Edward Griffin Hitchcock Explained

Edward Griffin Hitchcock
Spouse:Mary Tenney Castle
Children:6
Parents:Harvey Rexford Hitchcock
Rebecca Howard
Birth Date:20 January 1837
Birth Place:Lahaina, Maui
Death Place:Kohala
Occupation:Sheriff

Edward Griffin "Holy Terror" Hitchcock (January 20, 1837 – October 9, 1898) was a law enforcement officer in the Kingdom of Hawaii, who rose to the position of Marshal of the Republic of Hawaii.

Life

Edward Griffin Hitchcock was born January 20, 1837, in Lahaina on the island of Maui. His father was early missionary Harvey Rexford Hitchcock (1800–1855), and mother was Rebecca Howard (1808–1890). They were assigned the mission station called Kaluaʻaha on the eastern end of the island of Molokaʻi.[1] He attended Punahou School from 1847 to 1853.[2] He married Mary Tenney Castle (1838–1926), daughter of Castle & Cooke founder Samuel Northrup Castle (1808–1894) on April 11, 1862.[3] He managed the family sugarcane plantation at Pāpaʻikou.[4]

He was appointed as Sheriff of the island of Hawaiʻi on April 5, 1888.[5] In December 1889, deputy sheriff Rufus Anderson Lyman informed him of the lynching case of Japanese immigrant Katsu Goto in Honokaʻa. Hitchcock tracked down his suspects who were tried and found guilty, but they were later pardoned and freed by the new government.[6] The episode was dramatized in a 2001 play by Eric Anderson "Another Heaven",[7] and a memorial was erected in Honokaʻa for Goto.[8]

After the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii in early 1893, Marshal Charles Burnett Wilson was viewed as loyal to deposed Queen Liliʻuokalani.[9] Hitchcock replaced Wilson as Marshal, the highest law enforcement officer in the country.[10] His effectiveness at rounding up suspects and his ties to missionaries earned him the nickname "Holy Terror".[11] [12] [13]

He lived in the capital Honolulu while serving as Marshal of the Provisional Government of Hawaii and the Republic of Hawaii.One of the first of several uprisings he faced was called the Leper War. He ordered victims of Leprosy to the remote colony of Kalaupapa. Some on the island of Kaua'i had to be captured by force.[12] The Kalaupapa Leper Colony was considered more like a prison than a medical facility. A leader of the uprising named Koʻolau was dramatized in the Jack London short story "Koolau the Leper".[14]

The 1895 Counter-Revolution in Hawaii, was an organized armed revolt on the capital. After an initial victory by the Royalists, on January 7, 1895, President Sanford B. Dole declared martial law and employed troops and artillery. Hitchcock eventually arrested the leaders and the Queen. Hitchcock resigned on August 1, 1895, and Arthur M. Brown, who had served as Hitchcock's deputy, became the new Marshal. He returned to his island Sheriff duties, until he was appointed circuit court judge of the island of Hawaiʻi in October 1896 replacing Antone Rosa.[15]

Death and legacy

He died October 9, 1898, in the Kohala district of Hawaiʻi island.[16] He and Mary had six children who grew to adulthood.Harvey Rexford Hitchcock was born August 17, 1864, married Hannah Julia Meyer (1866–1912), daughter of German businessman Rudolph Wilhelm Meyer on February 18, 1891, and died August 23, 1931.[17] [18] Their son Harvey Rexford Hitchcock, Jr. (1891-1958) was on the 1913 College Football All-America Team. Mary Rebecca Hitchcock was born June 27, 1866, married Frederick Galen Snow (1858–1926) in 1898, and died October 9, 1958.[19] Harriet Castle Hitchcock was born September 15, 1868, and died August 26, 1933.Edward Northrup Hitchcock was born June 25, 1870, married Clara Louise Fasset and died September 29, 1901.Eloise Tenney Hitchcock was born January 8, 1873, married Frank Tallant Smith in 1895, and died August 31, 1899, in San Francisco.Mabel Winchester Hitchcock was born November 1, 1876, married Bertrand Ferdidand Schoen, and died May 3, 1963.Two other daughters died young.[19] His nephew D. Howard Hitchcock (1861–1943) became a painter in what was called the Volcano School because of the use of the volcanoes of Hawaiʻi island as subjects.

Popular culture

He was portrayed by Johnathan Schaeck in the 2022 historical drama The Wind & the Reckoning.[20]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: John Haskell Hewitt . Williams College and foreign missions: biographical sketches of Williams College men who have rendered special service to the cause of foreign missions. 1914 . Pilgrim Press . 141–147.
  2. Book: Punahou School. William De Witt Alexander. Oahu college: list of trustees, presidents, instructors, matrons, librarians, superintendents of grounds and students, 1841-1906. Historical sketch of Oahu college. 1907. Hawaiian Gazette Co.. 48.
  3. Web site: Oahu 1832-1910 marriage records . state archives digital collections . state of Hawaii . May 13, 2010 .
  4. Web site: Register of the Mauna Kea Sugar Company (Onomea Sugar Company) Papaikou, Hawaii, 1885-1947 . Plantation Archives of the Hawaiian Sugar Plantation Association . University of Hawaii . May 16, 2010 .
  5. News: Notice . Ululani, Governess of Hawaii . Hawaiian Gazette . May 1, 1888 . May 13, 2010 .
  6. Book: Bob Dye . Gaylord C. Kubota . The Lynching of Katsu Goto . Hawaiʻi chronicles: island history from the pages of Honolulu magazine . July 1996 . University of Hawaiʻi Press . 197–214 . 978-0-8248-1829-6 . 2010-05-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100609193546/http://clear.uhwo.hawaii.edu/KatsuGoto.html . 2010-06-09 . dead .
  7. News: Isle murder play has historical basis . John Berger . Honolulu Star-Bulletin . May 28, 2006 . May 17, 2010 .
  8. Web site: Honoka'a Town: The Katsu Goto Memorial . Honoka'a Business Association . May 17, 2010 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110311133911/http://www.honokaa.org/experience-hamakua/honokaa-town/ . March 11, 2011 .
  9. Web site: Wilson, Charles B. office record . state archives digital collections . state of Hawaii . 2010-01-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303185741/http://archives1.dags.hawaii.gov/gsdl/collect/governme/index/assoc/HASH0169/b46db112.dir/Wilson%2C%20Charles%20B.jpg . 2016-03-03 . dead.
  10. Web site: Hitchcock, Edward Griffin office record . state archives digital collections . state of Hawaii . May 13, 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120320234832/http://archives1.dags.hawaii.gov/gsdl/collect/governme/index/assoc/HASH01f8/243d5735.dir/Hitchcock,%20Edward%20Griffin.jpg . March 20, 2012 . dead .
  11. Book: William G. Bailey . The encyclopedia of police science. March 1, 1995. Taylor & Francis . 978-0-8153-1331-1 . 366.
  12. Book: Tony Gould . A disease apart: leprosy in the modern world . August 26, 2005 . Macmillan . 978-0-312-30502-4 . 103.
  13. Book: Sandhya Rajendra Shukla . Heidi Tinsman . Imagining our Americas: toward a transnational frame . June 30, 2007 . Duke University Press. 978-0-8223-3961-8 . 157–158 .
  14. Book: Jack London . Koolau the Leper . The house of pride, and other tales of Hawaii . https://books.google.com/books?id=qcVEAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA47 . 1919 . The Macmillan company . 47–91.
  15. News: Hawaii Judgeship was well Settled: Sheriff E. G. Hitchcock Gets the Appointment . Hawaiian Gazette . October 30, 1896 . May 13, 2010 .
  16. News: Death of Judge Hitchcock . The Independent . October 13, 1898 . May 13, 2010 .
  17. Book: Annual report. Hawaiian Mission Children's Society. 1913. 61. 46.
  18. Web site: Descendants of Robert Royce of New London, Connecticut . May 13, 2010 .
  19. Book: Jonathan Tenney . The Tenney family, or, the descendants of Thomas Tenney, of Rowley, Massachusetts, 1638-1890 . 1891 . 1904 . Rumford Press . 446, 592.
  20. Web site: Stolfi-Tow . Daniela . 2022-08-27 . Hawaii Independent film Wind and The Reckoning getting closer to coming to the screen! . 2022-10-21 . Hawaii Reporter . en-US.