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Acknowledgments When I was young, I occasionally would watch my handyman father work on odd projects in our basement. On one such a night, he turned from his latest project and asked me,“You want to see some old-timey square nails?” I nodded,and he rummaged in an old card-catalog drawer filled with odds and ends. From it, he pulled out a yellowed envelope. In pencil on the envelope’s cover was written “Original nails from Kirtland Temple.” He opened the envelope and showed me two rusty square nails. My father’s former business partner, a man who had served as a grandfather figure to me, had retrieved the nails in the 1960s while doing restoration work at the first Mormon temple, the Kirtland Temple. As a nine-year-old, I was deeply impressed by the artifacts—not just because they once belonged to my “Papa,” who had passed away just a few years earlier, but because I knew that the Kirtland Temple was no ordinary building. My parents, devout conservative members of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, had raised me with stories of miracles surrounding the dedication of the temple. To say that this book originated in seeing two rusty nails when I was nine is an exaggeration, but this incident illustrates that, even then, I knew something of the power of a holy site on a believer. My study is a historical ethnography of a changing sacred site, following in the tradition of Robert Orsi, who popularized historical ethnography as a viable and important tool of inquiry for religious studies scholars.1 To understand the changes at the KirtlandTemple in the past forty years,I combined ethnographic observations and oral history interviews with traditional archival sources. In the course of my research, I conducted extensive research at the Kirtland Temple Historic Site Special Collections in Kirtland, Ohio; x Acknowledgments the Community of Christ Library Archives in Independence, Missouri; the Office of the Clerk of Court of the Lake County Ohio Common Pleas Court in Painesville, Ohio; and the Church History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City, Utah. My archival sources were richly varied. They included journal entries from visitors, attendance statistics (charted monthly, revealing the faith background of pilgrims), visitor comment cards from the late 1960s and the first decade of the twenty-first century, published accounts of spiritual experiences during visits, official correspondence on the presentation and design of the site, and the scripts for plays performed at the pilgrimage site. I supplemented my study of the temple with oral history interviews, participant observation at the site, and a questionnaire. I conducted interviews of site interpreters, pilgrims, bus drivers , non-Mormon tourists, tour leaders, and long-term Kirtland residents. I also copied dozens of publicly accessed blogs that record visitor reflections about the site, many written the day after the visit. Compiling these sources meant that I incurred considerable debts of gratitude along the way. I wish to thank my colleagues, friends, and interview partners associated (past and present) with the Kirtland Temple, Community of Christ, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Historic Kirtland, and the Lake County Common Pleas Court. These include Lachlan Mackay, Barbara Walden, Ronald Romig, Ronald G. Watt, Karl Anderson, Sunny Morton, Barbara Bernauer,Sue MacDonald,Mark Scherer,Lee Updike,Rachel Killebrew ,and Maureen G.Kelly.They deserve my unbounded thanks for helping locate primary source documents, photographs, artifacts, and the occasional citation information for pesky sources that had eluded full notation in my research notes. Writers work in communities—even if the communities are interior imagined audiences—and those communities shape what is written. I am greatly indebted to a host of institutions, mentors, colleagues, family members, and friends who have made this book possible and shaped me as a scholar. My mentors at the University of Iowa included Raymond Mentzer, Michelene Pesantubbee, Ralph Keen, Richard Turner, Scott Schnell, Janine Sawada, Morten Schlütter, and my many fellow graduate students. All of the aforementioned individuals helped inspire my interests in pilgrimage, ethnography , and religion in America. Institutions also generously supported my research and writing.Bowdoin College and the Andrew W.Mellon Foundation funded a two-year postdoctoral fellowship during which I completed this book. To these institutions, I am truly grateful to have been given the time and resources to write, revise, write, and revise. [3.17.162.247] Project MUSE (2024-04...

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