

An edition of Samson Occom and the Christian Indians of New England (1899)
By William DeLoss Love
Publish Date
1975
Publisher
The Pilgrim press
Language
eng
Pages
379
Description:
"Long out of print, this account reveals one of the most unusual actors to step on stage in the eighteenth-century American colonies. Mohegan yet Christian, a native speaker of Mohegan and fluent in English - and literate in Greek, Latin, and French - Occom strode across the cultures of his time and place.". "Occom was man passionate about his advocacy for Native Americans in education and religious training. An ordained Presbyterian minister, he was a spiritual and educational broker among cultures immersed in an era of tumultuous change. As a businessman, he secured the funding necessary for the creation of Dartmouth College. He proved to be a dominant and influential presence in the eighteenth-century world of the Great Awakening of the 1740s, the War of Independence, and the emergence of the Young Republic." "Drawing on primary source material - manuscript collections, Occom's diaries and letters - Love brings a vast historical knowledge and a degree of critical evidence unmatched by any recent modern work on Occom."--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: Missions, Algonquian Indians, Brotherton Indians, Indians of North America, Biography, History, Missionaries, Government relations, Relocation, Presbyterian Church, Land tenure, Mohegan Indians, Occom, samson, 1723-1792, Missionaries, biography, Indians of north america, east (u.s.), Presbyterian church (u.s.a.)., missions, Indians of north america, land tenure, Indians of north america, government relations
People: Samson Occom (1723-1792)
Places: New England