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Moses Kuaea
Native Hawaiian clergyman and politician

Moses Kuaea

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Native Hawaiian clergyman and politician
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Biography

Moses Kuaea (c. 1824 – May 5, 1884) was a Native Hawaiian clergyman and politician of the Hawaiian Kingdom. He was pastor of the Kaumakapili Church from 1874 to 1882 and was known as an eloquent preacher. He also served as a member of the Privy Council of State for King Kalākaua and was his Minister of Finance from August 14 to September 27, 1880.

Early life

He was born around 1824, based on his obituary which stated he was sixty years old at his death.

American missionary historian Orramel Hinckley Gulick, writing in 1918, stated that Kuaea was rescued from a hole in ground which his parents were planned to bury him alive in, as an act of infanticide. He was raised by the passerby who rescued him. Gulick stated that Kuaea "stated that he took the name of Moses, probably upon the occasion of his baptism, for the reason that as Pharaoh's daughter called the infant's name Moses, and said: 'Because I drew him out of the water,' so he, himself, had been drawn out of the ground". However, modern research cast doubt on missionary accounts of Hawaiian infanticide. His obituary in missionary newspapers The Friend called him Matthew Kuaea.

A member of the ʻAhahui ʻEuanelio Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian Evangelical Association), Kuaea wrote the article Culture, Sale, and Use of Awa in 1886 for the association. Scholar Jean Charlot described him as "a writer of superior Hawaiian, for example, employing an extensive and precise vocabulary to describe the production and use of ʻawa while strongly condemning the use of ‘awa and the relaxation of laws against it, he provided a rich description of its place in classical Hawaiian culture—including sayings, prayers, and religious and medical uses—and also of its syncretistic use with Christian elements." Kuaea also wrote a revision of Lorenzo Lyons' Haʻawina Mua (First Lessons), a Sunday school book published in 1878. He also served as an advisor to the Hawaiian language newspaper Ka Nupepa Kuokoa.

Missionary descendant and First Lady of Hawaii, Mary Dillingham Frear wrote that "Kuaea is remembered by child eyes as an unusually handsome figure—a man of fine physique with beautiful white hair and a face and bearing often likened to Henry Ward Beecher."

In 1870, the American newspaper Hartford Courant described Kuaea as the "Daniel Webster of Hawaii".

Pastor of Kaumakapili Church

Kaumakapili Church, before it burned down, c. 1897–1900

Kuaea served as pastor of the native church at Hauʻula, Oahu and later at the church of American missionary John Smith Emerson at Waialua, Oahu. In 1874, Kuaea was appointed the pastor of Kaumakapili Church, the church for common people in Honolulu, succeeding George Washington Pilipō. He served as a pastor until 1882 when he resigned due to illness. He lived for months under languishing conditions until his resignation was accepted. He was succeeded by the interim pastor Henry Waterhouse from 1882 to 1883 before the appointment of Hawaiian pastor John Waiamau who served in that position until 1896.

During his pastorship, Kuaea was active in raising funds for the building of the second church building for Kaumakapili. He tore down the original church building. Construction on the new structure began in 1881 with the laying of the cornerstone by Princess Liliʻuokalani (future queen) on September 2 and was completed on June 10, 1888 (after Kuaea's death). This edifice was burned down in the Great Honolulu Chinatown Fire of 1900 which was started to control an outbreak of bubonic plague.

On November 16, 1874, during Kalākaua's 38th birthday morning services at Kawaiahaʻo Church prior to his state visit to the United States, Kuaea gave a speech to the king and the assembled worshipers at the church. Considered an eloquent preacher, He offered a prayer, praised the king's efforts to save the nation's agricultural interest, and asked for the people to pray for his safety during his upcoming trip.

Political career

On, December 5, 1876, Kuaea was appointed a member of the Commission to Increase the Original Hawaiian Race. This commission was part of Kalākaua's vision of Hoʻolulu Lāhui (increasing the nation), an effort to combat the depopulation of the Native Hawaiian people. He served on the Privy Council of State from June 5, 1879 to 1882.

On August 14, 1884, King Kalākaua appointed Kuaea as the Minister of Finance. The king had been at odds with his cabinet ministers for some time, and dismissed his entire cabinet on August 14. He appointed a new cabinet with Italian adventurer Celso Caesar Moreno as the Minister of Foreign Affairs, John E. Bush as the Minister of the Interior, W. Claude Jones as the Attorney General, and Kuaea as the Minister of Finance. Out of these men, only Bush had any significant political experience. The American minister to Hawaii James M. Comly described these group as "for the most part grotesque in unfitness." The foreign diplomatic corps stationed in Hawaii refused to acknowledge the new cabinet especially Moreno's position. Mass meetings were held in Honolulu, including at Kaumakapili Church, and community leaders urged Kalākaua to remove Moreno. On August 18, Kalākaua accepted Moreno's resignation from the cabinet.

William Lowthian Green was appointed on September 22 foreign minister in place of Moreno with the intention of retaining Kuaea and Bush. Jones, a second rate lawyer, was expected to resign. However, the king dismissed the entire cabinet on September 27, retaining only Green. John Smith Walker replaced Kuaea as finance minister.

Personal life

On September 8, 1870, Kuaea married Tamar Makahiki (1851–1899), a student of American missionary Maria Ogden at the Kawaiahaʻo Seminary for Girls, as his second wife. They had three children. Their daughter Esther U. Kuala Kuakea (1874–1944) attended the Kawaiahaʻo Seminary for Girls and married 1896 Solomon David Koki and had two children.

Kuaea died on May 5, 1884, at Waikahalulu, his residence in Honolulu, at the age of sixty. The cause of death was reported as "a softening of the brain", likely a stroke. He was survived by his widow and three children. His funeral, officiated by the first pastor of Kaumakapili, Lowell Smith, on May 6, was well-attended. Members of the Hawaiian legislature attended his funeral and wore an emblem of mourning out of respect for Kuaea's former association with the government.

His nephew and namesake was Moses Kuaea Nākuina (1867–1911), a politician, novelist, and traveling evangelist of the Hawaiian Evangelical Association, who married Hawaiian female judge Emma Kaʻili Metcalf Beckley Nākuina.

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