The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Oklahoma

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple

As of 2014, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints reported 45,734 members, seven stakes, 86 congregations (57 wards and 25 branches), one mission, and one temple in Oklahoma.[1][2]

The history of the denomination in what would become Oklahoma begins in the 1840s and the Indian Territory Mission was created and placed under the leadership of George Miller in 1855. The first temple in Oklahoma was dedicated in 2000.

The eight stakes based in Oklahoma are located in Bartlesville, Lawton, Norman, Oklahoma City, Stillwater and Tulsa.

History

In the late 1840s, George Miller, a former bishop who delayed going to the West, traveled from Winter Quarters to visit his son in Texas. He and two other members with him, Joseph Kilting and Richard Hewitt, found construction work available in the Cherokee Nation. They arrived in Tahlequah on July 9, 1847, and began to build houses. They also began to teach others about the Mormon faith, but antagonism forced Miller to leave in December. Hewitt and Kilting remained to work.[3]

In 1855, Orson Spencer and James McGaw visited the Indian Territory from St. Louis, Missouri, and on April 8, five more missionaries were sent from Salt Lake City, and four from St. Louis. The Indian Territory Mission was created and placed under the leadership of Miller on June 26, 1855.

The missionaries met and reconverted followers of Lyman Wight. One of these was Jacob Croft who had met missionaries earlier and started for Utah. After hearing misconceptions about conditions there, his party settled in Indian Territory and built a gristmill.

As early as July 1855, missionaries preached to about 400 Indians, and the Cherokee Branch was started at Croft’s Spavinaw Creek mill.[3] This became Mission headquarters. Croft later lead a party of 56 including other former followers of Wight and some re-converted "Strangites" to Utah.

Later in the year, missionaries were sent from St. Louis to southern portions of the Cherokee Nations. In 1856, the Princess Creek branch was organized. The Lehi and Nephi branches were organized in 1858.[4]

Illness was a problem in the Indian Territory Mission for many years. At least four missionaries died including Orson Spencer.[5]

The Remaining Members Migrated to Utah in 1858 and 1859. By 1860, the missionaries save John A. Richards, who had married an Indian wife, returned to Utah and the mission was discontinued.

When Matthew Dalton and John Hubbard returned to begin missionary work in 1877, they found Richards was still faithful, and they received assistance from him. Later that year, Elder Hubbard died and the mission was closed. In 1883, Matthew Dalton and Elder George Teasdale of the Quorum of the Twelve reorganized the mission. Tracts in the Cherokee language were printed.

Andrew Kimball, father of President Spencer W. Kimball, presided over the mission in 1885. Although he had contracted malaria, he carried on the work and was assisted by John Richards, and later by additional full-time missionaries. In 1892, the first meetinghouse was built in Manard(Cherokee County). Another was built in Massey (Choctaw Nation).

On November 7, 1911, a branch was established at Gore with 113 members but was later dissolved. It was not until May 1, 1960, when the branch was again organized in Gore. A Sunday school that began in Bartlesville in 1924 became a branch on October 13, 1945. Membership increased slowly as many converts moved to Utah.

Membership increased in the 1950s and 1960s. Two stakes were created in 1960. The Tulsa Stake was created on May 1, 1960, and the Oklahoma City Stake on October 23, 1960.[6]

Year Membership
1974 10,105
1980 20,819
1990 26,596
1999 33,721
2008 41,547
2011 43,905

The Latter-day Saint community reached out to those in need after a bomb destroyed the nine-story Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995.[7]

In 1999, thousands of Latter-day Saints volunteers from Oklahoma and surrounding areas came to Oklahoma in response to the 1999 Oklahoma tornado outbreak to provide rescue, relief, and recovery for the victims of the storm.[8] Latter-day Saints in Oklahoma provided relief to victims of other disasters including floods in 2007,[9] the Mid-May 2008 tornado outbreak sequence,[10] and provided aid to victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Stakes

There are eight stakes with their stake center located in Oklahoma. Since The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have no paid clergy, stake presidents, bishops, etc. have their own occupation.

Stakes with their stake center in Oklahoma and their current stake presidents are as follows:

Stake Organized Stake President Occupation
Bartlesville Oklahoma Nov 2, 2014 Matthew Lane Bell Managing Director of SRS, LLC
Lawton Oklahoma Oct 31, 1976 Brian Lane Blaisdell Gladwell[11] Family Physician.
Norman Oklahoma Oct 18, 1970 Shad Brent Satterthwaite[12] Professor of Political Science at the University of Oklahoma
Oklahoma City Oklahoma Oct 23, 1960 Kevin Ronald Graves[13] Strategic Account Executive for Quest Diagnostics
Oklahoma City Oklahoma South Nov 14,1982 Jeffrey Bellows[14] Works at FAA Center in Oklahoma City at Will Rogers World Airport.
Stillwater Oklahoma June 14, 1981 Don Ray Hansen[15] Professor of Accounting at Oklahoma State University
Tulsa Oklahoma May 1, 1960 Gerald Alan Roberts[16] Assistant Superintendent at Dewey Public Schools
Tulsa Oklahoma East April 30, 1978 Mark J. Cluff[17] Plant Manager

Missions

On March 29, 1898, Oklahoma became part of the Southwestern States Mission, and it was included in the Central States Mission on April 4, 1904. The Oklahoma Mission was created on June 10, 1970, renamed the Oklahoma Tulsa Mission in 1974, and again renamed the Arkansas Bentonville Mission in 2015. The Oklahoma Oklahoma City Mission was created in 1990.

Temples

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple was dedicated on July 30, 2000, by President James E. Faust of the First Presidency.

95. Oklahoma City Oklahoma

Location:
Announcement:
Dedication:
Coordinates:
 Size:
Style:

Yukon, Oklahoma, US
14 March 1999
30 July 2000 by James E. Faust
35°35′30.64559″N 97°43′36.11999″W / 35.5918459972°N 97.7266999972°W / 35.5918459972; -97.7266999972 (Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple)
10,769 sq ft (1,000 m2) and 71 ft (22 m) high on a 1 acre (0.4 ha) site
Classic modern, single-spire design - designed by Richard Lueb and Church A&E Services

References

  1. LDS Newsroom Statistical Information for Oklahoma (accessed November 3, 2013)
  2. LDS Meetinghouse Locator. Nearby Congregations (Wards and Branches).
  3. 1 2 Chronicles of Oklahoma, Volume 13. (accessed November 3, 2013)
  4. Brigham Young the Colonizer
  5. McCloud, Susan Evans. Brigham Young: A Personal Portrait. (American Fork, Utah: Covenant Communications, 1996) Chapter 13
  6. Lynetta K. Bingham, et al., A History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Eastern Oklahoma, from Oklahoma and Indian Territories to 1980, 1980.
  7. Faith, Courage Rise From The Rubble (October 16, 2004), Church News
  8. Oklahoma City -- Hope after the storm (May 15, 1999), Church News
  9. Fires and floods (July 14, 2007), Church News
  10. Church responds to world disasters (May 17, 2008),Church News
  11. New stake presidents (Nov 8, 2016 Deseret News
  12. New Stake Presidents Called to Serve in U.S. and New Zealand (December 19, 2013)Church News
  13. New stake presidents (August 9, 2009)Church News
  14. May 2015 South OKC Stake Conference
  15. New stake presidents (April 15, 2000)Church News
  16. New stake presidents (February 4, 2006)Church News
  17. "New stake presidents". LDS Church News. January 25, 2014.

External links

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