In 1818, the Society was renamed
The London Missionary Society. In 1822,
John Philip was appointed superintendent of the London Missionary Society stations in South Africa where he fought for the rights of the indigenous people. 1821 –
John Williams is the first recorded reverend of the Cook Islands Christian Church (CICC) in Arutanga, Aitutaki, Cook Islands. It is here that the missionary work was first established. In later years John Williams visited Rarotonga, taking with him two Tahitians he picked up from Tahiti. One of the Tahitians, named Papehia, was used as intermediaries to convince local chiefs to join the new gospel. 1830 – John Williams sighted the coast of
Savai'i in
Samoa and landed on August 24, 1830 at
Sapapali'i village in search of
Malietoa Vai‘inupo, a
paramount chief of Samoa. John Williams was greeted by his brother Taimalelagi. Upon meeting Malietoa at a large gathering in Sapapali'i, the LMS mission was accepted and grew rapidly throughout the Samoan Islands. The eastern end of the Samoan archipelago, was the kingdom of
Manu'a. The paramount chief, Tui-Manu'a embraced Christianity and Manu'a also became a LMS island kingdom. 1832 – John Williams (
Ioane Viliamu as he is known to Samoans) landed at Leone Bay in what was later to become
American Samoa. (Tala faasolopito o le Ekalesia Samoa) He was informed that men of their village have accepted the 'lotu' brought by Ioane Viliamu in Savai'i; not knowing John Williams now stood before them. A monument stands before the large
Siona Chapel – now CCCAS in Leone, American Samoa – in honor of John Williams. In 1839, John Williams's missionary work whilst visiting the New Hebrides came to an abrupt end, when he was killed and eaten by cannibals on the island of
Erromango whilst he was preaching to them. He was traveling at the time in the Missionary ship
Camden commanded by Captain
Robert Clark Morgan (1798–1864). A memorial stone was erected on the island of
Rarotonga in 1839 and is still there today. His widow is buried with their son, Samuel Tamatoa Williams, at the old Cedar Circle in London's
Abney Park Cemetery, the name of her husband and the record of his death described first on the stone. John Williams' remains were sought by a group from Samoa and his bones were brought back to Samoa, where throngs of the LMS mission attended a funeral service attended by Samoan royalty, high-ranking chiefs and the LMS missionaries. His remains were interred at the native LMS church in Apia. A monument stands in his memory across from the Congregational Christian Church of Apia chapel. The Rev. Alexander MacDonald and his wife Selina (
née Blomfield) arrived in
Rarotonga in May 1836, then
Samoa in April 1837 and settled at
Safune on the central north coast of
Savai'i island in Samoa in August 1837. He left the LMS in 1850 when he accepted a position with the Congregational church in Auckland, New Zealand. 1839–1879 – The Rev.
George Pratt served as a missionary in Samoa for many years, at the station at
Matautu on Savai'i island. Samoa, Tonga, and New Guinea. 15 October 1870 - Rev. Samuel James Whitmee arrived at
Arorae (Gilbert Islands, now
Kiribati), and later that month he visited
Tamana,
Onoatoa and
Beru. In August 1872,
George Pratt of the LMS visited the Gilbert Islands. 1871 - London Missionary Society arrives in the
Torres Strait Islands (now in
Queensland, Australia). The event is commemorated to this day by the
Torres Strait Islanders in the annual
Coming of the Light Festival. == Notable missionaries==