Worcester, S. A. (Samuel Austin), 1798-1859
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Worcester, S. A. (Samuel Austin), 1798-1859
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Worcester, S. A. (Samuel Austin), 1798-1859
Worcester, Samuel
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Name :
Worcester, Samuel
Worcester, Samuel A. 1798-1859
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Name :
Worcester, Samuel A. 1798-1859
Worcester, Samuel Austin, 1798-1859
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Name :
Worcester, Samuel Austin, 1798-1859
Worcester, S. A. 1798-1859
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Name :
Worcester, S. A. 1798-1859
Worcester, Samuel Austin
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Worcester, Samuel Austin
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Biographical History
Worcester worked as a missionary for the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions from 1825 to 1859, serving the Cherokee Nation at Brainerd Mission, Tennessee; New Echota, Georgia; and in Indian Territory [Oklahoma]. During the state of Georgia's attempt to remove the Cherokee, Worcester refused to cooperate fully and was imprisoned from 1831 to 1833. In 1835, he and his wife Ann moved to Indian Territory where he set up his printing press at Dwight Mission and later Park Hill. During his career, he published many books and pamphlets in Choctaw, Creek, and Cherokee.
Samuel A. Worcester went to Cherokee Nation in 1825 as a missionary, and established his mission in Cherokee territory. He defied an 1830 Georgia law that required white men in Cherokee country to take an oath of allegiance to the state and receive a license from the Governor, for which he was jailed. The case was taken to the Supreme Court, Worcester vs. State of Georgia, and Worcester won.
Worcester was a missionary who lived with the Cherokee Indians in Georgia. He worked on translating religious texts into the Cherokee language. He and fellow missionary Elizur Butler were sent to jail in 1831 for violating an 1830 law that forbade white person, except for those specifically licensed by the governor, to live among the Cherokees. Despite winning an appeal in the Supreme Court case, Worcester v Georgia, both served two years of hard labor. The intention of their appeal was not to grant their release, but to challenge the State of Georgia's jurisdiction over the Cherokee Nation as unconstitutional. President Andrew Jackson refused to enforce the Court's decision, but both were eventually granted clemency by the governor of Georgia.
Alice Robertson was a Congresswoman from Oklahoma, born a member of the Creek Nation. She also served as a clerk in the Indian Office in Washington D.C. and taught at several Indian schools.
Missionary to the Cherokee Indians, and translator and printer of the Bible and other works in the Cherokee language.
Worcester began his missionary work with the Cherokee Indians in East Tennesse in 1825, and moved to New Echota, Ga. in 1827. In 1831 he and Elizur Butler were arrested and imprisoned for violating a Georgia ordinance forbidding white persons to live among the Indians without taking an oath of allegiance to the state and obtaining a license. The case was appealed in 1832 to the Supreme Court, which declared the Georgia law unconstitutional, but Worcester and Butler were not released until 1833. In 1835 Worcester established the Park Hill Mission among the Cherokees residing west of the Mississippi in the Indian Territory (now Oklahoma).
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/57414884
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-nr91036456
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/nr91036456
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q7412967
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Languages Used
Subjects
Cherokee Indians
Cherokee Indians
Cherokee Indians
Cherokee language
Cherokee language
Cherokee language
Civil disobedience
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Manuscripts, American
Missionaries
Missionaries
Prisoners
Prisoners
Prisons
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Oklahoma
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Georgia
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Georgia
as recorded (not vetted)
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Indian Territory
as recorded (not vetted)
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Georgia
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Georgia
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Milledgeville (Ga.)
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Oklahoma
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>