(May 2019 update: The Church has announced a renovation of the St. George Utah Temple. The temple will close in November 2019, with the work expected to be completed in 2022. Check out the details here: https://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/church-shares-renovation-plans-st-george-utah-temple.)
For many Latter-day Saints the pioneer era temples are among the most recognizable and best loved. The oldest of these historic buildings is the St. George Utah Temple. This temple was dedicated in 1877 and it has been in use continually since that time (with the exception of relatively short remodeling closures). For us in 2015 that has been 138 years! While the building’s stark white exterior has changed little during that time, the interior spaces—specifically the lower levels—have been heavily remodeled.
For many Latter-day Saints the pioneer era temples are among the most recognizable and best loved. The oldest of these historic buildings is the St. George Utah Temple. This temple was dedicated in 1877 and it has been in use continually since that time (with the exception of relatively short remodeling closures). For us in 2015 that has been 138 years! While the building’s stark white exterior has changed little during that time, the interior spaces—specifically the lower levels—have been heavily remodeled.
The addition of modern conveniences like electricity,
elevators, and—very important to this corner of Utah—air conditioning, have all
played a large part in necessitating the many remodelings. But there have been
other reasons to change the temple’s interior as well. For example, the most
recent major remodeling came in the 1970s when, among other changes, the rooms
used to present the endowment ordinance were modified to allow this
presentation by way of a film. Yet the endowment rooms changed during this remodel
were not 1877 originals. In fact when the temple was dedicated there
were not truly permanent endowment rooms like we see in modern-day temples.
The St. George Temple’s basic design and original
interior were very similar to the 1846 Nauvoo Temple. In fact when archaeological
studies were being conducted on the Nauvoo Temple site in the 1960s, the archaeologists
used St. George Temple plans and photographs to help interpret what they were
finding (Harrington, 5). These two temples in turn shared a basic floor plan with the Kirtland Temple and other unbuilt temples of the restoration.
While I hope to do a more in-depth post on the design similarities of the early
Latter-day Saint temples I will give a summary here:
The Kirtland Temple, whose original layout remains preserved
to this day, includes two large assembly rooms which take up the majority of
floor space on the two lower stories of the temple. These large assembly rooms
include pulpits at both ends where Church leadership would sit during
meetings. Curtains were also suspended from the ceiling and could be lowered to
partition these large assembly spaces into smaller temporary rooms. Above these
two floors is a third story “attic” which is permanently divided up into
small rooms and was used mostly as classroom space. All three stories are accessed from a vestibule on the east end which includes two staircases.
Topping the temple’s east end is a small tower. There is a basement level but
it is little more than a storage/crawl space. Looking at the HABS drawing below will help you make sense of this layout.
The Kirtland Temple. Source: Historic American Buildings Survey. |
The Kirtland Temple. Source: Historic American Buildings Survey. |
The next temple constructed by the Latter-day Saints (Nauvoo) followed this same floor plan, with two important additions. The first was the
addition of a basement level which included a font to be used in Baptisms for the
Dead. These baptisms had yet to be practiced when the Kirtland Temple was
built. The second design change was the addition of mezzanine levels above each
assembly room. These levels were made up of small rooms running the length of
the temple. So in review there was the basement level with its baptistry, the
first assembly room level, the first mezzanine level, the second assembly room
level, the second mezzanine level, and finally the attic level. All six of
these levels were accessed from two spiral staircases located in the corners of
the temple at the west end.
The St. George Temple would follow the same pattern as the
Nauvoo Temple, with the exception of the attic story; there would be no level
above the second mezzanine level. The endowment ordinance which had taken place
on Nauvoo’s attic floor would take place on the basement level of the St.
George Temple (Yorgason, 226). This meant the basement of the St. George temple would be a beehive of activity, with not only the canvas partitioned
endowment rooms and the baptistry, but with changing rooms, the
boiler, and equipment for indoor plumbing (Ibid).
A cross section of the St. George Temple; circa 1877. |
It can be difficult to envision the layout of the temple through reading, so I have draw and posted some diagrams to help. These are based upon original temple drawings by Truman O. Angell which were published in The St. George Temple: The First 100 Years by Janice Force DeMille, and upon my personal knowledge/observations and that which has been shared to me by others. Keep in mind these are not professional or 100 percent accurate.
According to the authors of All That Was Promised: The St. George Temple and the Unfolding of the
Restoration the basement very quickly proved to be too small and the two
final rooms used in the endowment (the terrestrial and celestial rooms) were moved from the basement to the first assembly floor (Yorgason, 286-288). The exact layout isn’t
publicly known, though it appears it was done with canvas partitions rather
than physical walls. For 60 years the basement would include the creation,
garden, and world rooms (which included beautiful murals) while the first level
assembly room provided space for the remainder of the endowment (Yorgason,
238).
By the 1970s it was decided to remodel the temple once
again. The rooms used to present the endowment would be changed around to allow
for a film presentation. Church architect Emil B. Fetzer, who designed
the Provo and original Ogden Utah Temples would led the remodeling program
(DeMille, 113). On the west end of the temple a large addition was made, which
added two new stairwells and an elevator. This allowed the temple patrons to
skip the old circular staircases at the east end. The first three rooms of the
endowment ceremony (creation, garden, and world) were basically gutted and
turned into stationary rooms with a screen at one end on which to project the film.
Entrance into these rooms is made through doorways placed in the old west
wall windows that are now accessible from the western addition. Doors were
cut from each of these stationary endowment rooms into the present veil room. I believe this veil room was once the terrestrial room, though how much it has changed I do not know. The celestial room was essentially unchanged and today remains fairly similar to its 1938
configuration. At present the endowment begins in one of the three rooms (which are
on a rotating schedule) after which the patron moves to the veil room and then
finally the celestial room.
A cross section of the modern St. George Temple; circa 2015. |
The St. George Temple would be the only Utah temple built with the “restoration” temple design of two assembly halls. The other pioneer temples (Logan, Manti, and Salt Lake) were all constructed with permanent endowment rooms in the lower levels and a single assembly room on the top floor. This short history ignores many other construction projects seen on the temple, such as its numerous annexes, and the building of a new taller tower. But hopefully this post adds to your appreciation of the St. George Temple and its continual part in the restoration of Christ's Gospel.
Works Cited
DeMille, Janice Force. The
St. George Temple: The First 100 Years. Hurricane, Utah: Homestead
Publishers, 1977.
Harrington, Virginia S. and J. C. Harrington. Rediscovery of the Nauvoo Temple: Report on
Archaeological Excavations. Nauvoo Restoration, Inc. 1971.
Kirtland Temple (Mormon). Historic American Buildings Survey.
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/oh0043/
Kirtland Temple (Mormon). Historic American Buildings Survey.
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/oh0043/
Yorgason, Blaine M., Richard A. Schmutz and Douglas D.
Alder. All That Was Promised: The St.
George Temple and the Unfolding of the Restoration. Salt Lake City: Deseret
Book, 2013.
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