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1Engraved at Lahainaluna

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“Engraved at Lahainaluna” Metadata:

  • Title: Engraved at Lahainaluna
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: Median: 232
  • Publisher: Mission Houses Museum
  • Publish Date:

“Engraved at Lahainaluna” Subjects and Themes:

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Access and General Info:

  • First Year Published: 2014
  • Is Full Text Available: No
  • Is The Book Public: No
  • Access Status: No_ebook

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Lahainaluna High School

Andrews was chosen as first principal of a seminary for boys and young men. The site was named Lahainaluna for "upper Lahaina". On September 5, 1831,

Lorrin Andrews

He opened the first post-secondary school for Hawaiians called Lahainaluna Seminary, prepared a Hawaiian dictionary and several works on the literature

Lahaina, Hawaii

on September 14, 1828. In 1831, missionaries founded Lahainaluna Seminary (present-day Lahainaluna High School) where Hawaiian boys and young men (among

History of Maui

Christianity, and Queen Kaʻahumanu. In 1831 the Lahainaluna Mission School, later Lahainaluna Seminary was established, publishing Hawaiian language bibles

Keanolani

marriage to a commoner named Keaupuni, an expelled student from Lahainaluna Seminary and servant of her hānai (informally adopted) mother, Governess Kekauʻōnohi

List of missionaries to Hawaii

Parthian from Boston: Rev. Lorrin Andrews (1795–1868), founder of Lahainaluna Seminary and judge Rev. Ephraim Weston Clark (1799–1878), third pastor of

S. N. Haleʻole

by the American missionaries. In 1834, he began his education at Lahainaluna Seminary and graduated after four years in 1838. Taught by Lorrin Andrews

Haʻalelea

or chief of land (land agent). In 1834, he and Leleiohoku attend Lahainaluna Seminary, a school ran by the American missionaries who arrived in Hawaii

Edward Bailey

were sketches and drawings which were engraved by students at the Lahainaluna Seminary between 1833 and 1843. He began painting about 1865, at the age of

Samuel Kamakau

island of Oʻahu. He traveled to the island of Maui and enrolled at Lahainaluna Seminary in 1833, where he became a student of Reverend Sheldon Dibble. Dibble