Samuel Thomas Alexander | |
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With his family in the 1880s
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Born |
Hanalei, Hawaii |
October 29, 1836
Died | September 10, 1904 Africa |
(aged 67)
Nationality | United States |
Occupation | Businessman |
Spouse(s) | Martha Eliza Cooke |
Children | Juliette Annie Montague Alexander Wallace M. Alexander Martha |
Parent(s) |
William Alexander Mary McKinney |
Samuel Thomas Alexander (October 29, 1836 – September 10, 1904) co-founded a major agricultural and transportation business in the Kingdom of Hawaii.
In November 1831, the Reverend William Patterson Alexander (1805–1884) and Mary Ann McKinney Alexander (1810–1888) arrived in April 1832 as missionaries to the Hawaiian Islands. Samuel Thomas was born October 29, 1836 at the Waiʻoli mission in what is now Hanalei on the northern coast of Kauaʻi island.
In 1843 the family moved to the Lahainaluna School, where they became friends with the family of Dwight Baldwin who had arrived in the previous company in 1831. Alexander's education was sporadic; he went to Punahou School for various times between 1841 and 1859 In 1857 he and Frederick S. Lyman (son of missionary David Belden Lyman) went to California in a late wave of the California Gold Rush, but came back empty handed. He then to Williams College for one year, and then Westfield School in Massachusetts. He followed his father's footsteps and taught at Lahainaluna briefly, but it was not his calling. In 1863 Alexander became manager of the Waiheʻe sugarcane plantation near Wailuku, hiring Henry Perrine Baldwin (1842–1911) as assistant.