History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Your family research will be more effective and interesting when you understand the history of their times. Learn about wars, governments, laws, migrations, and events in Church history to help you understand your ancestor’s movements, activities and concerns. This may also help you identify new sources to use to find your family. Ward, branch, and stake histories sometimes include biographical sketches of local members. You may find additional sources in the "History" section of the state, province, or national research outlines for the localities where a Church member ancestor lived.

Time Line
Events in Church history that affected Church members and their record keeping include:


 * 1830 Joseph Smith organized the Church in Fayette, New York. Samuel Smith was called as the first missionary.
 * 1831 The first Church settlements were started in Kirtland, Ohio and Jackson County, Missouri.
 * 1836 The Kirtland Temple was dedicated.
 * 1837 The first foreign mission was opened in the British Isles.
 * 1838–1839 Most Church officers and members left Kirtland. Others were forced out of Missouri. Members settled Nauvoo, Illinois.
 * 1840 The first proxy baptisms were performed in the Mississippi River. The first company of Saints sailed from Liverpool, England, bound for the United States.
 * 1841 The first sealings to spouse were performed for living couples.
 * 1842 The first endowments were performed for living people.
 * 1844 Joseph Smith was martyred.
 * 1846 The Nauvoo Temple was dedicated. Living endowments and sealings to spouse were performed here. Living sealings to parents were also performed.
 * 1846–1847 The Saints were forced to leave Nauvoo and began migrating to the West. The Mormon Battalion was commissioned to serve in the Mexican War.
 * 1849 The Perpetual Emigrating Fund was started to help poor Saints move to Utah.
 * 1850–1900 Major colonization efforts established many towns in Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Nevada, California, Wyoming, Sonora (Mexico), Chihuahua (Mexico), and Alberta (Canada).
 * 1850 Missionary work began in France, Italy, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian countries.
 * 1852 Brigham Young encouraged the Saints in Iowa to migrate to Utah. The Perpetual Emigrating Fund was extended to help poor Saints emigrating from other countries. The first Scandinavian converts emigrated to Zion. The Church announced the doctrine of plural marriage.
 * 1853 The first German converts emigrated to Zion.
 * 1855–1889 The Endowment House opened in Salt Lake City. Living endowments and the sealings to spouse, proxy and living, were performed there.
 * 1856–1857 Members were admonished to reform their lives and rededicate themselves to the Lord. Many members were rebaptized.
 * 1857–1858 30,000 members from northern Utah moved south into Utah County due to the coming of Johnston’s army. United States troops under Colonel Johnston arrived and established Camp Floyd. Many members moved back to their homes in northern Utah, but others made permanent homes in central Utah.
 * 1869 The transcontinental railroad was completed. The railroad increased the migration of members to Utah and Church colonization throughout the west.
 * 1877 The St. George Temple was dedicated and the first proxy endowments were performed. Living sealings to parents were again performed. The first proxy sealings to parents were performed here. Brigham Young reorganized the Seventies priesthood organizations throughout the Church. Many members renewed their covenants and were rebaptized. New membership forms were designed to record the rebaptism and reconfirmation dates.
 * 1879 Due to the controversy over polygamy, the Secretary of State of the United States urged European governments to halt the flow of Church emigrants.
 * 1884–1887 Polygamists were persecuted intensely by the federal government. To avoid this, many Saints moved to Mexico and Canada. The United States government confiscated the money for the Perpetual Emigrating Fund, which also restricted Church emigration. Utah counties began recording marriages.
 * 1890 President Wilford Woodruff issued the Manifesto, officially stopping new plural marriages among the Saints in the United States.
 * 1894 President Woodruff received a revelation clarifying that children should be sealed to their parents instead of Church Leaders.
 * 1895 The first stakes outside the United States were organized in Alberta, Canada, and Juarez, Mexico. Utah counties began keeping birth and death records.
 * 1898 Leaders of the Church began discouraging emigration.
 * 1905 The State of Utah began recording births and deaths.
 * 1914 The first Church census was conducted to identify members. Starting in 1920, censuses were taken every five years until 1960, except in 1945 due to World War II.
 * 1918–1919 Weekly services were not held in many areas due to the worldwide flu epidemic. The April 1919 General Conference was also delayed until June 1919. Many blessings and baptisms were delayed.
 * 1924 The first of the three- and four-generation programs began. Members submitted family group records, and they were placed in the Patron Section of the Family Group Records Collection.
 * 1941 The Deceased Members File began.
 * 1942 Family group record forms were used to submit names for temple work.
 * 1969 The new computerized name processing required Individual Entry and Marriage Entry Forms to clear names for temple work. This was the beginning of the file that became the Ordinance Index.
 * 1978 Every worthy male could hold the priesthood and participate in temple ordinances.
 * 1979 The Church began collecting pedigree charts and family group records for the Ancestral File.
 * 1981 The Salt Lake Temple’s recording process was computerized. Most temples were converted to the new computerized Temple Recording System over the next ten years.
 * 1990 FamilySearch was released.
 * 1991 The TempleReady computer program made it possible for members to clear their own names for temple work.
 * 1997 The Ordinance Index was created from the International Genealogical Index.
 * 1998 The Family Name System was started in the English-speaking temples. This allows temple patrons to keep track of their own temple submission entries on colored cards.
 * 1999 The FamilySearch™ Internet Genealogy Service started. The first Pedigree Resource File names were submitted over the Internet, web sites added, and collaboration lists started.

Events by Date
The following sources list events in Church history in chronological order:


 * Journal History (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) This source is a day-by-day scrapbook of events in Church history, kept by the Church History Library. The microfilm copy covers from 1830 to 1973. It includes the largest collection of pioneer company rosters 1847 to 1868, priesthood ordinations, missionary labors, records of new missions and stakes, conference reports, and obituaries taken from newspaper clippings, extracts from journals, letters, histories, biographies, and manuscript material. The microfilms do not circulate to Family History Centers, but it is available on microfilm at the Family History Library, at the Harold B. Lee Library (Brigham Young Univ.), and at the Marriott Library (Univ. of Utah).


 * The index is online at Journal History Index. There is also a microfilm index called the Index to Journal History This alphabetical card index shows the date and page number for names, places, events and subjects mentioned.


 * Church Chronology The Church Chronology describes major events in Church history from 1805 to 1913. This is indexed in the Early Church Information File and included in the LDS Family History Suite 2. Before printing, the copy of this work was carefully read to a committee of church Hoistorians. Great effort was taken to make the work inclusive and accurate of the historical events in this reference work. The main section of this book covers the years of 1805 starting with the birth of the Prophet Joseph Smith, December 23, 1805 to November 30, 1898 giving historical informationof a death of a missionary serving in the Swedish mission. An index is at the end of this secion on page 223.


 * The first supplement begins January 7, 1899 to December 31, 1905 ending with the index to that section.
 * The second supplement covers the years 1906 January 1 to December 31, 1913. The index is at it's end.


 * Deseret News 1997–1998 Church Almanac Pages 470 to 504 list the major Church events from 1805 to October 1996. It also shows noteworthy civil events in italics. The index in the back also includes references to articles and topics found only in earlier editions of the almanac.

General Church Histories
The following works discuss general Church history:


 * The Story of the Latter-day Saints Includes index and bibliography. This is a good, single-volume, general history about the Church from 1830 to 1990.


 * Comprehensive History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Century I. Six Volumes Includes index. These volumes give detailed information about the first century of Church history. This is indexed in the Early Church Information File and included in the LDS Family History Suite 2.


 * Index to a Comprehensive History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints


 * History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints This set of volumes was taken from the writings of Joseph Smith and others, 1830–1848, including events leading to up to the Church’s organization. This work is included in the LDS Family History Suite 2. This is also indexed in: Documentary History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: 1830–1848


 * LDS Church History
 * Available at Mormon.org questions can be answered.
 * This site has information about most aspects of Church history divided into six historical periods. It also has biographies of eminent members, and sections about various forms of history such as the "social" and "economic" history of the Church. Each of these major divisions has many subdivisions with their own quotations and articles.

Histories of Local Church Units
Many histories of wards, stakes, and missions are available at the Family History Library and the Historical Department. Published histories are in the Historical Department—Church Library and manuscripts are in the Historical Department—Archive Search Room. These unit histories often include biographical sketches of members, photographs, maps, lists of ward officers, and a history of the local community. For books and articles that give short histories of many local Church units see:


 * Deseret News 1997–1998 Church Almanac. Pages 188 to 280 include short histories of the Church in each state in the United States. Pages 280 to 408 cover the history of the Church in other countries. New editions appear bi-annually.

Jenson, Andrew. Encyclopedic History of the Church cited fully in the "Historical Geography" section of this outline.

Davies, Mark. WW-LDS: Resources of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Outside of the United States and Canada [Internet site]. [Normal, Ill.: M. Davies, 1999]. Available at http://mdavies.for.ilstu.edu/ww-lds/. This site contains an index of more than 3,000 articles in the Church News, Ensign, New Era, and Friend from 1986–1999 that deal with nearly 200 countries including more than 1,700 direct links to the actual Church News articles, which can be accessed online.

"LDSWorld Gems." In LDSWorld [Internet site]. N.p.: LDSWorld, 1999. Available at www.ldsworld.com/gems/wws/0,2620,,00.html. This site has Church histories and stories from over 40 nations.

The Historical Department—Archive Search Room has manuscript histories, and historical reports for local Church units from the 1830s to 1983. Since 1984 ward and branch histories have been kept by the local Church units. These records include the names of the Church unit’s officers and teachers. The Historical Department still collects mission and stake histories. Histories of the Mormon Battalion, the Pioneers of 1847, handcart companies, and other prominent groups are also available.

Family History Library
The Family History Library also has many histories of local Church units. To find them look in the Locality Search of the Family History Library Catalog under:

[NATION]— CHURCH HISTORY

[STATE or PROVINCE]— CHURCH HISTORY

[STATE or PROVINCE], [COUNTY]— CHURCH HISTORY

[STATE or PROVINCE], [COUNTY], [TOWN]— CHURCH HISTORY

[NATION]— HISTORY

[STATE or PROVINCE]— HISTORY

[STATE or PROVINCE], [COUNTY]— HISTORY

[STATE or PROVINCE], [COUNTY], [TOWN]— HISTORY

To find ward histories in the Author/Title Search of the Family History Library Catalog, look under:

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. [Locality]

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. [Ward Name]

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. [Stake Name]

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. [Mission Name]

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. [Area Name]

To find ward histories in the Subject Search of the Family History Library Catalog, look under:

MORMONS— [LOCALITY]

MORMONS— BIOGRAPHY

MORMONS— CHURCH HISTORY

MORMONS— HISTORY

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS— BIOGRAPHY

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS— CHURCH HISTORY

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS— HISTORY

Another place to look to find information about unit histories and histories of Latter-day Saints is:

A Catalogue of Theses and Dissertations Concerning The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Mormonism and Utah. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press, 1971. (Family History Library book 289.3016 C28by). This includes ward and local histories and other topics of interest to family historians.

Other Historical Documents of Local Church Units
The Historical Department—Archive Search Room also has the following types of historical records:

Minute Books from 1837 to 1977. You will find minutes of priesthood quorums, Relief Societies, other auxiliary organizations, and general ward and stake minutes. The minutes may provide dates of blessings, baptisms, confirmations, and ordinations that you will not be able to find elsewhere.

Quarterly Reports of branches, wards, stakes, and missions. These reports provide the names of the leaders in the various organizations. Stake and mission reports are available to the present. The ward and branch reports are available between 1956 and 1983.

Other Sources
Some of the most valuable sources for family history research are local histories. Published histories of towns, counties, and states usually contain accounts of area families. Even histories of towns, counties, states, provinces, or nations may include information about the Church and its members in the area. See the "History" section of the state, province, and national research outlines for places where the member lived to find out what sources are available.

The "Colonization" page deals with the history of Church settlements and colonies. For information about Church emigration from Britain, Europe, and Scandinavia, or the journey of the pioneers to Utah see the "Emigration and Immigration" page. The " LDS Historical Geography" page describes reference sources discussing the history of wards, branches, stakes, missions, and their boundaries.