Register of the James Godson Bleak Papers,

Table of Contents

Collection Overview

Collection Inventory+/-

Biographical Note/Historical Note

Content Description

Collection Use

Administrative Information

Collection Overview +/-

Title: James Godson Bleak Papers,
Dates: 1864-1895. (inclusive)
Collection Number: Mss B 171
Summary: Recorder of the St. George temple, pioneer organizer of Cotton Mission and cooperative manufacturing, post master of St. George, editor of "Millenial Star." Miscellaneous items collected by and about James Bleak. Includes certificates, personal papers, minutes of the St. George stake, songs and poetry. A manuscript of Bleak's "Historical Memoranda of Southern Utah Mission," notes on wine-making in southern Utah, and a cipy of volume 1 of the "Annals of the Southern Utah Mission", and papers from the Orderville United Order. Photocopies of his diary (1864-1895) have been added to the collection.
Repository: Utah State Historical Society

Collection Inventory +/-

Box Folder Contents
Box , Folder : Miscellaneous papers
Box 1, Folder 1 : Appointments to Religious and Political Office
Box 1, Folder 2 : St. George Gardener's Club; Organization United Order of Zion
Box 1, Folder 3 : Zion's Co-Operative Rio Virgin Manufacturing Company
Box 1, Folder 4 : Minutes and other Records of the St. George Stake
Box 1, Folder 5 : Songs and Poems
Box 1, Folder 6 : Personal Papers
Box 1, Folder 7 : Wine Production in the Washington County Mission
Box 1, Folder 8-10 : Annals of the Southern Utah Mission, Vol. 1, Book A
Box 1, Folder 11-14 : Annals of the Southern Utah Mission, Vol. 1, Book A, copy
Box 2, Folder 1 : "Historical Memoranda of Southern Utah Mission"
Box 2, Folder 2 : News Items on Exploration of Southern Utah and Nevada
Box 2, Folder 3 : Correspondence, 1870-1875
Box 2, Folder 4-5 : Orderville (Utah) United Order
Box , Folder : Journals
Box 2, Folder 6 : 1864
Box 2, Folder 7 : 1878
Box 2, Folder 8 : 1878 [typescript copy]
Box 3, Folder 1 : 1879
Box 3, Folder 2 : 1880
Box 3, Folder 3 : 1881
Box 3, Folder 4 : 1882
Box 3, Folder 5 : 1883
Box 3, Folder 6 : 1884
Box 4, Folder 1 : 1887
Box 4, Folder 2 : 1888
Box 4, Folder 3 : 1889
Box 4, Folder 4 : 1890
Box 4, Folder 5 : 1891
Box 4, Folder 6 : 1892
Box 4, Folder 7 : 1893
Box 4, Folder 8 : 1894
Box 4, Folder 9 : 1895

Biographical Note/Historical Note +/-

The biography of James Godson Bleak may well typify the people who provided local spiritual and temporal leadership in the pioneer Mormon Church. The best brief remarks on Bleak are by Preston Nibley and the only biography of Bleak is an unpublished thesis by Caroline S. Addy. James Bleak was born in Southwark, Surrey, England, 15 November 1829 to Thomas and Mary Godson Bleak. His father died when he was fourteen and his mother two years later.

He apprenticed himself to a silversmith for four years until he married Elizabeth Moore in 1849 when he was twenty years old. A year later he was converted by the message of Mormon missionaries and both he and his wife became Latter-day Saints in February 1851. Three years after his baptism he was appointed President of the White Chapel Branch of the Church.

In 1856 the Bleaks began their trek to Zion and into Utah history. Arriving late in the year in Iowa City, they joined the Martin handcart company. Because of the last minute rush to beat the prairie winter, as well as accommodating the unexpected number of emigrants, T. B. H. Stenhouse reports that the carts were makeshift and under provided. As a result of the late start, poor communication with more knowledgeable Church leaders, and an over-zealous reliance on the possibility of miracles, 135 persons of the 575 Saints who began, died in the snows of Wyoming. The Bleaks and their faith survived.

They settled in what is now the North Ogden area, but in 1861 Brigham Young called them to join the Cotton Mission and move to Southern Utah. Two weeks before his departure, Bleak met Jane Thompson, who became his first plural wife just before her sixteenth birthday. His romantic attraction for her seems to have persisted into old age. Jane had come to the United States when she was nine, lived in Rhode Island with her parents, witnessed a debate between Lincoln and Douglas, and actually talked with Lincoln at a banquet afterwards.

The activity of Jane, Elizabeth, and Bleak's other wife in the construction of Zion is not recorded. In 1862, Bleak was appointed counselor to the Bishop of the Third Ward. Thereafter he became tithing clerk for the mission and city recorder for St. George and still later he became a member of the High Council. From 1868 to 1872 he was the postmaster of St. George. He was called at the age of forty-three to serve a mission in England, the land of his birth, and during 1872-1873 he edited the Millennial Star. He returned to the red earth of the Cotton Mission, helped complete the St. George Temple and became the Temple's first recorder. There is no record of his persecution by the Federal government, but Bleak must have experienced some contention over his plural marriages. In 1909 he was ordained a Patriarch in the St. George Stake, and he died at 88 years of age on 30 January 1918, in the town he helped build.

Content Description +/-

The collection of James G. Bleak papers combines several original, and in most cases, handwritten documents from Bleak's personal, religious, and community life with the first portion of his Manuscript History of St. George. The earliest document in the collection is the 1857 certification of Bleak to the High Priest Quorum of the Mormon Church. Other religious papers of note are Bleak's missionary call and his letter of introduction as a missionary in England. These are dated 1872 and signed by George A. Smith and Daniel H. Wells. One of the political documents included is Bleak's authorization by the Territorial legislature to be Notary Public of Washington County, March 1870.

The papers of what at one time was the Zion's Cooperative Rio Virgin Manufacturing Company, are mostly limited to the years 1896-1911 and concern the construction of dams and other water systems for that famous factory as well as its transfer in 1911 away from Church ownership. Four letters to James Bleak from Armand Hof in 1904 report on the daily conduct of business and give a good idea of the nature of the business at that time. A stock certificate dated 1883 for sixty thousand dollars to Mormon President John Taylor and some impatient letters from the Office of the Presiding Bishopric in 1910 provide some information on the combination of religious and business enterprise in those days.

James Bleak was the Temple historian in St. George and was for many years the Clerk of the St. George Stake. As well as weekly attendance roll sheets and the settlement of petty disputes among the brethren, there are minutes of a meeting which organized the workers of wood and leather into guild-type organizations, presumably as part of the United Order in April 1877.

Since Bleak had a flair for ideas and their expression, it is possible that he may have authored one or two of the songs included in the file. However, they appear to have been only collected by him for use in Stake meetings. "Hard Times," "The Mountain Brave," "Marching to Dixie" -- the titles themselves indicate the tenor of life and the attitude of the southern Utah pioneers towards it. Anyone looking at songs as a source of information about life in early Utah will find substance in the few verses of this collection.

Swiss immigrants to the Virgin River area near St. George saw the potential in soil and climate for the development of vines, grapes and wine. Before 1911, the St. George area was a fair wine-producing region, growing and fermenting varieties of native American as well as California-bred French grape transplants. A paper in the collection reports on the amount and expense of wine stored in St. George in 1882.

There are three copies of section "A" of James G. Bleak's Manuscript History of St. George entitled Annals of the Southern Utah Mission. This portion was "arranged" from the original manuscript, now in the Huntington Library, by William J. Snow and H. Lorenzo Reid in 1928. Copies of other portions of the manuscript are believed to be an abridgement from whatever constitutes the original first section. Nevertheless, the work provides general information about the colonization of the Washington County and Muddy River areas of Utah and Nevada. Relationships with the Indians and distribution of property and tasks are highlights of the history. As an example of its limits, the "arranged" typescript contains the original charter drafted by the city of St. George, but it does not reveal how the different aspects of the charter were formulated, nor speak of the men who drafted it. Perhaps such information is in the original.

In 1988, the Society added to the foregoing Bleak papers copies of letters, 1870-1875, records of the United Order of Orderville, and Bleak's personal journal, 1864-1891 (with gaps, 1865-1878 and 1885-1886) through the courtesy of Brigham Young University. These additions are in Boxes 2 and 3, as indicated on the following inventory.

Collection Use +/-

Restrictions on Access:

Restrictions on Use

Administrative Information +/-

Arrangement:

Creator:

Bleak, James Godson, 1829-1918.

Language:

English.

Sponsor:

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

Quantity:

4 boxes (2 linear ft.)

Language of the Finding Aid:

Finding aid written in Englishin Latin script

EAD Creation Date:

1999.