Facts and Statistics

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New Hampshire

8,553

Total Church Membership

1-in-

3

Stakes

18

Congregations

14 Wards
4 Branches

6

FamilySearch Centers

6

1

Missions

History

In 1811, the family of Joseph Smith, Jr. moved to Lebanon (now West Lebanon) and rented a home there for two years. During this period in Lebanon, young Joseph, who was about 6 or 7 years old, suffered a severe bone infection in his leg. Five miles away was Dr. Nathan Smith, founder of Dartmouth Medical School, who was ahead of his time in terms of treating this particular ailment. Dr. Smith was able to save Joseph’s leg.

In 1832, Joseph Smith, now leader of a fledgling religious movement, received a revelation calling Orson Pratt and Lyman E. Johnson on missions to the eastern United States. Within that same year, they arrived in New Hampshire, staying for 26 days and initially baptizing 20 people. In the 1840s, several Latter-day Saint congregations were meeting together in New Hampshire. One missionary working in the state, Eli P. Maginn, wrote that he could not “fill from one to twenty of the calls for preaching; there is the greatest excitement in this country that I ever beheld.”

Missionary work in New Hampshire lessened after the 1844 murder of Joseph Smith and the subsequent mass movement west by Church members. Around the turn of the 20th century, Latter-day Saints once again began to establish congregations in New Hampshire. The first stake in New Hampshire was created in Manchester in 1970.

Notable local Latter-day Saints include Dick Swett, who grew up in New Hampshire. He represented the 2nd Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1991 to 1995 and served as ambassador to Denmark from 1998 to 2001.