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  2. He died from tuberculosis on October 9, 1747, at the age of 29. He is buried at Bridge Street Cemetery in Northampton, next to Jerusha, [15] who died in February 1748 as a result of contracting tuberculosis from nursing Brainerd. [16] After his death, his younger brother John Brainerd (1720–1781) continued his work.

  3. Oct 5, 2024 · David Brainerd (born April 20, 1718, Haddam, Conn. [U.S.]—died Oct. 9, 1747, Northampton, Mass.) was a Presbyterian missionary to the Seneca and Delaware Indians of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania (1744–47).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Childhood and Unspeakable Glory
    • Yale College and Awakening
    • Missionary to The American Indians
    • Impact

    Born on Easter Sunday, April 20, 1718, in Haddam, Connecticut, David was one of nine children born to Hezekiah and Dorothy Brainerd. The Brainerd family were descendants of a long line of men and women noteworthy for their religious zeal. It was said that David’s father, Hezekiah, was a man of “great personal dignity and self-restraint . . . and of...

    In early September 1739, only two months after his conversion, Brainerd entered Yale College in New Haven, Connecticut. During his first year, he contracted measles, which sent him home for several weeks. In his second year, he began to spit up blood, an early warning sign of tuberculosis. The disease would eventually take his life. He first experi...

    Unable to complete his formal education, Brainerd sought other opportunities to fulfill his ministerial calling. After receiving a license to preach, he was approved for missionary work on November 25, 1742. He was sent to a small church on Long Island, which served as a doorway to the vast New England wilderness the following spring. From 1743 to ...

    After his death, Edwards discovered Brainerd’s diaries and believed they would be of immense value to the broader Christian world. In 1749, with an introduction, Edwards published the journals as The Life and Diary of the Rev. David Brainerd. Missionaries Henry Martyn, William Carey, and countless others have devoured Brainerd’s diaries as encourag...

  4. May 29, 2014 · March 1747 = one last visit with his congregation in Cranberry (before his brother John Brainerd would succeed him there) by the end of DB’s ministry there, there were 85 communicant members of the Indian congregation, 43 adults and 42 children. April 1747 = leaves for New England. May 28, 1747 = arrives in Northampton

  5. Jul 30, 2015 · He died when still a young man. Only 29. But David Brainerd, a young Puritan who ministered to the Indians, was one of America's most influential missionaries. Though his life was brief, Brainerd's intense, passionate devotion to God affected countless Christians for many generations.

  6. The Life of David Brainerd, also called The Life and Diary of David Brainerd, is a biography of David Brainerd by evangelical theologian Jonathan Edwards, first published in 1749 under the title "An Account of the Life of the Late Rev. David Brainerd".

  7. Died: October 9, 1747 Northampton, Mass. Life Span: 29 years, 5 months, 19 days. He was only 29 when he died...his gravestone simply says, "A faithful and laborious missionary to the Stockbridge, Delaware and Susquehanna tribes of Indians." But in truth David Brainerd's life sacrifice reached out and touched the whole world, challenging more ...

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