Melancholy Death of Dr. Beraz.—By the arrival yesterday of the Nettie Merrill from Lahaina, intelligence was received of the finding on Tuesday morning last, of the dead body of Dr. H. Beraz, a much esteemed German physician residing on East Maui, under circumstances that indicate that he was either drowned in crossing the gulch of Kapia, orthat he had met with foul play. A letter from an intelligent native, Mr. Aholo, relates the following circumstances: Continue reading
Category Archives: Death Announcement
Death of W. O. Aiken, 1960.
Worth Aiken, 87, Businessman, Dies
Worth O. Aiken, prominent Island businessman, died yesterday in Berkley, California, where he had lived since his retirement in 1953.
Masonic rites will be held Tuesday in Berkley and services will be held here later.
Mr. Aiken, 87, was born in Robbinsville, North California, and came to the islands in 1891 on the Bakentine Planter to be a public school teacher in Wailuku, Maui. Continue reading
Death of Lonoehu (k) in Laupahoehoe, 1889.
BITS OF NEWS
O Kuokoa; Aloha oe:
Please show this important news: Seen was the dead body of Lonoehu (m) by D. Hoakimoa at 6 o’clock in the evening of Friday, the 9th of August, in the ocean right outside of the crooked harbor of Ulekii [?? ke awa kekee o Ulekii] in Laupahoehoe, and Kahaawilau dove in and got the body. Continue reading
More on the death of Lilia Kaleikau, 1922.
KAUAI’S OLDEST WOMAN DIES AT THE AGE OF 96 YEARS
Lilia Davis Kaleikau, grandmother of Senator John Andrew Kealoha passed away at her home in Kapaa on Sunday morning at the ripe age of 96 years, and was probably the oldest living Hawaiian woman on Kauai at the time of her death. Continue reading
English report on the death of Lilia Kaleikau, 1922.
Kauai’s Oldest Native Woman Dies At Kapaa
(Special To The Advertiser)
LIHUE, May 23—Lilia Davis Kaleikau, who was the oldest Hawaiian woman on Kauai, died last Sunday morning at the home of her grandson, Senator John Kealoha, in Kapaa, at the age of 96. Continue reading
On the death of Lilia Kaleikau, and an extensive genealogy! 1922.
OUR BELOVED GRANDMOTHER HAS PASSED.
Lilia Kaleikau was born in Lahaina, Maui, from the loins of Pohunui (f) and Nakea, in the year 1826, on the 28th day of April. Continue reading
Expression of affection for Kailipanio Pahia, 1916.
CONDOLENCES FOR A. KAILIPANIO K. FRANK PAHIA.
O Mr. Editor of the Kuokoa Newpaper, Solomon Hanohano, Aloha oe:—Please may we ask for your patience in giving us an open space of the Prize of the People to welcome the title place above, so that the multitudes of family of the beloved one who passed on may see. Here is her story:
Abigail [Apikaila] Kailipanio Kuaana Pahia was born at Kalauao, Ewa, Oahu, in 1847, from the loins of Kuaana (m) and Rebecca [Rebeka] Kauhane, therefore she was 70 years old and some months extra. She was married for 38 years with the senior Frank Pahia, and then she lay to rest. Continue reading
Death of Kailipanio Pahia, 1916.
[Found under: “Obituaries”]
MRS. FRANK PAHIA
Kailipanio, the wife of Frank Pahia and the mother of Mrs. William Henry died at the family residence, Heeia, Continue reading
Death of Frank Pahia, 1923.
FRANK PAHIA WAS CALLED BACK.
FRANK PAHIA.
At 4 o’clock on Thursday afternoon past, the messenger of death visited the home of Frank Pahia, an important Hawaiian, who carried out the work of the people for half a century, and [the messenger of death] took his life breath and left his cold body, the dust returning to dust at the cemetery of the Hawaiian church in Kaneohe, after he was sick for a short time.
He was born in Kukuipahu, Kohala, Hawaii, on the 1st of January, 1847, and at his rest, he was 76 years old and a few days over. He became a widower six years ago, and he left behind three children, Mrs. William Henry, the widow of the first Sheriff of the Territory; William Henry; Henry Pahia, a surveyor; and John I. Pahia, a watchman for the lighthouse.
Frank Pahia was highly educated at the schools of Kohala, here in Honolulu, and finally at the college of Lahainaluna, the school famous in that time as the Light not extinguished by the Kauaula wind.
Frank Pahia held many government jobs outside of his regular vocation of surveyor; he was the deputy sheriff of Hawaii at Hilo, and when he returned to Oahu nei, the was deputy sheriff for 16 years for here in the district of Koolaupoko. He was one of the members of the legislature in the time of the Monarchy for two seasons.
Heeia is where he lived the last days of his life. In 1916, his partner left him and he lived alone until his death.
While he held all sorts of positions, he carried out his duties with impartially and righteously; there was seen at all any blemishes in his work in all the positions he held.
He was kind and had an open heart, and he was a redeemer for the people of this land, and a parental figure for the district in which he lived.
(Kuokoa, 1/11/1923, p. 3)

Ka Nupepa Kuokoa, Buke XLII, Helu 2, Aoao 3. Ianuari 11, 1923.
Death of Kaae, 1866.
[Found under: “HUNAHUNA MEA HOU O HAWAII NEI.”]
Death.—On this past 5th of July, Kaae died at Kahehuna; he was a child that was greatly loved by his kupuna. Continue reading