Google
×
Samuel Austin Worcester (January 19, 1798 – April 20, 1859), was an American missionary to the Cherokee, translator of the Bible, printer, and defender of ...
Autres questions
The Worcesters worked from Brainerd, Tennessee, from 1825 to 1828, when they moved to New Echota, Georgia, capital of the Cherokee Nation, and where Samuel's ...
Missionary to the Cherokee Indians. ... Born in Massachusetts, Worcester graduated from the University of Vermont (1819) and Andover Theological Seminary (1823).
In Worcester v. Georgia …of white Christian missionaries, including Samuel A. Worcester, who were living in Cherokee territory in Georgia.
Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: Samuel Austin Worcester (1798-1859) was a missionary to the Cherokees in Georgia and in ...
Samuel Worcester (1 November 1770, in Hollis, New Hampshire – 7 June 1821, in Brainerd, Tennessee) was a United States clergyman noted for his participation ...
Termes manquants : inauthor: | Afficher les résultats avec :inauthor:
Part of a series of 26 five-minute radio programs about individuals and episodes in Oklahoma history promoting a statewide Oklahoma Image Project.
Samuel Worcester, a missionary, defied Georgia through peaceful means to protest the state's handling of Cherokee lands. He was arrested several times as a ...
Worcester was now arrested and sentenced to four years imprisonment for violating a Georgia law prohibiting a white from living among the Native Americans.
7 janv. 2022 · Upon his own death in Indian Territory in 1859, Samuel Austin Worcester left a legacy in no way encompassed by, but perhaps glimpsed at, in ...