Facts and Statistics

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Oregon

150,170

Total Church Membership

1-in-

34

Stakes

101010

291

Congregations

243 Wards
48 Branches

76

FamilySearch Centers

76

2

Temples

3

Missions

History

When Church President Joseph Smith visited Washington, D.C. in 1838, Henry Clay, "the great compromiser," suggested that Joseph Smith take members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to Oregon Territory. Joseph Smith did not take Clay seriously. Although the territory was claimed by both America and Great Britain, Church members from both countries were denied governmental support to settle there.

After Oregon obtained statehood, Church members found more favorable conditions. Latter-day Saint settlement largely began with the arrival of Latter-day Saint businessmen in 1887. They built a lumber mill on North Powder River and persuaded several hundred Latter-day Saint families to migrate to Oregon. Migration continued with the purchase of land for sugar beet farms. By June 1901, enough members had migrated that a stake (diocese) was created in Oregon. Two years later, the five original congregations had grown to twelve, "all in excellent working order." By 1930, Church membership in Oregon was 3,230. When the Portland Oregon Temple was dedicated in 1989, more than 300,000 visitors toured the edifice.