Facts and Statistics

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Wisconsin

28,430

Total Church Membership

1-in-

6

Stakes

69

Congregations

48 Wards
21 Branches

29

FamilySearch Centers

29

1

Missions

History

The first missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Wisconsin Territory preached during the 1830s. Then, in 1841, the state became the primary source of wood for the construction of a temple in Nauvoo, Illinois. Church leaders dispatched more than 100 men to Wisconsin where they set up six logging camps, known as the pineries, and operated four mills in the vicinity of the Black River. Between 1841 and 1845 these Church members sent an estimated 1.5 million board feet of milled lumber down the Mississippi River to Nauvoo.

When persecution forced the Latter-day Saints to leave Nauvoo in 1846 many Wisconsin members joined the trek to the Great Basin. Missionary efforts resumed in the state in 1878, with a congregation formed in Milwaukee in 1899 and a chapel built in 1907. After World War I, many German Church members immigrating to Wisconsin settled in Milwaukee. Their intent was to stay long enough to earn money to continue to Utah, but many settled in Wisconsin instead. In 1963, the first stake in Wisconsin was established in Milwaukee.

There are now more than 25,000 Church members in Wisconsin organized across six stakes. Latter-day Saints in the state frequently partner in humanitarian efforts with civic and community leaders throughout the state, and with those in other states throughout the Great Lakes region.