Monday, October 14, 2024

John A. Tvedtnes on the Kinderhook Plates (1997)

I recently came across a brief discussion of the Kinderhook Plates by the late John A. Tvedtnes; I am reproducing it for those who are fans of his work:



 


 

Kinderhook Plates a "Hoax"

 

This week I read J. G. Barton's article on the Kinderhook Plates that appeared in the latest issue of Ancient American. I don't know if the author is simply ignorant of more recent research on the topic or is aware of it but deceptive in omitting it from the article.

 

In 1980, the only plate known to still exist was submitted to various tests, using a scanning microprobe and X-ray fluorescence analysis. The tests demonstrated that, contrary to earlier opinions elicited in the article by my good friend, Welby Ricks (cited in the Barron article), the plate was produced by acid etching rather than by an engraving tool.

 

This matter was discussed at length by another of my acquaintances, Prof. Stanley B. Kimball, in his article, "Kinderhook Plates Brought to Joseph Smith Appear to be a Nineteenth Century Hoax," which was published in The Ensign (successor to The Improvement Era that carried the Ricks article), August 1981. Even more recent is Kimball's entry on the "Kinderhook Plates" in Macmillan's Encyclopedia of Mormonism, volume 2. It would be well for you to mention these facts, so your readers will not be misled.

 

John A. Tvedtness

F.A.R.M.S.

Provo, UT (John A. Tvedtnes, letter to the editor, Ancient American: Archaeology of the Americas before Columbus 3, no. 21 [November/December 1997]: 23)

 

 

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