Wards and Branches of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Frisco, Beaver County, Utah: Difference between revisions

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=== Boundaries  ===
=== Boundaries  ===


While active, the congregation consisted of the mining towns of Frisco and Grampton.
While active, the congregation consisted of the mining towns of Frisco and Grampton.It was part of Beaver Stake.


=== History Timeline  ===
=== History Timeline  ===

Revision as of 10:23, 6 November 2012

Utah Church Records go to Beaver County Church Records go to Frisco, Utah Wards and Branches

This page includes a history timeline up to 1940, boundaries of wards and branches in the area as of 1940, and how to obtain the records.

Source of information: Jenson, Andrew. Encyclopedic History of the Church]. (Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1941), p 269-70. Online through BYU Books. (Free) Text searchable. Also available through Ancestry.com ($).

Boundaries[edit | edit source]

While active, the congregation consisted of the mining towns of Frisco and Grampton.It was part of Beaver Stake.

History Timeline[edit | edit source]

  • ____ - 1911. The town depended upon the Horn Silver Mine, the terminus of a branch of the Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad.
  • 1881, June 27. Organized as a branch.
  • 1882, March. 36 people belonged to the branch. "It seems that this first branch organization was not continued...."
  • 1897, April 25. Reorganized. They met alternately at the school house in Frisco and the hall at Grampton.
  • 1905, January 22. Frisco was organized as a ward.
  • 1911. The mines were closed and most of the saints moved away. Those that remained were transferred to Milford Ward.


Other History Resources
Many wards or branches appointed members to compile a history. Copies may be in the ward library or in homes of members. Some contain biographical sketches of members of the ward at the time of compilation.

Obtain the Records[edit | edit source]

Records up to about 1948 are available, usually on microfilm.

References[edit | edit source]