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Advertise ![]() Copyright © 2008 - 2012 by Andrew J. Morris A generation which ignores history has no past -- and no future. Robert Heinlein |
History of Honolulu, (Honolulu County) HawaiiFeatured Picture: ![]() Alexander Young Hotel in Honolulu HI ca 1910. 15% - 35% off all Products ยป The Ready Store Biographies:Biographical Sketch of Hiram Bingham Hiram Bingham, Jr., missionary, was born in Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, Aug. 16, 1831, son of Hiram Bingham, a missionary of the A. B.C. F.M. He was brought to America by his father in 1841, and was graduated from Yale college in 1853. He was ordained to the Congregational ministry in 1856, chose the missionary field and was assigned to Micronesia by the A. B. C. F. M., where he labored for nearly eighteen years. For two years he had command of the missionary ship Morning Star. He translated the Bible from the Hebrew into the language of the Gilbert Islands. In this great work, which he completed in 1890, he was materially aided by his wife. Afterwards he was stationed at Honolulu as missionary of the A. B.C. F. M. A Short Biography of George Parsons Lathrop George Parsons Lathrop, author, was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, Aug. 25, 1851; eldest son of Dr. George Alfred and Frances Maria (Smith) Lathrop; grandson of Alfred and Margaret (Parsons) Hubbard Lathrop, and of James and Hannah (Pratt) Smith; great grandson of William and Cynthia (Elderkin) Lathtop and of Maj.-Gen. Samuel Holden Parsons ; great2 grandson of Jeremiah and Lydia (Armstrong) Lathrop; and a descendant from John Lathrop, who came from Kent, England, where he was pastor of the first Independent church in London, and settled in Scituate, Mass., in 1634, later removing to Barnstable. Dr. George Alfred Lathrop was U.S. hospital surgeon at Honolulu, Hawaii, 1849-51, and was appointed U.S. consul there in 1851, returning to New York in 1858. George Parsons Lathrop was educated in the private schools of Oswego and in New York city, 1858-67, and at Dresden, Germany, 1867-70. He entered Columbia law school in 1870, and was employed in the law office of William M. Evarts in New York city. Deciding to devote himself to literature he again went abroad, and was married, Sept. 11, 1871, in St. Peter's church, Chelsea, England, to Rose, daughter of Nathaniel and Sophia (Peabody) Hawthorne. He was assistant editor of the Atlantic Monthly, 1875-77; editor of the Boston Courier, 1877-79, and editor of the Providence Visitor. In 1879 he purchased Nathaniel Hawthorne's house, "the Wayside," in Concord, Mass., where he resided until 1883, when he removed to New York city, and subsequently to New London, Conn. In 1881 he visited Spain and the articles prepared there for Harper's Magazine were subsequently published in book form. He founded the American Copyright League, was its secretary, 1883-85, and promoted the passage of the copyright law. He was a promoter and trustee of the Catholic Summer schools at New London, Conn., and at Plattsburg, N.Y.; a supporter of the Paulist inauguration of the Apostolate of the Press in 1895, and a member of the Papyrus club of Boston; the Authors and Players clubs of New York; the Connecticut Society of the Sons of the Revolution; the St. John's Literary society of New London, and an honorary member of the John Boyle O'Reilly Reading Circle of Boston. The honorary degree of LL.D. was conferred on him by St. John's college, Fordham, N.Y., in 1892. He is the author of: Rose and Rooftree (1875); A Study of Hawthorne (1876); Afterglow (1877); Somebody Else (1878); Presidential Pills (1880); An Echo of Passion (1882); In the Distance (1882); Spanish Vistas (1883); History of the Union League of Philadelphia (1883); Newport (1884): True and other Stories (1884); Behind Time (1886); Gettysburg, a Battle Ode (1888); Two Sides of a Story (1889); Would You Kill Him ? (1889); The Letter of Credit (with W. H. Rideing, 1890); Dreams and Days (1892). He edited A Masque of Poets (1878), and contributed to its contents, and an edition of Hawthorne's works, for which he wrote a brief biography and introductory notes in 1883. He also adapted a dramatization of Tennyson's "Elaine" in blank verse, which was successfully staged and produced in Boston, New York and Chicago. With Rose Hawthorne Lathrop he prepared: A Story of Courage: Annals of the Georgetown Convent of Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary from the MS. records (1894). He died in New York city, April 19, 1898. |
Hawaii Facts: Honolulu County Facts: Seat: HonoluluEstablished: 1905 Formed from: Kingdom of Hawaii
Honolulu is situated 5 meters above sea level. |