for her biographies of Dudley Leavitt, George Brooks, and William Brooks. At the end of the series is a group of legal and financial records, including publishing contracts and royalty records.

Boxes 22 through 30 contain a massive quantity of research notes assembled in support of some of Mrs. Brooks's major projects. They include general notes on the St. George - Washington County area, the major figures in the Mountain Meadows Massacre, and other figures such as Thomas D. Brown and Hosea Stout in whom she maintained an abiding interest.

In Boxes 31 and 32 are miscellaneous notes and documents relating to a wide variety of topics. These arrived at the Society in no discernible order and have been labeled as well as possible and placed in alphabetical order. Boxes 33-35 contain various fragmentary notes and jottings that the processor has not been able to fit into any other series.

Collection Use +/-

Restrictions on Access:

Restrictions on Access

Administrative Information +/-

Arrangement:

Creator:

Brooks, Juanita Leone Leavitt Pulsipher, 1898-1990

Language:

English.

Sponsor:

Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008

Quantity:

41 boxes (28 linear ft.) and 29 reels of microfilm

Language of the Finding Aid:

Finding aid written in Englishin Latin script

EAD Creation Date:

1999.