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Church history/reference web site?

Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 11:49 am
by cmcphie
Is there a web site where a person can query and/or contribute to church historical information and talk references? Recently I was reading a talk by Pres. Monson (1986 Oct general conference) in which he referred to a bombing mission and wanted to find out more details about that event. He mentioned a Life magazine article but there are no references in the talk. I would think many individuals would benefit from such a web site that would include information about original documents, photographs and in other ways expand on a talk or message that has been given. It would also assist those wanting to get details about a particular account in church history and do additional research.

Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 12:28 pm
by aebrown
cmcphie wrote:Is there a web site where a person can query and/or contribute to church historical information and talk references? Recently I was reading a talk by Pres. Monson (1986 Oct general conference) in which he referred to a bombing mission and wanted to find out more details about that event. He mentioned a Life magazine article but there are no references in the talk. I would think many individuals would benefit from such a web site that would include information about original documents, photographs and in other ways expand on a talk or message that has been given. It would also assist those wanting to get details about a particular account in church history and do additional research.
Although it's only a small fraction of what you're asking for, you might consult the Church History Library Resources page.

Posted: Sun Apr 17, 2011 8:43 pm
by JamesAnderson
As to the Life Magazine article, try Google for that one. I think there is an archive on Google of photos from the magazine. That may also give you the article, and some major libraries may have the back-issue run for that time period. In its day, Life was a magazine you always ran across somewhere in your day, at offices, schools, homes, etc., it was practically an American icon among magazines.