- Corporate body
- 1957-1960
Charged with creating a Hawai‘i general plan dealing with diverse functions such as public facilities and economic potential, including tourism. In 1960, functions transferred to the Department of Planning and Research.
Charged with creating a Hawai‘i general plan dealing with diverse functions such as public facilities and economic potential, including tourism. In 1960, functions transferred to the Department of Planning and Research.
The Survey Office was originally established in 1870 to prepare maps of the various islands, to determine the extent and location of land held by the government, and to prepare surveys and descriptions of government lands. The division also made harbor surveys, ran street lines, performed engineering jobs for the Minister of Interior and acted as the weather bureau of the Hawaiian Kingdom
Authorized by Organic Act, Section 78, 1900; the Surveyor became successor to the Surveyor-General.
Theodore Kelsey was born to Helen Lucy (nee Wells) and Henry Evelyn Kelsey at Seattle, Washington on August 4, 1891. He arrived in Honolulu on January 26, 1895 aboard the S.S. Miowera, with his mother, Helen, who went to teach at Hanamaulu, Kaua‘i where her brother William Ira Wells was principal. ON January 19, 1897, his father arrived in Honolulu and joined the family on Kaua‘i.
In 1905, Kelsey began teaching himself the Hawaiian language from a Hawaiian-English language phrase book.
In 1908, Kelsey attended New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, New Mexico to further his education. In the years that followed, he traveled throughout the western United States, Mexico, and Hawai‘i, eventually graduating from Illinois College in Effingham in 1916.
In 1917, Kelsey returned permanently to Hawai‘i; was offered a year's tuition at Yale by Bishop Museum's Dr. Herbert Gregory, but declined to accept. In November, witnessed the funeral of Queen Liliuokalani. Kelsey eventually settled in Hilo where he worked as a photographer out of a photo studio that his father helped to establish.
In 1921, Kelsey worked for creation of a Hawaiian Legend and Folklore Commission, Acts 61 and 126, S.L.H. 1921.
In 1923-1924, Kelsey assisted Padraic Colum to rewrite Hawaiian legends and helped Helen H. Roberts to record Hawaiian chants used in "Ancient Hawaiian Music," published in 1926.
In 1927, Kelsey recorded chants of George P. Kalama and moved to Honolulu residing with artist Arthur Emerson. Kelsey continued with his photography and began teaching Hawaiian.
From 1933 to 1936, Kelsey resided at George P. Mossman's Lalani Hawaiian Village recording and transcribing Hawaiian chants and lore of James. P. Kuluwaimaka and others.
From 1936 to 1939, Kelsey served as a Works Program Administration (W.P.A.) worker at the Archives of Hawai‘i with Henry E.P. Kekahuna and others. He began a serious study of the Kumulipo creation chant.
From 1939 to 1941, Kelsey resided and studied Hawaiiana with Henry E.P. Kekahuna.
In 1949, work began for the Pukui and Elbert Hawaiian-English Dictionary, published in 1957, on which Kelsey and Henry E.P. Kekahuna were committee members.
In 1956, Kelsey received the first David Malo Award, with Kekahuna, from the East Honolulu Hawaiian Civic Club.
In 1957, Kelsey and Kekahuna mapped Big Island historic sites.
In 1958, Kelsey married Mrs. Esther Kaikai Kanoa Kalaukoa; widow of John Kaipo Kalaukoa.
On April 6, 1960, wife Esther died.
In 1977, Kelsey was declared a "Living Treasure of Hawai‘i" by the Honpa Hongwanji Mission.
In 1978, Kelsey moved to Waianae, Oahu to reside with the family of Hawaiian researcher and author June Gutmanis.
In 1980, Kelsey received a certificate of appreciation from Alu Like for a lifetime of service to the Hawaiian Community.
In 1982, Kelsey received the Na Makua Mahalo ‘Ia award from Brigham Young University Hawai‘i campus.
On February 13, 1987, Kelsey died at the Gutmanis home in Waianae, Oahu.
On October 8, 1840, Kamehameha III granted the first constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, which vested the judicial power of government in a Supreme Court, consisting of the King as chief judge, Premier (kuhina nui), and four individuals appointed by the representative body. Island courts held by their respective governors functioned as circuit courts on their respective island. The island governors were given powers to appoint judges who functioned as district magistrates for the island. Chapter XLVII of the Laws of 1842 mandated that the Supreme judges assemble in Honolulu each June and in Lahaina each December to try cases appealed to them. Selection criteria for foreign and native juries were provided for in the Laws of 1842. The Third Act of Kamehameha III in 1847 titled "An Act to Organize the Judiciary Department of the Hawaiian Islands" created four levels of courts - the Supreme Court, the Superior Court of Law and Equity, four circuit court jurisdictions, and district courts.
Vehicle Industry Licensing Board
The Vehicle Industry Licensing Board was formerly known as the Motor Vehicle Dealers Licensing Board and
was established on July 1, 1939.
Act 17 of the 2nd Special Session of 1932 explicitly vested the Board of Prison Directors with responsibility for "the entire government, control and supervision of all territorial prisons and prison camps." Concurrently, it created the position of Warden of Oahu Prison and removed responsibility for prison management from the High Sheriff.
1855 b. Honolulu
1855 graduated Yale University
1858 professor of Greek, Oahu College
1860 m. Abigail Baldwin of Lahaina.
1864 president, Oahu College
1870 charge of Bureau of Government Survey
1891 author, “A brief history of the Hawaiian people”
1896 author, "History of later years of the Hawaiian monarch and the revolution of 1893”
1896-06-24 / 1905-06-24 Commissioner of Public Instruction.
1900-06-14 to 1901-02-01 Surveyor
1905-11-06 Board of Education member. Reappointed 1887-07-07; 1894-02-19, 1895-08.
1913 d. Honolulu, Feb.21
William Harrison Rice was born October 12, 1813 in Oswego, New York to Joseph and Sally Rice. On September 28, 1840, he married Mary Sophia Hyde. Together, they arrived in Honolulu on May 21, 1841 aboard the ship Gloucester in Ninth Company of American Board of Commissioners of Foreign Missions (ABCFM). The Rices were teachers by training and were stationed at Hana, Maui. In 1844, the Rice family was transferred to become the first secular teachers at Punahou School in Honolulu. In 1854, the Rices resigned from Punahou and moved to Kauai where Mr. Rice was hired to manage Lihue Plantation owned by Henry Pierce and William Little Lee. William Harrison Rice died on May 27, 1862 in Lihue, Kauai.
William Jonathan Cooper was born to William Humes and Elizabeth (Sission) Cooper on March 22, 1876 in Cochranton, Pennsylvania. He was educated at the University of West Virginia. In 1906, he became a reporter on San Francisco Chronicle and came to Honolulu as a reporter on the Star. He married Lucy C. Vrooman, M.D. in Honolulu on August 3, 1907. In 1908, he served on the Promition Committee and represented the committee at A.-Y.-P. Exposition in Seattle in 1909. From 1910-1912, he was a reporter for the Honolulu Star. In 1912, he and Mrs. Lucy Vrooman Cooper moved to Haiku, Maui where they purchased a homestead. Cooper was appointed assistant manager of Maui Publishing Company, Ltd. and became the editor of Maui News in 1914.
Cooper served on the Territory of Hawaii Industrial Accident Board representing Maui for a 2 year term starting 1915-06-01. He was reappointed 1917-07-01 serving to 1921-09-06.
Cooper passed away on November 6, 1970.