Source: newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/facts-and -statistics/country/australia
The
first missionary of the Church to Australia was William Barratt, a 17-year-old
English convert who arrived in 1840. He was followed a year later by Andrew
Anderson from Scotland, who organized the first branch (a small congregation)
in 1844. American missionaries John Murdock and Charles Wandell arrived in
Sydney on October 31, 1851. They found the colony in the grip of gold fever. "The
more plentiful the gold, the smaller the hearts of the people were," they
recorded.
A small branch was organized in Sydney
early in 1852 with a handful of members. In September of that year a branch was
organized in Melbourne. Many early converts emigrated to the United States,
including Joseph Ridges, who was an organ builder. He later built the organ
that was used in the historic Tabernacle on Temple Square in Salt Lake City.
This pattern — baptism followed by emigration — was one of the factors that
held Church growth in Australia in check for many years.
Then, in the mid-1950s, the Church in
Australia was caught up in an unprecedented surge in membership that has
continued ever since. This surge resulted from a number of factors, including a
decline in emigration of Australian members to Utah, much-improved social
acceptance of the Church, the start of an intensive chapel-building program,
growing numbers of local leaders and an emphasis on missionary work.
The first Church building was constructed
in Brisbane in 1904. The country’s first temple, located in Sydney, was
completed in September 1984.
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