Locating, Researching, and Publishing Joseph Smith’s Legal Papers
Locating, Researching, and Publishing Joseph Smith’s
Legal Papers
The publication of the Legal Records series of The Joseph Smith Papers represents the
culmination of several decades of research by historians,
researchers, attorneys, and manuscript collectors who have sought to
illuminate Joseph Smith’s legal experience. Beginning in the 1960s,
attorney Gordon A. Madsen, as well as Brigham Young University
scholars Richard L. Anderson and Max H Parkin, scoured midwestern
courthouses and repositories to locate and make photocopies of
Joseph Smith legal documents. As an attorney and an employee of the
Historical Department of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, Scott Bradshaw reviewed the holdings of courthouses in New
York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois in the 1990s and identified many of
Joseph Smith’s court cases, resulting in several boxes of
photocopied documents and research files. Unfortunately, many Joseph
Smith legal documents are now missing from their repositories of
origin, and Bradshaw’s photocopies and research files provide
crucial information regarding the provenance of documents, some of
which are now in the private collector market.
Following the organization of the Joseph Smith Papers Project in
2001, further efforts were made to systematically collect and
research Joseph Smith’s interactions with the law. From 2001 to
2002, Scott H. Faulring, a research historian at the Joseph Fielding
Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History at BYU, researched and
digitized financial and legal documents in relevant repositories in
the eastern and midwestern United States. In 2002, Gordon A. Madsen
joined the Joseph Smith Papers team as an editor of what was then
called the Legal series, sharing his own extensive files on Joseph
Smith’s legal encounters. Within a few years, the legal team
expanded to include practicing attorney Jeffrey N. Walker, who later became series
editor; John W. Welch, a professor of law at BYU’s J. Reuben Clark
Law School and editor in chief of BYU Studies; and
practicing attorneys Joseph I. Bentley and Morris A. Thurston. Under
the direction of Walker and Welch, many BYU law students contributed
to the understanding of legal terminology, statutes, jurisprudence, and legal
process in nineteenth-century America. David Grua researched Ohio,
Missouri, and Illinois cases and digitized Joseph Smith legal
documents housed at various courthouses and archives. Richard S.
Bennett researched legal statutes and performed second-level text
verification. The Mormon Historic Sites Foundation, now known as the Ensign Peak Foundation, provided financial
assistance and staff to obtain high-quality digital images of Joseph
Smith legal documents from repositories in New York, Pennsylvania,
and Ohio. The foundation also funded the transcription of many of
the documents. Sharalyn Howcroft compiled case files, wrote document
physical descriptions, and did text verification.
The Joseph Smith Papers web team is now preparing the
legal papers for digital publication, building on the half century
of work by historians and lawyers before them. The short
introductions to legal cases that appear on this website have been
written by JSP staff members David Grua, Sharalyn Howcroft, Chad
Foulger, Jeffrey Mahas, and Elizabeth Kuehn. Separate from the Joseph Smith Papers
Project, Jeffrey Walker, Gordon Madsen, and John Welch are preparing
print volumes of many of the legal cases in which Joseph Smith
appeared as defendant, plaintiff, witness, or judge. These two
efforts—the comprehensive digital edition of images and transcripts
by the Joseph Smith Papers Project and the in-depth coverage of many
cases in printed volumes edited by Walker, Madsen, and Welch—will
demonstrate the breadth and depth of Joseph Smith’s interactions
with the law, place the cases in historical context, and provide a basis for future scholarship.
Various other people and institutions merit acknowledgment for
helping identify and locate Joseph Smith’s legal papers. We thank
Hans Finke, former director and records management officer, Mary Jo
Lamphear, former assistant archives and records management officer,
and Rosemary Switzer, current director and records management
officer at the Ontario County, New York, Archives and Records
Center; Michael Jankowski, Wayne County, New York, clerk/recorder;
Peter Evans, Wayne County historian; Bonnie Hayes, executive
director of Historic Palmyra, Inc.; Kenneth Stuetz, Oneida (New
York) and Northern District historian; Dale Storms and Pat Evans,
Chenango County, New York, historians; and James J. Folts, New York
state archivist. We are also indebted to Betty Smith, director of
the Susquehanna County (Pennsylvania) Historical Society, and Susan
Eddleston, former Susquehanna County prothonotary and clerk of
courts.
We also extend our thanks to Bari Stith, former director of the
Geauga County, Ohio, Archives and Records Center; Linda Burhenne,
current director of GCARC; and GCARC archivists Clair L. Wilson and
Vicki Smolko; Maureen Kelly, Lake County, Ohio, clerk of courts;
Lynn Vandevort, museum collections manager of the Lake County
Historical Society and historical society staff members Karon
Tomlinsen and Cheryl McClelland; and Lachlan McKay, who served as
director of the Kirtland, Ohio, temple for Community of Christ.
We are likewise grateful to have received assistance from Kenneth L.
Wynn, Missouri state archivist; Stephen S. Davis, former chief clerk and administrator of the Missouri House of Representatives; and Ronald Romig, former Community of
Christ archivist.
Collaborative efforts between FamilySearch, the Church
History Department of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, and Hancock County, Illinois, resulted in an exhaustive
survey and the digitization of Hancock County records for 1839–1846,
the era the Mormons were settled in Nauvoo and the surrounding
region. The Joseph Smith Papers Project is particularly indebted to
Jeff Anderson, an acquisitions specialist for the Church History
Department; historic sites curator Benjamin Pykles of the Church
History Department; JSP staff member Alex Smith; Hancock County
independent historian Joseph Johnstun; Latter-day Saint missionary Eugene
Shurts; Michael Hanson, the book scanning operations manager for
FamilySearch; Hancock County clerk Kerry Asbridge; Hancock County
Circuit Court clerk John Neally; and the staff of the Illinois
Regional Archives Depository, Malpass Library, Western Illinois
University, Macomb; and of Rare Books and Special Collections at
Northern Illinois University, for aiding in this effort.
Instrumental in researching other Illinois cases were Stanley H.
Tucker, Carthage attorney, and George Schrade, Adams County
clerk/recorder. For help preparing legal introductions and documents for publication, we also thank Tyson Reeder, Joseph Darowski, Kay Darowski, Keaton Reed, Jeremy Walker, Alison Kitchen Gainer, and Taylor Kalia Nelson.
Additionally, dealers and collectors of Latter-day Saint manuscripts have
shared their collections with JSP staff, further bolstering our
understanding of Joseph Smith’s legal encounters and his documentary
record.