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  1. John Williams (29 June 1796 – 20 November 1839) was an English missionary, active in the South Pacific. Early life [ edit ] He was born in Tottenham , [2] near London , to Welsh parents.

  2. May 4, 2017 · John Williams. These islands captured the heart of Welsh missionary John Williams, later to be known to history as the “Martyr of Polynesia.”. More than any other man, John Williams would be the instrument of God to open the islands of the South Pacific to mission work. The first island upon which the Williams labored was the beautiful ...

  3. Jan 4, 2016 · John became a member at the Tabernacle and joined the London Missionary Society. He was ordained, September 1816, at Surrey Chapel, London, alongside another destined to be a great missionary, Robert Moffat, whose sights were set on Africa. In November 1816, the newly-married young missionary sailed with his bride, Mary, bound for the other ...

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  4. Samoa. John Williams, a member of the London Missionary Society, arrived to establish a Christian mission in 1830. He made a convert of Malietoa Vainu’upo, who had just conquered all of Samoa, and the rest of the population soon followed suit. A foreign settlement had developed…. Other articles where John Williams is discussed: Rarotonga ...

  5. John Williams (1796-1839), missionary, was born on 27 June 1796 at Tottenham High Cross, London, the son of John Williams and Hannah (?) Maidment. His ancestors on his father's side had been Baptists for many generations. His mother was influenced by the Calvinistic Methodist movement and brought her son up as a Congregationalist.

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  6. May 20, 2020 · By Rob May 20, 2020. John Williams (27 June 1796 – 20 November 1839) served with the London Missionary Society in the South Pacific. In order to expand his work to the Samoa and the Society Islands he build a missionary Ship – The Messenger of Peace – at Rarotonga. Following his death at the hands of cannibals in the New Hebrides, the ...

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  8. Williams believed that the spread of Christianity, 'civilization', and commerce went hand-in-hand, and his work in and around Tahiti and Rarotonga from the time of his first posting there by the London Missionary Society in 1817 was largely well received.

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