Stanley Buchholz Kimball (November 25, 1926 – May 15, 2003) was a historian at Southern Illinois University. He was an expert on eastern European history and also wrote on Latter-day Saint history, including his ancestor Heber C. Kimball and the Mormon Trail.
Kimball returned home and completed his B.A. and M.A. from the University of Denver.[2] Kimball then became a director of an art center in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. While living in Winston-Salem he married Violet Tew, with whom he would have four children. He then went to Columbia University where he earned a Ph.D. in history, doing his dissertation on the Czech National Theatre in America.[1]
Knight, Hal; Stanley B. Kimball (1978). 111 Days to Zion. Robert R. Noyce (illustration); Richard F. Carter (maps). Salt Lake City: Deseret News. ISBN0-9656694-0-8.
Kimball, Stanley B. (1979). Discovering Mormon Trails: New York to California, 1831-1868. Diane Clements (cartography). Salt Lake City: Deseret Book. ISBN978-0877477563. OCLC5614526.
——; Violet T. Kimball; Gary Ladd (1995). Mary L. Van Camp (ed.). Mormon Trail: Voyage of Discovery. Las Vegas, Nevada: KC Publications. ISBN0-88714-092-0.
—— (1996). The Mormon Battalion on the Santa Fe Trail in 1846: A Study of the Mormon Battalion Trail Accounts During the War with Mexico. Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior.
Stanley B. Kimball Sources of Mormon History in Illinois—digitized pdf of Sources of Mormon history in Illinois, 1839-48: an annotated catalog of the microfilm collection at Southern Illinois University compiled by Kimball, accompanied by a biography of Kimball.