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Library of Congress Collection of Mormon Diaries < PAGE TITLE

What is the Library of Congress Collection of Mormon Diaries
The Library of Congress Collection of Mormon Diaries is a collection of transcripts of journals, diaries, biographies, life sketches, historical sketches of localities, and other documents pertaining to early members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the history of the state of Utah. The transcripts, chiefly typewritten, were made in 1936-1937 by the Utah Historical Records Survey of the Works Progress Administration Federal Writers' Projects. Transcripts were created in Logan, Ogden, Provo, Salt Lake City, St. George, and elsewhere in Utah. Transcripts list, where applicable, the name and locality of the possessor of the original from which the transcripts were made.

Location
The originals are held by the Library of Congress, which microfilmed the collection in 1950 on 13 rolls of microfilm for the University of California, Berkeley. The films at UC-Berkeley are titled "Mormon Biographies" and are numbered BANC MSS P-F 319 Reel 1 through 13. The originals at the Library of Congress are today part of the "United States Work Projects Administration records, 1524-1975" collection, "Historical Records Survey: Archival and Manuscript Records, 1681-1937" group, "State File, 1681-1937" series, boxes B208 to B219. They have been reorganized since filming.

Partial Inventory
The number at the start of each content line is the frame or image number.