Jump to content

Maria J. Forbes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maria Jane Chamberlain Forbes (1899)

Maria J. Forbes (née Chamberlain; 1832-1909) was a Kamaʻāina and the manager of Lunalilo Home, a Hawaiian charity and retirement home. She was the first child in the family of Levi Chamberlain to be born in the Chamberlain House.

History

[edit]
Chamberlain House (1902)

Maria Jane Chamberlain was born in Honolulu, Oahu, on April 25, 1832. Her father was Levi Chamberlain, one of the pioneer American missionaries to the Hawaiian Islands.[1] Her mother, Maria (née, Patton), had been one of the third company of missionaries who reached Honolulu in the ship Parthian in 1828. The parents married in September of that same year. Maria Jane had six siblings.[2] She was the first child in the family to be born in the Chamberlain House.[2]

Forbes was one of five island girls who, after studying at Punahou School, Honolulu, pursued their education together at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, Massachusetts,[3] in the years 1850-53.[4] In her third year, she gave up her course and went to Springfield to study music.[5] She returned to Hawaii in 1854.[3]

(undated)

In 1858, in Honolulu, she married another Kamaʻāina, Rev. Anderson Oliver Forbes (1833-1888),[3] who was a missionary of the American Board.[1] The earlier years of the married life of this couple were spent at Kalua'aha on the east coast of Molokai, Mr. Forbes for some years succeeding Rev. Harvey Rexford Hitchcock as missionary pastor of what at that time constituted an interesting portion of the Hawaiian field. Later, after other pastorates in Hilo and elsewhere in the Hawaiian Islands, Mr. Forbes was called, in 1880, to the secretaryship of the Hawaiian Board of Missions, and made his home in Honolulu. After years in this service, physicians prescribed travel for his health and while on return from the Eastern United States, he died in Colorado Springs, in 1888. In all his work for Hawaiians, Mrs. Forbes was his helper.[4]

A year after she was widowed, Forbes was appointed[6] the manager of the Lunalilo Home for aged and disabled Hawaiians in Honolulu.[3] In 1901, sensible of the increasing infirmities of age, Forbes resigned and was succeed by Mrs. Weaver.[4]

Forbes had at least three children.[1] Her later years were spent in her own home on Punahou Street. She died in Honolulu on January 22, 1909, age 77 years, and was buried in the old missionary ground at Kawaiahaʻo Church.[4][1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "Worthy Woman Passes Away". The Hawaiian Star. 22 January 1909. p. 5. Retrieved 28 October 2024 – via Newspapers.com. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ a b "Levi Chamberlain SECULAR AGENT FOR THE AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Centenary Number 1820-1920: Commemorating the Hundredth Anniversary of the Landing of the First American Missionaries in Hawaii. Honolulu: Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Limited: 33. April 1920. Retrieved 28 October 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ a b c d Hawaiian Mission Children's Society, ed. (1901). Portraits of American Protestant missionaries to Hawaii;. Honolulu: Printed by the Hawaiian Gazette Co. p. 96. Retrieved 27 October 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. ^ a b c d Gulick, Orramel Hinckley (February 1909). Damon, Samuel Chenery (ed.). "Hawaii Cousins". The Friend. Samuel C. Damon: 17–18. Retrieved 27 October 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ JENNESS, MARY E., ed. (April 1909). "IN MEMORIAM. MRS. MARIA J. FORBES" (PDF). The Mount Holyoke. XVIII (8): 67. Retrieved 28 October 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  6. ^ "Death of Mrs. Maria J. Forbes". Hilo Daily Tribune. 26 January 1909. p. 1. Retrieved 28 October 2024 – via Newspapers.com. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.