Elias Bond was born in
Hallowell, Maine on August 19, 1813. His father was also named Elias Bond (1774–1864), son of Colonel William Bond who served in the
American Revolutionary War, and his mother was Rebecca Davis. He graduated from
Bowdoin College in Maine in 1837, and from
Bangor Theological Seminary in 1840. He married Ellen Mariner Howell September 29, 1840 in Hallowell, Maine and was ordained the following day. The Bonds had 11 children born in Hawaii (but only 9 lived to adulthood). Mrs. Bond died May 12, 1881, and Reverend Bond died July 24, 1896. The Bonds sailed on the ship
Gloucester from Boston November 14, 1840 with the Ninth Company from the
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. The ship arrived in Honolulu in May 1841 where he observed the construction of
Kawaiahao Church. They were assigned a remote outpost on the northern coast of the
Big Island of Hawaii, in the area known as the
Kohala district.
Bond House An earlier missionary to Kohala, Reverend Isaac Bliss (1804–1851), had just completed building the main house for the homestead compound when the Bonds arrived in June 1841. Bond described it as made from "native wood and plaster on stone foundation with a good cellar." By 1842 he had expanded it to about by . The next addition was built of stonework similar to the Kawaiahao Church. The fieldstones were held together with burned coral mortar, to add a wash house, foundations for a woodshed and carpenter sheds, an archway, and courtyard walls, all around a large open space. Around 1845 a kitchen wing was added, with a stone foundation and wooden walls. By 1848 the Foreign Missions Board wanted to reduce its financial support, so Bond offered to forego a salary if they would let him have the house which he had improved. Instead, the Board asked him to pay them $500 for it. But because of the changes in property law called the
Mahele, Bond legally took personal title to the house. He would eventually expand the homestead and buy about of the ancient land division
(ahupuaa) called Iole. Leases from farmers on the land provided a steady source of income. In 1853 another wing was added to the house, about by . Masonry walls were finished with lime plaster inside and out. At various times a workshop, other outbuildings and a lily pond were added. The original thatched roofs were replaced by corrugated metal. A doctor's office was attached to the house in 1884 for his practice. In 1889 Dr. Bond married Emma Mary Renton (1866–1951), and a wood-framed cottage was added at the east end of the main house for them. A small shed was expanded to shelter a
horse carriage and single horse stall, to be ready for emergency medical calls. Around 1900, the family added modern bathrooms, servants' quarters, and larger stables. A rock-crusher and power-house first produced gravel for paving the roads of the estate from their own quarry, and then was converted to process
macadamia nuts grown on the property. ==Kalahikiola Church==