The first official meeting of the LDS Church in Sierra Leone was held in Goderich in January 1988, with the first LDS missionaries arriving in May of that year. They were under the Liberia Monrovia Mission. A district was organized in Freetown in 1990. At various times in the 1990s, missionaries were withdrawn due to the civil war in the country. In 1991, the Liberia Monrovia Mission was discontinued and Sierra Leone was placed under the Accra Ghana Mission. The first LDS-built meetinghouse in the country was completed in Bo in 2004. In 2007, the Sierra Leone Freetown Mission was created covering both Sierra Leone and Liberia.[6] In December 2012, Jeffrey R. Holland created the first LDS stake in Sierra Leone in Freetown. In 2013, Liberia was split off to be its own separate mission.
Stakes and districts
The Freetown Sierra Leone Stake was organized on December 2, 2012, making it the 3,000th stake in the LDS Church.[7][8] As of November 2024, Sierra Leone had the following stakes and districts:[9]
Stakes and Districts
Stake/District
Organized
Mission
Bo Sierra Leone Durba Stake
20 Oct 2024
Sierra Leone Bo
Bo Sierra Leone East Stake
1 Jun 2014
Sierra Leone Bo
Bo Sierra Leone North Stake
27 Nov 2016
Sierra Leone Bo
Bo Sierra Leone West Stake
28 Feb 1992
Sierra Leone Bo
Freetown Sierra Leone Stake
5 Nov 1991
Sierra Leone Freetown
Freetown Sierra Leone East Stake
3 Dec 2017
Sierra Leone Freetown
Freetown Sierra Leone Hill Station
10 Dec 2023
Sierra Leone Freetown
Kenema Sierra Leone Stake
25 Nov 2012
Sierra Leone Bo
Kissy Sierra Leone Stake
21 Aug 2011
Sierra Leone Freetown
Kossoh Town Sierra Leone Stake
16 Mar 2014
Sierra Leone Freetown
Makeni Sierra Leone District
21 May 2017
Sierra Leone Freetown
Moriba Town Sierra Leone District
26 Jun 2022
Sierra Leone Bo
Wellington Sierra Leone Stake
10 Oct 2021
Sierra Leone Freetown
Congregations in Sierra Leone not part of a stake or district include:
Kapeteh Branch
Koidu Branch
Moyamba Branch
Sierra Leone Freetown Mission Branch
The Sierra Leone Freetown Mission Branch serves families and individuals in Sierra Leone that is not in proximity of a meetinghouse.
Missions
Sierra Leone Freetown, organized on July 1, 2007[10]
Sierra Bo, organized in June 2024
2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak
After two of its members died during the 2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak, the LDS Church required its missionaries to remain in their apartments as a precautionary measure.[11][12] Then on August 1, 2014 the LDS Church announced that it would transfer all of its 274 missionaries out of Sierra Leone and Liberia, thereby closing the Sierra Leone Freetown Mission for the duration of the outbreak.[11][12][13]