Business & Society

New USU Library Collection Documents 150 Years of the Episcopal Church in Cache Valley

A photo of a service in St. John's, taken in the 1970s. This photograph has been edited for enhanced viewing purposes. Courtesy of USU Special Collections & Archives.??

Following the 150th anniversary of the Episcopal Church’s presence in Cache Valley, a new digital collection and exhibit that document the history of St. John’s Episcopal Church have been created through joint efforts between Utah State University and the church.

St. John’s was the first church outside of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to be established in Cache Valley, and it has seen many changes take place both within its congregation and the Episcopal church itself during its 150 years in the valley. St. John’s hosted a variety of events for this anniversary, including music performances and community gatherings.

The digital collection and exhibit themselves are a result, in part, of St. John’s year of celebration. USU’s Special Collections and Archives was already in possession of many materials relating to the Episcopal Church’s history in Cache Valley, but these resources had never been compiled and made accessible in a full-sized collection centered on St. John’s.

The church expressed an interest to USU Libraries in having a collection on St. John’s history created, and it ultimately paid for a curator — USU history graduate student Connor Murphy — to be hired for the broader St. John’s project.

This project involved creating the collection as well as a digital exhibit that utilizes the collection's materials to provide a more detailed and narrative-based history of St. John’s. Murphy collected and researched materials from multiple collections in USU Libraries’ Special Collections and Archives as part of this project and as part of his master’s thesis project. Murphy was supported in his work by Dan Davis, the faculty project adviser and photograph curator at Special Collections and Archives.

Several other parties at USU Libraries worked together to create and publish the collection and exhibit, making them truly collaborative products of the history department, USU Libraries, and St. John’s. In addition to the already mentioned Special Collections and Archives, the collection was also made possible by efforts from Library Information Technology, Collections & Resource Sharing, the Special Collections and Archives Digital Stewardship team, and the Digital Initiatives unit. ?

The collection and the exhibit include timelines, photos, publications, correspondence, manuscripts, and radio broadcasts relating to the clergy and congregation. Taken as a whole, these materials create a rich historical account of St. John’s place in the religious, educational, and recreational life of Cache Valley.

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