Gerrit P. Judd
Gerrit Parmele Judd (April 23, 1803 – July 12, 1873) was an American physician and missionary to the Kingdom of Hawaii who later renounced his American citizenship and became a trusted advisor and cabinet minister to King Kamehameha III.
Gerrit P. Judd
July 12, 1873 (aged 70)
American
Missionary, Physician, Politician
Laura Fish Judd (married 1827)
Gerrit Parmele II
Elizabeth Kinaʻu
Helen Seymour
Charles Hastings
Laura Fish
Albert Francis
Allan Wilkes
Sybil Augusta
Juliet Isabelle
Elnathan Judd
Betsey Hastings
He married missionary and historian Laura Fish Judd in 1827.
Life[edit]
Judd was born April 23, 1803, in Paris, Oneida County, New York, the son of Elnathan Judd and his wife Betsey Hastings. On his mother's side, he was descended from Thomas Hastings, who came from the East Anglian area of England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634. He received his middle name in honor of his maternal grandmother, Eunice Parmele.
He was educated as a physician at the medical college in Fairfield, New York. He married Laura Fish (1804–1872) on September 20, 1827, in Clinton, Oneida County, New York.
The couple sailed to Hawaii (then known as the 'Sandwich Islands') that same year, on the ship Parthian, the third company from the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.[1]
He was assigned to the mission at Honolulu on the island of Oahu, as a missionary physician, and continued in that employment fifteen years.[2]
Work[edit]
In 1842 he resigned from the mission and became an advisor and translator to King Kamehameha III.
He also became involved in the civil concerns of the islands, and was the King’s Minister of Foreign Affairs from November 1843 to March 1845, Minister of Interior from March 1845 to February 1846, Minister of Finance from April 1846 to September 1853, and in the House of Representatives from 1858 to 1859.[3] He was commissioned in 1849 as Minister Plenipotentiary to England, France and the United States.
He was one of the founders of the Punahou School for children of the missionaries in 1841. He founded Hawaii's first medical school in 1870, and was the author of one of the first medical texts written in Hawaiian, Anatomia : he palapala ia e hoike ai i ke ano o ko ke kanaka kino, in 1838.
In 1850 Judd purchased from King Kamehameha the land which became the Kualoa Ranch on the Windward Coast of Oahu. His descendants still own and operate the ranch today.[4]
Judd died July 12, 1873, in Honolulu and was buried in the Oahu Cemetery.
Legacy[edit]
Judd's life was the basis of the novel The White King. A biography, Dr. Judd, Hawaii’s Friend[9] which was written by his great-grandson Gerrit P. Judd IV (1915–1971) and published in 1960.[10] His papers were kept under restricted access at the Bishop Museum until his great-grandson Albert Francis Judd III died in 2006.[11]
Judd Street in Honolulu is named in his honour, as is Judd Trail off Old Pali Road in Nu'uanu.[12]