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By Peggy; Carnagie, Julie Saari

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Occom received none of the assistance generally given to English clergymen and teachers. As a result he soon had a debt of more than fifty pounds. The Occoms had to purchase their own wood and raise their own corn, but they were not allowed to keep sheep. When Samson was away preaching, Mary often had to beg for money from Wheelock and others in order to buy food and necessities. Church leaders claimed, however, that the Occoms were poor simply because they did not know how to budget their money.

Harvard University Press, 1978. The Puritans: American Literature Colonial Period (1608-1700). http://www. htm Available July 13, 1999. Silverman, Kenneth. The Life and Times of Cotton Mather. New York: Harper & Row, 1984. Wendell, Barrett. Cotton Mather. New York: Chelsea House, 1980. 212 Colonial America: Biographies Metacom (King Philip) c. 1640 Southeastern Massachusetts August 12, 1676 Mount Hope Native American leader M etacom (also known as King Philip) was the chief of the Wampanoag tribe.

Pursues science with religion Despite his success as a minister, Mather felt a strong pull toward science. Consequently, for forty years he struggled to make a connection between two apparently opposite world views. He firmly believed in the literal truth of the Bible (the holy book of the Christian faith), and he never doubted that God controlled world affairs. Nevertheless, when he was in his thirties he became one of the leading scientists of the early eighteenth century. In an effort to reconcile religion with science, he asserted that the world was created by God and but could be understood through scientific study.

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