George Luther Kapeau
George Luther Kapeau (died 1860) was a noble and statesman in the Kingdom of Hawaii who was one of the first generation of native Hawaiians to receive a Western education at the missionary founded Lahainaluna School. Despite his obscure family status, he rose to prominence as an advisor to King Kamehameha III. He served many government posts such Royal Governor of the Island of Hawaiʻi and member of the House of Nobles. Early lifeKapeau was born in Honolulu in the early 19th century, possibly around 1811,[1] to a largely obscure family of lower status. A chief of Maui descent, he was considered a kaukaualiʻi, lesser chiefs or nobles in service to the aliʻi nui (high chiefs). His names means "to crawl on one's knees before high royalty".[2][3][4] Contemporary sources also differed on his status. Foreign visitors often called him a chief,[5] especially during his capacity as royal governor, but most of his contemporaries like Samuel Kamakau, missionary Hiram Bingham I, and even King Kamehameha III considered him a makaʻāinana or commoner. Kapeau was one of the first non-royal Hawaiians to receive a western education from the missionaries who arrived in Hawaii in 1820.[6] Enrolled at the Lahainaluna Seminary in 1833, he graduated after four years in 1837.[7] On June 8, 1839, on the occasion of the laying of the cornerstone of Kawaiahaʻo Church, Kapeau personally played part in the ceremony. He made a copper plate, the first engraving ever done by a Hawaiian, which was placed under the stone as a memorial to the Christian mission in Hawaii along with a copy of the newly translated Hawaiian Bible and two volumes on Mathematics and Anatomy.[8][9] The copper plate read:
Political careerKapeau was greatly trusted by King Kamehameha III, who said, "He understands the work very well, and I wish there were more such men."[11] Kapeau was appointed Secretary of the Treasury.[6] In 1843, he and Jonah Kapena served as clerks in the 1843 session of the Legislature of Hawaii at Lahaina.[12] Kapeau served in the Privy Council as an advisor to the king from 1847 until 1854, the year of Kamehameha III's death.[13] He also served as a member of the House of Nobles from 1848 to 1855. His appointment was challenged by Hawaiian historian and fellow Lahainaluna classmate Samuel Kamakau who regarded his rank of Kaukaualiʻi (low-ranking chief) as too inferior for him to sit as a noble.[2] By the 1850s, however, the House of Nobles consisted mainly of Kaukaualiʻi.[14] In addition to his legislative posts, he held the post of deputy governor of the Island of Hawaii under Governor William Pitt Leleiohoku I.[15][1] In 1846, Chester Lyman met both the governor and the deputy governor, but only Kapeau left an impression on him:
From 1846 to 1850, he served as deputy governor of Hawaii; Leleiohoku died in the measles epidemic of 1848.[7] In 1849, Kapeau contravened the treaty under which the Roman Catholic priests were entitled to import porcelain duty-free by sending tax assessors to attempt to collect taxes on the goods from the priests in Kailua. The actions of the assessors resulted in the smashing of the china, leading the French consul in Honolulu to lodge a complaint over the incident to Admiral de Tromelin, commander of a French warship.[16] Infuriated by the Consul's complaints, the French Admiral made ten demands to King Kamehameha III on August 22.[17] One of these demands was "the removal of the governor of Hawaii for allowing the domicile of a priest to be violated by police officers who entered it to make an arrest or the order that the governor make reparation to that missionary."[17] When the king refused, Admiral de Tromelin invaded Honolulu, sacked the Fort and caused an estimated $100,000 in damages.[16][17] The situation didn't seem to have any effect on Kapeau's position as acting governor, and in July 1850 he became the official governor of the island after four years as acting governor.[18] Around February 1849, the English traveler Samuel S. Hill paid a visit to Kailua and met Governor Kapeau:
He was the last governor who kept up the maintenance of Kailua Fort.[19] Death and legacyOn May 7, 1855, Kapeau was appointed Judge of the Third Circuit Court.[13] He married Julia Hoa of Wailuku, Maui and had a son, George, Jr. His wife died in Kona, Hawaii, in June, 1858, and his son died at Wailuku, February 19, 1861. Kapeau died in October 1860,[20][3] and was succeeded by Ruth Keʻelikōlani, the widow of Leleiohoku, as Governor of Hawaii.[19] On the ahupuaʻa or land division of Waiʻaha, Kapeau had built his residence located about two thousand feet above Kailua-Kona on the slopes of the dormant volcano of Hualālai. After his death, it was sold to Reverend T. E. Taylor who enlarged the house and lived in it for several years before selling it to King Kamehameha IV who used it as his summer house. In its later days, situated among groves of coffee, orange, breadfruit, and other tropical treas, it was judged "one of the most delightful and healthy spots" in the Islands, "worthy of being made the [king's] Kona country seat." It was later inherited by his widow Queen Emma.[21][22] On June 8, 1989, two plaques commemorating the 150th anniversary of the laying of the cornerstone at Kawaiahaʻo Church were erected underneath an 1889 slab that honored the life of missionary Hiram Bingham I on the centennial of his birth. The plaque on the left briefly gives credit to Kapeau's copper plate which had been placed under the cornerstone in 1839.[23] References
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