The family traveled back to the United States for medical care in 1853, and returned on November 28, 1854. He died at the Kaluaaha home August 29, 1855, and is buried on the hillside overlooking the church. The church was restored and rededicated in 1917, but after suffering from termite damage on May 15, 1967, the steeple toppled and the church was in ruins for several decades. The small congregation maintains the site, and on September 27, 2009, had a rededication ceremony under a temporary corrugated metal roof. It is located at near the settlement known as Pukoo. Besides two daughters who died young in 1834 and 1838, they had three sons. David Howard Hitchcock, born May 29, 1832, married Almeda Eliza Widger (1828–1895) March 13, 1857, and had a son also named
David Howard Hitchcock (1861–1943) who was a painter. David Howard Hitchcock Sr. was a lawyer who served in the
legislature of the Hawaiian Kingdom, and partnered with his daughter
Almeda Eliza Hitchcock Moore (1863–1895) who was the first woman lawyer in Hawaii. He died December 12, 1899. Harvey Rexford Hitchcock, Jr. (generally known as H. Rexford Hitchcock) was born in 1835 and published a dictionary of the
Hawaiian language while principal of
Lahainaluna School, in an effort to teach Hawaiians the English language. He married Alice Field Hardy (1854–1895) on May 30, 1877, was elected to the
House of Representatives of the Kingdom from 1862 through 1870. He died June 6, 1891.
Edward Griffin Hitchcock was born January 20, 1837, married Mary Tenney Castle, daughter of
Castle & Cooke founder
Samuel Northrup Castle (1808–1894), and died October 9, 1898. Edward and Mary also named a son Harvey Rexford Hitchcock (1864–1931), who married Hannah Julia Meyer (1866–1912), daughter of German businessman
Rudolph Wilhelm Meyer (1826–1897). Their son
Harvey Rexford Hitchcock, Jr. (1891–1958) was on the
1913 College Football All-America Team from Harvard. ==Family tree==