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Zorobabela Kaʻauwai

Zorobabela Kaʻauwai (c. 1799/1806 – August 8, 1856)[a] was an early politician and judge in the Kingdom of Hawaii. Beginning as an assistant to the Hoapili, Governor of Maui, he served many political posts including Assistant Judge of the first Supreme Court of Hawaii, an original member of the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles, a multiple-term representative in the Hawaiian legislature and circuit judge for Maui. An early convert to Christianity and devout adherent of the Protestant faith, his first name is a Hawaiian form of the Biblical name Zerubbabel.

Zorobabela Kaʻauwai
Assistant Judge of the Supreme Court of Hawaii
In office
May 10, 1842 – November 1846
Succeeded byJoshua Kaʻeo
Member of the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles
In office
February 10, 1846 – March 21, 1850
Succeeded byJoshua Kekaulahao
Member of the Kingdom of Hawaii
House of Representatives
In office
1851–1852, 1854–1855
Personal details
Bornc. 1799/1806[a]
Kona, Hawaii
DiedAugust 8, 1856
Makawao, Maui
NationalityKingdom of Hawaii
SpouseKalanikauleleiaiwi III
ChildrenDavid Kahalekula Kaʻauwai
William Hoapili Kaʻauwai
George Kaleiwohi Kaʻauwai
Alma materLahainaluna Seminary
OccupationDeacon, Judge, Politician, Businessman

Early life edit

Kaʻauwai was born around 1799 or 1806,[a] in the district of Kona on the island of Hawaii. Although not of chiefly descent, his family belonged to the "old class of chief's right-hand men." Later historian Jon Kamakawiwoʻole Osorio stated he was a chief, of Maui lineage.[2] At a young age, he attracted the attention of Kamehameha I and later came under the patronage of High Chief Hoapili, one of Kamehameha's advisor and loyal companion and later Governor of Maui. He worked in the household of Hoapili and became his loyal subject. Later writer noted that Kaʻauwai "must have been an extraordinary youth to secure, as he did, the confidence and love of this old chieftain."[3]

Kaʻauwai revered Hoapili as a father figure and accompanied him into battle and fought in the 1824 rebellion of Humehume, on the island of Kauai.[4] He was present when the American missionaries, who arrived in Hawaii in 1820, established a mission station at Lahaina. After the converted Hoapili imposed a law requiring his household retainers to learn the Hawaiian alphabet or otherwise be deprived of food, the obedient Kaʻauwai abstained from food for two entire days and he learned to read and write. He and his friend David Malo became interested in Christianity at the same time and both served as early helpers to the missionaries in Lahaina, although unlike Malo, he was never licensed to preach. Under the order of Hoapili, he helped build the stone church of Kalaniʻohua, on Maui.[5] With Malo, he attended the Lahainaluna became one of the first generation of Hawaiians to receive a western education by the American missionaries who arrived in Hawaii in 1820.[6] Reginald Yzendoorn, author of History of the Catholic Mission in the Hawaiian Islands, later wrote that Kaʻauwai was a judge and Calvinist deacon who related the burning of the Roman Catholic chapel of Wailuku in 1843 to his mother-in-law Marie Leahi, an early Catholic female catechumen.[7] In the early Hawaiian Protestant mission, deacons did not have to be licensed to preach.[8]

Kaʻauwai became an experienced fisherman, manager of the chief's canoes and an early physician. He worked as his headman or right-hand agent to Governor Hoapili and was effectively the Lieutenant Governor of Maui in all but name. In their first meeting in 1832, Reverend Richard Armstrong described how Hoapili trusted him with all his important business including accessing and collecting taxes, managing his property, and conducting tours of the island of Maui, and thus became a highly respected and well-loved official in the public view.[9] In October 1851, the Privy Council of State, the advisory council for the king, recommended him as a candidate for the Governorship of Maui left vacant by the death of James Kānehoa Young, but the council eventually voted eight to three to recommended the appointment of Prince Lot Kapuāiwa (the future Kamehameha V) instead. However, Prince Lot never seem to have taken up this position either because Kānehoa's deputy Paul Nahaolelua remained acting governor until his own appointment in 1852.[10]

Political career edit

In 1842, Kaʻauwai was elected by the Hawaiian legislature to serve as one of the four Assistant Judges of the Supreme Court of Hawaii, the first formed in the Kingdom of Hawaii between 1842 and 1848, which was headed by King Kamehameha III and the Kuhina Nui Kekāuluohi and after her death Keoni Ana. These four judges of the Supreme Court were not Associate Justices (like later individuals appointed after 1848) but served in the capacity of an assistant to the Chief Justice, i.e., the King. He sat as a judge from 1842 to 1846, before resigning in November, 1846.[11] He was succeeded by Joshua Kaʻeo.[12] In 1842, King Kamehameha III also appointed Kaʻauwai as one of the five original members of the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles, a government committee in charge of settling or quieting land claims of the Great Māhele. He served in this post from February 10, 1846 until his resignation on March 21, 1850; an experienced attorney Joshua Kekaulahao was appointed in his place after he resigned.[13]

 
Mauna Kilika, an early government building and meeting place for the Legislature of Hawaii from 1845 to 1852

According to historian Samuel Kamakau and contemporary legislative records, Kaʻauwai was one of the early "representatives of the people" who assembled with the king and the chiefs in the first session of the legislature of the Hawaiian Kingdom which met between April and May 1841, at Luaʻehu, in the early capital of Lahaina. Instead of a direct vote, these early representatives were appointed by recommendation or petitions from the people of the four main islands to the king.[14][15] In 1842, Kamakau replaced him as one of the two representative for Maui in the next session.[16] Records and legislative roster from the monarchy do not list him as a representative of the other sessions of the 1840s. After the expansion of representation in the 1850s and the introduction of direct suffrage in 1851, he was elected as a member of the House of Representatives, the lower house of the legislature, and sat for four terms in the legislative assemblies of 1851, 1852, 1854 and 1855. No records exist for his representation in 1851, but he represented the district of Makawao, Maui in 1852, for Hamakua, Maui in 1854, and for Honolulu, Oahu in 1855.[17][18][19] Writing after his death, Reverend Jonathan Smith Green noted, "As a member of this body, I had the testimony of Judge Lee, often repeated, that no Hawaiian member equalled him for solid worth. Mr. Lee was Speaker once or twice when Kaauwai was a member, and knew him well. Had he lived, he would doubtless have continued to serve his generation by the will of God."[20] He served as a magistrate for Makawao. He was also a judge of the Circuit Court of Maui from April 27, 1855 until his death on August 8, 1856.[21][22]

Aside from politics, Kaʻauwai was a successful entrepreneur and was regarded as a "man of wealth".[23] He acquired and accumulated extensive property in Honolulu and Maui, and according to Reverend Armstrong, who was pastor at Kawaiahaʻo Church and knew him in later life, stated "He did accumulate property; he had lands, houses, cattle, and money. But he did not hoard these fruits of his industry—he gave freely to aid in every good work; gave for the support of the Gospel; aided in building meeting houses and school houses; in sending the Gospel to the heathen, and in assisting the needy."[20] In March 1849, he attempted to purchase the island of Kahoʻolawe from the King and the Land Commission. Kaʻauwai offered $400 for the entire island, which had been previously used unsuccessfully as a male penal colony. The offer was refused by the King and his Privy Council of State, and a subsequent application dated to August 18, 1854 for a fifty-year lease at $200 per year was also declined.[24] He also worked as a farmer and acquired property on Maui for growing taro and banana, which he won prizes for at the Hawaiian Agricultural Society in 1851.[25]

In later life, he became a resident of Wailuku and Makawao and was a donor and attendant of the church at Makawao, founded by Reverend Green, after developing a rift with the Wailuku Congregational Church. Falling ill while he was in Honolulu, Kaʻauwai returned to his native Maui for a change of climate which did nothing to improve his health. He died at Makawao, on August 8, 1856.[23] In a letter dated to October 6, 1856, Reverend Jonathan Smith Green, who had befriended him during his lifetime as a parishioner of the Makawao church, wrote a short biography of Kaʻauwai which was published in The American Missionary.[26]

Family and children edit

 
His son William Hoapili Kaʻauwai

Kaʻauwai married Kalanikauleleiaiwi III, a high chiefess of the Maui lineage descended from Piʻilani, and a relative of the family of High Chief Hoapili.[27] His mother-in-law Marie Leahi was an early Roman Catholic female catechumen.[7] With Kalanikauleleiaiwi he had four children: three sons including David Kahalekula Kaʻauwai (1833–1856), William Hoapili Kaʻauwai (1835–1874), and George Kaleiwohi Kaʻauwai (1843–1883) and a daughter who died in infancy before 1848.[25] His eldest son David Kahalekula Kaʻauwai served alongside his father in the House of Representatives, from 1854 to 1855, and was considered "one of the finest Hawaiian orators".[28] His second son William Hoapili Kaʻauwai also served in the legislator as a Representative for Wailuku for two terms in 1862 and 1870. He became the only ordained Hawaiian Anglican priest and traveled with his wife Kiliwehi as part of the retinue of Queen Emma during her trip to Europe.[29] His youngest son George Kaleiwohi Kaʻauwai married Ulalia Muolo Keaweheulu Laʻanui, and their daughter was Princess Elizabeth Kahanu Kalanianaʻole, wife of Prince Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole, the second Congressional Delegate from the Territory of Hawaii.[30]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Sources differ on the year of his birth. American missionary Jonathan Smith Green claimed he was born about 1799 while historian Andrew Forest Muir claims it was about 1806.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ Green 1857, p. 27; Muir 1952, p. 5
  2. ^ Green 1857, p. 27; Muir 1952, p. 5; Osorio 2002, pp. 34–35
  3. ^ Green 1857, p. 28
  4. ^ Green 1857, pp. 27–28
  5. ^ Green 1857, pp. 27–28, 30; Kuykendall 1965, p. 343; Kamakau 1992, p. 356
  6. ^ Osorio 2002, p. 267
  7. ^ a b Yzendoorn 1927, p. 181.
  8. ^ Lange 2006, p. 183.
  9. ^ Green 1857, pp. 27–29
  10. ^ . Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives. pp. 273, 275. Archived from the original on May 31, 2016. Retrieved August 5, 2015.; (PDF). official archives. state of Hawaii. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2011. Retrieved September 1, 2009.
  11. ^ Frear 1894, p. 9; Judd 1888, pp. 63–67; Kuykendall 1965, pp. 167–168
  12. ^ "By Authority". The Polynesian. Vol. 3, no. 6. Honolulu. November 14, 1846. p. 3. from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  13. ^ Moffat & Fitzpatrick 1995, pp. 43, 47; Kuykendall 1965, p. 280; Van Dyke 2008, pp. 34–35; Kameʻeleihiwa 1992, p. 185; Osorio 2002, pp. 34, 48; Green 1857, p. 29
  14. ^ Kamakau 1992, p. 396; Spaulding 1930, pp. 27–28
  15. ^ "Buke Oihana o ka Ahaolelo, Helu 1 – Legislature – 1845". Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Kamakau 1992, p. 397
  17. ^ Hawaii & Lydecker 1918, pp. 32, 35, 55, 61; Osorio 2002, p. 69; Parke 1891, pp. 19–20
  18. ^ "Representatives". The Polynesian. Vol. 8, no. 35. Honolulu. January 17, 1852. p. 2.; "Results of the Election". The Polynesian. Vol. 10, no. 35. Honolulu. January 7, 1854. p. 2.; "Representatives elect – Session of 1855". The Polynesian. Vol. XI, no. 40. Honolulu. February 17, 1855. p. 2.; "Special Election in Honolulu". The Polynesian. Vol. XI, no. 41. Honolulu. February 17, 1855. p. 2. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  19. ^ . Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives. Archived from the original on March 25, 2015. Retrieved August 22, 2018.; "Journal of the House of Representatives, 1854". Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives.[permanent dead link]; "Journal of the House of Representatives, 1855 through 1856". Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives. Retrieved August 5, 2015.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ a b Green 1857, p. 29
  21. ^ Green 1857, pp. 29–30
  22. ^ . state archives digital collections. state of Hawaii. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  23. ^ a b Green 1857, p. 30; "Died". The Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Vol. I, no. 7. Honolulu. August 14, 1856. p. 2. from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved September 13, 2015.; "Death". The Polynesian. Vol. XIII, no. 15. Honolulu. August 16, 1856. p. 3. from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
  24. ^ MacDonald 1972, pp. 69–90; Judd 1916, pp. 117–125; Van Dyke 2008, p. 34; Osorio 2002, p. 76; . Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives. p. 241. Archived from the original on May 31, 2016. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
  25. ^ a b Muir 1952, pp. 5, 11.
  26. ^ Green 1857, pp. 27–30
  27. ^ Muir 1952, p. 5; McKinzie 1983, p. 49; "Mookuauhau Alii – Na Iwikuamoo o Hawaii Nei Mai Kahiko Mai". Ka Makaainana. Vol. VI, no. 6. Honolulu. August 10, 1896. p. 2. Retrieved September 26, 2016.
  28. ^ Muir 1952, p. 11; Kaeo & Queen Emma 1976, pp. 208–210; Hawaii & Lydecker 1918, pp. 55, 61, 63–64
  29. ^ Hawaii & Lydecker 1918, pp. 86, 117; Muir 1952, pp. 5–13
  30. ^ Muir 1952, p. 11; Peterson 1984, p. 186–189

Bibliography edit

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  • Green, J. S. (1857). "Letter from Rev. J. S. Green, Makawao Maui, October 6, 1856". The American Missionary. Vol. I. New York: American Missionary Association. pp. 26–30. OCLC 42342811.
  • Hawaii (1918). Lydecker, Robert Colfax (ed.). Roster Legislatures of Hawaii, 1841–1918. Honolulu: Hawaiian Gazette Company. OCLC 60737418.
  • Judd, Albert Francis (1888). Thrum, Thomas G. (ed.). "Early Constitution of the Judiciary of the Hawaiian Islands, Maile Wreath, February 1875, reprinted in". Hawaiian Almanac and Annual for 1889. Honolulu: Honolulu Star-Bulletin: 63–67. hdl:10524/655. OCLC 1663720.
  • Judd, C. S. (1916). Thrum, Thomas G. (ed.). Kahoolawe. Honolulu: Honolulu Star-Bulletin. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Kaeo, Peter; Queen Emma (1976). Korn, Alfons L. (ed.). News from Molokai, Letters Between Peter Kaeo & Queen Emma, 1873–1876. Honolulu: The University Press of Hawaii. hdl:10125/39980. ISBN 978-0-8248-0399-5. OCLC 2225064.
  • Kamakau, Samuel (1992) [1961]. Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii (Revised ed.). Honolulu: Kamehameha Schools Press. ISBN 0-87336-014-1. OCLC 25008795.
  • Kameʻeleihiwa, Lilikalā (1992). Native Land and Foreign Desires. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press. ISBN 0-930897-59-5. OCLC 154146650.
  • Kuykendall, Ralph Simpson (1965) [1938]. The Hawaiian Kingdom 1778–1854, Foundation and Transformation. Vol. 1. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-87022-431-X. OCLC 47008868.
  • Lange, Raeburn (2006). Island Ministers: Indigenous Leadership in Nineteenth Century Pacific Islands Christianity (PDF). Christchurch, New Zealand: Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Canterbury. ISBN 978-1-74076-176-5.
  • MacDonald, Peter (1972). "Fixed in Time: A Brief History of Kahoolawe". The Hawaiian Journal of History. 6. Honolulu: Hawaiian Historical Society: 69–90. hdl:10524/446. OCLC 60626541.
  • McKinzie, Edith Kawelohea (1983). Stagner, Ishmael W. (ed.). Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers. Vol. 1. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-939154-28-5. OCLC 12555087.
  • Moffat, Riley Moore; Fitzpatrick, Gary L. (1995). Surveying the Mahele: Mapping the Hawaiian Land Revolution. Honolulu: Editions Limited. ISBN 978-0-915013-17-3. OCLC 33045472.
  • Muir, Andrew Forest (1952). "William Hoapili Kaauwai: A Hawaiian in Holy Orders". Sixty-First Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society for the Year 1952. 61. Honolulu: Hawaiian Historical Society: 5–13. hdl:10524/48. OCLC 722778378.
  • Osorio, Jon Kamakawiwoʻole (2002). Dismembering Lāhui: A History of the Hawaiian Nation to 1887. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-2549-7. OCLC 48579247.
  • Parke, William Cooper (1891). Personal Reminiscences of William Cooper Parke: Marshal of the Hawaiian Islands, From 1850 to 1884: Rewritten and Arranged by His Son, William C. Parke. Cambridge, MA: University Press. OCLC 907685107.
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  • Spaulding, Thomas Marshall (1930). "Early Years of the Hawaiian Legislature". Thirty-Eighth Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society for the Year 1929. Honolulu: Hawaiian Historical Society: 25–33. hdl:10524/33. OCLC 2105039.
  • Van Dyke, Jon M. (2008). Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawaiʻi?. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-6560-3. OCLC 257449971 – via Project MUSE.
  • Yzendoorn, Reginald (1927). History of the Catholic Mission in the Hawaiian Islands. Honolulu: Honolulu Star-Bulletin. OCLC 5524024.

zorobabela, kaʻauwai, 1799, 1806, august, 1856, early, politician, judge, kingdom, hawaii, beginning, assistant, hoapili, governor, maui, served, many, political, posts, including, assistant, judge, first, supreme, court, hawaii, original, member, board, commi. Zorobabela Kaʻauwai c 1799 1806 August 8 1856 a was an early politician and judge in the Kingdom of Hawaii Beginning as an assistant to the Hoapili Governor of Maui he served many political posts including Assistant Judge of the first Supreme Court of Hawaii an original member of the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles a multiple term representative in the Hawaiian legislature and circuit judge for Maui An early convert to Christianity and devout adherent of the Protestant faith his first name is a Hawaiian form of the Biblical name Zerubbabel Zorobabela KaʻauwaiAssistant Judge of the Supreme Court of HawaiiIn office May 10 1842 November 1846Succeeded byJoshua KaʻeoMember of the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land TitlesIn office February 10 1846 March 21 1850Succeeded byJoshua KekaulahaoMember of the Kingdom of HawaiiHouse of RepresentativesIn office 1851 1852 1854 1855Personal detailsBornc 1799 1806 a Kona HawaiiDiedAugust 8 1856Makawao MauiNationalityKingdom of HawaiiSpouseKalanikauleleiaiwi IIIChildrenDavid Kahalekula KaʻauwaiWilliam Hoapili KaʻauwaiGeorge Kaleiwohi KaʻauwaiAlma materLahainaluna SeminaryOccupationDeacon Judge Politician Businessman Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 3 Family and children 4 Notes 5 References 6 BibliographyEarly life editKaʻauwai was born around 1799 or 1806 a in the district of Kona on the island of Hawaii Although not of chiefly descent his family belonged to the old class of chief s right hand men Later historian Jon Kamakawiwoʻole Osorio stated he was a chief of Maui lineage 2 At a young age he attracted the attention of Kamehameha I and later came under the patronage of High Chief Hoapili one of Kamehameha s advisor and loyal companion and later Governor of Maui He worked in the household of Hoapili and became his loyal subject Later writer noted that Kaʻauwai must have been an extraordinary youth to secure as he did the confidence and love of this old chieftain 3 Kaʻauwai revered Hoapili as a father figure and accompanied him into battle and fought in the 1824 rebellion of Humehume on the island of Kauai 4 He was present when the American missionaries who arrived in Hawaii in 1820 established a mission station at Lahaina After the converted Hoapili imposed a law requiring his household retainers to learn the Hawaiian alphabet or otherwise be deprived of food the obedient Kaʻauwai abstained from food for two entire days and he learned to read and write He and his friend David Malo became interested in Christianity at the same time and both served as early helpers to the missionaries in Lahaina although unlike Malo he was never licensed to preach Under the order of Hoapili he helped build the stone church of Kalaniʻohua on Maui 5 With Malo he attended the Lahainaluna became one of the first generation of Hawaiians to receive a western education by the American missionaries who arrived in Hawaii in 1820 6 Reginald Yzendoorn author of History of the Catholic Mission in the Hawaiian Islands later wrote that Kaʻauwai was a judge and Calvinist deacon who related the burning of the Roman Catholic chapel of Wailuku in 1843 to his mother in law Marie Leahi an early Catholic female catechumen 7 In the early Hawaiian Protestant mission deacons did not have to be licensed to preach 8 Kaʻauwai became an experienced fisherman manager of the chief s canoes and an early physician He worked as his headman or right hand agent to Governor Hoapili and was effectively the Lieutenant Governor of Maui in all but name In their first meeting in 1832 Reverend Richard Armstrong described how Hoapili trusted him with all his important business including accessing and collecting taxes managing his property and conducting tours of the island of Maui and thus became a highly respected and well loved official in the public view 9 In October 1851 the Privy Council of State the advisory council for the king recommended him as a candidate for the Governorship of Maui left vacant by the death of James Kanehoa Young but the council eventually voted eight to three to recommended the appointment of Prince Lot Kapuaiwa the future Kamehameha V instead However Prince Lot never seem to have taken up this position either because Kanehoa s deputy Paul Nahaolelua remained acting governor until his own appointment in 1852 10 Political career editIn 1842 Kaʻauwai was elected by the Hawaiian legislature to serve as one of the four Assistant Judges of the Supreme Court of Hawaii the first formed in the Kingdom of Hawaii between 1842 and 1848 which was headed by King Kamehameha III and the Kuhina Nui Kekauluohi and after her death Keoni Ana These four judges of the Supreme Court were not Associate Justices like later individuals appointed after 1848 but served in the capacity of an assistant to the Chief Justice i e the King He sat as a judge from 1842 to 1846 before resigning in November 1846 11 He was succeeded by Joshua Kaʻeo 12 In 1842 King Kamehameha III also appointed Kaʻauwai as one of the five original members of the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles a government committee in charge of settling or quieting land claims of the Great Mahele He served in this post from February 10 1846 until his resignation on March 21 1850 an experienced attorney Joshua Kekaulahao was appointed in his place after he resigned 13 nbsp Mauna Kilika an early government building and meeting place for the Legislature of Hawaii from 1845 to 1852 According to historian Samuel Kamakau and contemporary legislative records Kaʻauwai was one of the early representatives of the people who assembled with the king and the chiefs in the first session of the legislature of the Hawaiian Kingdom which met between April and May 1841 at Luaʻehu in the early capital of Lahaina Instead of a direct vote these early representatives were appointed by recommendation or petitions from the people of the four main islands to the king 14 15 In 1842 Kamakau replaced him as one of the two representative for Maui in the next session 16 Records and legislative roster from the monarchy do not list him as a representative of the other sessions of the 1840s After the expansion of representation in the 1850s and the introduction of direct suffrage in 1851 he was elected as a member of the House of Representatives the lower house of the legislature and sat for four terms in the legislative assemblies of 1851 1852 1854 and 1855 No records exist for his representation in 1851 but he represented the district of Makawao Maui in 1852 for Hamakua Maui in 1854 and for Honolulu Oahu in 1855 17 18 19 Writing after his death Reverend Jonathan Smith Green noted As a member of this body I had the testimony of Judge Lee often repeated that no Hawaiian member equalled him for solid worth Mr Lee was Speaker once or twice when Kaauwai was a member and knew him well Had he lived he would doubtless have continued to serve his generation by the will of God 20 He served as a magistrate for Makawao He was also a judge of the Circuit Court of Maui from April 27 1855 until his death on August 8 1856 21 22 Aside from politics Kaʻauwai was a successful entrepreneur and was regarded as a man of wealth 23 He acquired and accumulated extensive property in Honolulu and Maui and according to Reverend Armstrong who was pastor at Kawaiahaʻo Church and knew him in later life stated He did accumulate property he had lands houses cattle and money But he did not hoard these fruits of his industry he gave freely to aid in every good work gave for the support of the Gospel aided in building meeting houses and school houses in sending the Gospel to the heathen and in assisting the needy 20 In March 1849 he attempted to purchase the island of Kahoʻolawe from the King and the Land Commission Kaʻauwai offered 400 for the entire island which had been previously used unsuccessfully as a male penal colony The offer was refused by the King and his Privy Council of State and a subsequent application dated to August 18 1854 for a fifty year lease at 200 per year was also declined 24 He also worked as a farmer and acquired property on Maui for growing taro and banana which he won prizes for at the Hawaiian Agricultural Society in 1851 25 In later life he became a resident of Wailuku and Makawao and was a donor and attendant of the church at Makawao founded by Reverend Green after developing a rift with the Wailuku Congregational Church Falling ill while he was in Honolulu Kaʻauwai returned to his native Maui for a change of climate which did nothing to improve his health He died at Makawao on August 8 1856 23 In a letter dated to October 6 1856 Reverend Jonathan Smith Green who had befriended him during his lifetime as a parishioner of the Makawao church wrote a short biography of Kaʻauwai which was published in The American Missionary 26 Family and children edit nbsp His son William Hoapili Kaʻauwai Kaʻauwai married Kalanikauleleiaiwi III a high chiefess of the Maui lineage descended from Piʻilani and a relative of the family of High Chief Hoapili 27 His mother in law Marie Leahi was an early Roman Catholic female catechumen 7 With Kalanikauleleiaiwi he had four children three sons including David Kahalekula Kaʻauwai 1833 1856 William Hoapili Kaʻauwai 1835 1874 and George Kaleiwohi Kaʻauwai 1843 1883 and a daughter who died in infancy before 1848 25 His eldest son David Kahalekula Kaʻauwai served alongside his father in the House of Representatives from 1854 to 1855 and was considered one of the finest Hawaiian orators 28 His second son William Hoapili Kaʻauwai also served in the legislator as a Representative for Wailuku for two terms in 1862 and 1870 He became the only ordained Hawaiian Anglican priest and traveled with his wife Kiliwehi as part of the retinue of Queen Emma during her trip to Europe 29 His youngest son George Kaleiwohi Kaʻauwai married Ulalia Muolo Keaweheulu Laʻanui and their daughter was Princess Elizabeth Kahanu Kalanianaʻole wife of Prince Jonah Kuhiō Kalanianaʻole the second Congressional Delegate from the Territory of Hawaii 30 Notes edit a b c Sources differ on the year of his birth American missionary Jonathan Smith Green claimed he was born about 1799 while historian Andrew Forest Muir claims it was about 1806 1 References edit Green 1857 p 27 Muir 1952 p 5 Green 1857 p 27 Muir 1952 p 5 Osorio 2002 pp 34 35 Green 1857 p 28 Green 1857 pp 27 28 Green 1857 pp 27 28 30 Kuykendall 1965 p 343 Kamakau 1992 p 356 Osorio 2002 p 267 a b Yzendoorn 1927 p 181 Lange 2006 p 183 Green 1857 pp 27 29 Minutes of the Privy Council 1851 1852 Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives pp 273 275 Archived from the original on May 31 2016 Retrieved August 5 2015 Governor of Maui Molokai and Lanai PDF official archives state of Hawaii Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2011 Retrieved September 1 2009 Frear 1894 p 9 Judd 1888 pp 63 67 Kuykendall 1965 pp 167 168 By Authority The Polynesian Vol 3 no 6 Honolulu November 14 1846 p 3 Archived from the original on May 25 2015 Retrieved March 23 2015 Moffat amp Fitzpatrick 1995 pp 43 47 Kuykendall 1965 p 280 Van Dyke 2008 pp 34 35 Kameʻeleihiwa 1992 p 185 Osorio 2002 pp 34 48 Green 1857 p 29 Kamakau 1992 p 396 Spaulding 1930 pp 27 28 Buke Oihana o ka Ahaolelo Helu 1 Legislature 1845 Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives permanent dead link Kamakau 1992 p 397 Hawaii amp Lydecker 1918 pp 32 35 55 61 Osorio 2002 p 69 Parke 1891 pp 19 20 Representatives The Polynesian Vol 8 no 35 Honolulu January 17 1852 p 2 Results of the Election The Polynesian Vol 10 no 35 Honolulu January 7 1854 p 2 Representatives elect Session of 1855 The Polynesian Vol XI no 40 Honolulu February 17 1855 p 2 Special Election in Honolulu The Polynesian Vol XI no 41 Honolulu February 17 1855 p 2 Retrieved March 23 2015 Journal of the House of Representatives 1851 through 1853 Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives Archived from the original on March 25 2015 Retrieved August 22 2018 Journal of the House of Representatives 1854 Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives permanent dead link Journal of the House of Representatives 1855 through 1856 Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives Retrieved August 5 2015 permanent dead link a b Green 1857 p 29 Green 1857 pp 29 30 Kaauwai Zorobabela office record state archives digital collections state of Hawaii Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved September 12 2015 a b Green 1857 p 30 Died The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Vol I no 7 Honolulu August 14 1856 p 2 Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved September 13 2015 Death The Polynesian Vol XIII no 15 Honolulu August 16 1856 p 3 Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved September 13 2015 MacDonald 1972 pp 69 90 Judd 1916 pp 117 125 Van Dyke 2008 p 34 Osorio 2002 p 76 Minutes of the Privy Council 1847 1849 Ka Huli Ao Digital Archives p 241 Archived from the original on May 31 2016 Retrieved August 5 2015 a b Muir 1952 pp 5 11 Green 1857 pp 27 30 Muir 1952 p 5 McKinzie 1983 p 49 Mookuauhau Alii Na Iwikuamoo o Hawaii Nei Mai Kahiko Mai Ka Makaainana Vol VI no 6 Honolulu August 10 1896 p 2 Retrieved September 26 2016 Muir 1952 p 11 Kaeo amp Queen Emma 1976 pp 208 210 Hawaii amp Lydecker 1918 pp 55 61 63 64 Hawaii amp Lydecker 1918 pp 86 117 Muir 1952 pp 5 13 Muir 1952 p 11 Peterson 1984 p 186 189Bibliography editFrear Walter F 1894 Evolution of the Hawaiian Judiciary Papers of the Hawaiian Historical Society 7 Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 1 25 hdl 10524 966 Green J S 1857 Letter from Rev J S Green Makawao Maui October 6 1856 The American Missionary Vol I New York American Missionary Association pp 26 30 OCLC 42342811 Hawaii 1918 Lydecker Robert Colfax ed Roster Legislatures of Hawaii 1841 1918 Honolulu Hawaiian Gazette Company OCLC 60737418 Judd Albert Francis 1888 Thrum Thomas G ed Early Constitution of the Judiciary of the Hawaiian Islands Maile Wreath February 1875 reprinted in Hawaiian Almanac and Annual for 1889 Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin 63 67 hdl 10524 655 OCLC 1663720 Judd C S 1916 Thrum Thomas G ed Kahoolawe Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Kaeo Peter Queen Emma 1976 Korn Alfons L ed News from Molokai Letters Between Peter Kaeo amp Queen Emma 1873 1876 Honolulu The University Press of Hawaii hdl 10125 39980 ISBN 978 0 8248 0399 5 OCLC 2225064 Kamakau Samuel 1992 1961 Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii Revised ed Honolulu Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 0 87336 014 1 OCLC 25008795 Kameʻeleihiwa Lilikala 1992 Native Land and Foreign Desires Honolulu Bishop Museum Press ISBN 0 930897 59 5 OCLC 154146650 Kuykendall Ralph Simpson 1965 1938 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1778 1854 Foundation and Transformation Vol 1 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 87022 431 X OCLC 47008868 Lange Raeburn 2006 Island Ministers Indigenous Leadership in Nineteenth Century Pacific Islands Christianity PDF Christchurch New Zealand Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies University of Canterbury ISBN 978 1 74076 176 5 MacDonald Peter 1972 Fixed in Time A Brief History of Kahoolawe The Hawaiian Journal of History 6 Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 69 90 hdl 10524 446 OCLC 60626541 McKinzie Edith Kawelohea 1983 Stagner Ishmael W ed Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Vol 1 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 939154 28 5 OCLC 12555087 Moffat Riley Moore Fitzpatrick Gary L 1995 Surveying the Mahele Mapping the Hawaiian Land Revolution Honolulu Editions Limited ISBN 978 0 915013 17 3 OCLC 33045472 Muir Andrew Forest 1952 William Hoapili Kaauwai A Hawaiian in Holy Orders Sixty First Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society for the Year 1952 61 Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 5 13 hdl 10524 48 OCLC 722778378 Osorio Jon Kamakawiwoʻole 2002 Dismembering Lahui A History of the Hawaiian Nation to 1887 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 2549 7 OCLC 48579247 Parke William Cooper 1891 Personal Reminiscences of William Cooper Parke Marshal of the Hawaiian Islands From 1850 to 1884 Rewritten and Arranged by His Son William C Parke Cambridge MA University Press OCLC 907685107 Peterson Barbara Bennett 1984 Notable Women of Hawaii Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0820 4 OCLC 11030010 Spaulding Thomas Marshall 1930 Early Years of the Hawaiian Legislature Thirty Eighth Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society for the Year 1929 Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 25 33 hdl 10524 33 OCLC 2105039 Van Dyke Jon M 2008 Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawaiʻi Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 6560 3 OCLC 257449971 via Project MUSE Yzendoorn Reginald 1927 History of the Catholic Mission in the Hawaiian Islands Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin OCLC 5524024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zorobabela Kaʻauwai amp oldid 1216381449, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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