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<ead audience="external"> 
  <eadheader audience="internal" langencoding="ISO 639-2"> 
	 <eadid systemid="UHi" source="DLC" type="local number">b0061</eadid> 
	 <filedesc> 
		<titlestmt> 
		  <titleproper>Elias Hicks Blackburn Papers, 
			 <date>1848-1908</date></titleproper> 
		  <subtitle>A Register of the Collection at the <lb/>Utah State
			 Historical Society</subtitle> 
		</titlestmt> 
		<publicationstmt> 
		  <publisher>Utah State Historical Society</publisher> 
		  <date type="publication">1999</date> 
		</publicationstmt> 
	 </filedesc> 
	 <profiledesc> 
		<creation>Finding aid encode in EAD 1.0 by Craig Ringgenberg using XMetaL
		  1.0, 
		  <date>1999.</date></creation> 
		<langusage>Finding aid written in
		  <language>English</language>.</langusage> 
	 </profiledesc> 
	 <revisiondesc> 
		<change> 
		  <date><?xm-replace_text Enter the date of the first change to this finding aid.}?></date>
		  
		  <item><?xm-replace_text Enter the nature of the first change to this finding aid. Repeat this pair for each subsequent change.}?></item>
		  
		</change> 
	 </revisiondesc> 
  </eadheader> 
  <frontmatter> 
	 <titlepage> 
		<note> 
		  <p>The machine-readable finding aid for this collection was created by
			 the </p> 
		</note> 
		<author>Collections Management staff, Utah State Historical
		  Society,</author> 
		<note> 
		  <p>with financial assistance from an LSTA grant provided by the </p> 
		</note> 
		<sponsor>Utah State Library Division.</sponsor> 
		<publisher>Utah State Historical Society</publisher> 
		<date type="publication">1999</date> 
		<address> 
		  <addressline>Salt Lake City, Utah</addressline> 
		</address> 
		<note> 
		  <p> 
			 <extref href="http://history.utah.gov/findaids/logo.jpg"
			  actuate="auto" show="embed"/><lb/> Copyright Utah State Historical Society. All
				rights reserved.<lb/> Reproduction, storage or transmittal of this work, or any
				part of it, in any form or by any means, for commercial purposes, is prohibited
				without prior authorization of the Utah State Historical Society. This work may
				be used for scholarly and other non-commercial use provided that the Utah State
				Historical Society is acknowledged as the creator and copyright holder. </p> 
		</note> 
	 </titlepage> 
  </frontmatter> 
  <archdesc audience="external" relatedencoding="marc"
	langmaterial="eng" level="collection" type="register"> 
	 <did> 
		<head>Summary Description</head> 
		<repository label="Repository">Utah State Historical Society</repository>
		
		<unitid label="Collection number" countrycode="US"
		 repositorycode="UHi">Mss B 61</unitid> 
		<origination label="Creator"> 
		  <persname encodinganalog="100"> Blackburn, Elias Hicks, 1827-1908
			 </persname></origination> 
		<unittitle label="Title" encodinganalog="245">Elias Hicks Blackburn
		  Papers, 
		  <unitdate type="inclusive">1848-1908</unitdate></unittitle> 
		<physdesc encodinganalog="300">1 lin. ft. (2 boxes)</physdesc> 
		<physdesc encodinganalog="300">2 reels</physdesc> 
		<note> 
		  <p>Available on microfilm. (MIC 119-120.) </p> 
		</note> 
		<abstract>Pioneer and Mormon bishop in Provo and Loa, Utah, farmer,
		  member of Territorial legislature, home-remedy healer. The collection includes
		  diaries, correspondence, and miscellaneous materials. The collection included
		  13 bound diaries from 1848-1849 to 1908. Other materials include six pieces of
		  correspondence from his foreign mission days (1859-1862) and his final years at
		  Loa. Of interest is the "Sketch, or Summary Record," a diary-like volume
		  maintained regularly from 1848 through 1906. It reveals on a daily basis, the
		  character of life in rural South Central Utah as experienced by a dedicated
		  churchman, farmer, and healer.</abstract> 
	 </did> 
	 <controlaccess> 
		<head>Topics:</head> 
		<subject encodinganalog="650">Homeopathy.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="650">Medicine -- Utah.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="690">Mormons and Mormonism -- Missions --
		  England -- 1859-1862.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="690">Mormons and Mormonism -- Missions -- Salmon
		  River. </subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="650">Polygamy.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="650">Postal service -- Utah.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="690">Salmon River Mission.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="690">Shoemakers.</subject> 
	 </controlaccess> 
	 <controlaccess> 
		<head>Persons:</head> 
		<persname encodinganalog="700" role="origination">Cannon, George Q.
		  1827-1901.</persname> 
		<persname encodinganalog="700" role="origination">Haacka, Clara
		  Blackburn.</persname> 
		<persname encodinganalog="600" role="subject">Murray, Elia H. </persname>
		
	 </controlaccess> 
	 <controlaccess> 
		<head>Places:</head> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Beaver (Utah)</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Beaver County (Utah)</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Fremont Valley (Utah)</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Loa (Utah)</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Piute County (Utah)</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Wayne County (Utah)</geogname> 
	 </controlaccess> 
	 <bioghist> 
		<head> Background </head> 
		<bioghist encodinganalog="545"> 
		  <head> Biographical Note </head> 
		  <p> Elias Hicks Blackburn (1827-1908) provides ample detail for his
			 biography in his several diaries and journals. He was born of a large family,
			 17 September 1827; his mother was widowed when he was one year old. She moved
			 her family from Bedford, Pennsylvania to Ohio and then to Illinois. Blackburn
			 was baptized into the LDS Church in April 1845 and came to Utah in the Milo
			 Andrus company in 1849. </p> 
		  <p>The earliest extant record that Blackburn kept begins in 1849; for
			 each year thereafter he maintained some sort of written record of his
			 activities, duties, assignments, etc., until sometime in 1863 when he began
			 what he termed his "Sketch, or Summary Record." He summarized his life to that
			 point and then maintained a comparatively regular chronicle of his activities
			 in that volume through 1900. From 1900 until his death in 1908 he kept annual
			 journals. Additional anecdotal information may be found in a brief, undated
			 biography of Blackburn by a granddaughter, Clara Blackburn Haacke. </p> 
		  <p>Upon arriving in Utah, Blackburn became one of the busiest of the
			 early pioneers. His first assignment from President Brigham Young was to guide
			 and assist in the settling of Provo City. Blackburn was soon appointed Bishop
			 of Provo and continued to guide the development of that community. </p> 
		  <p>The year 1857 was a typically busy one for Blackburn. For example,
			 he was called to assist President Young in an inspection of the Lemhi Mission
			 in the Salmon River country. He was also called upon to assist in the rescue of
			 an immigrant pack train that had lost oxen and supplies on the plains. Further,
			 the year 1857 also saw the U. S. Government halt mail service into the
			 territory, and Blackburn was asked to maintain a mail run from Salt Lake City
			 to Salt Creek (later known as Nephi) for three months; his assignment was
			 continued for an entire year during which time his young families suffered
			 severe hardship because Blackburn was not only running the mail service at his
			 own expense, he also had little time for farming.</p> 
		  <p>The 
		  <title render="italic">LDS Biographical Encyclopedia</title> indicates
		  that Blackburn had five wives. However, entries in his Sketch reveal that he
		  apparently married two additional women; none of the extant materials indicates
		  any issue of these unions, and there is evidence that these two otherwise
		  unrecorded marriages were of short duration. </p> 
		  <p> By September 1859, Blackburn had grown weary of camping in the
			 hills around Provo in an effort to avoid arrest for unlawful cohabitation and
			 he was called to fill a Mission. Blackburn remained abroad for three years, and
			 his final year was spent as President of the British Mission. </p> 
		  <p>Upon his return from England, Blackburn was appointed an Emigration
			 Agent and in that capacity shepherded several hundred Saints from England to
			 Salt Lake City. Next, Blackburn was assigned to Beaver County where he
			 organized and supervised the Sunday School program and acted as home missionary
			 in that stake. </p> 
		  <p>Blackburn continued in Beaver County farming, healing, caring for
			 his families, serving as Selectman, and supervising the Sunday School. His
			 removal to Fremont Valley came in May 1879. Later that same summer, Blackburn
			 was elected a Selectman for Piute County, a circumstance he mildly bemoaned,
			 having just served a similar post in Beaver County. </p> 
		  <p>In May 1880, Apostle Erastus Snow set apart Bishop Blackburn to
			 serve the entire Fremont Valley and all the settlements therein. The decade was
			 a full one for Blackburn. In addition to his regular church duties, preaching,
			 collecting and accounting for tithes, performing marriages, holding Bishop's
			 Courts, and excommunicating adulterous couples, he also served a term in the
			 Territorial Legislature, 1882. </p> 
		  <p>In May 1889, Apostle Francis M. Lyman set apart Elias Blackburn as
			 Patriarch to travel and perform blessings. The remaining eighteen years of his
			 life were so spent; moreover, he continued to administer to the sick.</p> 
		</bioghist> 
		<bioghist> 
		  <head> Genealogical Chart </head> 
		  <p>Genealogical chart available with register.</p> 
		</bioghist> 
	 </bioghist> 
	 <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
		<head> Scope and Content </head> 
		<p>The Elias Hicks Blackburn collection consists of thirteen bound
		  journals or sketches and approximately three linear centimeters of loose
		  materials. The bound journals are arranged chronologically; and the loose
		  materials are arranged chronologically by the character of their subject
		  matter, i.e., one folder contains materials actually written by Blackburn;
		  another contains documents of his life; and yet another contains materials
		  about him and the collection. </p> 
		<p>As valuable as these materials--especially the "Sketch, or Summary
		  Record"--appear to be for the day-to-day glimpse they provide into life in
		  Wayne County and vicinity during the last third of the nineteenth century,
		  perhaps of equal value is the large number of individual and family names whom
		  Blackburn names as patients. The compilation of a name index for the Blackburn
		  Sketch and Journals could prove to be of usefulness to scholars and historians.
		  </p> 
		<p>Elias Blackburn and his families crossed the lines of several other
		  families in Wayne, Sevier, and Beaver Counties. The Maxfields, the Okelands,
		  the Stoddards, the Kings, and others form a sort of latticework in the
		  development of that area of Utah. These interrelationships (through marriage,
		  church work, physical proximity, etc.) if explored in detail could provide
		  still deeper insight into life in south central Utah in the nineteenth century.
		  Correspondence and patriarchal blessings in Blackburn's hand, for example,
		  appear in the Volney King collection 
		  <extref href="http://history.utah.gov/findaids/b00036">Mss B
			 36.</extref></p> 
		<p> Early exploration of Fremont Valley, Wayne County, and vicinity was
		  carried on irregularly by Blackburn, some members of his family, by Albert King
		  Thurber, and others. The records of their explorations, if they were to be
		  compared and/or consolidated, could provide a view of the area that has not
		  been available before.</p> 
	 </scopecontent> 
	 <organization> 
		<head> Series Descriptions </head> 
		<p> 
		  <unittitle>Correspondence and Miscellaneous</unittitle></p> 
		<p> 
		  <unittitle>Journals</unittitle></p> 
	 </organization> 
	 <admininfo> 
		<head> Administrative Information </head> 
		<prefercite> 
		  <head> Preferred Citation: </head> 
		  <p>Elias Hicks Blackburn Papers, 1848-1908, Utah State Historical
			 Society. </p> 
		</prefercite> 
		<acqinfo> 
		  <head> Acquisition Information: </head> 
		  <p>Gift of Joseph C. Blackburn.</p> 
		</acqinfo> 
		<userestrict> 
		  <head> Restrictions on Use </head> 
		  <p> The Elias Hicks Blackburn Papers are the physical property of the
			 Utah Historical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. Literary rights, including
			 copyright, may belong to the authors or their heirs and assigns. Please contact
			 the Historical Society for information regarding specific use of this
			 collection. </p> 
		</userestrict> 
		<processinfo> 
		  <head> Processing Information: </head> 
		  <list> 
			 <item> Collection processed by William C. Seifrit, 1979</item> 
			 <item> Finding aid compiled by William C. Seifrit, 1979</item> 
			 <item> Finding aid edited by Linda Thatcher, 2000</item> 
			 <item> Collection cataloged by Richard Saunders, 1988 (RLIN ID:
				UTSX88-A81). </item> 
			 <item> Finding aid encoded for the World Wide Web by Craig
				Ringgenberg, 2000. </item> 
		  </list> 
		</processinfo> 
	 </admininfo> 
	 <dsc type="in-depth"> 
		<head> Container list </head> 
		<thead> 
		  <row> 
			 <entry> Box </entry> 
			 <entry> Folder </entry> 
			 <entry> Contents </entry> 
		  </row> 
		</thead> 
		<c01 level="series"> 
		  <did> 
			 <container type="box" label=""></container> 
			 <container type="folder"></container> 
			 <unitid></unitid> 
			 <unittitle>Correspondence and Miscellaneous</unittitle> 
		  </did> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="39222000124300">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">1</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Correspondence, 1859-1862; Handwritten Copies of
				  Correspondence From His Last Years [7 items]</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">2</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous Documents, Certificates, Petition Copy,
				  Receipts, Photographs</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">3</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Correspondence: Donor Joseph Blackburn; Testimony of
				  Healing Powers; Autobiographical material</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">8</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Sketch or Summary Record, 1827-1900</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		</c01> 
		<c01 level="series"> 
		  <did> 
			 <container type="box" label=""></container> 
			 <container type="folder"></container> 
			 <unitid></unitid> 
			 <unittitle>Journals</unittitle> 
		  </did> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">4</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1849-1859</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">5</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1859-1860</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">6</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1861</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">7</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1862-1863</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="39222000124318">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">1</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1900</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">2</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1901-1902</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">3</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1903</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">4</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1904</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">5</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1905</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">6</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1906</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">7</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1907</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">8</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Journal, 1908</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		</c01> 
	 </dsc> 
  </archdesc> 
</ead> 
