Showing posts with label key dates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label key dates. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2013

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


Here's a limited chronological listing of highlights -- key, important dates --  in the history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:

1820, spring: First Vision by Joseph Smith.

1823, Sept. 21-22: Angel Moroni visits Joseph Smith

1827, Sept. 22: Joseph Smith receives the Golden Plates and the Urim and Thummin.

1829, May 15: Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery receive the Aaronic Priesthood from John the Baptist.

1829, May or June: Peter, James and John receive the Melchizedek Priesthood from Peter, James and John.

1829, June: Book of Mormon translation completed. Three Witnesses are shown the Golden Plates by the heavenly messenger and later eight witnesses.

1830, March 26: Some 5,000 copies of the Book of Mormon are printed.

1830, April 6: Church of Christ is organized.

1833, Jan. 22-23: School of Prophets begins.

1833, Feb. 27: The Prophet Joseph Smith receives the Word of Wisdom.

1833, March 18: First Presidency is organized.

1833, July 2: Joseph Smith finishes his retranslation of the New Testament.

1834, Feb. 17: The first Stake in the church is organized in Kirtland.

1835, Feb. 14: Quorum of the Twelve Apostles is organized.

1835, Feb. 28: First Quorum ("Council") of the Seventy is organized.

1835: The Doctrine and Covenants is issue (The forerunner "Book of Commandments ..." had been issued in 1833.) 

1836, March 27: First modern temple is dedicated, the Kirtland Temple.

1836, April 3: The Savior, Moses, Elias and Elijah appear to Joseph Smith and Olive Cowdery and restore the keys of their dispensation.

1838, April 26: Official name of the church is given by revelation, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

1838, July 6: The exodus from Kirtland commences to Far West, Mo.

1838, July 8: Revelation on the law of tithing is received.

1839, April 20: Final church members leave Far West, Mo. and soon after end what in what will become Nauvoo, Ill.

1841, Jan. 19: Baptism for the Dead revelation received.

1842, March 1:  Articles of Faith are published.

1842, March 17: Relief Society is organized.

1843, July 12, Eternal marriage revelation is received.

1844, June 27: Joseph and Hyrum Smith are murdered by a mob at a jail in Carthage, Ill.

1844, Aug. 8: Twelve Apostles are sustained as leading the church.

1845-1846, Dec. 10-Feb. 17: About 5,000 members receive their endowments in the Nauvoo Temple.

1846, Feb. 4: Migration from Nauvoo begins to temporary camps in Iowa and Nebraska.

1847, April 5: First pioneer company heads west.




1847, July 22-24: First pioneers arrive in Salt Lake Valley.




1847, July 28: Brigham Young dedicates Salt Lake Temple site.

1847, Dec. 5: First Presidency reorganized in Kanesville, Iowa, by Council of the 12, with Brigham Young as prophet.




1849, Feb 14: Great Salt Lake City divided into 19 wards.

1849, Dec. 9: Sunday School begins.

1851, Jan. 26: First stake outside Salt Lake, the Weber Stake in Ogden is organized.

1851, Nov. 11: The University of the State of Deseret (now University of Utah) begins.

1852, Aug. 28-29: The practice of plural marriage, for the first time ever,  is publicly acknowledged as happening in the church. (Previously it was privately practiced.)

1853, Feb. 14: Ground is broken on the Salt Lake Temple.

1855, May 5: The Endowment House is dedicated.




1867, Oct. 6: First Conference in the just finished Tabernacle is held.

1869, May 10: Transcontinental railroad is completed at Promontory Summit, Utah.

1869, Nov. 28, Young Ladies Retrenchment Association, forerunner to Young Women's Mutual Association, is organized.

1875, June 10: Young Men's Mutual Improvement organized begins.

1877, April 6: St. George Temple is dedicated.




1877, Aug. 27: Brigham Young dies at age 76.





1878, Aug. 25: Primary begins.

1879: The Book of Mormon is divided into chapters and verses, with references.

1884, May 17: Logan Temple, the church's second, is dedicated.

1897, February: The federal Edmunds-Tucker Act seizes all church property. (This is not rescinded until 1893-1896.)

1889, April 6: First Relief Society General Conference is held.

1890, Sept. 24: "Manifesto" is issued.




1893, April 6: Salt Lake Temple is dedicated.

1895, June 9: The first stake outside the U.S., in Cardston, Canada is organized.

1896, Jan. 4: Utah is made a state.

1896, Nov. 5: Fast day is now the first Sunday of the month, rather than the first Thursday.

1898, April 1: The Church's first-ever full-time sister missionaries are set apart.

1899, May 8: The payment of tithes is stressed at a St. George conference. (The church was in deep debt and had issued bonds 7 months earlier.)

1900, July 24: The Brigham Young Monument is unveiled in downtown Salt Lake City.

1902: The first volume of History of the Church is published. (The last and 7th volume would not be added until 1932.)

1902, Aug. 4: A limited visitor booth opens on Temple Square.

1907, Jan. 10: The church announced it is totally free of debt now.

1911: The Boy Scout program is adopted by the church.

1912: The first seminary in the church opens at Granite High School.

1912, Nov. 8: Church creates a Correlation Committee.

1915, April 27: The Family Home Evening program begins.

1917, Oct. 2: Church Administration Building opens.

1918, Oct. 2: President Joseph F. Smith receives a revelation that will become D&C 138 in 1979.

1919, April: General Conference is not held, due to a flu epidemic.

1919, November: There is no public funeral for President Joseph F. Smith, because of the continuing flu epidemic.

1920: Ward chapels and cultural halls are from henceforth designed to be connected.

1924, Oct. 3: Church enters the broadcast age as General Conference is broadcast on the radio.

1925, Feb. 3: The church dedicates its first "MTC," a home at 31 N. State Street.

1929, July 15: The Mormon Tabernacle Choir begins a weekly broadcast, destined to be the world's longest continuing broadcast program.

1931: The Utah Legislature passed a bill approving the transfer of LDS-owned Weber College and Snow College to the state collegiate system. 

1936, April: The church begins a formal welfare program.

1938, Aug. 14: The first Deseret Industries store opens in Salt Lake.

1942, March 23: The church began using only older men, who were high priests or seventies, for full-time missionary work, until World War II ends.

1942, April: The Tabernacle is closed to the public duringWorld War II and all general conferences during that time are open only to leaders. (This continues until Sept. 1945.)

1942, April 18: The "superintendents" term for church auxiliary leaders disappears and is replaced with "presidents."

1946, May 2: The Sacrament is now to be passed to the presiding authority first.

1947: The church reaches the 1 million member mark.

1949, October: General Conference is broadcast for the first time on television.

1952, April: General Priesthood meeting is sent to chapels outside the Tabernacle by new telephone technology.

1953: The Cub Scout program begins in the church.

1953, March 25: Full-time missionaries now report to their local stake leaders, instead of the First Presidency.

1954, July: The Indian Placement program begins.

1954, Aug. 31: Priest and teacher ordination age is lower to 16 and 14, vs. the former 15 and 17.

1955, Dec. 27: The first college wards are created in the church, at BYU.

1956, Oct. 3: The Relief Society Building is dedicated.

1957, October: General Conference is canceled because of a flu outbreak.

1959, April 6: The "every member a missionary" program begins.

1960, July 21: Young men can now serve full time missions at age 19, without certain education and military service requirements.

1961, November: BYU established a language training center for missionaries.

1963, December: The Granite record vaults in Little Cottonwood Canyon are completed.

1964, January: Home teaching replaces ward teaching.

1969, January: Two months of language training is now the norm for foreign speaking missionaries.

1970, January: A computerized tithing system begins.

1970, October: Monday is now the designated Family Home Evening night. (Previously wards could choose a night.)

1971, January: The Ensign and New Era magazines begin.

1971, September: All LDS Women are not automatically enrolled in the Relief Society and dues for the group end.

1972: Church sports programs end at the regional level now, instead of going all-church.

1974, June 23: MIA is discontinued as the name for church youth programs.

1974, Sept. 6: The church divests its 15 hospitals into a non-profit organization.





1975, July 24: The 28-story Church Office Building is dedicated.

1978, March 31: Stake conferences are to be held twice a year now, instead of quarterly.

1978, June 9: Worthy Black males can now hold the priesthood, as new revelation was announced.

1978, Sept. 9: An MTC in Provo now replaces the Salt Lake Mission Home. (This also means missionaries no longer have a "Solemn Assembly" with the Prophet in the Salt Lake Temple, as part of their training.)

1978, Sept. 16: A Young Women's conference is now held each fall.

1978, Sept. 30: Emeritus status for some general authorities begins.

1979, Feb. 18: The church's 1,000th stake is created in Nauvoo, Ill.

1979, Sept. 29: A new King James Bible is released by the church.

1980, March 2: Block time meetings begin.

1981, Sept. 12: The less costly Sage design chapel is announced.

1981: The church discontinues the historic Delta Phi Kappa Fraternity, as the last chapter holdout, Weber State, closes.

1981, Sept. 26: The church releases a new triple combination set of scriptures.

1985: A new Hymn book is published,the first in 37 years.

1986, Oct. 4: Seventies quorums in stakes are discontinued.

1987: The Hotel Utah closes, to be renovated to a chapel/office structure.

1989: The Second Quorum of the Seventy is created.

1989, May 16: The BYU Jerusalem Center is dedicated.

1989, Nov. 25: Stake and ward budget assessments end. The costs for all full-time missionaries are equalized.

1995: Area Authorities are announced, as a new calling.

1995: The Family Proclamation is released.

1996, Feb. 28: The majority of church members now live outside the U.S.

1996: The church begins a humanitarian fund.

1997: Third, Fourth and Fifth Quorums of the Seventy are announced.

1997: A commemorative wagon train reenacts the pioneer trek to Utah 150 years earlier.

1997, June 1: Priesthood and Relief Society lessons will be the same starting in 1998, comes an announcement.

1997, November: Church membership surpasses 10 million.

1999, Oct. 2-3: The last General Conference is held in the Tabernacle, as the Conference Center opens next year.

2000: The 100 millionth copy of The Book of Mormon is published, as well as its printing in its 100th different language.

2001: Ricks College is renamed BYU-Idaho.

2002, Feb. 8-24: Salt Lake City hosts the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. More than 10,000 visitors a day visit Temple Square.

2003, Jan. 11: The first-ever satellite transmitted priesthood leadership meeting is held globally, reaching more than 97 percent of all leaders.

2004: The Sixth Quorum of the Seventy is created.

2004, November: The "Preach My Gospel" missionary program premieres.

2005, April: The Seventh and Eighth Quorums of the Seventy are created.

2005: Plans for a new Church History Library are announced.

2007: The Salt Lake Tabernacle closes for extensive renovations and to meet seismic codes. Seating capacity is reduced by about 1,000.

2008: The first volume in the Joseph Smith Papers series is released.

2012, October: The age for young men to serve full-time missions is reduced by one year to age 18. The age for young women to serve is lower from 21 to age 19.

2013: The Church's membership exceeds 15 million.

SOURCES: Church News Almanac, Google, personal notes.

NOTE: This article and all of the NighUntoKolob blog are NOT an official website of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.