by Tamera Lynn Kraft
Samson Occom was
born in a wigwam in 1723, part of the the Mohegan tribe near New London,
Connecticut. His parents were Joshua and Sarah Ockham. He was a direct descendant of Uncas, a famous
Mohegan chief. The Mohegan lived as nomads and traveled often.
At the age of 16,
Occom heard his first sermon during the Great Awakening. His mother Sarah was
one of the first Mohegan converts. Samson was stirred by what he heard and
began to study English so he could read the Bible for himself. A year later he
became a Christian under the preaching of James Davenport. He started going to
a school for Indians and white boys started by evangelist Eleazar
Wheelock. He spent four years at Wheelock’s school and was a gifted student,
but poor eyesight prevented him from going to college.
He taught school and ministered to the Montauk Indians for
eleven years. He used many creative methods including singing and card games as
teaching devices. When Azariah Horton, the white Presbyterian minister to the
Montauk, retired, Samson took his place as pastor. Samson married Mary Fowler
in 1751, and they had ten children.
Samson was paid by the church but received a much smaller
salary than the white men doing the same job. To make ends meet, he bound books
and carved spoons, pails, and gunstocks for his white neighbors. Despite the
prejudice he faced, Samson was ordained in 1759 by the Presbyterian Church, one
of the first Native Americans to be ordained.
His passion was to share the Gospel with other Native
Americans and was commission by the Scotch Society of Missions to preach to the
Cherokee in Georgia and Tennessee. Fighting among the Cherokee and white
settles put those plans on hold, so instead Samson went to New York to preach
among the Oneida.
In 1765 Samson traveled with George Whitefield, Great
Awakening preacher, during his sixth preaching tour in the colonies. Later that
year, he traveled to England with Nathaniel Whitaker to raise money for
Wheelock’s Indian Charity School. Over the next two years, he preached over 200
sermons in England and was well received. He raised over 11,000 pounds, the
most ever raised for a ministry in the colonies. While in England Samson
visited with John Newton, writer of Amazing Grace, and received an honorary
degree from the University of Edinburgh which he politely declined.
When he returned to America in 1768, Samson found that Wheelock had failed to care for his wife and children as Wheelock had promised. Samson’s family was living in poverty. The rift widened when he learned Wheelock had used the money he’d raised to move the school to New Hampshire and decided to exclude Indians. Wheelock renamed the school Dartmouth.
Samson was a prolific writer throughout his lifetime. He
kept a diary from 1743 to 1790 about his work that became an historic document.
In 1772, Samson preached a temperance sermon at the execution of a Native
American who murdered a man while he was drunk. That sermon became a best
seller. He also wrote and published hymns. He is recognized as the first Native
American to become published.
When Samson became a defender of land claim of the Montauk
and Oneida against speculators, false rumors were spread that he was a heavy
drinker and not even a Mohegan. Although these reports were untrue, he lost the
support of his denomination and several missionary societies. He wrote an
autobiography to defend himself, but it did little good.
Throughout the 1770s and 1780s, Samson preached among the
Mohegan and other tribes in new England. After the Revolutionary War, he settled
in Brothertown, New Yourt on a reservation for New England Indians where he
establish the first Indian Presbyterian Church. As he gather wood to finish the
church building in 1791, he died.
His legacy continued after his death through his
children, students, and converts who also ministered to Native American. Two students later became authors like their teacher.
This is very interesting Tamera. I had not heard of Samson Occom or his life.
ReplyDeleteBlessings, Tina
Thank you for the article. Pastor Occom was one of several early Native American Christian preachers. In the book, Black Country, by Al DeFilippo, there is a moving scene where Pastor Occom is preaching in George Whitefield's Tottenham Court Road Chapel in 18th-century London. The website for the book is www.francisasburytriptych.com. There you will find numerous articles on the early Methodist movement that Whitefield attached himself to. Again, thank you for the article.
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