Facts and Statistics

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Ohio

64,595

Total Church Membership

1-in-

15

Stakes

10

127

Congregations

101 Wards
26 Branches

46

FamilySearch Centers

46

1

Temples

2

Missions

History

In January 1831, people of the Delaware Nation graciously received traveling missionaries of the fledgling Church of Christ (established in 1830 and later renamed The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) and listened to their message. Around the same time, Ohio minister Sidney Rigdon and much of his congregation in Mentor, Ohio, encountered the same missionaries and joined the Church. Nearby Kirtland became Church headquarters from 1831 to 1838. In its heyday, the Latter-day Saint community in northern Ohio included over 2,000 members.

In 1831, Church President Joseph Smith, his wife Emma Smith, and their children moved to Kirtland. Church members sacrificed their time and resources to build a house of worship, the Kirtland Temple. In 1836, after three years of labor, the temple was complete. Two years later, tensions in the community compelled church members to leave Kirtland and gather with another body of Latter-day Saints in Missouri.

Beginning in the late 1970s, Latter-day Saints in northern Ohio reorganized congregations. The Church has since restored historic sites in Kirtland and Hiram, including a store, a sawmill, an ashery, and Joseph and Emma Smith’s home. The Kirtland Temple is a national historical landmark under the management of the Community of Christ, another denomination historically rooted in the teachings of Joseph Smith.

In 1999, Latter-day Saints hosted members of the community for an open house of the Columbus Ohio Temple prior to its dedication. In 2010, a team of Church archivists worked with the Geauga County Archives Department to digitally preserve historical documents and to share with the Archives Department copies of other documents needed to fill gaps in its collection. Church members work to be engaged members of their local communities, contributing to civic life and serving those in need.