[HI-FOOTSTEPS] Hi-Statewide Co. Bios (Wood)
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Thu Oct 8 14:28:27 CDT 2009
Statewide County HI Archives Biographies.....Wood, John H. December 4, 1816 - August 4, 1892
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
J. Orr orr at hawaii.com October 8, 2009, 2:28 pm
Source: The Story of Hawaii and Its Builders. Published by The Honolulu Star Bulletin, Territory of Hawaii 1925
Author: Edited by George F. Nellist
JOHN H. WOOD, Pioneer Merchant and Planter. A passenger to Hawaii in 1846 on
the same historic vessel, the brig Henry, which carried as his fellow
passengers, E. L. Lee, later a famous chief justice of Hawaii and chancellor
of the kingdom, and Charles R. Bishop, one of the great early builders of
Hawaii, John H. Wood also was destined to take his place among the noted
pioneers who aided in the development of the islands.
Soon after reaching Honolulu, Mr. Wood erected the first brick building in
the city, on the site of the present Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., Ltd., and
opened a shoe store, where he was in business for twenty years. In 1849, upon
the discovery of gold in California, he formed a company with six others and
his brother, Oral Wood, who had accompanied him to Hawaii three years before,
and they went to California and mined for a brief period. He then returned to
his former home in Massachusetts via Panama, married Sarah Hardy, daughter of
Temple Hardy of Salem, Mass., purchased a large stock of goods and came back
to the islands with his bride and a cousin, the late Jacob Hardy, for some
years a district judge on the Island of Kauai. Mr. Wood arrived in Honolulu
for the second time in May, 1850.
A year later, Mr. Wood purchased a house lot, 200 feet square, on Nuuanu
Street and sent to Boston for a sectional house, which was the Wood familys
home for decades. For thirty years he was the owner of that large tract of
land in Nuuanu Valley, now known as the Dowsett Tract, and in 1863 took charge
of his sugar plantation there, two and a half miles from the Honolulu of that
day, the first plantation on this side of the Pali and one of the first on the
Island of Oahu. There he continued the cultivation of sugar cane and the
manufacture of sugar until 1871, when he converted the property into a stock
and dairy farm.
Mr. Wood held several government commissions under the Monarchy. His counsel
was sought in affairs of state, and he was a deep student of scientific
subjects, besides being intensely interested in the importation and
cultivation of rare trees and shrubs.
Born in Littleton, Mass., Dec. 4, 1816, Mr. Wood was the son of Carshena and
Tryphena (Lawrence) Wood. With his brother-in-law, B. W. Priest, he learned
the trade of a shoemaker and continued in that business until he left for
Hawaii. Mr. Wood and his first wife had two daughters, Florence, who later
became the wife of Pierre Jones, an instructor at Punahou and St. Albans
Schools and a descendant of a Russian princess; and Stella May, now Mrs.
Albert F. Dixon, widow of the late Captain Dixon, U.S.N. Mrs. Jones resides in
Honolulu and is custodian of the Queen Emma Home. She was a lifelong friend of
the late queen and among her cherished possessions today are ninety-two
letters written to her by Queen Emma, and photographs and autographs of
various members of the Hawaiian royal house. Mrs. Jones is the mother of Miss
Maude Jones, librarian in the Honolulu Public Library; Mrs. Nathan L. Coleman
of Hollywood, Calif., and George Douglas Jones, head of the Lawn-Vac Co. of
Sacramento, Calif., and inventor of the electric vacuum lawn mower. Mrs. Jones
has one granddaughter, Miss Marie Malulani Lyon, who resides with her mother,
Mrs. Nathan L. Coleman, at Hollywood. The first Mrs. John H. Wood, mother of
Mrs. Jones, died in 1860. Mr. Wood later re-married. He died in Honolulu on
Aug. 4, 1892.
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