in front of the
Church Administration Building, c. 1917 The first official youth association of the church—the Young Gentlemen's and Young Ladies’ Relief Society—was formally organized by youth in
Nauvoo, Illinois, on the advice of church founder,
Joseph Smith, in March 1843. The group had held several informal meetings since late January of that year under the supervision of
apostle Heber C. Kimball. In 1854, apostle
Lorenzo Snow organized the Polysophical Society and encouraged young Latter-day Saints to join. In 1875, LDS Church
president Brigham Young organized the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association (YMMIA) and intended that it act as a male equivalent of the Young Ladies' Cooperative Retrenchment Association, which was renamed the
Young Ladies' National Mutual Improvement Association in 1877. The purpose was to "help young men develop their gifts, to stand up and speak, and to bear testimony". A central committee of the YMMIA, led by
Junius F. Wells, was formed in 1876 to oversee the organization, conduct missionary work, and issue general instructions. A YMMIA general superintendency (later renamed "general presidency") was formed by church president John Taylor in 1880. In 1901, the YMMIA was divided into junior and senior classes. In 1911, the church followed the pattern developed by the
Boy Scouts of America (BSA) and created the YMMIA Scouts. The organization was officially integrated into the BSA on May 21, 1913. In the 1970s, the YMMIA was briefly merged with the church's Aaronic priesthood and young women's organizations and officially renamed the
Aaronic Priesthood MIA Young Women. In June 1974, this consolidation was reversed: an independent
Young Women organization was established and the name of the Young Men organization was changed to Aaronic Priesthood. Also in 1974, the church eliminated the YMMIA General Presidency, placing the organization under the direction of the
Presiding Bishopric. The organization's name was changed to Young Men in May 1977 and a general presidency was reinstated. Aaronic Priesthood MIA Young Women was the name of the LDS Church's official young men organization between 1972 and 1974. It was formed by consolidating the YMMIA and the YWMIA into one organization. Leadership of the auxiliary was shared between the presiding bishopric and the Young Men General Presidency. The combined organization was short-lived, and in 1974 the organization was again divided into the renamed Young Men and the Young Women. Between 1979 and 2004, the Young Men General Presidency had been composed of
seventies, who were church
general authorities. In the church's April 2004
general conference,
Thomas S. Monson, a counselor in the
First Presidency, announced that "a recent decision [has been made] that members of the Quorums of the Seventy [will] not serve in the general presidencies of the Sunday School and Young Men." The Young Men organization was involved in
Scouting from 1911 with the formation of their MIA Scouts until the end of 2019. The YMMIA Scouts merged with
Boy Scouts of America (BSA) on May 21, 1913, with the church becoming the first chartering organization, with John H. Taylor as the first LDS Scout Commissioner. In 1928, the Boy Scouts was named the church's official youth program for boys ages 12 to 16. Young Men organizations in other countries were not involved in Scouting. In the
United Kingdom and in other
Commonwealth countries, some local groups participated in the
Duke of Edinburgh's Award Scheme or its equivalent. As of January 1, 2018, the church withdrew from
Varsity and Venturing scouting programs, with boys ages 8 to 13 still enrolled in the Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts. In May 2018, the church announced that they would completely withdrawal from all BSA programs at the end of 2019. In October 2019, the church announced that ward Young Men presidencies would be discontinued, and implemented the church's newly created "Children and Youth Program" at the beginning of 2020. ==Today's organization==