During the summer of 1868, the Reverend
A.N. Fisher, representing the Nevada Conference of the
Methodist Church, visited Salt Lake City. At the invitation
of Brigham Young, he preached the first Methodist sermon
in Utah in the Mormon Tabernacle. His sermon on heavenly
riches was reputedly publicly mocked by Young: Fisher
claimed, "I sustained the humiliation of having
my sermon ridiculed before an audience of thousands
of people." Nonetheless, as a result of this trip
the Methodists sought a person to supervise their activities
in the Intermountain area. Reverend Lewis Hartsough
became the missionary superintendent of Wyoming, Utah,
and southern Idaho under the Colorado Conference. Because
of his work in developing a Utah mission, he is known
as the father of Methodism in Utah. His first sermon
in Utah was preached with the encouragement and aid
of the Episcopal Church. Bishop Tuttle offered the use
of the room his church occupied as well as the services
of his congregation's organist.
In the spring of 1870, Dr. Hartsough returned to the
east seeking people and financial aid for the work in
Utah. On 22 May 1870, Reverend Gustave Pierce came to
Utah to continue the work started by Reverend Hartsough.
He organized The First Methodist Church of Salt Lake
City. Fausts Hall, the first official meeting place
of the church, was an old hayloft over a stable and
rented for fifty dollars a month. Pierce called it "an
exorbitant amount, but our only chance". That same
year Reverend Pierce began the Methodist contribution
of education in Utah by opening a school known as the
Rocky Mountain Seminary. Within two years the school
had an impressive enrollment of 220 pupils, and it remained
open until 1893. Pierce later organized other churches
and schools in Corrine, Tooele, Beaver, and Provo.
Methodists consider their greatest contribution to the
development of the state of Utah to be in the field
of education. While Mormons had established schools
in every area they entered in Utah, these schools generally
taught only the very basic fundamentals of learning.
They suffered a low attendance rate and short school
year, often less than three months. The Mormon struggle
for survival and effort toward colonization, didn't
allow for a concentrated effort toward education. Non-Mormons
in Utah had the resources to focus on education as wll
as the desire to limit the Mormon influence in the school
system. The institution of polygamy and the use of the
Deseret alphabet, for example, were seen as attacks
on fundamental American systems.
From 1870 until 1894 Methodist education in Utah thrived.
A total of forthy-two schools had been established.
Not all of the schools were open at the same time, and
some lasted only a year. Young women representing the
Women's Home Missionary Society made up a majority of
the teachers within the schools. In 1890, the most successful
year, there were 26 schools operating with 32 teachers
and 1,467 pupils. These pupils included 544 Mormons,
673 former Mormons, and 250 Protestants. The effectiveness
of the schools helped keep the conflict between Mormons
and Methodists in the area of education to a minimum.
When the opportunity afforded itself, Methodists worked
towards the establishment of a free public educations
system. In 1890 the territorial legislature passed such
a bil, and by 1917 Methodist involvement in education
in Utah came to an end.
As the need for Methodist resources in education diminished,
more emphasis was placed on mission work. Since the
church's organization in 1784 the Methodists had been
one of the foremost evangelical groups on the American
frontier. Methodists considered it their responsibility
to convert the nonbeliever to Methodism, which included
a desired conversion to the strict moral standards of
the Methodist lifestyle. Mormons were not considered
by many Mthodists to be Christians, and the practice
of polygamy was considered evil. Because of this practice
and the theocratic form of government used by the Mormons,
they were considered to be un-American by the Methodists,
who set their sights on Americanizing Utah and winning
Mormons to Methodism.
Mormons generally voted as a group represented by one
political party. To Methodists, this was un-democratic,
consequently they became involved in political efforts
to prevent Utah from becoming a state until the LDS
Church arranged to have its people divided along national
party lines.
Although the Methodists placed prominence on their mission
to the Mormons in Utah, they also established churches
and schools in the predominantly non-Mormon mining towns
These were challenging tasks because of the transient
population of those areas and the endangered survival
of the towns themselves. Substantial congregations would
be wiped out with a depression or a strike that would
close a mine. However, the church at Park City was at
one time the most successful Methodist church in the
state. In 1891 it boasted 300 members, the largest in
the territory, and had become entirely self supporting--the
first Methodist church in Utah to achieve this. By 1894,
Methodists were active in at least forty-two towns.
According to the census figures of 1895, church membership
was 1,440. Membership increased to 2,021 in 1936, to
4,351 in 1952, to 5,956 in 1971, and to approximately
7,000 by 1990.
The Women's Home Missionary Society is prominent in
Utah Methodist history. The society was founded on 10
July 1880, and in the winter of that year two of its
first missionaries arrived in Utah. The society's focus
was on education and social work. Within six years of
its arrival, the Women's Home Missionary Society had
missionaries and teachers in Salt Lake City, Ogden,
Moroni, Spanish Fork, Richfield, Elsinore, Grantsville,
Ephriam, Mount Pleasant, and Spring City. In some areas
they worked with missionaries or ministers from the
Utah mission, but in some of the smaller towns they
were responsible for Sunday services including the preaching
of sermons.
Shortly after its arrival in Utah, the Women's Home
Society became active in joining the protest against
polygamy, and it was active in the push for a constitutional
amendment making polygamy constitutionally illegal.
Methodist propaganda was influential in the Supreme
Court's decision in the case of Reynolds v. The United
States, which held that it was in the power of the
civil government to determine whether plural marriage
was legal. Propaganda also had a direct effect on anti-polygamy
legislation in Congress which culminated in the Edmunds
Tucker Law of 1887. Antipolygamy activity resulted in
the Manifesto issued in 1890 by the LDS Church President
Wilford Woodruff advising against the contracting of
any further plural marriages in the United States. In
1904 the Mormon Church officially prohibited polygamy.
Angie Newmon, a member of the society, was instrumental
in the development of an interdenominationally supported
home which served as a refuge for discontented or abandoned
plural wives and their children. She raised $6,500 at
a convention of the Women's Home Missionary Society
held in Cincinnati. The first session of the Forty-ninth
Congress awarded $40,000 in aid to the home in 1886.
A year later, an additional $74,000 was appropriated
by Congress. The home was intended to be a refuge for
women and children affected by the legislation against
polygamy. It contained forty sleeping rooms which could
be increased to fifty if necessary. The highest rate
of occupancy was in September 1887 when it contained
eleven women and twenty-two children. It ceased operations
15 June 15 1893, and $90,300 was lost when the home
was sold for $22,500. While the home was a financial
failure, it represented a major stepping stone in cooperation
between denominations.
The women's society also set up two boarding homes,
called Esther Halls, one in Salt Lake City and one in
Ogden. These homes were set up in 1914 as homes for
working women who needed shelter. Admission was not
affected by church status or ability to pay.
From its beginning finances were a problem for the Utah
Methodist Mission. The small church membership in Utah
could not support the activities deemed necessary; therefore
most of the financing came from outside Utah. From 1879
until 1948 Utah Methodism had the status of a mission.
This meant that its financial burdens came under the
general care of the whole church. In July of 1948, due
to the request of the church in Utah, the status of
Utah Methodism changed to the Salt Lake City District
of the Colorado Conference. Under this form of church
government, Utah Methodism now carries its own burdens
and represents a significant portion of the non-Mormon
community within the state.
Connie Fife