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Sidney B. Sperry financial records, 1943-1964

 Series — Box: 4, Folder: 7-13
Identifier: UA 618 Series 7

Scope and Contents

Contains Merrill Lynch stock and commodity exchange account statements, transaction receipts, and correspondence; J. A. Hogle & Company transaction records, receipts for securities, and account statements; miscellaneous stock record book, purchase receipts, and relevant correspondence; book royalty receipts and records, tax notices, statements, and forms, receipts for donations to Brigham Young University, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the Boy Scouts of America, and wage statements.

Dates

  • 1943-1964

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Restricted. Closed for 35 years from the date of creation of the records, and thereafter open to the public in accordance with the L. Tom Perry Special Collections Restriction Policy.

Conditions Governing Use

It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain any necessary copyright clearances. Permission to use material from this collection must be obtained from Reference Services at specialcollections@byu.edu.

Biographical History

From the Collection:

Brigham Young University in the 1930's was shaped by the Great Depression. A cutback in the school's budget led to a cut in faculty pay and the school faced the threat of being shut down or turned over to the State of Utah. However, in spite of these obstacles, BYU flourished under the leadership of President Franklin S. Harris. The student enrollment rate continued to rise, and the number of faculty also reached its highest point up to that time. Students at BYU also faced difficulties in trying to live on as little money as possible. However, the student body also adapted and school life continued with athletic events, debates, and other inexpensive student activities.

Sidney Branton Sperry was born in Salt Lake City on December 26, 1895 to Harrison and Josephine Titcomb Sperry. Following his graduation from L.D.S. High School in Salt Lake City in 1913, he attended the University of Utah, receiving his B.A. degree with a major in chemistry and a minor in geology in 1917. After graduation, he was employed as a research chemist by both the United States Bureau of Metallurgical Research and the United States Army and was assigned to Camp Lewis, Washington. From October 9, 1918 to December 15, 1918, he served as a second lieutenant in the 71st Field Artillery at Camp Knox, Kentucky. His physical prowess was evidenced in his selection as the heavy-weight boxing champion of his battalion. Following World War II, Sperry served as an Mormon missionary in the southern states, presiding over the South Carolina Conference for nearly twenty months. He returned home from his mission in 1921 and on September 1 of that year married Eva Lila Braithewaite. in the ensuing years, eight children were born to the Sperrys: Lyman, Claire Elaine, Richard, Phyllis, Delbert, Arlyn, Brent, and Karen. From 1921 to 1922, Sperry taught math, chemistry, physics, and choir at Afton (Wyoming) High School, following which he joined the LDS Church School System at the invitation of Dr. Adam S. Bennion, Commissioner of Education. Sperry served as a seminary teacher in Moroni and American Fork, Utah and pioneered the seminary system in Ogden, Utah. In 1925, Sperry enrolled in the Divinity School of the University of Chicago, specializing in Old Testament with a minor in Hebrew and receiving his M.A. in 1926. Sperry returned to Utah and then moved to Idaho where he initiated the seminary and institute program at Pocatello and served as director of the LDS Institute of Religion in moscow from 1929 to 1931. In 1931, Sperry received a Ph.D. in Old Testament languages and literature from the University of chicago. During the next academic year (1931-1932), he did post-doctoral research in archaeology at the American School of Oriental research in Jerusalem.

In 1932 at the end of his year abroad, Sperry joined the faculty of Brigham Young University as an associate professor of religious education. During his years at BYU, Dr. Sperry taught courses in Old Testament, New Testament, Hebrew, Syriac, Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, Pearl of Great Price, Mormon theology and church history, along with courses in Greek history, Roman history, geometry and mathematics. In 1939, Dr. Sperry received full professorial status. During the Second World War, Sperry was employed simultaneously by BYU and by the U.S. War Manpower Commission at Geneva Steel plant as a truck driver and junior clerk. From 1946 to 1954, Dr. Sperry was director of religious instruction at BYU, and from 1954 to 1959, he was director of graduate studies in religion at BYU. He was instrumental in organizing religion courses designed especially for prospective missionaries in preparation for their missionary service. Dr. Sperry sought to produce a rigorous and scholastically sound division of religion; he wrote that he "had the desire and vision that some day it would become spiritually and scholastically the greatest in the world." Dr. Sperry led a BYU travel study tour of Europe and the Holy Land in 1953. In May, 1962, Brigham Young University bestowed the Karl G. Maeser Distinguished Teaching Award upon him. Dr. Sperry pioneered the adult education lecture series by giving a series of speeches in both the Assembly hall and the LDS Business College in Salt Lake City, as well as elsewhere in Utah and in Idaho, Nevada, California, Washington, and Alberta. He also began the education weeks program conducted by BYU. Dr. Sperry retired from BYU in 1971. In 1976, he was awarded an honorary doctorate in religious literature from BYU.

Within the Church, Sperry served as a Sunday School Gospel doctrine teacher, high councilor, an influential member of the Utah Stake High Priests Quorum, a member of the Stake Sunday School Board, and patriarch for the BYU Eighth Stake, delivering 141 blessings between 1968 and 1971. He also delivered a series of Sunday evening gospel lectures over KSL Radio for the LDS Church Radio Hour upon the invitation of the Church Radio, Publicity and Missionary Literature Committee from 1946 to 1947.

Within the community, Dr. Sperry was active in the Republican party; served as chairman of the Department of the Handicapped Child for the Utah PTA Committee on Education; as chairman of the Child Welfare Program in Provo; and as chairman of the Utah Scholarship Foundation, a non-profit organization designed to provide financial aids to students in higher education.

Between 1954 and 1958, Dr. Sperry and his sons owned and operated an art dealership which purchased paintings from European artists and museums and sold them to residents of Utah.

Dr. Sperry was widely known as an author. He wrote numerous articles for the Improvement Era, the Liahona, and the Instructor, and was named as a contributing editor to the Improvement Era in 1958. Dr. Sperry wrote several lesson manuals for the Sunday School, the MIA, the Relief Society and the ward teaching programs of the Church. He also authored the following fourteen books: Ancient Records Testify (1938); The Spirit of the Old Testament (1940); The Message of the Twelve Prophets (1941); Our Book of Mormon (1947); Themes of the Restored Gospel (1950); The Book of Mormon Testifies (1952); The Voice of Israel's Prophets (1953); The Aramaic Vocabulary of the Old Testament (1954); Paul's Life and Letters (1955); Knowledge is Power (1958); Doctrine and Covenants Compendium (1960); Problems of the Book of the Book of Mormon (1964); Book of Mormon Compendium (1968); and Book of Mormon Chronology (1970).

Dr. Sperry belonged to two professional organizations: the Corporation of the American Schools of oriental Research (where he represented BYU) and the American Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis.

Dr. Sperry's abilities extended into the realm of music where he was an accomplished pipe organist and a student of Tabernacle organist John J. McClellan.

Sperry was also a fan of word puzzles.

Dr. Sperry passed away on September 4, 1977 at the age of 81. He was survived by his wife, eight children, 42 grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. His funeral services were held in the Joseph Smith Auditorium on the BYU campus, the first time in eleven years that a funeral had been held on the campus and an indication of the esteem with which Dr. Sperry was regarded.

Extent

7 folders

Language of Materials

English