Davis Bitton

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Biography

Bitton was raised in the area of Blackfoot, Idaho. He started playing piano at age six and was a talented pianist.Template:Sfn After two years at Brigham Young University (BYU), he served as an LDS missionary in FranceTemplate:Sfn where he edited the church's L'Etoile periodical.Template:Sfn While on his LDS mission he performed on the piano to assist in proselyting.Template:Sfn He then served in the United States Army during the Korean War.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bitton returned to BYU where he was president of his Phi Alpha Theta chapter. While president of the Phi Alpha Theta chapter at BYU he invited Arrington to address the spring banquet. Arrington also wrote a letter of recommendation for Bitton during this time.Template:Sfn He graduated in 1956 from BYU with a BA in history.Template:Sfn Afterward, he studied at Princeton University; there he received a M.A. in 1958 and earned his Ph.D. in French History in 1961.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Bitton was a professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin until 1961 when he started teaching at the University of California, Santa Barbara.Template:Sfn He then joined the University of Utah faculty in 1966Template:Sfn where he taught for 29 yearsTemplate:Sfn until his retirement in 1995.Template:Sfn Coming out of retirement, from 2005–2006 Bitton was a visiting professor at Brigham Young University Hawaii.Template:Sfn

He was an original member and founder of the Mormon History Association in 1965 and he served as president from 1971–1972.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bitton served as an official Assistant Church Historian to Leonard J. Arrington from 1972–1982.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bitton referred to this time as "Camelot", an exciting time of unprecedented development of new Mormon historical research. Bitton published several works with Arrington.Template:Sfn With Arrington's help, Bitton was appointed as a consultant for BYU to the newly created Joseph Fielding Smith Institute with an honorarium of $1,000 per year. However, this position only lasted two years before it was terminated.Template:Sfn

Bitton married his wife Joan in 1984,Template:Sfn and later in life they served together as guides on Temple Square for five years.Template:Sfn He died at the age of 77 in Salt Lake City.Template:Sfn

Awards and honors

Davis Bitton has been presented five awards by the MHA. His first award granted by the MHA was in 1975 for the Best Article By A Senior Author for his works Ritualization of Mormon History and The Making of a Community: Blackfoot, Idaho, 1878 to 1910. Two years later he won the Outstanding Bibliography Award for his Guide to Mormon Diaries and Autobiographies. In 1979, Arrington and Bitton were given the MHA Best Book Award for The Mormon Experience: A History of the Latterday Saints. For his biography on George Q. Cannon, Bitton was honored with the MHA Best Book Award in 1999; in 2006, the Mormon History Association awarded Bitton the Leonard J. Arrington Award for "distinguished and meritorious service to Mormon history."Template:Sfn

Although his specialty was French history, Bitton made many contributions to Mormon history. Bitton was given the "Silver Award" from Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought for an essay on B. H. Roberts.Template:Sfn Bitton's biography of George Q. Cannon was described by Deseret News "as a definitive study of one of the most important of all Mormon leaders."Template:Sfn

Published works

The following is only a partial list of Bitton's published works:

Books

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    Winner of Outstanding Bibliography Award (Mormon History Association)Template:Sfn
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    Winner of Best Book Award (Mormon History Association)Template:Sfn
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    Winner of Best Book Award (Mormon History Association) and Evans Biography Award (Utah State University)Template:Sfn

Articles

Notes

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References

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External links

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