From Deseret News archives:
Historians hail LDS Church record keeping
Mormons are "world champion record keepers" in the eyes of Phillip Barlow.
The Arrington chairman of Mormon History and Culture at Utah State University says LDS Church members, with all their journals, office records and genealogical information are unparalleled anywhere in the world.
Jan Shipps, professor emeritus of history and religious studies at Indiana University-Purdue University, agrees.
"The LDS keep better records than anybody I know about," she said. "They started keeping records from the beginning."
She figures The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints would still be No. 1 in records, even without its world-famous family history system.
That's one reason why the church needs the new Church History Library, an entire five-story building with 230,000 square-feet at the northeast corner of Main and North Temple streets — just to store records.
For a church less than 200 years old to have so many records is surprising.
Elder Marlin K. Jensen, church historian and member of the Seventy, believes the new history building "will rival the great libraries of the world with its facilities and collections."
He believes it will become the "mecca of church history" and says the Lord places great value on church history.
Construction began in October 2006 on the building, which will be dedicated June 20.
The library's collection will include 270,000 books, pamphlets and magazines, as well as 240,000 original unpublished records. The library will house nearly 25 miles of shelving.
It will also have 23,000 audiovisual items, 13,000 collections of photographs and 3.5 million patriarchal blessings of LDS Church members.
Shipps said Mormonism was lucky in that it began at the start of a great literacy movement.
One reason Shipps said she's spent 50 years studying the LDS Church is because it has so many records available. There are also records by believers and non-believers.
Shipps said she's only scratched the surface reading church records. There are so many records out there, just of the LDS pioneer era, that you couldn't read them all in a lifetime.
There are Mormon records at many places, such as Yale and Berkeley. She is also impressed at the vast LDS collections at Brigham Young University, the University of Utah and even USU.
"There are Mormon records everywhere," Shipps said. "It's amazing."
She's not sure the church can continue to keep records at the same pace, because it has become so large.
"For a long time they stored everything," she said. "Now they tend to store things selectively."
The one thing Shipps worries about now is that the most modern of records in the LDS Church may only be on computer.
"They don't always print it out," she said.












