Haʻalelea

Levi Haʻalelea (c.1822 – October 3, 1864) was a high chief and member of the Hawaiian nobility during the Hawaiian Kingdom. He initially served as a kahu (royal caretaker) and konohiki (land agent) for High Chief Leleiohoku, one of the grandsons of Kamehameha I. He later became aa Hulumanu (court favorite) in the royal court of Kamehameha III and eventually served as Chamberlain for the court. He married Kekauʻōnohi, the granddaughter of Kamehameha I. These connections to the ruling dynasty gave him access to vast landholding during the land division of the Great Mahele in 1848. Active in politics, he was a member of the Privy Council of State and served in the House of Nobles. In later life, he helped the early Mormon missionaries to the islands by leasing them land and eventually converted to that faith.

Levi Haʻalelea
Member of the House of Nobles
In office
1853–1862
Member of the Privy Council of State
In office
April 26, 1852  July 18, 1855
Personal details
Bornc.1822
Lahaina, Maui, Hawaiian Kingdom
DiedOctober 3, 1864 (aged 4142)
Holani Pa, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaiian Kingdom
Resting placeKawaiahaʻo Cemetery
NationalityHawaiian Kingdom
Spouse(s)Kekauʻōnohi
Amoe Ululani Ena
ChildrenJulia Kamalalehua
ParentsHaʻaloʻu and Kipa
Alma materLahainaluna School
OccupationPolitician

Early life and family

Born circa 1822 in Lahaina, Maui, his father was Haʻaloʻu, the Governor of the island of Molokai under Prime Minister Kalanimoku, and his mother was Kipa. His maternal half-brother was Timoteo Haʻalilio, secretary of Kamehameha III and envoy of the Hawaiian Kingdom who led a diplomatic mission to Europe and the United States for international recognition of Hawaii's sovereignty.[1][2] In the Hawaiian language, his name Haʻalelea meant man sacrificed when cutting an ʻōhiʻa tree for an image.[3]

Haʻalelea became a kahu (caretaker) and cared for High Chief Leleiohoku along with his maternal uncle Malo. Leleiohoku was the son of Kalanimoku and a grandson of Kamehameha I. He would also serve as Leleiohoku's konohiki or chief of land (land agent).[4][5] In 1834, he and Leleiohoku attend Lahainaluna Seminary, a school ran by the American missionaries who arrived in Hawaii in 1820. Some of his classmates included writer S. N. Haleole, historian Samuel Kamakau and future royal governor George Luther Kapeau.[6] He became a Hulumanu (court favorite) in the royal court of Kamehameha III in the 1830s. In 1837, the members of the Hulumanu divided the king's land on the island of Molokai between themselves and Haʻalelea received lands at Ohia and half the ahupuaʻa of Kamananoni.[1][7][8]

Chiefly status and marriages

Haʻalelea also served as the private secretary and land agent of Kealiʻiahonui, the son of the last independent king of Kauaʻi Kaumualiʻi, and his wife Kekauʻōnohi, the granddaughter of Kamehameha I and former wife of Kamehameha II, until the former's death in 1849.[9] Around November 1849 (Haʻalelea himself dates this to 1850), he married Kealiʻiahonui's widow Kekauʻōnohi. This marriage elevated him to the status of chief but produced no children before Kekauʻōnohi's death in 1851.[1][10][11] The Great Mahele of 1848 reaffirmed him in his personal landholdings at Kamananoni, Molokai.[1] After his marriage, he received additional land from Kekauʻōnohi and became the largest landowner on Molokai. His landholdings on Molokai included the ahupuaʻa of Makanalua, Naiwa in Kalaʻe, the adjoining kona ahupuaʻa of Kapulei, Kumueli, and Wawaia, the ahupuaʻa of Moakea on the far east end of the island and forty-one acres in Pelekunu Valley.[8] He also held lands on Oahu, Maui, Lanai and the island of Hawaii.[1]

His only child was a daughter named Julia Kamalalehua or Kamalelehua (1839–1856). She died on February 8, 1856, at her father's residence, of brain congestion, at the age of sixteen and six months.[2][12][13]

On January 21, 1858, he married his second wife Anaderia Amoe Ululani Kapukalakala Ena (1842–1904) at the age of 16. She was the eldest daughter of the chiefess Kaikilanialiiwahineopuna and John Ena (Zane Shang Hsien) of Hilo, a merchant of Chinese descent.[1][14][15]

Political career

Haʻalelea was a member of the Privy Council of State from 1852 to 1855 and served in the House of Nobles from 1853 to 1862.[16] He would also serve as Chamberlain of the Royal Court.[17]

Haʻalelea was a staff officer in the retinue of Kamehameha III and later Prince Lot (the future Kamehameha V.[18][19] In the fall of 1860, Haʻalelea accompanied Prince Lot, a young David Kalākaua and Hawaii's Consul for Peru, Josiah C. Spalding, on a two-month tour of British Columbia and California. They sailed from Honolulu aboard the yacht Emma Rooke, on August 29, arriving on September 18 in Victoria, British Columbia where they were received by the local dignitaries of the city.[20] In California, the party visited San Francisco, Sacramento, Folsom and other local areas where they were honorably received.[21]

Mormon missionaries

In 1854, Haʻalelea leased his land in the Pālāwai Valley on the island of Lanai to the early Mormon missionaries who set up a Mormon colony on the island for a period of time. This land was however considered useless, so Haʻalelea may have used it as a chance to get rid of an unwanted piece of property.[22] He would eventually convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In 1863, he sold the entire ahupuaʻa to Walter Murray Gibson.[23][24]

Death and legacy

Amoe Ululani Kapukalakala Ena Haʻalelea

Haʻalelea died on October 3, 1864 of aneurism at Holani Pa, his residence on Richards Street in Honolulu.[13][25] The two-story coral-house was originally built by Kealiʻiahonui and adjoined with Haimoeipo, the private residence of Queen Kalama, a relative of Haʻalelea. In his lifetime, he befriended American conchologist William Harper Pease who kept his shell collections in Haʻalelea's home. After his death, it became known as Haʻalelea Lawn, but the house was later torn down and the land used by the University Club.[26][25]

In 1907, a marble memorial tablet at Kawaiahaʻo Church was erected honoring Haʻalilio, Haʻalelea, and his second wife Amoe Ululani, who was a great benefactor of the church. The plaque and another plaque commemorating Ululani's sister Laura Kekuakapuokalani Coney hang above the mauka (mountainward) royal pew at Kawaiahaʻo. His brother's Christian name was written as Richard instead of Timothy and Haʻalelea's birth year was inscribed as 1828 instead of 1822. The tablet reads: "In Memory of Levi Haalelea 1828-1864 His wife Ululani A. A. Haalelea 1824-1904 and Richard Haalilio 1808—1844."[27][28][29] A similarly inscribed stone grave marker for Ululani, Haʻalilio and Haʻalelea was erected at the Kawaiahaʻo Cemetery in an enclosure, makai (seaward) of the Lunalilo Mausoleum.[30]

An oil portrait of Haʻalelea (above) by Enoch Wood Perry Jr. once hanged at ʻIolani Palace in the 1920s.[18][31] It is now in the collections of the Hawaii State Archives.

He was a related by blood to both Queen Kalama and her uncle, Charles Kanaʻina. After his death the two would approve administration of his Last Will and Testament as the devisees under the Will.[1]

Family tree

KeakealanikaneKaleiheana
MoanakanePiʻilaniwahine
Kapuni-a-MoanaLono-a-MoanaKauhi-a-HakiIliki-a-Moana
Manua a.k.a. UauaMoanawahine
Kuaina (Haaleleaina)Ahumaikealake
MaloHaʻaloʻu (k)Koeleele (k)Kipa (w)
Levi HaʻaleleaTimoteo Haʻalilio

References

  1. Barrere 1994, pp. 22–24
  2. Forbes 2001, p. 390.
  3. Pukui & Elbert 1986, p. 45.
  4. Kanahele 1999, p. 11.
  5. Kameʻeleihiwa 1992, p. 114.
  6. Ka Hae Hawaii 1858.
  7. Kamakau 1992, pp. 279, 283, 342.
  8. Graham 2018, pp. 81–82.
  9. Alexander 1907, pp. 26–28.
  10. Kam 2017, p. 55.
  11. Pratt 1920, p. 40.
  12. The Friend 1856.
  13. Ka Nupepa Kuokoa 1864a.
  14. Williams 2004, pp. 149, 151–152.
  15. Chang, Lum & Luke 1988, p. 29.
  16. Hawaii state office record.
  17. Johnson 1994, pp. 3–4.
  18. Taylor 1927, pp. 39, 47.
  19. Liliuokalani 1898, p. 24.
  20. The Polynesian 1860.
  21. Baur 1922, pp. 248–249.
  22. Britsch 1978, pp. 68–83.
  23. Bailey 1980, pp. 119, 121, 127.
  24. Adler & Kamins 1986, pp. 68–70.
  25. The Pacific Commercial Advertiser 1864.
  26. Wilson 1911, p. 455; Iaukea 1930, p. 20; Taylor 1922, p. 390; Johnson 1994, pp. 3–4
  27. Williams 2004, p. 152.
  28. The Hawaiian Gazette 1907a.
  29. The Hawaiian Gazette 1907b.
  30. Kam 2017, p. 27.
  31. Ka Nupepa Kuokoa 1864b.

Bibliography

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