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Hawaiian Mission Children's Society (acronym, HMCS; sometimes abbreviated as Mission Children's Society; common name, Cousins' Society; originally, Social Missionary Society; est. 1852) [1] is an American historical and memorial society of descendants of Protestant missionaries associated with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) to the Hawaiian Kingdom.
Rev. Lorenzo Lyons (1807–1886), who built Imiola Church in Waimea, Hawaii County, Hawaii; The sixth ABCFM company arrived on May 1, 1833, on the Mentor: [8] Rev. Lowell Smith; Mrs. Abigail Willis Tenney Smith (1809–1885), President of the Woman's Board of Missions for the Pacific Islands; Rev. Benjamin Wyman Parker; Mrs. Mary Elizabeth ...
The Hawaiian Mission Houses Historic Site and Archives in Honolulu, Hawaii, was established in 1920 by the Hawaiian Mission Children's Society, a private, non-profit organization and genealogical society, on the 100th anniversary of the arrival of the first Christian missionaries in Hawaiʻi.
Charles Scarborough (1927–2002) from England to Gilbert Islands; Samuel Marsden (1765–1838) - from England to Australia; Henry Nott (1774–1844) - from Britain to Tahiti ...
The Mission Dayspring, for children, was published jointly by the ABCFM and the Women's Boards. Each of the latter issued annually a variety of leaflets and reports from its own headquarters, and the Board of the Interior, in addition, printed monthly a twenty-page paper, Mission Studies, and furnished a column for a weekly paper in Chicago. [1]
Pages in category "Christian missionaries in Hawaii" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *
The North American Mission Board (reorganized from the Home Mission Board in 1997) and other agencies, have continued to help Hawaii Pacific Baptists' missions and ministry opportunities. In 1955 the first meeting of the HBC executive board met at the Baptist Student Center. The Samoa Baptist Academy began with 14 volunteer teachers.
Levi Chamberlain (1845) This house was built under the direction of Levi Chamberlain during the four years from 1828 to 1832. It was called the Depository because here were received and stored all goods belonging to the mission, and from this as a center they were distributed to the various mission stations, until about 1840 when a separate Depository building was erected seaward of this house.