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While en route to Italy, Snow called T. B. H. Stenhouse and Jabez Woodard to serve in the new mission. They arrived in Genoa on 25 June 1850, and Snow offered a prayer dedicating Italy to the preaching of the gospel and organized the Italian Mission on 19 September on a mountain peak near the city of Torre Pellice. On 27 October, Snow baptized ...
1850 Erastus Snow, Peter O. Hansen, John E. Forsgren, and George P. Dykes First preached in Copenhagen Italy: 1850 Lorenzo Snow, Joseph Toronto, and Thomas Stenhouse: First preached in Genoa Sweden: 1850 John E. Forsgren Switzerland: 1850 Thomas Stenhouse and Lorenzo Snow: First preached in Geneva Norway: 1851 Hans F. Petersen
In 1849, Toronto was ordained a seventy in the LDS Church. In 1850, he traveled with Lorenzo Snow and Thomas B. H. Stenhouse to England and then on to continental Europe and became the first LDS Church missionaries in Italy. [3] Toronto and his associates met with little success due in part to opposition from the Italian media and government.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) ... 1 Nov 1850 2 Aug 1966 1966 Swiss: Italy 1970 Italy South 1971 Italy Rome 1974: 1 Jan 1854 extant
1843–1845; 1850–1854 preached without formal mission call (1843–1845), called to serve (1850–1854) Great Britain, Western Europe Cannon, Abraham Hoagland [15] London Conference, Nottingham Conference, Swiss and German Mission 1879–1882 Great Britain Maughan, William Harrison [16] 1875–1876 Great Britain Clayton, William [17]
Six months later, in 1974, he was sent on a Mormon mission to Pescara, Italy. As a Mormon missionary, you are expected to be fully present and dedicated to your duties for every moment during ...
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints holds a number of sites as historically significant. This list is intended as a quick reference for these sites. The sites may or may not be owned by the church.
In 1981, the church published a new LDS edition of the Standard Works that changed a passage in The Book of Mormon that Lamanites (considered by many Latter-day Saints to be Native Americans) will "become white and delightsome" after accepting the gospel of Jesus Christ. Instead of continuing the original reference to skin color, the new ...