Boston Massachusetts Temple

Boston Massachusetts Temple

Location

86 Frontage Road
Belmont, Massachusetts 02478-2135
United States

Contact

Telephone: 617-993-9993
Facsimile: 617-993-9906
Distribution Services: 617-489-7330

Details

Announcement: 30 September 1995
Groundbreaking and Site Dedication: 13 June 1997 by Richard G. Scott
Public Open House: 29 August–23 September 2000
Dedication: 1 October 2000 by Gordon B. Hinckley

Site: 8 acres.
Exterior Finish: Olympia white granite.
Ordinance Rooms: Four ordinance rooms (two-stage progressive) and four sealing.
Total Floor Area: 69,600 square feet.

Temple Locale:
Standing atop a wooded granite hillside in the northwest suburb of Belmont, the Boston Massachusetts Temple is a striking landmark along the busy Concord Turnpike. The public is welcome to tour the grounds of the temple and adjoining meetinghouse, which feature a series of walkways that wind among the beautiful trees and meticulously landscaped grounds.

Temple Facts:
The Boston Massachusetts Temple was the first temple built in New England (and in Massachusetts).
The Boston Massachusetts Temple holds the distinction of being the 100th operating temple of the Church—fulfilling President Gordon B. Hinckley's desire to have 100 temples in operation before the end of the year 2000.

The joint announcement of the Boston Massachusetts Temple and the White Plains New York Temple replaced the Church's previously announced plans to build a temple in Hartford, Connecticut, to serve both New York and New England.

The Boston Massachusetts Temple site was originally purchased for the meetinghouse that adjoins the temple. And although the architect was asked to design the meetinghouse for the center of the property, he could only wrap his mind around a design that placed the building in the lower corner. Despite repeated attempts at the urging of Church leaders, he finally insisted that another architect would have to be hired if they wanted the building elsewhere. The design was accepted. This decision left a large empty parcel at the top of the granite crag—perfect for the temple.
Not long after construction of the Boston Massachusetts Temple began, a few neighbors became alarmed by its size and filed suit with the intention to have the temple torn down. The plaintiffs argued that the state's Dover Amendment, which exempts religious buildings from local zoning, violated the separation of Church and State. The federal judge disagreed and ruled in favor of the Church.

Salt Lake Organizing Committee President Mitt Romney escorted U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy through the Boston Massachusetts Temple during the VIP open house. Just six years earlier, Romney had challenged Kennedy for his veteran seat in the Senate in a heated race many considered too close for comfort.

The Boston Massachusetts Temple was dedicated steepleless due to a second law suit contesting the proposed height of the steeple. The Church eventually won the case on appeal, and the steeple was added about a year after dedication.
Elder Loren C. Dunn, the first president of the Boston Massachusetts Temple, passed away just hours after the court's ruling that the steeple could be added.

The angel Moroni statue was installed atop the Boston Massachusetts Temple on September 21, 2001, in a tri-temple setting honoring the 178th anniversary of the first appearance of Moroni to the Prophet Joseph Smith. (The other two temples participating in the setting were the Nauvoo Illinois Temple and the The Hague Netherlands Temple.)

The angel Moroni statue atop the Boston Massachusetts Temple is a casting made by LaVar Wallgren of the statue created by Torlief Knaphus for the Washington D.C. Ward chapel, which he made as a replica of Cyrus E. Dallin's statue atop the Salt Lake Temple. (Other castings of this statue stand atop the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple and formerly atop the Atlanta Georgia Temple.)