Of
Scottish descent, Hunter was born in
Holden, Utah, the son of John Edward and Margaret Teeples Hunter. He attended
Brigham Young High School, and
Brigham Young University, receiving a bachelor's degree in 1929 and a master's degree in 1931. He married Ferne Gardner in
Logan, Utah, in 1931, and the couple had six children. For several years Hunter worked as a public school administrator in Nevada and Utah. His first education job was as principal of a school in
St. Thomas, Nevada, a city since flooded by
Lake Mead. He later taught
LDS seminary courses while living in
Provo, Utah. In 1935, Hunter earned Ph.D. in history from the
University of California, Berkeley. Although his professors in Berkeley encouraged him to take a university position in history, he chose to continue as a teacher of religion and moved to
Logan, Utah, to teach at the
Institute of Religion. Hunter spent the next 17 years as a seminary teacher. Hunter was called to serve on the LDS Church's First Council of the Seventy and was
sustained on April 6, 1945. Assignments as a general authority took him to many parts of the world, including trips to
Mexico, Central America, and South America to study archaeological ruins in the context of accounts found within the
Book of Mormon. Hunter was a cofounder along with
Thomas Stuart Ferguson of the
New World Archaeological Foundation, and is the co-author, also with Ferguson, of the book
Ancient America and the Book of Mormon. First published in 1950, the book focuses on the writings of an Aztec historian
Ixtlilxochitl who, in written accounts of
Mesoamerican history provided to the newly arrived Europeans, appears to corroborate a number of claims made in the
Book of Mormon. Hunter also served as national president of
Delta Phi Kappa, a fraternity for former Mormon missionaries. ==Publications==