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Hawaiian almanac and annual for 1876. Black & Auld, Honolulu. hdl:10524/665. Hawaiian Mission Children's Society (1901). Portraits of American Protestant Missionaries to Hawaii. Honolulu: The Hawaiian Gazette Co. OCLC 11796269. Hawaiian Mission Children's Society (1969).
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.
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.
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. *
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 ...
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.
A new colony for Hawaiian Latter-day Saints was established in Lāʻie. [12] In 1889, Iosepa, Utah was founded as a colony for Hawaiian Latter-day Saints. This colony functioned until 1915 when the saints there were encouraged to return to Hawaii in anticipation of the building of a temple there. The first stake in Hawaii was organized in 1935 ...
Portrait of Hiram and Sybil Moseley Bingham, by Samuel Morse, 1819. Hiram Bingham, formally Hiram Bingham I (October 30, 1789 – November 11, 1869), was the leader of the first group of American Protestant missionaries to introduce Christianity to the Hawaiian Islands.