Facts and Statistics

Close

Virginia

98,786

Total Church Membership

1-in-

22

Stakes

1010

210

Congregations

173 Wards
37 Branches

46

FamilySearch Centers

46

1

Temples

2

Missions

History

Jedediah M. Grant, an early missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, discovered a high level of curiosity about the Church when he arrived in Virginia in 1839. He received three speaking invitations for every one he could fill. In 1841, there were some 80 members of the Church in Virginia. After Grant and his brother left the state in 1842, another missionary, R.H. Kinnamon, traveled to nine counties and baptized more than 100 people. When Church President Joseph Smith was murdered by a mob in 1844, Church membership in Virginia was likely more than 350. Many of these early members migrated to Utah Territory.

The Church stopped sending missionaries to Virginia during the Civil War, but resumed missionary work in the state during the 1870s. The Church grew gradually during the ensuing decades, and new congregations were formed throughout the state. In 1883, missionaries J. Golden Kimball and Charles Welch baptized Peter Mason and his family in Rockbridge County. The Mason family was Native American and their conversion led to the conversion of others in the Rockbridge Native American community and the establishment of a Church congregation in the central Blue Ridge region of the state.

In 1957, in Richmond, the Church established its first stake in Virginia. The Church grew rapidly in the state during the 1970s and 1980s, establishing 10 new stakes during those decades. In 1974, the Church dedicated the Washington D.C. Temple (in Kensington, Maryland). At that time, it was the only temple in the United States east of the Mississippi River. As such, it served thousands of church members living in the eastern United States, including those residing in Virginia. The Church began a major renovation of the temple in 2018, and it was rededicated in August 14, 2022.

In 2018, the Church announced the construction of a temple in the Richmond area. There are now more than 90,000 Church members in Virginia organized into 22 stakes. In 2021, President Dallin H. Oaks, First Counselor in the Church’s First Presidency, delivered a landmark address on religious freedom at the University of Virginia.