The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in South Carolina refers to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and its members in South Carolina. The first small branch was established in 1882. It has since grown to more than 44,000 members in 79 congregations.
Official church membership as a percentage of general population was 0.83% in 2014. According to the 2014 Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life survey, less than 1% of South Carolinans self-identify themselves most closely with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[3] The LDS Church is the 11th largest denomination in South Carolina.[4]
History
The first LDS member in South Carolina is believed to be Emmanual Masters Murphy, who was baptized in Tennessee in 1836. When Elder Lysander M. Davis arrived in South Carolina in 1839 (nine years after the Church was organized in New York), he found the Murphys had people prepared for baptism. Seven of them were baptized.[5]
Opposition arose and Davis was briefly jailed. Murphy had reportedly spoken with Church President Joseph Smith in the late 1830s, and was told to warn South Carolinians of the destruction soon to hit their state, "the wars that will shortly come to pass, beginning at the rebellion of South Carolina, which will eventually terminate in the death and misery of many souls ... the Southern states will call on other nations, even the nation of Great Britain..." This warning saw reality in 1861, when the Confederates attacked Fort Sumter, and the Civil War commenced.[5][6][7]
The South Carolina Conference was organized on March 31, 1882, with its first president as Elder Willard C. Burton of the Southern States Mission.[8] The Kings Mountain Baptist Church had several families converted on March 12, 1882. Some of the earliest branches were established at King's Mountains beginning March 3, 1882, and among the Catawba Indian community beginning July 31, 1885. Conference headquarters were established at the plantation of John Shaw Black, a man who remained unbaptized to provide refuge for the Church, and a veteran of the Palmetto Sharpshooters. Many converts, including Indians, moved onto his plantation to escape persecution. The Catawbas also shielded missionaries from persecutions. Two families were noted in Missionary journals as being home base, James and Elizabeth W Patterson's home protected them on the occasions of the mobs hunting them. Evan and Lucy Marsh Watts were the host family when Elder C E Robinson died, and they were again helping when the two Elders were injured, Elder W C Cragun and F A Franughton. Most of the Catawbas joined the Church and remained faithful in South Carolina.[9]
One of the more known LDS members of the Catawba tribe was Samuel Taylor Blue (Chief Blue). Blue was baptized in 1897. A few years later he served as branch president of the branch of the LDS Church on the Catawba Reservation. In the early 20th century he would often help missionaries escape mobs.[10] In 1950 Blue traveled to Salt Lake City and gave a talk at General Conference on April 9.[11]
Another Catawba, the first Lamanite Patriarch, William F. Canty, came from five families who moved west with the Migration in 1887. His father John Alonzo Canty was the first Branch President of the Gaffney area, and James Patterson, his grandfather, was the first Branch President of the Catawba Branch. William (Buck) Canty spoke at the BYU Indian school graduation many times in the 1970s and toured with the Lamanite Generation in 1978.[12]
Church growth
Membership in South Carolina
Year
Members
1900
1,200
1930
3,343
1974
10,755
1980
17,012
1990
23,731
1999
27,399
2009
35,968
2019
41,358
2022
44,230
Source: Windall J. Ashton; Jim M. Wall, Deseret News, various years, Church Almanac State Information: South Carolina[1]
Progress and persecution continued in the 1890s. Mobs often gathered to persecute missionaries. In 1897, mobs burned one of South Carolina's first Latter-day Saint meetinghouses in an area called by locals Centerville near the small town of Ridgeway South Carolina. It was rebuilt and burned again in 1899.[13]
Branches organized included Society Hill, Columbia, Charleston, and Fairfield. However, as converts migrated to the West, branches dwindled, and some were reorganized later with new converts. The South Carolina conference included six branches (four with meetinghouses) and 10 Sunday Schools.[13]
On November 20–21, 2004, President Hinckley spoke to nearly 12,000 Church members in Columbia, S.C., with proceedings carried to 11 meetinghouses in 11 other stakes in South Carolina and Georgia.[14]
The LDS Church in South Carolina has been involved in a number of humanitarian services. These include disaster relief, aid to the needy and sick, and other services. Some of the more significant relief efforts given by the church or its members in South Carolina are mentioned in this section.
Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, several thousand Latter-day Saint volunteers from South Carolina and other areas, went to Louisiana and Mississippi. Many of them took time out of their jobs or came down on the weekends to help.[21]
In 1996, the LDS Church authorized $100,000 and service to help rebuild 28 of the predominantly black churches across the South (including in South Carolina) that had burned in the previous 18 months. These funds were divided according to need.[22]
In 1996, the LDS Church donated 41,000 pounds of food to the Crisis Ministries Center in the Charleston area.[23]
Stakes
South Carolina's first stake was created in Columbia on October 19, 1947. It included the entire state, with wards in Columbia, Greenville, Charleston, Gaffney, Hartsville, Ridgeway, and Spartanburg. Its branches included Augusta (Georgia), Sumter, Society Hill, Winnsboro, and Darlington.
The South Carolina West Stake (later known as Greenville South Carolina East Stake), was organized in 1963. In 1968, the South Carolina East Stake was organized, and later became known as the Florence South Carolina Stake (now Myrtle Beach South Carolina Stake). The Charleston Stake was organized in 1972. As of January 2024, the following stakes were located in South Carolina:[24][25]
Stake
Organized
Mission
Aiken South Carolina Stake
February 17, 2019
South Carolina Columbia
Charleston South Carolina
August 20, 1972
South Carolina Charleston
Columbia South Carolina
October 19, 1947
South Carolina Columbia
Fort Mill South Carolina
August 26, 2018
North Carolina Charlotte
Greenville South Carolina
November 19, 1972
South Carolina Columbia
Greenville South Carolina East
November 16, 2003
South Carolina Columbia
Hartsville South Carolina Stake
October 22, 2023
South Carolina Columbia
Hilton Head South Carolina Stake
February 24, 2019
South Carolina Charleston
Myrtle Beach South Carolina
February 5, 1978
South Carolina Charleston
West Columbia South Carolina
February 3, 2002
South Carolina Columbia
Charleston South Carolina Stake - Originally named Charleston Stake when organized in 1972.
Columbia South Carolina Stake - Originally named South Carolina Stake (S.C., Georgia)
Florence South Carolina Stake - Originally named South Carolina East (South Carolina) when it was organized on April 21, 1968. The name was then changed to the Columbia South Carolina East Stake. It was finally reorganized and named the Florence South Carolina on February 5, 1978.
Fort Mill South Carolina - Stake was created from congregations in the Charlotte North Carolina South and Gastonia North Carolina Stakes. Was created by Elder Vern P. Stanfill, General Authority Seventy, and Elder Matthew S. Harding, an Area Seventy in August 2018. First stake President being Blake D. Smith. Stake formed on August 26, 2018.
Greenville South Carolina - Originally named Greenville Stake when it was organized in 1972.
Greenville South Carolina East - Originally named South Carolina West (S.C, N.C.) when it was organized on January 37, 1963. It was then reorganized and named the Greenville South Carolina East Stake on November 16, 2003.
Missions
South Carolina was originally part of the Southern States Mission when it was opened in 1876. In June 1971, the Southern States Mission was divided and renamed the Georgia-South Carolina Mission. On June 20, 1974, it was renamed the Georgia Atlanta Mission in accordance to the new church naming policy for missions. On July 1, 1975, the South Carolina Columbia Mission was organized.
In June 2024 the South Carolina Charleston Mission was created from a division of existing missions.
Hopkins, South Carolina, United States September 11, 1998 by Gordon B. Hinckley December 5, 1998 by Gordon T. Watts October 16, 1999 by Gordon B. Hinckley 10,700 sq ft (990 m2) on a 3.6-acre (1.5 ha) site Classic modern, single-spire design - designed by Mike Watson
^LaMar C. Berret, History of the Southern States Mission 1831-1861, thesis 1960.
^Tate, Lucille C., LeGrande Richards: Beloved Apostle (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1982) p. 169
^Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History, p. 1165
^Genealogy of the Western Catawba, Missionary Journals of Joseph P Willey and Pinkney Head, and My Father's People, all written by Judy Canty Martin. News articles from the Church news in 1978 and other sources of family.