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Miscellaneous

1900 Galveston Hurricane, 6/8: Finding a Vengeful God in the Whirlwind

By October 22, 2008


Earlier I wrote about Mormons who found evidence of God?s mercy or of His one true church in the 1900 Galveston Hurricane. A parallel thread in those documents was that the Lord was also vengeful, or at least millenarian.

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1900 Galveston Hurricane, 5/8: Finding a Merciful God in the Whirlwind

By October 22, 2008


Missionaries and other church members detected God?s will in the 1900 Galveston Hurricane?s destruction and in the Elders? preservation therefrom.

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1900 Galveston Hurricane, 4/8: Life Continues

By October 21, 2008


In many senses, the event that is a ?storm? lasts far longer than the storm itself. Thus, hurricane Ike (2008) found some houses in my home ward with roofs still tarped from Rita (2005). Likewise, psychological and social changes can persist far longer than floodwaters. 1900 was no different.

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From The Archives: Posts You Might Have Missed, Part 1

By October 21, 2008


Incredibly, the Juvenile Instructor is approaching it’s 1st year anniversary.  We went live on October 26, 2007.  We hope to have a little historical write up nearer that time about how all this got going.  In the mean time, I wanted to put up some posts you might have missed since our beginning.  There are too many good ones to put them all up, but here’s a sampling from our first months:

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1900 Galveston Hurricane, 3/8: The Institutional Response

By October 21, 2008


Preparation, information gathering, and relief efforts figure prominently in present-day discussions of Mormons and natural disasters. Just last conference President Eyring spoke of those who praise the church for ?know[ing] how to organize to get things done? but don?t always recognize that ?the miracle lies not in organization alone, but in the people?s hearts? [1]. Elders who experienced some part of the 1900 Galveston Hurricane recorded evidence of concerned hearts; their dairies also provide glimpses of a nascent organization.

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1900 Galveston Hurricane, 2/8: Landfall

By October 20, 2008


Like many Elders in the American South, and like many of the people they visited, Elder Brooks and companion, Elder Decker, were both suffering from malaria in September 1900. Although they had some success in their counties near the Louisiana border, flooding and disease took a heavy toll on their enthusiasm and their bodies. In fact, Elder Decker requested release from the mission on September 03.

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1900 Galveston Hurricane, 1/8: Introduction and Overview

By October 20, 2008


Hurricanes have been on my mind of late?and more literally in my yard and in a great many houses. Instead of writing about recent storms, however, I?d like to discuss the 1900 Galveston Hurricane that nearly obliterated the city of Galveston, Texas, before smashing its way into the continental interior. Estimates vary, but the modern consensus centers around eight-thousand dead. Four Mormon missionaries and one member (presumably) were in Galveston that night and a hand-full of Saints and other missionaries?probably less than a hundred?encountered the storm before it disintegrated. Over the next few days I will examine elements of the Mormon experience of, response to, and interpretation of the storm. This page will function as a homepage of sorts, with links added as the posts become available.

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Book Review: An Uncommon Common Pioneer: The Journals of James Henry Martineau, 1828-1918

By October 15, 2008


Admin Note: We’re pleased to have Joe Geisner, a frequent reader and knowledgeable commenter here at the JI post his review of the newly published James H. Martineau journals. 

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From the Archives: An Abortion Court

By October 13, 2008


I reckon I better start earning my keep around these parts and post more often. James G. Duffin presided over the Southwestern States (later Central States) Mission in the first years of the twentieth century. Below I?ve reproduced his diary entries dealing with an abortion case brought before a church court.

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Historian Honored with BYU Distinguished Service Award

By October 10, 2008


One of BYU?s homecoming events this year (today, I think) will be to honor Dr. Jim Olson, a Regents Professor of History at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, with a Distinguished Service Award. I hope this post doesn?t sound like a eulogy. When I asked him about the award earlier this week, he said it meant that he had to wear a suit to the football game.

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