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Encyclopedia > John Young (Hawaii)

John Young (c.1742December 17, 1835) was a British Royal Advisor to Kamehameha I in the Kingdom of Hawaii. He was accidentally left behind by a British ship and became a friend and advisor to Kamehameha. He brought western military knowledge to Hawaii and played a big role during Hawaii's first contacts with the Europeans powers. He spent the rest of his life in Hawai'i. Between 1802-1812, John Young ruled as Governor of the Island of Hawaii while King Kamehameha was away on other islands. Image File history File links Question_book-3. ... // Events January 24 - Charles VII Albert becomes Holy Roman Emperor. ... December 17 is the 351st day of the year (352nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... | Come and take it, slogan of the Texas Revolution 1835 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ... “Kamehameha” redirects here. ... Motto Ua mau ke ea o ka āina i ka pono Anthem Hawaii Ponoi Kingdom of Hawaii Capital Lahaina (until 1845) Honolulu (from 1845) Language(s) Hawaiian, English Government Constitutional monarchy Monarch  - 1795–1819 Kamehameha I  - 1891–1893 Liliuokalani Provisional Government  - 1893-1894 Committee of Safety History  - Inception 1795  - Unification...


Life

According to his tombstone at Mauna `Ala, (the Hawaiian Royal Masoleum) he was born in 1742 in Lancashire, England. Lancashire is a non-metropolitan county of historic origin in the North West of England, bounded to the west by the Irish Sea. ... For other uses, see England (disambiguation). ...


About 1805, Kamehameha sent for his niece, the daughter of his favourite brother, and she became the second wife of John Young. This marriage brought him increased recognition and prestige.


Four children were born to John Young's second marriage — Fannie, Grace, John Jr., and Jane. To Fannie, when grown and married, was born a daughter, Emma, who would become one of the most beloved queens in the Kamehameha dynasty. Queen Emma of Hawaii was queen to King Kamehameha IV from 1856 to his death in 1863. ...


Mrs. Lucy Thurston, in her story of her life as a missionary in Hawaii, in speaking of John Young, says; "He had long been a rare example in that degenerate age, of building a hedge about his family and standing in the gap thereof. When occasion offered, he spoke with energy and decision, giving no uncertain sound, well understood by his children and by strangers. By marriage, by deeds and by counsel, he had justly risen to the eminence of a peer with the chiefs of the nation. Saxon blood flowed in his veins. He was Mr. Young, the noble grandfather of our most noble Queen Emma."


Death

John Young died on Honolulu on December 17, 1835, at the age of 93 after living in Hawai'i for 46 years. Honolulu as seen from the International Space Station Honolulu is the largest city and the capital of the U.S. state of Hawai‘i. ... December 17 is the 351st day of the year (352nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... | Come and take it, slogan of the Texas Revolution 1835 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ...


In a speech delivered by his Excellency, J. H. Kapena, Minister of Foreign Relations, on the occasion of the laying of the Cornerstone of The Royal Palace, Honolulu, in 1879, His excellency says;

"Here in the premises of Pokukaina was erected the tomb of the departed ghosts and retards and at the entrance of the sacred place was placed the body of John Young, one of Kamehameha's intimate friends. In order that the spot may not be forgotten where a tomb once stood, King Kalakaua has caused a mound to be raised there, crowned with ferns and flowers in memory of those who slept beneath it. Doubtless the memory is yet green of that never to be forgotten night when the remains of the departed chiefs were removed to the Royal Mausoleum in Nuuanu Valley. Perhaps the world had never witnessed a procession more weird and solemn than that which conveyed the bodies of the chiefs through the streets, accompanied on each side by thousands of people until the mausoleum was reached, the entire scene and procession lighted by large kukui torches, while surrounding darkness brought in striking relief the coffins on their biers. Truly we cannot forget the weirdness, the solemnity and the affecting scene afforded by that strange midnight procession."

At the Royal Mausoleum, on a flat, grey stone which covers his grave, is the following inscription:


"Beneath this stone are deposited the remains of John Young [of Lancashire, England] the friend and companion in arms of Kamehameha who departed this life December 17th, 1835, in the 93rd year of his age and the 46th of his residence on the "Sandwhich Islands"


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
John Young - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (297 words)
John Young (Governor) (1802–1852), 19th century Governor of New York.
John Young, 1st Baron Lisgar (1807–1876), the second Governor General of Canada.
John Young, Royal Advisor to Kamehameha I, Kingdom of Hawaii
Hawaii - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (6521 words)
Hawaii is the only state that: (1) lies completely in the tropics; (2) is without territory on the mainland of any continent; (3) is completely surrounded by water; and (4) continues to grow in area because of active extrusive lava flows, most notably from Kilauea (Kīlauea).
The county executives are the Mayor of Hawaii, Mayor of Honolulu, Mayor of Kauai and Mayor of Maui.
Hawaii represents the northernmost extension of the vast Polynesian triangle of the south and central Pacific Ocean.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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