The pilgrims of Hawaii; their own story of their pilgrimage from New England and life work in the Sandwich Islands, now known as Hawaii; . hool was the Kohala BoysSchool, maintained for about fifty years by Rev. EliasBond. At Hanalei, on Kauai, for many years there con-tinued a Boys School under the guidance of successivemissionaries. The first of the Girls Schools was the WailukuSeminary, founded about 1836, by Rev. and Mrs. J. and Miss Lydia Brown. About 1840 it cameunder the guidance of Mr. Edward Bailey and MissMaria Ogden, who carried it on for ten or twelve yearslonger. Mrs. Fide


The pilgrims of Hawaii; their own story of their pilgrimage from New England and life work in the Sandwich Islands, now known as Hawaii; . hool was the Kohala BoysSchool, maintained for about fifty years by Rev. EliasBond. At Hanalei, on Kauai, for many years there con-tinued a Boys School under the guidance of successivemissionaries. The first of the Girls Schools was the WailukuSeminary, founded about 1836, by Rev. and Mrs. J. and Miss Lydia Brown. About 1840 it cameunder the guidance of Mr. Edward Bailey and MissMaria Ogden, who carried it on for ten or twelve yearslonger. Mrs. Fidelia Coan conducted for a time a smallGirls Boarding School in Hilo. Punahou School or Academy was originally foundedfor the education of the children of the missionaries,but is now open to all classes and races of our islandcommunity. The earlier Hawaiian ministers were prepared fortheir work in the Lahainaluna Seminary and, also, bythe personal teaching of individual missionaries. At the request of the higher chiefs a Boarding Schoolknown as The Royal School was established in Hono-lulu by the Mission in 1839, under the care of Kamehameha III. William C. Lunalilo, who reignedKing of Hawaii from —Feb. 1874


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