The first missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to arrive in Wales were Henry Royle and Frederick Cook. Royle was called as a missionary in 1840; He was a convert to the church and a native of Britain. Brigham Young and Heber C. Kimball had briefly preached in Wales during their mission together. The two missionaries arrived on 16 October and began teaching in Overton. They were met with immediate success and had baptisms in the River Dee only two days after their arrival. By the end of the month, they established a branch of 32 members. The two elders were joined by James Burnham in November of that year.[4]
In January 1849 a small Mormon chapel was built in Llanelli becoming the first purpose built Latter-day Saint church not just in Wales but in the whole of the British Isles.[5]
Dan Jones
In 1845 Dan Jones was called as a missionary to Wales. He would become one of the most successful Latter Day Saints missionaries to work in the United Kingdom. Arriving January 1845,[6] Jones was assigned to work in Wrexham.[7] By December there were 493 baptised members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Wales. The next year in January, he was made mission president and oversaw missionary work in the country by Wilford Woodruff because Jones knew how to speak, read, and write in Welsh.[6] By the time he left Wales in February 1849 there were 4,645 baptised members and seventy-two branches.[6]
In terms of population, one out of every 278 people in Wales at that time was baptised into the LDS Church. When Jones returned from his first mission, he helped a group of Welsh Saints to emigrate to the Salt Lake Valley.[8]
Jones was asked to return to Wales in August 1852. He became a counselor to the mission president and was called to be the president in 1854. He also worked as the editor of Udgorn Seion. During his second mission, opposition to the church had increased, but over 2,000 new members were added to the church by his departure 1856.[6] On his passage home, he again assisted a group of Welsh emigrants to Utah.[8]
Translating church publications
In 1846, Jones had begun to publish a Welsh language periodical for the church entitled Prophwyd y Jubili (Prophet of the Jubilee). It was the first Mormon periodical to be published in a language other than English.[6][9] He had initiated publishing pamphlets and other magazines in the Welsh language that ultimately led to the publication of a Welsh translation of the Book of Mormon in April 1852 by John S. Davis.[7][10]
In 1850 Davis, who had been appointed to oversee church publications in Wales, announced that he would translate the Doctrine and Covenants into Welsh. Davis would publish a 16-page signature in every other issue of Ugdorn Seion (Zion's Trumpet), which was the church publication following Prophet of the Jubilee. By August 1851, the 20 signatures were finished printing and were bound as the Welsh Doctrine and Covenants. Davies began translating and publishing the Book of Mormon into Welsh in the same manner. Church members paid a penny per signature that was printed. The initial printing of the book was delayed due to a lack of subscribers; however, the book eventually received enough funding and was printed, the final signature printing on 17 April 1852. These translations of these two books are still used by the church today.[10]
Although early missionary efforts had been successful, there was a decline in church membership in the late 1850s. This decline was due, in part, by church members emigrating to the United States after their conversion and a decrease in the number of new converts. Other factors that could have contributed to this decline include the introduction of polygamy into church practice in 1853 and social and political reforms in Wales.[12] Opposition to Latter-day Saint missionary efforts in United Kingdom existed from the earliest missions but intensified in South Wales and the West Midlands in the 1850s, leading to some violent incidents.[13]
Another factor that led to decline in membership was the organisation of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (now known as Community of Christ) on 6 April 1860. This group was led by Joseph Smith's son Joseph Smith III and consisted of previously scattered branches of the church in the Midwestern United States who had rejected Brigham Young and the Council of Twelve Apostles' leadership and not gone West with the majority of the Latter Days Saints (see succession crisis). RLDS missionaries began preaching in Wales in 1863 with many LDS members choosing to join with the Reorganization. Because of the decrease in membership, the last issue of Ugdorn Seion was published in April 1962. This gradual decline continued until the mid-20th century.[12]
Welsh members and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir
Dan Jones and faithful Welsh members greatly influenced the formation of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Jones helped bring a group of 250 Welsh converts to the United States. Among these faithful church members were many singers who would help form the church's choir. John Parry, one of the members in this group, directed 85 Welsh converts in a special musical number at the October 1849 General Conference.[14] Parry was asked by Brigham Young to form and direct a choir, which later became known as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.[15]
4 Stakes have congregations in Wales. 2 Stakes are entirely within Wales. The Chester England Stake Centre and 6 of its 8 congregations meet in Wales. Only a single branch in the Newcastle-Under-Lyme England Stake meet in Wales.
There are no temples in Wales itself. Instead, members of the church in Wales use either of the two temples in England. Members of the church in north Wales as assigned to the Preston temple district, whereas the London temple (actually in Sussex) district includes the two Stakes in south Wales.
^Dennis, Ronald D. (2 March 2005), "The Beginnings of Mormonism in North Wales", Welsh Mormon History, Center for Family History and Genealogy at Brigham Young University, retrieved 15 January 2014