Table of ContentsCollection OverviewCollection Inventory+/-
Biographical Note/Historical NoteContent DescriptionCollection UseAdministrative Information |
Collection Overview +/-
Collection Inventory +/- Box Folder Contents
box , folder : Diaries
box 1, folder 1 : Control folder
box 1, folder 2 : Diary: Harvard, 12 September 1898 - 22 June
1899
box 1, folder 3 : Diary: Mission to Germany, 10 July 1901 - 14 September
1901
box 1, folder 4 : Diary: [copy], Mission [revised], 10 July 1901 - 14
September 1901
box 1, folder 5 : Diary: Mission, 5 September 1901 - 17 December
1901
box 1, folder 6 : Diary: Mission, 18 December 1901 - 19 April
1902
box 1, folder 7 : Diary: Mission, 20 April 1902 - 1 August
1902
box 1, folder 8 : Diary: Mission, 2 August 1902 - 19 October
1902
box 2, folder 1 : Diary: Mission, 20 October 1902 - 28 February
1903
box 2, folder 2 : Diary: Mission [copy], 1 March 1903 - 8 July
1903
box 2, folder 3 : Diary: Mission, 9 July 1903 - 30 September
1903
box 2, folder 4 : Diary: Mission, 17 October 1903 - 28 January
1904
box 3, folder 1 : Diary: Mission, 8 February 1904 - 19 April
1904
box 3, folder 2 : Diary: Mission, 1 May 1904 - 1 July 1904
box 3, folder 3 : Diary: 7 January 1934 - 14 October 1934
box 4, folder 1 : Diary: 1 January 1940 - 29 December 1940
box 4, folder 2 : Diary: 1 January 1941 - 25 December 1941
box , folder : General Correspondence
box , folder : Business Correspondence, First Quorum of
Seventy
box 6, folder 1 : Correspondence, 1947-1950
box 6, folder 2 : Correspondence, 1951
box 7, folder 1 : Correspondence, 1952
box 7, folder 2 : Correspondence, 8 October 1951 - 19 November
1953
box 7, folder 3 : Miscellaneous correspondence, ca.1909-1963
box 7, folder 4 : Miscellaneous family correspondence, ca.
1923-1950
box , folder : History of The Seventies
box 8, folder 1-2 : History of the Seventies, MSS
box 8, folder 3 : "Seven"--A Symbol of Perfection
box 8, folder 4 : Knowledge Out of the Best Books
box 8, folder 5 : History of the Organization of the Seventies, by Joseph
Young, Sr. [typescript]
box 8, folder 6 : Seventies March from Kirtland, I [from Smith [?]
journal, typescript]
box 8, folder 7 : Seventies March from Kirtland, II [from Smith [?]
journal, typescript]
box 8, folder 8 : Book of Records of Seventies, ca. 1835
[typescript]
box 8, folder 9 : Records of the Seventies Library, ca. 1863-1864
[typescript]
box 8, folder 10 : Transcripts,
Deseret News, regarding Seventies,
ca. 1850s
box 8, folder 11 : Minutes of various Seventies quorums, ca. 1850s
[typescripts]
box 8, folder 12 : Miscellaneous pamphlets of the Seventies [copies], ca.
1890
box , folder : Manuscripts And Notes--Religious Topics
box 9, folder 1 : The Message of Israel [manuscript]
box 9, folder 2 : From Old Testament Days to the Birth of Christ
[manuscript]
box 9, folder 3 : The New Testament [manuscript]
box 9, folder 4 : Religious manuscripts:
box , folder 1: Archaeological Discoveries Illumine the
Bible
box , folder 2: The Book of Job
box , folder 3: Etymology of Divine Words
box , folder 4: The Holy Bible, Book of Mormon, Doctrine &
Covenants, Pearl of Great Price
box , folder 5: Letter to German Students
box , folder 6: Man Divinely Related to His Maker We Must Not
Forget
box , folder 7: Will Jesus Christ Come Again? Untitled manuscripts [2
copies]
box 9, folder 5 : Short Manuscripts [filed alphabetically]
box 9, folder 6 : Notebook on Jesus Christ, John the Baptist,
etc.
box 9, folder 7 : King James Translation--The Translators to the Reader
[manuscript]
box 9, folder 8 : Notes--religious topics
box 9, folder 9 : Fragments
box 9, folder 10 : Miscellaneous pamphlets and clippings
box , folder : Utah And LDS Church History Manuscripts
box 10, folder 1 : Correspondence and Miscellaneous documents [copies];
Originals in vault [see 25, Folders 1-3 for listing]
box 10, folder 2 : The First Hundred Years (typescript) and pamphlet (same
title) from
Deseret News, 6 April
1930
box 10, folder 3 : Blessed City of God (Nauvoo, Illinois)
box 10, folder 4 : Calling of the Twelve Apostles
box 10, folder 5 : Drama--the Old Salt Lake Theater
box 10, folder 6 : Education in Early Utah
box 10, folder 7 : Industrial Growth in Utah
box 10, folder 8 : Irrigation
box 10, folder 9 : New England Town Government in Early Utah
box 10, folder 10 : Pioneer Home
box 10, folder 11 : Salt Lake City
box 10, folder 12 : Salt Lake Tabernacle
box 10, folder 13 : Spirit of the Pioneers
box 10, folder 14 : Cyrus Dallin
box 10, folder 15 : Peter Skene Ogden
box 10, folder 16 : Levi S. Riter
box 10, folder 17 : Joseph Smith, Sr.
box 10, folder 18 : Joseph Smith, Jr.
box 10, folder 19 : Mary Hurren Wright [of the Willie Handcart
Company]
box 10, folder 20 : Ann Elizabeth Riter Young
box 10, folder 21 : Brigham Young
box 10, folder 22 : Joseph and Jane Bicknell Young
box 10, folder 23 : Mahonri Young
box 10, folder 24 : General Epistle from Council of Twelve to Saints, 15
March 1848 [typescript]
box 10, folder 25 : Deseret News transcripts, November
1851 - January 1858
box , folder : Contemporary Material on Seventies and New England
Mission
box 11, folder 1 : Correspondence and instruction to the Seventies, ca.
1905-1959
box 11, folder 2 : Scrapbook of Seventies column, ca.1944
box 11, folder 3 : Scrapbook of Seventies column, ca.1946
box 11, folder 4 : Fragments and notes on Seventies
box 11, folder 5 : Correspondence and instruction, New England Mission, ca.
1939-1941
box 11, folder 6 : Scrapbook, New England Mission, ca.
1939-1941
box 11, folder 7 : Scrapbook, New England Mission, ca.1939-1941
box 11, folder 8 : Plan for missionary class
box 11, folder 9 : Miscellaneous manuscripts on missionary work
box , folder : Miscellaneous Notes and Manuscripts
box 12, folder 1 : Notes on miscellaneous missions
box 12, folder 2 : Miscellaneous extracts on LDS history
box 12, folder 3 : Clippings and miscellaneous articles by
Young
box 12, folder 4 : Outlines and fragments
box 12, folder 5 : Scrapbook on irrigation
box 12, folder 6 : Miscellaneous pamphlets on Utah history
box 12, folder 7 : Early Spanish Explorations up the Pacific Coast to
1603
box 12, folder 8 : Mothers of Men--Robert Gould Shaw [play]
box 12, folder 9 : The Hake--Drama Played Annually by the
Pawnee
box 12, folder 10 : American history manuscripts
box 12, folder 11 : Class outlines: Western history
box , folder : Notebooks and Scrapbooks
box 12, folder 12 : Scrapbook: Plymouth Colony
box 13, folder 1 : American history--Harvard, ca. 1898
box 13, folder 2 : American history--Harvard
box 13, folder 3 : Notebook, ca. 1898
box 13, folder 4 : Notebook: Greek philosophy
box 14, folder 1-2 : Scrapbook, ca. 1900
box 14, folder 3 : Scrapbook: poetry, ca. 1900
box 14, folder 4 : Notes on European Trip, 1904
box 14, folder 5 : Notes on German Language, 1904
box 15, folder 1 : Notebook: philosophy and history
box 15, folder 2 : Notebook: medieval history
box 15, folder 3 : Notebook: Genesis and Exodus
box 15, folder 4 : Notebook: The Message of Israel
box 15, folder 5 : Notebook: Ancient Israel
box 16, folder 1 : Notebook: Influence of Jesus
box 16, folder 2-3 : Scrapbooks: newspaper clippings
box 16, folder 4-6 : Scrapbooks
box 17, folder 1 : Scrapbook: San Juan, 1916
box 17, folder 2 : Scrapbook: Western history
box 17, folder 3 : Scrapbook: newspaper clippings, ca. 1918
box 18, folder 1 : Notebook: religion, ca. 1920s
box 18, folder 2 : Notebook: quotations, ca. 1920s
box 18, folder 3 : Scrapbook: clippings, letters, notes
box 18, folder 4-5 : Scrapbook
box 19, folder 1-2 : Scrapbook, ca. 1920s
box 19, folder 3 : Scrapbook, ca. 1938-1942
box 19, folder 4 : Scrapbook, ca. 1940
box 20, folder 1-2 : Scrapbook, ca. 1940
box 20, folder 3 : Scrapbook, ca. 1942
box 21, folder 1 : Scrapbooks, ca. 1948-1952
box 21, folder 2 : Scrapbook, ca. 1950s
box 21, folder 3 : Notebook: Message to America, n.d.
box 22, folder 1 : Notebook: Missionary history in Canada
box 22, folder 2 : Scrapbook: miscellaneous religious notes
box 22, folder 3 : Scrapbook: newspaper clippings
box 22, folder 4 : Scrapbook: newspaper clippings, ca. 1860s
box 23, folder 1 : Scrapbook: clippings
box 23, folder 2-3 : Scrapbook, n.d.
box 23, folder 4 : Notebook: Valeria B. Young
box , folder : Miscellany
box 24, folder 1 : Extracts, miscellaneous thoughts
box 24, folder 2 : Notes: American history
box 24, folder 3 : Miscellaneous outlines
box 24, folder 4 : Family photos [located in C-12]
box 24, folder 5 : General photos [located in C-12]
box 24, folder 6 : American Christian Palestine Committee
box 24, folder 7 : Miscellaneous newspaper clippings, memos,
etc.
box 24, folder 8-9 : Memorabilia
box , folder : Scrapbooks and Documents in Vault
box 25, folder 1 : Scrapbook, contains:
box 25, folder 2 : Scrapbook, contains:
box 25, folder 3 : Originals of documents in 7:
box , folder 1: Deseret University banknotes ($5.00), 8 December
1868
box , folder 2: Letter to Jane Young from Harriet Kimball, City of
Salt Lake, 6 October 1848
box , folder 3: Letter to Jane Young from the Sisters of the St. Louis
Branch, 2 May 1849
box , folder 4: List of library books, 1856
box , folder 5: Deed of Consecration by Thomas Stephen Nixon to LDS
Church, 3 March 1857
box , folder 6: Letter from Calvin Bicknell to his children, 14 March
1857
box , folder 7: Letter from Calvin Bicknell to his children, 6
November 1859
box , folder 8: Letter from Calvin Bicknell to his children, 25 July
1860
box , folder 9: Proclamation by the Governor [on the invasion of
"hostile forces"], 5 August 1857
box , folder 10: Certificate making Claudius V. Spencer a regent of the
University of the State of Deseret signed by Albert Cummings, Governor, 31
January 1859
box , folder 11: Memorandum from Seymour B. Young of First Council of
Seventies to "Presidents of the Various Quorums," 1 October 1896
box , folder 12: Letter from Reed Smoot to Levi Edgar Young, 21 April
1910
box , folder 13: Letter from Bernard DeVoto to Levi Edgar Young, 12
February 1947
Biographical Note/Historical Note +/-Levi Edgar Young was born to Seymour B. and Elizabeth Riter Young on 7 February 1874 in Salt Lake City, the fourth of twelve children. His grandfather was Joseph Young, brother to Brigham. His mother was a Utah pioneer of 1847. In a letter to Richard R. Lyman in 1952, Young recalled:
After graduating from the University of Utah in 1895 with a Bachelor of Science degree, Young taught at Lowell School for a year. He followed this experience by teaching English for two years at LDS University in Salt Lake City. Feeling the need for more education, Young left Salt Lake City in 1898 to attend Harvard. He apparently did not receive a degree there, but returned to Utah in 1900 to become an instructor in history at the University of Utah. In 1901, Young was called by the LDS Church on a mission to Germany where he lived until 1904, serving part of that time as president of the LDS Swiss-Austrian Mission. At the completion of his mission, he returned to Salt Lake City and the University of Utah. In 1907 he married Valeria Brinton in Salt Lake City. They had three daughters--Harriet, Jane, and Eleanor. Still pursuing a more comprehensive education, he left Utah once again to attend Columbia where he graduated with a Master of Arts degree in 1910. Many years later he wrote, "I had the pleasure of studying among the famous men of the University of Utah, Harvard University, and Columbia University, . . .leaders of thought in their day." He was proud of his education and also pleased to act as mentor to his students: "It may be pleasant to you to know that during 1951 alone I was the means of helping twelve students of universities all over the country write their theses. . . . But I must not continue because it will sound boastful." (Young to Richard R. Lyman, 7 January 1952) In 1910, Young was called also to be a member of the First Council of Seventy of the LDS Church. In this position, which he held until his death fifty-three years later, Young followed a family tradition. His grandfather Joseph Young was a member of the first First Council of Seventy in 1835 and his father Seymour, a physician, was appointed in 1882. The main emphasis of the Seventies, then as now, was missionary work, and Young accepted this responsibility completely. The history of the Seventies and missionary work are two of the larger subject areas covered in this collection. Along with his work for the Church, Young continued teaching history at the University of Utah. In 1920 he was appointed head of the Department of Western History and in 1937 became head of the newly created Department of History and Political Science. He retired from the University in 1939. In 1960 the University awarded Young an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree for his efforts over forty years at the school. After his retirement Young was appointed president of the New England LDS Mission. He served in that capacity until 1942. He had earlier served as president of the Salt Lake Temple Square Mission (1924-1932) in which position he apparently met many of the people he later corresponded with, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and William Allen White being two more prominent examples. In 1941 Young became the senior president of the First Council of Seventy. From 1944 to 1947 he wrote "The Seventy's Column" for the Deseret News in which he covered both spiritual and historical topics. Young joined the Utah State Historical Society sometime before 1909 and held several positions in the Society over the years. In 1923-1924 and again in 1945-1949 he served as president of the organization. He also served on the Board of Control and was awarded an honorary life membership on the Board of Trustees in 1959. Besides those institutions already mentioned, Levi Young was active in the Sons of the American Revolution (president of the Utah branch), Authors' Club (London), National Advisory Council of the American Palestine Committee, Utah Association for the United Nations, Exposition of Indian Tribal Arts, and the Salt Lake Conference of Religious Groups (president). He wrote frequently. Along with the "Seventy's Column," he composed articles on Utah and Mormon history and missionary work for the LDS magazines, historical treatments for the Utah Historical Quarterly and newspapers, and a book, The Founding of Utah, published in 1923 and based on his thesis at Columbia. Levi Edgar Young died at home in Salt Lake City on 13 December 1963. He was eighty-nine. Content Description +/-The Levi Edgar Young Collection consists of material donated to the Utah State Historical Society by Young and his wife in 1963. It can be roughly divided into four sections: diaries, correspondence, manuscripts and research, and scrapbooks. Young was quite relaxed about his personal filing system. His scrapbooks not only contained clippings, pamphlets, and postcards, but also letters and research notes. In the same way, his diaries contain mostly personal entries but also some clippings and correspondence. In organizing the collection, therefore, each bound volume has been placed in whichever category the majority of the material appeared to fall. For example, a scrapbook of letters will go with the correspondence because there is more of it in that volume. The diaries of Levi Edgar Young cover the period from September 1898 through June 1904. There is also a volume covering most of 1934 and two more covering 1940-1941. These diaries are generally concerned with Young's missions for the LDS Church--in 1898 to Germany and in 1940 to New England. They are, including the non-mission 1934 volume, primarily concerned with matters pertaining to his religious responsibilities. Correspondence: Young's correspondence is divided between his general correspondence, ca. 1929-1931 and 1950, and the formally bound volumes of his correspondence from the office of the First Council of Seventies (1947-1953). There are also some scattered letters from the years 1909-1963, both professional and private. The letters from the Seventies' office are carbon copies bound together. They cover a broad range of topics: acknowledging the appointments of church mission presidents, thank you notes to those who entertained him on church visits, letters of condolence, and letters of regret. Included, too, are letters to friends and family. He sent a lot of books to his grandchildren and arranged to buy a Dodge for one of his daughters. He also answered reference questions and gave advice. In 1950, in response to a person with an unnamed problem, he wrote, "Make it a matter of prayer, and ask God to direct you, and in whatever you do you will be blessed." (31 January 1950) In a slightly more acerbic vein, he commented on a memorial statue to Marcus Whitman by Avard Fairbanks, "While Mr. Fairbanks is a Utah man, he is not a great artist. There is never any soul in anything he creates. . . . Let me say again, I am so sorry that a real artist never executed the work." (Young to Helen Whitman, 29 April 1953) Probably the largest amount of material in this portion of the collection is concerned with the history and function of the Seventies. Included is the manuscript written by Young on the history of the group, as well as a history (copy) by his grandfather Joseph Young, and some copies of other early records, including transcripts from the Deseret News. Young also wrote on general religious issues, mostly concerning the New Testament period. The collection contains these short manuscripts, as well as some notes. His specific work on Utah history occupies only one box of the collection and is arranged alphabetically by title. Contemporary material on the Seventies and missionary work deserve mention, as do a body of miscellaneous notes, manuscripts, and fragments. Young's scrapbooks are divided according to amount of handwritten material contained in each. However, no matter where they are placed, the notebooks and scrapbooks, which are arranged chronologically, are an eclectic bunch. They are, generally speaking, a combination of notes from books, original thoughts, clippings, pamphlets, and important letters. There is a flower pressed inside one and in another is Young's report card from the 12th District School for 1888 ("Average in Studies--97X"). Calling cards are another significant group of items. Here are found most of the valuable items in the collection, for example, Deseret University banknotes from 1868, an 1846 proclamation by Brigham Young (holograph), and a letter from Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle (1932). These were either filed loose in the books or glued in. These items have been removed from the body of the collection and placed in the vault. Copies remain with the collection. Collection Use +/-Restrictions on Access: Restrictions on Access Administrative Information +/-Arrangement: Creator: Young, Levi Edgar, 1874-1963. Language: English. Sponsor: Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008 Quantity: 25 boxes (12.5 linear ft.) Language of the Finding Aid: Finding aid written in Englishin Latin script EAD Creation Date: 1999. |