News

The Kirtland Temple was dedicated by Joseph Smith in 1836. It reopened for tours on Monday after it was acquired by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in historic Kirtland, Ohio.
SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — For the first time since the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints bought it, the historic Kirtland Temple in Ohio has reopened to the public. The historic building ...
The week that the Kirtland Temple reopened, hundreds of members from all over the world visited Kirtland, Ohio, for tours of ...
When Jesus came to Kirtland in 1836 a chorus of angels sang from the rooftop of the Kirtland Temple. That’s just one of the stories told to those visiting the Temple, which has recently been ...
The Kirtland Temple will remain an historic building. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints plans to reopen it March 25, 2024, for public tours at no charge.
Northeast Ohio's Kirtland Temple, completed in 1836, was recently named one of the world's most sacred spaces. Susan Glaser, Cleveland.com ...
Ownership of the Kirtland Temple became an issue almost from the start. The title was broken more than once in the 1830s, Spencer McBride said in a Joseph Smith Papers Project podcast.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased the historic Kirtland Temple, the first LDS temple built, along with other historical buildings and artifacts, from the Community of ...
A Community of Christ historian discusses the sale of the Kirtland Temple and historic sites in Nauvoo to the LDS Church on a "Mormon Land" podcast.
Dedicated by Joseph Smith in 1836, the Kirtland Temple served as an all-purpose house of worship for early church members, who gathered there for prayer, study and Sunday worship.
The person who babysat me when I was little helped to work on the restoration of the Kirtland Temple in the 1930s or 1940s, and somewhere in my parents’ house are two nails that he pulled out.