Kinooleoliliha

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kinoʻole-o-Liliha
High Chiefess Kinoʻole

Portrait by J.M. Stanley 1849 at the Peabody Essex Museum of Salem
Spouse Benjamin Pitman
Issue
Mary Pitman Ailau
Henry Hoʻolulu Pitman
Benjamin Franklin Keolaokalani Pitman
Father High Chief Hoʻolulu
Mother High Chiefess Charlotte Halaki Cox
Born c. 1827
Hilo, Hawaii, Kingdom of Hawaii
Died August 18, 1855 (aged 27-28)
Honolulu, Oahu, Kingdom of Hawaii

Kinoʻoleoliliha Pitman (c. 1827–1855), also written as Kinoole-o-Liliha, was a member of the royal family during the Kingdom of Hawaii. She was known as Mrs. Pitman after her marriage. In the Hawaiian language, kino 'ole means "thin"[1] and liliha can mean "heartsick".[2]

Life

Her father was High Chief Hoʻolulu. Her paternal grandfather was High Chief Kameʻeiamoku, one of the royal twins (with Kamanawa) who advised Kamehameha I, and paternal grandmother was High Chiefess Kahikoloa. Her mother was High Chiefess Charlotte Halaki Cox, whose father lent his name to Keeaumoku II, the Governor of Maui.[3] Her father and uncle Hoapili were chosen to conceal the bones of Kamehameha I in a secret hiding place after his death.[4][5] They placed the bones of the king in a cave along the coastline;[6] it was a great honor to be the last to touch the bones of the king.[4] Her brothers were the High Chief Kaiheʻekai[3] and the High Chief Moʻoheau-nui-i-Kaaiawaawa-o-ʻUlu[7] and her only known sister was the High Chiefess Kahinu-o-kekuaukalani,[8] who married William Beckley (1814–1871),[9] the hapa-haole son of Captain George Charles Beckley (1787–1826),[10][11] an English sea captain and close friend of Kamehameha I,[12] and his Hawaiian wife, the Chiefess Ahia (1792–1854).[7][11][13] Some of her famous cousins include: High Chief Kamanawa II and High Chief ʻAikanaka, sons of her uncle High Chief Kepoʻokalani and grandfathers of Queen Liliʻuokalani and King David Kalakaua; the High Chiefess Kapiʻolani, daughter of her aunt High Chiefess Kekikipaʻa; the High Chiefess Keouawahine, daughter of her aunt High Chiefess Loewahine and grandmother of Princess Ruth Keʻelikolani; and Kuini Liliha, the daughter of her uncle the High Chief Hoapili.[3]

From her father she inherited vast lands in Hilo and Olaʻa.[5][6] King Kamehameha III granted her control of the ahupuaʻa of Hilo, thereby making her high chiefess. It was customary that when the lehuas started to bloom, the first blossoms had be strung into the leis for Kinoʻole. These flowers were called the "Lehuas of Panaewa".[6] This is one of the remnant traces of the kapu system which gave the noble class special privileges and sacredness.

She married Benjamin Pitman, born in Salem, Massachusetts[14] who had arrived in Hawaii from New England in 1836.[5][15] Pitman was a prominent businessman in Hilo and Honolulu. He owned a store[5] or ship chandlery in Hilo[14] and in Honolulu took up banking.[6] This marriage, an example of a businessman marrying a landholding high chiefess, such as Kaoanaeha and Namokuelua to John Young, Nakai Nalimaʻaluʻalu and Kalukuna to Isaac Davis, Bernice Pauahi Pākī to Charles Reed Bishop, Likelike to Archibald S. Cleghorn, Liliʻuokalani to John Owen Dominis, and Rachel Keliikipikaaneokoolakala to Samuel Parker. Such marriages paved the way for the ranches, plantations, banks and other businesses, through the investment of foreign capital.[16] These chiefesses enjoyed a better life than most women of their time; they had more land than their husband, and spousal abuse by their commoner husbands was unheard of.

Like many of the elites of the Hawaiian kingdom, the couple moved to the new capital of Honolulu. They built a beautiful two story house named Waialeale ("rippling water") at the corner of Alakea and Beretania Streets, now the site of the Honolulu Gas Company office. Surrounded by an iron fence, the walks were paved with tiles.[6] She died soon after the construction of her new home. Her funeral probably had the spirituality and solemnity traditionally associated with the Hawaiian nobility. Instead of a Honolulu funeral, she was buried on the Big Island, her ancestral home. Her remains were taken to Hilo with a large entourage of relatives and friends. The people of Hilo swam out in great numbers to the boat and bore the casket on their shoulders.[6] Native Hawaiians had a strong love and loyalty to their aliʻi (nobility and royalty) unmatched in either Europe or Asia. Their funerals were customarily marked by great mourning and wailing.

Issue

Mary Pitma Ailau.

Kinoʻole and Benjamin Pitman had three children:

  1. Mary Ann Kinoʻole Kaaumokulani Pitman (1841-1905),[17][18] later Mrs. Mary Ailau,[19] an intimate friend and bridesmaid[5] of Queen Emma, who married Kamehameha IV. In her youth, she was known as the "Belle of Hilo Bay".[6] She married in late life to Jack Ailau (1855-1894), a printer and musician of Honolulu. She died childless at Hilo in 1905, ten years after her husband.[20][21]
  2. Henry Hoʻolulu Pitman (1843–1863), served in the American Civil War as a private in the Union Army, was taken prisoner, and died being held at Libby Prison in February 27, 1863.[6][11][22] He was placed in the colored regiment even though he was 9/16th white.[23] He was buried in the Oahu Cemetery.[24]
  3. Benjamin Franklin Keolaokalani Pitman (1852-1918), married Almira Hollander (1854–1939), from Brookline, Massachusetts,[25] and he had descendants. Among his descendants is Theodore Pitman, great-great grandson of Kinoʻole who donated some of his great-great grandfather's manuscript that accounted the events of the early period of the Kingdom of Hawaii.[15]

Legacy

Benjamin Franklin Keolaokalani Pitman.

Pitman Street in Hilo was named for her husband,[26] but later changed to Kinoʻole street in her honor.[27] The Kinoole Baptist Church, is located at coordinates 19°41′42″N 155°4′10″W / 19.69500°N 155.06944°W / 19.69500; -155.06944.[28] [29]

In 1851, Benjamin Pitman bought the "Post Boy", a 44 ton topsail schooner built in Auckland, New Zealand that had arrived from San Francisco on November 22, 1850. It had been previously sold to a native by the name of Philip Nation who registered and ran her for a time under her foreign name. Pitman changed her name to the "Kinoole" after his wife. The "Kinoole" plied as a windward packet on various routes, with occasional trips to Kauaʻi. She was sold to R. Robinson and J. A. Simmons in 1852, Jas. Dawson and Paniani in 1853, D. Fredison and T.E. Cook and P.H. Treadway in 1856, A. K. Clark and O. H. Culick in 1858, and later to E. W. Clark and S. L. Austin.[30] On February 1, 1859, the "Kinoole" sailed from Honolulu and landed on Kealakekua Bay two days later. Onboard was the President of Punahou School who wanted to see the recent eruption of Mauna Loa.[31] On August 24, 1860, she finally wrecked on the shores of Niʻihau.[30]

After her death on August 18, 1855, Pitman remarried, but after his second wife also died, took his three children to attend schools in Boston.[6] Besides short trips back to Hawaii, her daughter Mary did not return to Hawaii until 1881.[32] Kinoʻole's descendants from her son Keolaokalani still live in Massachusetts. Many of her descendants were named for her.

References

  1. Pukui and Elbert (2003). 'ole "lookup of Kino'ole". on Hawaiian dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii. Retrieved 2009-11-30. 
  2. Pukui and Elbert (2003). "lookup of liliha". on Hawaiian dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii. Retrieved 2009-11-30. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Christopher Buyers. "Kauai Genealogy". Retrieved 2009-11-08. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Nu'uanu, O'ahu -- Memories: Mauna 'Ala". Retrieved 2009-11-26. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 George S. Kanahele (1999). Emma: Hawaii's Remarkable Queen. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 68, 152. ISBN 0-8248-2240-4. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 D Welch. "Pitman in Hawaii". Retrieved 2009-11-08. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 Mrs. Almira (Hollander) Pitman (1931). After fifty years: an appreciation, and a record of a unique incident. The Plimpton Press. pp. 150–153. 
  8. Our Family History and Ancestry. "Kahinu-O-Kekuaokalani-I-Lekeleke HOOLULU". Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  9. Our Family History and Ancestry. "William Charles Malulani Kaleipaihala BECKLEY". Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  10. Our Family History and Ancestry. "George Charles BECKLEY". Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Bob Dye (1997). Merchant prince of the Sandalwood Mountains: Afong and the Chinese in Hawaiʻi. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 80, 150–153. ISBN 0-8248-1772-9. 
  12. Cristina Bacchilega (2006). Legendary Hawai'i and the politics of place: tradition, translation, and tourism. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 110. ISBN 0-8122-3975-X. 
  13. Our Family History and Ancestry. "Loaa K AHIA". Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 Sally Engle Merry (2000). Colonizing Hawai'i: the cultural power of law. Princeton University Press. p. 156. ISBN 0-691-00932-5. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 Ben Wood. "Honolulu Star-Bulletin: Museum given manuscript of early Hilo businessman". Retrieved 2009-11-08. 
  16. Shirley Hune and Gail M. Nomura (2003). Asian/Pafciic Islander American women: a historical anthology. NYU Press. pp. 31–32. ISBN 0-8147-3633-5. 
  17. Peggy Kai (1974). "Chinese Settlers in the Village of Hilo before 1852". The Hawaiian Journal of History 8. Hawaiian Historical Society. p. 64. hdl:10524/221. 
  18. Our Family History and Ancestry. "Mary Ann Kinoole Kaaaumokulani PITTMAN". Retrieved 2009-11-10. 
  19. Edith K. McKinzie and Ishmael W. Stagner (1983). Hawaiian Genealogies: Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers 1. University of Hawaii Press. p. 48. ISBN 0-939154-28-5. 
  20. Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, Catherine C. Summers (1999). Material Culture: the J. S. Emerson Collection of Hawaiian Artifacts. Bishop Museum Press. pp. Page xii. ISBN 1-58178-006-0. 
  21. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82016339/1905-02-14/ed-1/seq-1.pdf
  22. Mrs. Almira (Hollander) Pitman (1931). After fifty years: an appreciation, and a record of a unique incident. The Plimpton Press. p. 21. 
  23. Cole, William (May 31, 2010). "Native Hawaiians served on both sides during Civil War". Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved July 25, 2013. 
  24. Burl Burlingame. "Honolulu Star-Bulletin: Reviving history". Retrieved 2009-11-25. 
  25. Henry Fritz-Gilbert Waters (1940). The New England Historic Genealogical Society 94. New England Historic Genealogical Society. pp. 127, 143. 
  26. Mrs. Almira (Hollander) Pitman (1931). After fifty years: an appreciation, and a record of a unique incident. The Plimpton Press. p. 139. 
  27. Pukui and Elbert (2004). 'ole "lookup of kino'ole". on Place Names of Hawai'i. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii. Retrieved 2009-11-30. 
  28. "Kinoole Baptist Church". Retrieved 2009-11-11. 
  29. Mary K. Pukui, Samuel H. Elbert, Esther T. Mookini (1976). Place names of Hawaii 2. University of Hawaii Press. p. 112. ISBN 0-8248-0524-0. 
  30. 30.0 30.1 Thos. S. Thrum (1886). All about Hawaii. Honolulu Star-Bulletin. p. 77. 
  31. James Jackson Jarves and Henry Martyn Whitney (1872). History of the Hawaiian islands. H. M. Whitney. p. 225. 
  32. Bishop Museum, Catherine C. Summers (1999). Material culture: the J. S. Emerson Collection of Hawaiian artifacts. Bishop Museum Press. pp. xii. ISBN 1-58178-006-0. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.