[HI-FOOTSTEPS] Hi-Statewide Co. Bios (Brash)
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Wed Jan 27 13:32:21 CST 2010
Statewide County HI Archives Biographies.....Brash, William George 1842 -
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
Jessica Orr orr at hawaii.com January 27, 2010, 1:32 pm
Source: The Story of Hawaii and Its Builders. Published by the Honolulu Star Bulletin, 1925
Author: Edited by George F. Nellist
WILLIAM GEORGE BRASH, Veteran Printer and Capitalist. Typesetter of the first
English-Hawaiian dictionary, known as Andrews Dictionary and published in
the late 60s, and the only living man who saw the first copy of the
old Pacific Commercial Advertiser taken off the press on July 2, 1856,
William G. Brash has witnessed the making of much history in Hawaii. Four
kings and a queen ruled the Hawaiian Islands during his residence here, a
monarchy was overthrown, a new form of government established and a great city
developed from the tiny village he first knew as Honolulu.
Mr. Brash was born in Wellington, N.Z., in 1842, the son of William and Mary
Brash. Shortly after his birth his parents went to South America, and in 1844
they arrived in Honolulu from Valparaiso on the American whaler Fame of New
London. He attended the Honolulu Free School, and in 1854 took a fancy to sea
life and obtained a position on the Akamai, plying between Honolulu and
Hanamaulu and Hanalei, Kauai. He worked as an oiler for a time and after
several years of service quit the sea to enter the Advertiser office as an
apprentice. At the end of his apprenticeship in 1859, Mr. Brash went to San
Francisco and for two years worked for the Francis-Valentine Co., printers.
In 1862 Mr. Brash returned to Honolulu and was employed by The Polynesian,
a government paper owned by the Monarchy. He then worked for the Advertiser
until 1877, when the late S. G. Wilder bought the steamer Likelike from the
Hawaiian government and appointed Mr. Brash purser. He soon was in charge of
the freight department of the Wilder Steamship Co., and remained in that
position for thirty years, until the amalgamation of the company with the
present Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co., Ltd. Mr. Brash is now retired and
cares for his sugar and other private business interests. He is a director of
the Honomu Sugar Co., Ltd., and has extensive realty holdings.
In 1889 he married Mary Cockett of Maui, and they have six children, Mrs.
John Anderson, wife of Representative John Anderson; William G. Brash,
California rancher; Adrian Brash, student in the University of California;
Winifred Brash, Lionel Brash, chemist and physical instructor at Palama
Settlement and Mrs. Irmgard Perkins. Mr. Brash is a charter member of Mystic
Lodge No. 2, Knights of Pythias.
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