Richard Armstrong (Hawaii)
Richard Armstrong | |
---|---|
Born |
McEwensville, Pennsylvania | April 13, 1805
Died |
September 23, 1860 55) Honolulu, Hawaii | (aged
Resting place | Kawaiahaʻo Church cemetery |
Alma mater |
Dickinson College Princeton Theological Seminary |
Known for |
Missionary Educator |
Religion | Presbyterian |
Spouse(s) | Clarissa Chapman Armstrong (1805–1891) |
Children |
Caroline Porter (1832–1905) William Nevins I (1834–1835) William Nevins (1835–1905) Mary Jane (1836–1920) Richard Baxter (1837–1871) Samuel Chapman (1839–1893) Clarissa Hannah (1840–1904) Reuben Chapman (1842–1843) Ellen Eliza (1844–1924) Amelia (1845–1923) |
Signature | |
Richard Armstrong (April 13, 1805 – September 23, 1860) was a missionary from Pennsylvania who arrived in Hawaii in 1832. Along with his wife Clarissa, he served in mission fields of the Marquesas Islands and in the Kingdom of Hawaii. He established several churches and schools, and was Kahu (shepherd) of Kawaiahaʻo Church after the departure of Hiram Bingham I. Kamehameha III appointed him Minister of Public Instruction, and his accomplishments established an educational system that earned him the nickname "The father of American education in Hawaii".
Background
Richard Armstrong was born in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania on April 13, 1805, to James Armstrong and his American-born wife Eleanor Pollock. The elder Armstrong had been born in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, and in 1786 emigrated to the United States, where he married Eleanor. The family were Presbyterian. Richard was the youngest child of the union. He was educated at Milton Academy in Massachusetts, furthering his education at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania, and graduating from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1831.[1]
Nuku Hiva and Hawaii
Princeton president Archibald Alexander provided a letter of recommendation In 1831, when Armstrong made the decision to join the next contingent of missionaries being sent to Hawaii by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. He received his ordination on October 27, and Armstrong and his new bride Clarissa departed with the other missionaries aboard the Averick on November 26. The ship docked in Honolulu on May 17, 1832, with Clarissa seven months pregnant.[2] Daughter and first child Caroline Porter was born in Honolulu on July 17.
The board sent the Armstrongs to minister to cannibalistic tribes on Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas Islands July 2, 1833 through May 12, 1834,[3] serving alongside missionary couples the Rev. William Patterson Alexander and his wife Mary,[4] and the Rev. Benjamin Wyman Parker and his wife Mary Elizabeth.[5] The first Armstrong son William Nevins was born on Nuku Hiva on January 2, 1834. The Nuku Hiva mission field was abandoned as futile.[6]
The Armstrongs were reassigned to the Island of Maui, where the infant William Nevins died March 17, 1835 in Lahaina. Their second son had been born two days before on March 15, and he was given the name of his brother William Nevins.[7] In July of that year, the Armstrongs were assigned to Wailuku. Three more children were born during this assignment. Mary Jane was born June 2, 1836 in Honolulu. Two sons were born in Wailuku, Richard Baxter on August 15, 1837, and Samuel Chapman on January 30, 1839. During his assignment on Maui, Armstrong established churches at Waihee, Wailuku, Ulupalakua, and at Haiku, where he also became an 1858 founder of Haiku Sugar Company on land he owned.[8][9]
In 1840, Armstrong was appointed Kahu (shepherd) of Kawaiahaʻo Church to replace Hiram Bingham I.[10] On August 26, 1854, he was licensed to perform marriages in Hawaii. Armstrong officiated at the June 19, 1856 wedding of Emma Rooke and Alexander Liholiho in Kawaiahaʻo Church.[11] Additionally, Armstrong served on the government Privy council and the House of Nobles.[12]
The father of American education in Hawaii
Under Kamehameha III, the position of Minister of Public Instruction of the Kingdom of Hawaii was created. On April 3, 1846, William Richards was appointed to fill the new position.[13] When Richards died in 1847, Armstrong was appointed to fill the position.[12] Armstrong held the position until 1855, when he became President of the Board of Education. The educational model he established in the kingdom earned Armstrong the sobriquet "The father of American education in Hawaii". He created a structured environment that was financially supported by a school tax. With Armstrong at the helm, curriculum was standardized, and the responsibilities of faith-based citizenship became a part of it. The kingdom's teachers were given extended training. Land grants were implemented for additional and improved facilities, and the kingdom began issuing its own textbooks. The public school system accommodated the majority of the students, but Armstrong also chartered private educational institutions.[14]
Personal life and death
Richard Armstrong died September 23, 1860 following a riding accident which punctured an artery in his neck. He was buried on the grounds of Kawaiahaʻo Church.[15]
He married Clarissa Chapman of Russell, Massachusetts. on September 5, 1831 in Bridgeport, Connecticut. She died July 20, 1891 in San Francisco, California.[16][17]
Name | Birth | Birthplace | Death | Place of death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Caroline Porter Armstrong Beckwith[19] | July 17, 1832 | Honolulu, Hawaii | July 18, 1905 | Hamakuapoko, Maui | Married Edward Griffin Beckwith of Great Barrington, Massachusetts |
William Nevins Armstrong I[20] | January 2, 1834 | Nuku Hiva, Marquesas Islands | March 17, 1835 | Lahaina, Maui | Died in infancy |
William Nevins Armstrong[21] | March 15, 1835 | Lahaina, Maui | October 15, 1905 | Washington, D.C. | Given his brother's name Became Attorney General of Hawaii, and accompanied Kalākaua on his 1881 trip around the world[22] |
Mary Jane Graham Armstrong[23][24] | June 2, 1836 | Honolulu | October 16, 1920 | Berkeley, California | |
Richard Baxter Armstrong[25] | August 15, 1837 | Wailuku, Maui | July 29, 1871 | Napa Valley, California | |
Samuel Chapman Armstrong[26] | January 30, 1839 | Wailuku | April 11, 1893 | Hampton, Virginia | Founder of Hampton University,[27] Union officer of the American Civil War. |
Clarissa Hannah Armstrong Banning | June 27, 1840 | Honolulu | June 14, 1904 | Oakland | Married Frederick Banning |
Reuben Chapman Armstrong[28] | October 5, 1842 | Honolulu | October 28, 1843 | Honolulu | Died in infancy |
Ellen Eliza Chapman Armstrong Weaver[29] | August 12, 1844 | Honolulu | September 29, 1924 | Berkeley, California | Married Philip Weaver |
Amelia Hamilton Armstrong[23] | November 1, 1845 | Honolulu | August 25, 1923 | Berkeley, California | |
Notes
- ↑ Eng (1999) pp.1,2
- ↑ Eng (1999) pp.2,3,4
- ↑ HMCS (1901) p.35
- ↑ HMCS (1901) p.34
- ↑ HMCS (1901) p.47
- ↑ Armstrong, Armstrong (1887) p.14
- ↑ Armstrong, Armstrong (1887) p.17
- ↑ Armstrong, Armstrong (1887) pp.21,22
- ↑ Kent, Boylan (1993) p.30
- ↑ Ohles (1978) p.50
- ↑ Porter, Kasdon, Rayson (2003) p.105
- 1 2 "Richard Armstrong". State archives. State of Hawaii. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
- ↑ "William Richards". State Archives. State of Hawaii. Retrieved May 7, 2012..
- ↑ Porter, Kasdon, Rayson (2003) pp.76,77
- ↑ Armstrong, Armstrong (1887) pp.101,102
- ↑ Eng (1999) p.3
- ↑ Clarissa Chapman Armstrong I at Find a Grave
- ↑ "Armstrong ancestry". Ancestry.com. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
- ↑ Caroline Porter Beckwith I at Find a Grave
- ↑ William Nevins Armstrong I at Find a Grave
- ↑ William Nevins Armstrong at Find a Grave
- ↑ "William Nevin Armstrong Papers". Yale University Library. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
- 1 2 "Armstrong Family Papers". Williams College. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
- ↑ Mary Jane Armstrong at Find a Grave
- ↑ Richard Baxter Armstrong at Find a Grave
- ↑ Samuel Chapman Armstrong at Find a Grave
- ↑ "Samuel Chapman Armstrong". Hawaiian Encyclopedia online. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
- ↑ Reuben Chapman Armstrong at Find a Grave
- ↑ Ellen Armstrong Weaver at Find a Grave
References
- Armstrong, Mrs. Mary Frances Morgan (1887). Richard Armstrong. Normal School Stream Press – via HathiTrust.
- American Protestant Missionaries to Hawaii. Hawaiian Mission Children's Society. 1901.
- Ohles, John F (1978). Biographical Dictionary of American Educators. Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-8371-9893-4.
- Kent, N.J.; Boylan, Daniel B. (1993). Hawaii Islands Under The Influence. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-1552-3.
- Engs, Robert Francis (1999). "Richard Armstrong and His Hawaiian Mission". Educating the Disfranchised and Disinherited: Samuel Chapman Armstrong and Hampton Institute, 1839–1893. Univ Tennessee Press. pp. 1–11. ISBN 978-1-57233-051-1.
- Potter, Norris W; Kasdon, Lawrence M; Rayson, Ann (2003). History of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Bess Press. ISBN 978-1-57306-150-6.