The Tithing Office, also known as the DUP Relic Hall, is a historic building located on State St. The Tithing Office was purchased by the DUP in 1968 and became their headquarters. The Tithing Office was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.3
Address: 26 South State St • Email: richmondrelichall@gmail.com
Church Building
In the early years of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a revelation to Church President Joseph Smith indicated that members of the Church should pay tithing as stated in the Bible.1 Almost 50 years after the first revelation, Church President Lorenzo Snow reinstated the same call for all Saints of the Church to pay tithing.2 Tithing in the earlier days of the Church was not like today where Latter-day Saints typically tithe only a tenth of their paycheck or cash. Most settlements had a bartering, or trading, system and hardly had any cash at all. Members would tithe cattle, sheep, chickens, money, furniture, and even food. To hold all these items, tithing offices were built across settlements in Utah, Idaho, and Arizona.
In January 1907, Alma Merrill—Stake President of the Benson Stake—and his brother Bishop Thomas H. Merrill of the Richmond Ward, requested Church headquarters to build a tithing office in Richmond. They would also use the building for other Church affairs such as Stake office meetings. The Presiding Bishopric of the Church was in charge of all tithing affairs and gave a bill of means as to how to construct the building. Richmond citizen James L. Burnham was hired to construct the building. The Tithing Office was completed in 1907-1908.3
Relic Hall
The Tithing Office did its job of containing all tithes that the citizens of Richmond would donate. The Office was owned and operated by the Church until 1968. The city purchased the building and today allows a local chapter of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers to use the building as a local museum, containing photos of early Latter-day Saint Pioneers, and artifacts of city and Church histories. They named the building the Pioneer Relic Hall: James Hendricks Camp after the purchase.
In 2006, they changed the name to the James & Drusilla Hendricks Daughters of Utah Pioneers Relic Hall.3 Starting in 2024, the Camp began a major renovation of its inventory and artifacts. They acquired a grant of $5,000 and began reorganizing their artifacts, taking lessons on how to care for their artifacts, purchasing tools to measure humidity and temperature, and asking local historian Bryce Holt for assistance in knowing who were Richmond Pioneers and who were not. The Daughters completed the work before the 110th anniversary of Black & White Days, 2025. To celebrate the occasion, the city held a ribbon cutting for the renovated building.
Tithing Office, 1983.
Photo property of National Register of Historic Places.
Tithing Office, 2017.
Photo property of Bryce Holt.
Doctrine and Covenants, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Sec. 119, July 8, 1838.
Genesis 28:22; Leviticus 27:30; Luke 18:12
Reexamining Lorenzo Snow's 1899 Tithing Revelation, Dennis B. Horne, 2014. https://ensignpeakfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Reexamining-Lorenzo-Snows-1899-Tithing-Revelation.pdf
United States Department of the Interior. National Register of Historic Places (1983). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Richmond Tithing Office. National Archive Catalog. https://catalog.archives.gov/id/71999247