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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). Search the whole document.

Found 6 total hits in 4 results.

Onondaga, N. Y. (New York, United States) (search for this): entry teganakoa-stephen
Teganakoa, Stephen Indian convert; went with his family to the mission of Sault St. Louis, where they were baptized. In the fall of 1790, while on a hunting expedition with his wife and another Indian, he was taken prisoner by a band of Cayugas and carried to Onondaga, N. Y. One of the party said to him that he owed his death to having left his countrymen for the dogs of Christians at the Sault. He answered: Do what you will with me, I fear neither your outrages nor your fires. I willingly give my life for a God who shed his blood for me. He was then slowly tortured to death, enduring his agony with fortitude and praying for his torturers.
Teganakoa, Stephen Indian convert; went with his family to the mission of Sault St. Louis, where they were baptized. In the fall of 1790, while on a hunting expedition with his wife and another Indian, he was taken prisoner by a band of Cayugas and carried to Onondaga, N. Y. One of the party said to him that he owed his death to having left his countrymen for the dogs of Christians at the Sault. He answered: Do what you will with me, I fear neither your outrages nor your fires. I willingly give my life for a God who shed his blood for me. He was then slowly tortured to death, enduring his agony with fortitude and praying for his torturers.
Louis.Sault St. Louis (search for this): entry teganakoa-stephen
Teganakoa, Stephen Indian convert; went with his family to the mission of Sault St. Louis, where they were baptized. In the fall of 1790, while on a hunting expedition with his wife and another Indian, he was taken prisoner by a band of Cayugas and carried to Onondaga, N. Y. One of the party said to him that he owed his death to having left his countrymen for the dogs of Christians at the Sault. He answered: Do what you will with me, I fear neither your outrages nor your fires. I willingly give my life for a God who shed his blood for me. He was then slowly tortured to death, enduring his agony with fortitude and praying for his torturers.
Teganakoa, Stephen Indian convert; went with his family to the mission of Sault St. Louis, where they were baptized. In the fall of 1790, while on a hunting expedition with his wife and another Indian, he was taken prisoner by a band of Cayugas and carried to Onondaga, N. Y. One of the party said to him that he owed his death to having left his countrymen for the dogs of Christians at the Sault. He answered: Do what you will with me, I fear neither your outrages nor your fires. I willingly give my life for a God who shed his blood for me. He was then slowly tortured to death, enduring his agony with fortitude and praying for his torturers.