Vernal Utah Temple
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Vernal Utah Temple | ||
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Number | 51 | edit data |
Announcement | 1994-02-13 | |
Groundbreaking | 1995-05-13 by Gordon B. Hinckley |
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Open House | 11 October - 25 October 1997 | |
Dedication | 1997-11-02 by Gordon B. Hinckley |
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Location | 170 South 400 West Vernal, Utah United States |
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Phone number | 435-789-3220 | |
Site | 1.6 acres (0.6 hectares) | |
Total floor area | 38,771 sq ft (3,602 m²) | |
Exterior finish | Face brick | |
Temple design | Adaptation of Uintah Stake Tabernacle | |
Ordinance rooms | 2 | |
Sealing rooms | 3 | |
Clothing rental | Yes | |
Cafeteria | No services | |
Visitors' center | No | |
Preceded by | St. Louis Missouri Temple | |
Followed by | Preston England Temple | |
Official website • News & Images |
The Vernal Utah Temple is the fifty-first Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Located in Vernal it is the tenth LDS temple in the state of Utah.
Upon its dedication November 2, 1997, the Vernal Temple was unique as the only LDS temple built from a previously-existing structure. Since 1997, the Copenhagen Denmark Temple and Manhattan New York Temple have similarly been adapted from existing structures.
Originally, the building served as the Uintah Stake Tabernacle for Latter-day Saints in eastern Utah. The Tabernacle's foundation was constructed of nearby sandstone with walls built of four layers of fired brick from local clay. The building was built with considerable donated labor from the fall of 1899 until it was dedicated on August 24, 1907 by LDS Church President Joseph F. Smith. Smith reportedly said he would not be surprised if a temple was built there some day.
Relative to other LDS Tabernacles, Roger Jackson characterized the Uintah Stake Tabernacle as relatively modest, without the decorative details found on Tabernacles in central and northern Utah. Nonetheless, he wrote, "the building is the most prominent structure in Vernal and considered the finest building in all of eastern Utah."
The tabernacle was superseded by an adjacent, more modern LDS stake center in 1948. Only used irregularly thereafter, the LDS Church announced the Tabernacle's closing in 1984 for public safety reasons. Among other things, the Tabernacle lacked indoor bathrooms and access for the disabled.
A local "Save the Tabernacle" committee formed, and in 1989 a preservation study was prepared. The LDS Church opted to turn the building into one of its new smaller temples, and plans were announced in 1994. In addition to preserving the exterior, bringing the building up to code, and altering the floor plan, the eastern spire of the temple was elongated to make it taller than the spire of the neighboring stake center. A golden statue of angel Moroni was placed on top of the spire facing east, a common element of almost all LDS Temples.
Over 120,000 visited the temple during its two week open house in October 1997.
[edit] References
Roger P. Jackson (1998). "Building Of The Vernal Utah Temple." Utah Preservation. Volume 2.
[edit] See also
- Temple (Mormonism)
- List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by geographic region
- Comparison of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- Temple architecture (Latter-day Saints)
[edit] External links
- Official LDS Vernal Utah Temple page
- Vernal Utah Temple page
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - Visitors page
- History of Mormon Temples - Lightplanet
- Mormon Temples and Secrecy
- Vernal Utah Temple is at coordinates Coordinates: