Ron Esplin
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Dr. Ronald K. Esplin is the current head of The Joseph Smith Papers project and the former chairman of the Joseph Fielding Smith institute for Latter-day Saint history at Brigham Young University (BYU).
[edit] Biography
Esplin served as a missionary in the Central American Mission, when that mission not only incuded all the countries from Guatemala to Panama, but also had Columbia within its borders.
Esplin holds degrees from the University of Utah and the University of Virginia.
In 1972 Esplin was planning to start a teaching career as an Institute instructor. He was recruited to work for the summer under Church Historian Leonard J. Arrington doing a search and study of Brigham YOung's papers in the churh archive. He remained working in the Church History Archives until 1980 when Church Commissioner of Education Jeffrey R. Holland convinced Esplin to come with him when he became president of Brigham Young University.[1] Esplin received a Ph.D. from BYU with his doctoral dissertation being entitled The Emergence of Brigham Young and The Twelve to Mormon Leadership, 1830-1841.[2]
By 1984 Esplin was director of the Smith Institute and he helped Dean C. Jesse to get The Papers of Joseph Smith: Volume 1 published in 1984. Esplin was also involved in the decision to entirely revamp the project. In 2001 he left BYU and took over as director of the papers project full time. However from 2001-2005 the project was operating at BYU. In 2005 it relocated to the Church Archives in Salt Lake City.[3]
Esplin's research has focused on the early period of the history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints particularly the role of Brigham Young during the presidency of Joseph Smith. Esplin was among the contributors to the Atlas of Mormonism.[4] and the Encyclopedia of Mormonism[5] Esplin was also one of fourteen editors working on the project under Daniel H. Ludlow.[6]
Besides direting the Smith Institute Esplin also taught classes in Church History at BYU.
As director of the Joseph Smith papers project Esplin has been working to make it so that once the papers come out they are available in many libraries around the world.[7]
Esplin has also served as the president of the Mormon History Association.[8][9]
Esplin has seven children and has served in such callings as a counselor in a bishopric and as a Sunday School teacher.[10][11]