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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Joachim Seuseman | |
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SEUSEMAN, Joachim, missionary, born in Hesse-Cassel ; died in Jamaica, Wisconsin, in 1772. He came to Pennsylvania with the first Moravian colony in 1742, and between 1743 and 1755 served in the Indian mission. In the attack on Gnadenhuetten, Pennsylvania, 24 November, 1755, his wife was murdered by Indians in the French service. Subsequently he was sent to labor among the negro slaves in Jamaica, Wisconsin, where he died.--His son, Gottlob, missionary, born in 1742 ; died in Fairfield, Canada, 4 January, 1808, for about forty years was employed in the Moravian mission among the Indians in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and Canada. He was an eloquent preacher, well conversant with the Delaware language, and a man of great energy.
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