• Source: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Jamaica
    • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Jamaica refers to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and its members in Jamaica. In 1980, there were 85 members in Jamaica. In 2021, there were 6,718 members in 18 congregations.


      History



      The first native converts to the LDS Church in Jamaica was the Victor and Verna Nugent family. They were baptized on January, 20 1974. They were introduced to the church by Paul Schmiel but by 1976, the small Branch's American priesthood holders had to leave due to political unrest and economic hardships, leaving the Nugent's as the only members on the island. They held church service in their home during this time. Missionaries returned in November 1978. On Dec. 5, 1978, Elder M. Russell Ballard dedicated the country for missionary work.
      Victor Nugent, a Mandeville resident, became the country's first native Elder and first Jamaican Branch and District President. Joseph Hamilton was the first Jamaican President of the Kingston Branch in 1982. The Kingston District was organized on February 4, 1983.
      Elder M. Russell Ballard visited Jamaica on December 5, 1978 and in April 1983, Thomas S. Monson visited the island. On May 15, 2002, President Gordon B. Hinckley addressed 2,000 people at a fireside in Kingston.
      On June 8, 2014, Elder Jeffery R. Holland presided over a conference with 800 attendees to organize the Kingston Jamaica Stake. The Kingston Jamaica Stake was the second English-speaking stake to be organized in the Caribbean after the creation of the Spain Trinidad Stake in 2009.
      On March 30, 2019, The Jamaican Red Cross awarded LDS Church in Jamaica a Humanitarian Services Award for aid provided through the LDS Charities at the JRC School of Transformation in Central Village, Spanish Town, and Clarendon.


      Stake and District


      As of February 2023, the following stake and district was located in Jamaica:
      Kingston Jamaica Stake

      Boulevard Ward
      Constant Spring Ward
      Kingston Branch (Kingston Branch)
      Linstead Ward
      Old Harbour Branch
      Portmore Ward
      Spanish Town 1st Ward
      Spanish Town 2nd Ward
      Mandeville Jamaica District

      Hopeton Branch (Hopeton Branch)
      Junction Branch (Junction Branch)
      Mandeville Branch
      May Pen Branch
      Montego Bay Branch (Montego Bay Branch)
      Santa Cruz Branch
      Savanna-La-Mar Branch
      Other Congregations
      The following congregations are not part of a stake or district:

      Ocho Rios Branch
      Port Antonio Branch
      Yallahs Branch
      Congregations not within a stake are named branches, regardless of size.


      Mission


      Jamaica was administered by Florida Fort Lauderdale Mission 1974 until 1983 when the West Indies Mission was created. In 1985, the Jamaica Kingston Mission was organized. This mission covers Jamaica, the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos, and the Cayman Islands.


      = Bahamas

      =
      The LDS Church reported 1,075 members in three congregations in the Bahamas as of December 31, 2022. Congregations are located in Freeport, Nassau, and Kingstown. A family history center is located in the Kingstown meetinghouse. Meetings are conducted in English. The Bahamas is located in the Nassau Caribbean District which covers the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands, and the Turks and Caicos Islands.


      = Turks and Caicos Islands

      =
      A single congregation of the LDS church is located in the Turks and Caicos Islands, and is located in the Nassau Caribbean District. The LDS Church reported 147 members in that congregation for December 31, 2018 but has not publicly reported it since. Missionaries first arrived on the island in December of 2008 and the Providenciales Branch was organized on 24 May 2009. Branch Meetings are conducted in English.


      = Cayman Islands

      =
      The LDS Church reported 230 members in a single congregation in the Cayman Islands as of December 31, 2022. It is located in the Nassau Caribbean District. Missionaries first arrived on the island in September 1985 after the Grand Cayman Branch was organized on 25 November 1981. The meetinghouse is located in the Grand Harbour neighborhood. Branch Meetings are conducted in English.


      Temples


      Countries and territories within the Jamaica Kingston Mission are located in the Panama City Panama Temple District. Cuba is part of the Santo Domingo Dominican Republic Temple District.


      References




      External links


      The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - Caribbean Area - Official Site
      Newsroom: Jamaica - News and Information
      ComeUntoChrist.org - Visitors Site

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