Introducing Brother Dutton, a former American Civil War Officer who assisted recently Sainted Father Damien of Molokai:

 

http://www.theheartofnewengland.com/travel-Kalawao.html

The Heart of New England
Celebrating the unique character & culture of Maine ~ New Hampshire ~ Vermont

 


 

 



 

 

Blessed Sacrament Church, Stowe, VT
One of the murals in the church

 

A Glimpse into
the World of Kalawao
By Joseph Yenkavitch

Sometimes a small stop on a journey can open up a larger world.

Recently, while visiting Stowe, Vermont, I came across the
Blessed Sacrament
Church
.  It’s an unassuming church tucked in among hotels and shops, but it
connects one remarkable man, Brother Joseph Dutton, with events half a world
away, and lays bare the best and worst in human nature.  

But don’t expect to pick up a pamphlet for this story.  No.  You’re going to have
to study the outside walls of the church itself.

Twelve murals adorn the two long sides of the church.  They seem crude, almost
childlike, but you’ll be instantly drawn to them.  Each mural provides a tiny
glimpse into the world of
Kalawao, a leper colony that once existed on
Molokai, Hawaii
.  On all the murals is the figure of Brother Dutton, a man who
spent forty-three years tending to the needs of those abandoned lepers and over
whose birthplace the church is built.  

 

Most people are more familiar with
Father Damien de Veuster who first
organized the Kalawao colony, than
Joseph Dutton.  Part of the reason,
beyond the work Father Damien did,
lay in his early death from the disease
he had hoped to conquer.  He became
the face of what seemed a hopeless
fight.

But Dutton, who arrived unannounced at Kalawao on July 29, 1886, ready to
fulfill his desire for a life of penance, proved equally dedicated.  Within three
years Damien had died and Dutton gladly shouldered the burden.  For over
forty years he never wavered, washing sores, dealing with ulcers, doing
rudimentary surgery, building, and writing to presidents, princes and medical
people for help.  He never left the Kalaupapa peninsula where Kalawao was
located.

As early as the second decade of the twentieth century a church had been
planned to honor Stowe’s famous son.  But it wasn’t until the arrival of the Rev.
Francis McDonough in 1947, with help from the late Maria von Trapp of Sound
of Music fame, that the dream became a reality.  A practical reason also existed
for erecting a new church.  Up until then Stowe’s worshippers had to spend
Sunday mornings in the basement of the town hall.

Letting the public know of Brother Dutton, who moved through half his eighty-
eight years as a successful Civil War soldier and businessman and the last half
as a penitent lay brother, remained a prime goal of Father McDonough.  And he
intended to use fully the church’s exterior walls to get the message across.

The thick-lined, lively paintings are reminiscent of the French painter, George
Rouault.  His student, Andre Girard, stepped forward after the church had been
completed and offered to paint the walls and interior, asking only for paint and
a place to stay.  Using passages from the book Damien the Leper and a booklet
by Father McDonough, Girard portrayed events in the colony.  At first glance,
the drawings may seem primitive, but like good primitive paintings the feelings
they’re meant to represent radiate from the outward simplicity.

The murals touch upon moments of hope, despair, and solace.  You’ll notice few
displays of joy.  In a number of scenes, gaunt-faced lepers surround or lean
toward the figures of Damien and Dutton, the leper’s last two slivers of hope -
and decency.  Another mural shows a sometimes-daily occurrence as a leper,
wrapped in a shroud, is lowered into a grave.  One particular scene shows a
pained Dutton kneeling at the bier of the dead Damien.  

The terror leprosy induced in others and the sense of abandonment it instilled in
the lepers is shown powerfully.  A dark figure stands on shore his arms raised in
fury at a distant schooner.  Small objects dot the water.  Fearful of landing,
sailors at times simply threw supplies for the colony into the ocean hoping the
currents would carry them ashore.  No wonder those sent to Kalawao called it
“the living tomb”.

Yet Dutton, for all his dedication to Kalawao, never lost his interest in the wider
world.  He wrote hundreds of letters and remained a true patriot at heart.  At the
start of World War I, he asked to lead his old Civil War regiment into battle.  
Turned down, he sent his binoculars instead.  Franklin Roosevelt, then Secretary
of the Navy, returned them after the war and said they had found honorable
duty aboard a destroyer.

The final mural shows how Dutton’s fame had spread.  He stands on the shore,
the American flag waving above him, a line of ships on the horizon.  In 1908
President Theodore Roosevelt, at Dutton’s request, diverted the Great White
Fleet from its around-the-world voyage showcasing American power so it could
pass before the colony.  As the fleet steamed past, each of the sixteen battleships,
the U.S.S. Vermont among them, dipped their flags to Dutton and the excited
lepers around him.

Be sure to enter the church.  The faces so prominent on the outside are carried
inside covering every inch of the ceiling.  But now the lines are more delicate,
the faces more joyous and unblemished, as though released from their torment.

Dutton died in March 1931.  Vermont, for which he always retained a special
feeling even to the point of adding pictures of Stowe to his letters, didn’t forget
him.  In 1952, the Trapp Family Singers visited Molokai and sang over his grave.

“Gently, Johannes placed our Mount Mansfield pine wreath at the foot of the
cross,” wrote Maria von Trapp.  “With Father McDonough leading, each one of
us added a lei to the grave and whispered, “Aloha Brother Joseph Dutton.  
Greetings from Stowe.”

The Blessed Sacrament Church is located one mile north from the center of
Stowe along Route 108.  You can view the murals and enter the church during
the daytime hours.  There’s no fee.






About the Author: Joseph Yenkavitch  is a Vermont-based freelance writer. He
has written for the Burlington Business Digest, USAir, Independent Living,
Military History and Tourist Travel Online. He was a middle school teacher and
has published short stories and a science fiction novel,
On A Distant World, for
ages 9-12.

 

***********************************************

Full resolution(1,467 × 1,000 pixels, file size: 547 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

[edit] Summary

Description
English: The Kalaupapa leper colony in 1905. There were approximately 750 living on the Kalaupapa peninsula at the time and included Stephen Mahelona Napela. Brother Dutton, in the center with the white beard, worked with Father Damien and also remained on Molokai until he died in 1931.
Date

1905

Source

Hawaii State Archives

Author

not given

 

************************************************

http://www.whirledwydeweb.com/kalaupapa/chronology.html

 

 

Historical Chronology

Today "leprosy" is known as "Hansen's disease". Those afflicted with Hansen's disease are known as "patients". At the time of most of the records mentioned below however, the terms "leprosy", "leper", and "inmate" were still in use. For the sake of historical accuracy I have left the old terms intact when quoting a historical source.

Click on the where it appears, for more information.

4th–5th
century A.D.
  • The earliest settlers, possibly from the Marquesas Islands, begin arriving in Hawaii.
1820
  • The brig Thaddeus arrives at Kailua, Hawai‘i, on April 4 bringing the pioneer company of American missionaries from Boston.
1823
  • Unconfirmed report of leprosy in Honolulu.
1827
  • Catholic priests arrive from France.
1835
  • Leprosy is observed in Kamuli, a Hawaiian woman living at Koloa, Kauai. This represents the first documented case of leprosy in Hawaii.
1839
  • Protestant religion established at Kalaupapa.
1848
  • Leprosy confirmed in Honolulu.
1850
  • First Board of Health established in Honolulu.
1853
  • First church in Kalaupapa (Calvanist) built of stone.
1863
  • Board of Health officially recognizes leprosy problem.
1864
  • Belgian postulant Father Damien (born Joseph DeVeuster) arrives in Honolulu and is ordained a priest on May 31 in the Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace in Honolulu.
1865
  • Leprosy spreads at an alarming rate among the native Hawaiians, so on January 3, 1865, King Kamehameha V signs An act to Prevent the Spread of Leprosy. The execution of the law is put in the hands of the Board of Health and authorizes the setting apart of land specifically to isolate and treat leprosy patients.
  • 2,764 people on the islands are reported to be lepers. Under the new act of prevention, segregation is begun and plans made for a separate hospital. Land is purchased in Palolo Valley, Island of Oahu, but when it becomes known in the neighborhood, objections are so strong that the effort is abandoned. A site is then secured at Kalihi, near Honolulu, well separated from the other habitations, and in November, 1865, the hospital is established there.
1866
  • The need for a larger and more permanent settlement is declared, isolated for those declared to be lepers, to be operated in connection with the Kalihi Hospital, where efforts would continue for the cure of cases in the early stages. In locating a site for the leper settlement the search is soon directed to the Molokai Peninsula, so well protected by the sea in front and by the towering cliff behind. Kalawao, on the Kalaupapa Peninsula, is set aside and on January 6 the first patients take up residence at the Kalaupapa Settlement.
  • 57 lepers are sent to Molokai Asylum, 101 remain at Kalihi Hospital for treatment. In sending lepers to Molokai, some difficulty attends the separating of relatives. Therefore, a few non-leper relatives are allowed to go along as helpers or Kokuas. Some cattle and sheep are also sent to Molokai. For Kalihi Hospital, and Molokai Asylum (or Settlement, as it generally became known later), the total amount of expenses in 1866 was $10,012.48.
  • Patients organize Siloama congregation in November.
1871
  • The building of Siloama church completed at Kalawao.
1872
  • St. Philomena chapel built by Brother Bertrant at Kalawao.
1873
  • Dr.Gerhard Henrick Armauer Hansen, a Norwegian physician, discovers Mycobacterium leprae, leading to proof of the disease as infectious in nature. Since then, this disorder has been called Hansen's disease.
  • Father Damien arrives at Kalawao on May 10, 1873 on board the steamer Kilauea with 50 leprosy patients and a cargo of cattle. He adds an extension to St. Philomena, and builds the first Catholic church in Kalaupapa.
1881
  • Princess Liliuokalani, sister of King Kalakaua, becomes the First member of royalty to visit the settlement.
  • A leprosy hospital is established at Kakaako, Honolulu.
1885
  • Father Damien establishes orphanage for boys and girls.
  • Father Damien is diagnosed as having contracted leprosy.
1886
  • Father Damien supervises major changes to St. Philomena.
  • Joseph Dutton arrives at Kalaupapa to assist Father Damien. Dutton, an energetic and dedicated man, assumes many of the duties Damien is unable to perform as his leprosy progresses. Born Ira Dutton in Stowe, Vermont, he would later adopt the name of his favorite saint, St. Joseph. He arrives at a time when Father Damien sorely needs another missionary, so although he is an unordained layman, Brother Damien immediately starts calling him "Brother Dutton".
1888
  • Mother Marianne, Sister Leopoldina, Sister Vicent arrive at Kalawao settlement in Molokai.
  • In answer to Father Damien's request for buildings to house trained nurses from the Sisters of St. Francis and young, unmarried women patients, Charles R. Bishop finances the building of several buildings at Kalaupapa, called Bishop Home.
    Read more about Charles R. Bishop.
1889
  • Father Damien, 49, dies of leprosy on April 15 - Monday of Holy Week.
  • Robert Louis Stevenson visits the peninsula and becomes friends with the nuns and, to their despair, mixes freely with the lepers, and plays with the children. His sorry state of health makes him more susceptible to infection, and Sister Marianne admonishes him. Before leaving the island, Stevenson presents the children's home with many gifts, including a piano, and addresses a little poem to the Sisters.
    Read the poem.
1890
  • Population shift from Kalawao to Kalaupapa accelerates.
1901
  • Bayview Home for aged and helpless opens at Kalaupapa.
1905
  • The Charles R. Bishop Trust repairs and improves the Bishop Home for women and girls.
  • Father Damien is slandered by the Reverend Mr. Hyde, a Protestant minister, for his methods of caring for the lepers. Robert Louis Stevenson writes an impassioned defense of Damien with the publication of an open letter entitled "Father Damien". Read more about The Strange Case of Father Damien and Robert Louis Stevenson.
1907
  • Jack London and his wife spend a week at Kalaupapa. He later writes several articles based on his experience there, including The Lepers Of Molokai, published by The Women's Home Companion. Read the article.
1909
  • First Kalaupapa Hospital opens at base of cliffs.
  • Federal Leprosy Investigation Station opens at Kalawao.
  • Powerful lighthouse built at end of peninsula.
1913
  • Federal Leprosy Investigation Station closes.
1918
  • Mother Marianne dies at the age of 80.
1925
  • Robert Cooke of the Mutual Telephone Co. wireless department installs 2 radio receivers at Kalaupapa.
  • Robert Cooke is selected to succeed John D. McVeigh as superintendent at Kalaupapa on July 1st.
  • Father Peter d'Orgeval comes to Kalaupapa - will become priest in residence.
1929
  • Vacant Federal Leprosy Investigation Station dismantled.
1931
  • Brother Joseph Dutton dies at age 88.
1932
  • Baldwin Home at Kalawao closes. Patients move into former Kalaupapa Hospital, renamed New Baldwin Home.
1934
  • Olivia Robello Breitha is diagnosed as having Leprosy and is sent to Kalihi Hospital.
1936
  • Robert Cooke oversees the return to Belgium of Father Damien's remains at the request of King Leopold. The people of Kalaupapa are extremely upset to be losing their beloved Damien.
1937
  • Olivia Robello Breitha is notified treatment is no longer of benefit to her and she will be sent to Kalaupapa.
  • Ernie Pyle visits Kalaupapa, devotes a chapter in his book Home Country to describing his visit. He and Doc become friends and correspond until Doc's death. Read the chapter.
1938
  • "Mother" Alice Kahokuluna comes to Kanaana Hou Church, takes part in restoration of Siloama Church.
1939
  • Robert "Doc" Cooke, age 52, dies of a heart attack on May 18 at his Kalaupapa residence.
1945
  • On April 18, while on the frontlines with American marines on an island four miles west of Okinawa, Ernie Pyle is killed by a Japanese sniper bullet.
1946
  • Sulfone drugs are introduced in Hawaii. Hansen's disease is put in remission and the sufferers are no longer contagious. The fewer than 100 former patients remaining on the peninsula are declared free to travel or relocate elsewhere, but most chose to remain where they have lived for so long.
1949
  • Hale Mohalu Hospital is established at Pearl City.
1966
  • Deteriorating Siloama totally rebuilt on location.
1969
  • State Board of Health ends policy of segregation.
  • Statues of Father Damien put in both national and state capitol buildings.
1976
  • Congresswoman Patsy Mink introduces legislation to place peninsula in National Park system.
1977
  • Father Damien declared "Venerable", First step toward canonization.
1980
  • Kalaupapa National Historic Park becomes a reality.
1981
  • The advent of multi-drug therapy, or MDT (a combination of rifampicin, clofazimine, and dapsone) make a more rapid cure possible.
1995
  • On June 4, 1995, Pope John Paul II beatified Blessed Damien and gave him his official spiritual title. On December 20, 1999, Jorge Medina Cardinal Estevez, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, confirmed the November 1999 decision of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops to place Blessed Damien on the liturgical calendar with the rank of optional memorial. His official Feast Day is on May 10 of each year.

    The Roman Catholic Diocese of Honolulu is currently awaiting findings by the Vatican as to the authenticity of several miracles attributed to Damien. Upon confirmation that those miracles are genuine, Blessed Damien could then be canonized and receive the title of Saint Damien of Molokai.

    In Blessed Damien's role as patron of those with HIV and AIDS, the world's only Roman Catholic memorial chapel to those who have died of this disease, at the Église Saint-Pierre-Apôtre in Montreal, is consecrated to him.
2005
  • Mother Marianne is beatified by the Catholic Church, the second of three steps required for sainthood.                        

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  • http://www.hawaiicatholicherald.org/Home/tabid/256/newsid884/3792/D...

     

     
    After 85 years, Wisconsin’s Brother Dutton School closes


    Posted on Friday, August 05, 2011 (Archive on Saturday, August 20, 2011)
    Posted by pdownes  Contributed by pdownes

     

    Wisconsin bid aloha this summer to an old and dear link to Catholic Hawaii.

    An elementary school in that state, with a legacy tied to a man who served beside St. Damien of Molokai, closed its doors after 85 years of Catholic education.

    The Catholic Herald, the newspaper for the Wisconsin Diocese of Madison, reported the June 4 Mass and farewell celebration at Brother Dutton School in the town of Beloit, Wis. About 500 people gathered to honor the school and to pay homage to its cherished history and tradition.

    Opened in the early 1900s, Brother Dutton School was named as a tribute to the “heroic courage” of Catholic convert Ira “Brother Joseph” Dutton, who worked alongside St. Damien in Kalawao and Kalaupapa, serving the needs of Hawaii’s Hansen’s disease sufferers.

    Dutton was born in Stowe, Vt., but grew up in Janesville, Wis., about 15 miles north of Beloit, which sits on the state’s southern border. He fought in the U.S. Civil War and later became a military captain with the 13th Wisconsin Volunteers.

    In 1886, recently converted to Catholicism, he traveled to Molokai to join St. Damien in his work. It was his way to atone for a failed marriage and the years of alcoholism that dogged him following the Civil War.

    He assisted St. Damien for the last three years of the priest’s life, then stayed in Kalaupapa for 41 years more. He was a layman, not a religious brother, but affectionately called “Brother” by Father Damien. His baptismal name was Joseph.

    Dutton died in 1931. His grave lies next to that of St. Damien next to St. Philomena Church in Kalawao.

    A Wisconsin priest who lived at the time of Dutton was awed by the former soldier’s charitable spirit. So when Father Joseph Hanz of St. Jude Parish in Beloit opened his parish school, he named the establishment after Dutton.

    According to an excerpt in the “Book of Beloit,” published in 1936, Brother Dutton School was built as “a monument to the courageous devotion and unselfish sacrifice of Brother Joseph Dutton, ‘Saint of Molokai.’”

    Ground was broken for Brother Dutton School in 1926, on Dutton’s birthday, April 27. Classes began on Nov. 28 that year, with 160 students in five grades. The book “Called to Glory, St. Jude’s Church, Beloit, Wisconsin, 1908-1983” notes that St. Jude Parish financed the entire school operation. No fees were charged to students for tuition or textbooks.

    Father Hanz wrote to Dutton on Molokai, notifying him of the grade school built in his name and of the possibility of creating a Brother Dutton National Memorial High School in the future. Dutton replied saying that having the schools “near the scene of my childhood and boyhood days in Wisconsin, is of all things dearest to my heart.”

    “And may God prosper the plan and bless all the helpers,” Dutton wrote to Father Hanz.

    Dutton maintained a personal relationship with the Beloit school. He presented Father Hanz with a special U.S. flag, which was placed on the school flagpole on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception in 1928. Students sent their Lenten alms to Dutton for his work on Molokai. They celebrated Dutton’s birthday with an annual program.

    After Brother Dutton School graduated its first ninth grade class of seven students, Father Hanz created a publication called “Fraira,” “fra” meaning “brother” and “Ira” being Dutton’s birth name.

    “‘Fraira’ — it is a charmed term,” Father Hanz wrote. “To us, the Brother Dutton School pupils, it stands for an ideal. He belongs to the [leprosy patients] of Molokai. He belongs to us — to the Rock — to Wisconsin — to America — to the world.”

    Father Hanz visited Dutton in Honolulu in January 1931. Two months after they met for the very first time, Dutton died on March 26. A memorial Mass for Brother Dutton was held at St. Jude Parish in Wisconsin on April 24, 1931.

    In the years that followed, Brother Dutton School remained a notable fixture in the Diocese of Madison. According to a story in the Madison Catholic Herald, enrollment peaked in the 1940s, ‘50s and ‘70s.

    The announcement of the closing of Brother Dutton School came this past January. Madison’s Catholic Herald reported that enrollment at the school had been declining for years. Brother Dutton School had 52 students in 2010-2011.

    Despite its closing, many alumni said the history of Brother Dutton School will not be forgotten.

    “I think memories from the school will live on in hearts of many people,” alumna Joyce Loizzo, Brother Dutton School class of 1937, told the Madison Catholic Herald.

    Other Molokai-related Catholic schools outside Hawaii include Saint Damien Grade School in Calgary, Canada, and Damien High School in La Verne, Calif.


    Posted on Friday, August 05, 2011 (Archive on Saturday, August 20, 2011)
    Posted by pdownes  Contributed by pdownes

     

    ********************************************************

    Note:  Brother Dutton lived on the borders of the South.  Although another article mentioned that he joined the North, but that doesn't seem to be true.

     

    All SOUTHERN American Civil War Officers after the War 1863-1865 had three (3) options:  (1) to be

    imprisoned or (2) to serve their country "on assignment" or

    (3) flee to other nations and sign up for other nations military.

     

    Note to other nations:  You just may find that many issues which resulted in American terror

    activities have ties to some American Civil War person in your ranks.  Suggest that you do

    a review of all who entered your militaries over time because you may find a number of

    problematic issues.

     

    Based on the fact of finding a number of American Civil War officers in the Hawaiian Islands,

    and documented in my book PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC:  Charles Reed Bishop and Friends,

    and articles written over time, it appears that Joseph Dutton aka Brother Joseph Dutton was

    on assignment and working for the U.S. in the Hawaiian Islands, and supporting the role

    of the Catholic Church, the Vatican, who did sign the agreement to help breakdown

    the Monarchy governments worldwide under the 1820 Secret Treaty of Verona with Austria,

    France, Prussia, Russia, England, the U.S., and the Vatican who was complemented for

    maintaining "obedience" amongst the people.

     

    I will be posting a very important article which was found in Brother Dutton's personal files........

    ..so all of you TRUE RESEARCHERS WHO ACTUALLY DOES RESEARCH, find more goodies

    at the Archives, Honolulu, Oahu; Bureau of Conveyances, Honolulu, Oahu; and all the

    institutions calling itself a library, etc. in the Hawaiian Islands.

     

    Long live Ko Hawaii Pae Aina/Kingdom of Hawaii/Hawaiian Kingdom/Hawaiian Islands/

    Hawaiian archipelago!

     

    Mahalo Ke Akua, kupuna kahiko, our wonderful researchers......

     

    aloha.

     

    aloha.

    eyes 068

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGKx2LNbF5M

    Sudden Rush- Messenjah's (Feat.Amy Hanaialii Gilom)

    Sudden Rush- Messenjah's (Feat.Amy Hanaialii Gilom)

    2 years ago 4,201 views


    HulaDancer.gif

     

    hawaiianpainting.jpg


    QueenLiliuokalani.jpg


    Queen Liliuokalani prophesied and stated the following:

     


    “Oh, honest Americans, as Christians hear me for my downtrodden people! Their form
    of Government is as dear to them as yours is Precious to you. Quite as warmly s you love
    your country, so they love theirs. With all your Goodly possessions, covering a
    territory so immense that there yet remain parts unexplored, possessing islands that,
    although new at hand, had to be neutral ground in time of war, do not covet the little
    vineyard of Naboth’s, so far from your shores, lest the Punishment of Ahab fall upon you,
    if not in Your day, in that of your children, for “be not deceived, God is not
    mocked.” The people to whom your fathers told of the living God, and taught to call
    “Father”, and whom the sons now seek to despoil and destroy, are crying aloud
    to Him in the time of trouble, and He will keep His promise, and will listen to the
    Voices of His Hawaiian children lamenting for their homes.”


    Kaulana Na Pua

    Hidden behind a deceptively light tune, this protest song tells of the ardent opposition of Native Hawaiians to the annexation of their nation to ...

      

     

     

    • 2766661979?profile=RESIZE_1024x10242766662492?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024
      • 2766661815?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024Note:  This is evidence of Genocide...........for these articles, pamphlets, files have been criminally removed from our Kingdom of Hawaii records.

         

        This article was saved in Brother Dutton's files.

         

        Although documents after 1893 are also recorded here, for our purposes the 1893 and earlier must be returned.

         

        DEPARTMENT REPORTS.

         

        General Superintendent of Census, 1890

         

        President.  Bureau of Immigration.  1884; 1886; 1888; 1890.

         

        Postmaster General 1882

         

        Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1845; 1850; 1852; 1854.

         

        Secretary of War and the Navy, 1854.

         

        Secretary of War, 1862.

         

        Major Commanding the King's Guard and Volunteer Forces, 1884.

         

        Attorney General, 1845; 1882; 1884; 1886; 1887; 1890

         

        Chief Justice 1854; 1855; 1856

         

        Minister of Public Instruction, 1854

         

        President Board of Education 1862; 1870

         

        Minister of Finance 1856; 1858

         

        Board of Health 1888

         

        Minister of Interior 1845; 1858; 1868

         

        Note:  The highlighted entries surround government, military activities prior to and post the American Civil War 1863-1865. 

         

        The other entries can basically be read easily.

         

        *************************************************

         

        Notice that the "Rules for conducting business in the House of Nobles 1854; "Act for the Government of Masters and Servants; Act upon the Subject of Diplomatic Privileges and Exemptions; Foreign Office Notice re Passports, 1850; Proclamation of Neutrality, 1854; "General Order No. 1.  Discipline of the Navy, 1887"; Official Report on Harbor Laws, 1845; King's Speeches, 1845-54, 1854-61;  Reports on the King's Personal Accounts, 1853-4; Special Instructions to Hawaiian Consular Officialsl, 1877; Standing Orders fort the King's Guard. 1884;  Statement of Applications for Government Lands, 1882-4;  A Brief Account of the Hawaiian Govt. Survey, Alexander, 1889.; Receipts and Expenditures of the Hawaiian Treasury, Apl. 1, 1888 to Apl. 1, 1889. and many other important documents are listed...........

         

        Note to students:  There's so much information to research and so much of dissertations that can come out of these documents alone.........

         

        Note to defenders of Ko Hawaii Pae Aina/Kingdom of Hawaii aka's:  The above remains evidence for all, along with the numbers of posts here on Maoliworld.com at theiolani.blogspot.com http://myweb.ecomplanet.com/GORA8037 and by googling my name on the web, etc.

         

         

        aloha.

        eyes 068

         

        Find more artists like Hawaiian Nation at Myspace Music


        HulaDancer.gif

         

        hawaiianpainting.jpg


        QueenLiliuokalani.jpg


        Queen Liliuokalani prophesied and stated the following:

         


        “Oh, honest Americans, as Christians hear me for my downtrodden people! Their form
        of Government is as dear to them as yours is Precious to you. Quite as warmly s you love
        your country, so they love theirs. With all your Goodly possessions, covering a
        territory so immense that there yet remain parts unexplored, possessing islands that,
        although new at hand, had to be neutral ground in time of war, do not covet the little
        vineyard of Naboth’s, so far from your shores, lest the Punishment of Ahab fall upon you,
        if not in Your day, in that of your children, for “be not deceived, God is not
        mocked.” The people to whom your fathers told of the living God, and taught to call
        “Father”, and whom the sons now seek to despoil and destroy, are crying aloud
        to Him in the time of trouble, and He will keep His promise, and will listen to the
        Voices of His Hawaiian children lamenting for their homes.”


        Kaulana Na Pua

        Hidden behind a deceptively light tune, this protest song tells of the ardent opposition of Native Hawaiians to the annexation of their nation to ...

          

  • http://myweb.ecomplanet.com/GORA8037

    PIRATES of the Pacific

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    The following shows the CONTENTS of the book PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC: CHARLES REED BISHOP AND FRIENDS

    <="" p="" align="CENTER"> Dedication Introduction Drawing PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC Aldrich, William Arthur Alexander, William DeWitt Alexander, Samuel Thomas Allen, Elisha Hunt Allen, William F 2 Andrews, Lorrin Armstrong, Richard Armstrong, Samuel C. 3 Armstrong, William N. Ashford, Clarence Wilder Ashford, Marguerite Kamehaokalani 4 Atherton, Joseph Ballard Austin, Jonathan Baldwin, Henry Perrine Belknap, George 5 Bishop, Charles Reed 6 Bishop, Eben Faxon 9 Bishop, Sereno E. Bolte, C. Bond, Edward P. Bowen, William Boyd. E.S. 10 Boyd, J. H. Boyd, R. N. Brewer, Charles Brewer II, Charles 11 Brown, Charles Augustus 12 Brown, George 13 Brown, Godfrey Brown, Jacob Foster Brown, M. Bush, Gavien Fred Bush, John Edward 14 Camara, Jr., J.M. Campbell, James Carlisle, John Griffith Carter, Charles L. Carter, George Robert Carter, Henry Alpheus Pierce 16 Cartwright, Bruce Castle, Samuel Northrup 17 Castle, William R. Chamberlain, Levi Cleghorn, Archibald Scott 18 Coffman, De Witt Cooke, Amos Starr Cooke, Charles 19 Cooper, Henry Ernest Cummins, John A. Cummings, W. H. Damon, Edward Damon, Samuel Mills Davies, Theophilus Harris 20 Day, Francis R. Dayton, David Delameter, N.B. Dillingham, Benjamin Franklin Dillingham, Walter 21 Dimond, Henry Dodge, F. S. Dole, Sanford Ballard Dominis, John O. 22 Dowsett, James Isaac Emmeluth, John Fisher, Joseph Henry 23 Forbes, Anderson Oliver Frear, Walter Francis Gibson, Walter Murray Gilman, Gorham D. 24 Glade, H. F. Godkin, Edwin L. Green, William Lowthan Gresham, Walter Quintin 25 Gulick, Charles T. Hackfeld, Heinrich Hall, Edwin Oscar Hall, W. W. Harris, Charles Coffin 26 Hartwell, Alfred Stedman Hassinger, J.A. Herrick, C. f. Hobbs, L. G. Hoes, R. R. Hoffman Holt, Robert Hooper, William Northey Iaukea, Curtis Piehu 27 Ihihi, I. Irwin, William Jones, G. W. C. Jones, Peter Cushman Judd, Albert Francis 28 Judd, Bernice Judd, Charles Hastings Judd, Gerrit Parmele 29 Kaai, Simon K. Kaia, Maria Kalanianaole/Kuhio/Prince Kuhio/Kuhio Kalanianaole 30 Kalu, D Kaluna, William Kamakaia, Samuel K Kanakanui, S. M. 31 Kauanui Keohokalole, Morris K. King, James A. Kinney, William A. Ku, Sam Kulike 32 Laird Lawrence, Robert Lee, William Little Liwai, J. Low, Frederick Ferdinand Lucas, Albert Ludlow, N. Lyons, C. S. McCandless, J. A. 33 McChesney, F. W. McGrew, John S. MacCarthur, Charles L. Macy, George Mahaulu, S. Marsden, Joseph 34 Meheula, H. Moore, E. K. Moreno, Celso Morgan, James F. Mott Smith, John Nakuina, Moses K. Neumann, Paul Notley, Charles 35 Oleson, William B. Olney, Richard Oxnard, Henry T. Parker, Samuel Peterson, A. P. 36 Pratt, J. W. Preston, Edward Procter, John Robert Ralston, William C. Reeder, F. W. Rice, William Hyde Robertson, George Rosa, Geo 37 Rose, Geo C. Rowell, William E. Schurz, Carl Shipman, William Silva, Manuel Enos Simpson, W. E Smith, William Owen 38 Soper, J. H. Spalding, Z.S. Spreckels, Claus Stelker, M. Stevens, John Leavitt Swinburne, W. T. 39 Thrum, Thomas G. Thurston, Lorrin Andrews Tracy, B. F. Vida, C. E. Waity, Henry E. Wall, W. E. 40 Ward, Curtis Perry Waterhouse, John Thomas White, Jno C. Whiting, William Austin Widemann, H.A. Wilcox, Albert S. Wilcox, Charles Wilcox, George N. Wilder, William C. 41 Wilder, Jr., W. O. Willis, C. J. Wundenburg, F. W. Wyllie, Robert C. Young, Alexander 42 Young, Lucien Ziegler, C. W. United States Presidents Family(ies)/Close Friends in Hawaii  Franklin Pierce – 14th President –Term: 1853 – 1857 43  Abraham Lincoln – 16th President – Term: 1861-1865  Grover Cleveland – 22nd & 24th President – Terms: 1885-1889 and 1893-1897  Theodore Roosevelt – 26th President – Terms: 1901-1905 and 1905-1909  Franklin D. Roosevelt – 32nd President – Terms: 1933-1941; and 1941-1945;  John F. Kennedy – 35th President – Term: 1961-1963 Santa Claus from Hawaii 45  Original Owner of MACY’S: Roland H. Macy’s relatives in Hawaii  General Electric Credit Corporation  Mutual Shares Corporation  Michael A. Price  Goldman & Sachs, limited partnership with Sidney J. Weinberg  Ed Finkelstein  Mark Handler  Art Reiner  Bobby Friedman  Hal Kahn  Sidney J. Weinberg  Dan I. Hale  Kamehameha Schools/KSBE/Bishop Estates aka’s  George Macy  Internal Revenue Service of the United States government  George Macy, Jr.  LIBERTY HOUSE  MACY’S Commentary Overview of the PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC -Americans -Bankers -Genealogy Frauds -Judges -Lawyers -Missionary or Missionary descendant -Planters or Plantation employees -Pacific Cable Company/cable interests -Suspected Spy (includes Masons, etc.) -Unidentified ---Totals ---Grand Totals -----Civil War Generals in Hawaii or Family in Hawaii Summary Notes References About the Author Other Books Available



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    Note:  There's a number of American Civil War Generals or their Families Who lived in the Hawaiian at the time of the criminal, premeditated period of dethroning Queen Liliuokalani in 1893.

     

    Brother Joseph Dutton was one of them.  Barack Obama, current U.S. President is a descendant of another American Civil War General named Robert E. Lee. 

     

    But for this articles purposes, let us focus on Brother Joseph Dutton who was part of the concerted effort to assume, criminally assume a friendly, neutral nation under the leadership of Sovereign from a Monarchical government, the true Hawaiian government.

     

    http://rolwaipahu.org/twojosephs.htm

     

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    Brother Joseph Dutton

    Brother Joseph Dutton of Molokai

    Ira Dutton, known to the world as Brother Dutton, was born in Stowe, Vermont on April 27, 1843 and in 1847 his family moved to Janesville, Wisconsin where he spent his youth. When the Civil War broke out he joined the Northern Army and served with distinction in the Quartmaster Corp rising to the rank of Captain. He was engaged in many battles. Following the war he volunteered to find the dead that were scattered on the battlefields and bring them to a common burial site, which eventually became the National Cemetery.Dutton entered into an unstable marriage that eventually ended in divorce. He turned to alcohol and drank heavily for the next few years. He was very patriotic and realizing that he was heading into oblivion, he took a vow to never touch a drop of whiskey again and he kept that vow for the remainder of his life. He sought to seek atonement for his transgressions and became a convert to the Catholic faith, taking the name Joseph at Baptism-not realizing that eventually he would meet another Jospeh who would change the course of his life. Dutton entered the Trappist Monastery in Kentucky but after two and a half years of strict discipline, fast and silence, he realized that this was not his true vocation and he left the monastery with the blessing of the Abbot.Learning about the plight of Father Damien, he knew that he was called to serve this heroic man. He gave away all of his possessions, went on a steamer to Hawaii and arrived at Kalawao in July 1886 offering himself to Father Damien without any request for any recompense. For almost two years he worked side by side with Damien, helping with his projects of building and caring for these isolated outcasts. After Damien's death he stayed on Molokai for the rest of his life, spending almost 42 more years caring for the young boys and men. He never contracted leprosy and became widely known by many distinguished figuers in the United States and foreign countries, including President Wilson and President Theodore Roosevelt who sent the Pacific Fleet to pass Molokai and dip their colors in salute to this heroic patriot. Brother Dutton died on March 26, 1931 and is buried in the grave next to Damien at St. Philomena Church, Kalawao.

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    http://www.nps.gov/nr/feature/asia/2005/park.htm

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    Brother Dutton, along with the Brothers of the sacred Heart, managed the Baldwin Home for Boys in Kalaupapa
    Photograph courtesy of the National Park Service http://www.nps.gov/kala/docs/start.htm

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    St. Philomena Catholic Church in Kalowao--- a small wooden building was being used for Catholic church services when Father Damien arrived at Kalawao in 1873, which was twice enlarged and finally completed in 1889 by Brother Joseph Dutton and the patients
    Photograph courtesy of the National Park Service

     

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