A Tithing Ranch
Posted by: brwhiz
N 36° 51.819 W 112° 44.360
12S E 344958 N 4081158
This Historical Marker is mounted on a steel post near one of the stone ranch buildings on the grounds of Pipe Spring National Monument about 15 miles west of Fredonia, Arizona.
Waymark Code: WMFT75
Location: Arizona, United States
Date Posted: 11/27/2012
Views: 3
A Tithing Ranch
Whether we have much or little, one-tenth should be paid in...the people are not compelled to pay their tithing...it is urged upon them only as a matter of duty between them and their God.
President Brigham Young, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1847-1877
Mormon pioneers in the 1870s often paid their tithes with livestock, crops, or labor-not cash. The Southern Utah Tithing Office accepted many steers and heifers as tithes, sending the stock here to Pipe Spring. This ranch was managed by the tithing office for the Mormon Church.
The Winsor, Pulsipher, and Woolley families-among others-worked this church ranch for 25 years. Pipe Spring was not privately owned until the Mormon Church sold the property in 1895.
[large photo caption]Every day 80-100 cows had to be milked on this ranch in the years 1870-1877. This milk made about 60 pounds of cheese and 40 pounds of butter.
[small photo #1 caption]Twice a month, 10 to 30 steers were driven to the tithing office in St. George, Utah, along with a load of butter and cheese.
[small photo #2 caption]Hundreds of men who worked on public roads and the St. George Temple received shares of beef, butter, and cheese.