John Coffin Jones Jr.

John Coffin Jones Jr. (1796 – December 24, 1861) was the first United States Consular Agent to the Kingdom of Hawaii.[1]

John Coffin Jones Jr.
U.S. Agent for Commerce and Seamen to the Kingdom of Hawaii
In office
September 19, 1820  April 1839
Preceded byInaugural holder
Succeeded byPeter A. Brinsmade
Personal details
Born
John Coffin Jones Jr.

1796
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedDecember 24, 1861(1861-12-24) (aged 64–65)
Newton, Massachusetts, U.S.
Spouses
Hannah Holmes Davis
(m. 1823; div. 1838)
    Manuela Carrillo
    (m. 1838)
    RelationsChristopher Champlin (uncle)
    Parent(s)John Coffin Jones Sr.
    Elizabeth Champlin Jones

    Early life

    John Coffin Jones Jr. was born in 1796 in Boston, Massachusetts, and baptized on June 26, 1796, by the minister of the Brattle Street Church.[2] He was the son of John Coffin Jones Sr. (1750–1829) and his third wife, Elizabeth (née Champlin) Jones (1770–1837). His father served as the Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.[3] His siblings included Christopher Champlin Jones and Anna Powel Jones and his elder half-siblings included Thomas Jones and Margaret Champlin Jones[lower-alpha 1] and Mary Jones.[7]

    Through his mother, he was the nephew of U.S. Senator from Rhode Island Christopher G. Champlin and grandson of Christopher Champlin, a merchant, ship owner and financier of Newport, Rhode Island.[8]

    Career

    Jones worked for Marshall and Wildes of Boston before he was appointed as the first Consul to Hawaii, which was then known as the Sandwich Islands, on September 19, 1820.[9] He was considered an advocate for commercial interests in Hawaii, and was often in conflict with missionary elements in the island.[10] He was a Unitarian.[11] His career was full of turmoil and complaint, and had limited support or instruction from Washington, D.C.[12] Although "his disposition was so unsteady and irascible",[2] he was known for his entertainment of visiting dignitaries, including John Sutter.[13]

    In 1838, Jones returned to Hawaii after a business trip in California and introduced Manuela Carrillo as his wife. Still married to Hannah, she initiated a divorce, after which King Kamehameha III refused to acknowledge him as the Consul from the United States.[10]

    In 1843, Manuela's father, Governor Carlos Antonio Carrillo, and her uncle, José Antonio Carrillo, were granted Santa Rosa Island by Governor Manuel Micheltorena. The brothers then sold the island to Manuela and her sister Francisca, who was also married to an American, Alpheus Basil Thompson.

    The Jones and the Thompsons then established a cattle ranch on Santa Rosa Island. In 1846, after the United States invaded Mexico during the Mexican–American War and occupied California, John and his wife moved to his native Boston. Jones later learned that Thompson had sold many of the island's livestock and didn't share the proceeds with him so he sued Thompson in 1851. Jones won the suit and Thompson appealed claiming John had "bought" witnesses. In 1857, Jones won the appeal and Abel Stearns was appointed as receiver to set the value of the property in dispute. Two years later in 1859, both Jones and Thompson sold their remaining interests in Santa Rosa Island to brother Thomas, Alexander, and Henry More.

    Personal life

    In 1823, Jones was married to Hannah Kalikolehua (née Holmes) Davis (d. 1848), the widow of Captain William Heath Davis. Hannah was the mother of two children from her first marriage, Robert Grimes Davis and William Heath Davis.[14] Together, Hannah and John were the parents of:

    • Elizabeth Jones (1830–1852), who married Captain John H. Brown (1820–1892) in 1848.[15][16]

    While in Hawaii and still married to Davis, Jones fathered three children with Lahilahi Marín (d. 1844), a daughter of Don Francisco de Paula Marín, the Spanish born confidant of Hawaiian King Kamehameha I. Their children were:[17]

    • Francis Jones (1830–1850)[18]
    • Rosalie Coffin Jones (1835–1863)[18]
    • John "Huanu" Coffin Jones III (1842–1919)[18]

    While in Santa Barbara, California on business, he met and married Manuela Antonia Carrillo (1820–1900) on June 4, 1838. She was the daughter of Governor Carlos Antonio Carrillo and Josefa Raymunda Castro. Together, they were the parents of:

    • Margarita Antonia Jones (1840–1904), who married Robert F. Clark (b. 1838).[3]
    • John Coffin Jones, Jr. (1842–1919), who served in the U.S. Civil War, became a stockbroker, and married Ella Maria Sumner in 1866.[3]
    • Benjamín Geronimo Jones (1844–1845), who died young.[3]
    • Anna Powell Jones (b. 1846).[3]
    • Joseph Cutler Jones (b. 1849).[3]
    • Charles Carrillo Jones (1850–1869).[3]
    • Martha Josepha Jones (b. 1855).[3]

    Jones died on December 24, 1861, in Newton, Massachusetts.[3] After his death, Manuela married George Nelson Kittle in 1867 and, later, moved to France where she died at Nice in 1900.[3]

    See also

    References

    Notes
    1. Margaret Champlin Jones (1792–1848) was married to Benjamin Underhill Coles in 1817.[4][5] After Coles' death, she married Benjamin Gorham in 1829.[6]
    Sources
    1. Day, Arthur Grove (1984). History makers of Hawaii: a biographical dictionary. Mutual Publishing of Honolulu. pp. 32, 57. ISBN 9780935180091. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    2. The Washington Historical Quarterly. Washington University State Historical Society. 1920. p. 177. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    3. Gast, Ross H. (1976). Contentious Consul: A Biography of John Coffin Jones, First United States Consular Agent at Hawaii. Dawson's Book Shop. ISBN 9780870931758. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    4. Assembly, New York (State) Legislature (1898). Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York. E. Croswell. p. 265. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    5. "Archives Directory for the History of Collecting". research.frick.org. Frick Art Reference Library. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    6. Kenslea, Timothy (2006). The Sedgwicks in Love: Courtship, Engagement, and Marriage in the Early Republic. UPNE. p. 199. ISBN 9781584654940. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    7. Bridgman, Thomas (1853). Memorials of the Dead in Boston: Containing Exact Transcripts of Inscriptions on the Sepulchral Monuments in the King's Chapel Burial Ground, in the City of Boston. With Copious Historical and Biographical Notices of the Early Settlers of the Metropolis of New England. B.B. Mussey. p. 84. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    8. "Christopher Champlin Papers". www.rihs.org. Rhode Island Historical Society. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    9. Hackler, Rhoda E. A. (1969). "The Voice of Commerce" (PDF). Hawaiian Journal of History. 3: 42–47.
    10. Lightner, Richard, Hawaiian History: An Annotated Bibliography, p. 71 (2004) Praeger/Greenwood; ISBN 0-313-28233-1
    11. Ponton, Evan A.; Scharper Jr., Phillip H. (October 2018). Catholic Churches of Hawai'i: A Shoal of Faith. Honolulu: Mutual Publishing, LLC. p. xx. ISBN 978-1939487-97-1.
    12. Johnson, Donald D. and Best, Gary D., The United States in the Pacific: Private Interests and Public Policies, 1784-1899, p. 59, Praeger Publishers; ISBN 0-275-95055-7
    13. Hurtado, Albert L. (2006). John Sutter: A Life on the North American Frontier. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 44. ISBN 9780806137728. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    14. Andrew F. Rolle (1956). An American in California: the biography of William Heath Davis, 1822-1909. Huntington Library.
    15. Morison, S.E. (July 1921). "Boston Traders in the Hawaiian Islands 1798-1823". Washington Historical Quarterly. 12 (3): 166–201. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    16. Lineage Book. The Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. 1905. p. 14. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
    17. "Land Commission Award 2938 (Heirs of Lahilahi Marin)" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-04-04.
    18. The Hawaiian Journal of History. Hawaiian Historical Society. 1998. p. 30. Retrieved 7 January 2019.

    Further reading

    • Gast, Ross H. Contentious consul: A biography of John Coffin Jones, first United States consular agent at Hawaii, Dawson's Book Shop (1976), ISBN 0-87093-175-X
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