The first Allen to become related to Hawaiian royalty through marriage, albeit indirectly, was William Fessenden Allen who wed Cordelia Church Bishop (1837–1912), a cousin of
Charles Reed Bishop, in 1865. Bishop was married to
Bernice Pauahi Pākī, of the royal
House of Kamehameha. In 1865, S. C. Allen married Bathsheba Maria Kulamanu Robinson (1849–1914), daughter of
John James Robinson (1799–1876) and
Rebecca Prever (1817– 1882), a descendant of Hawaiian chiefess Kamakana. The marriage merged two families who would influence Hawaiii's politics, ecology, and business economy for decades. Among his Robinson in-laws were: • Mark P. Robinson (1852–1915) served in the House of Nobles of the
Legislature of the Kingdom of Hawaii, and
Minister of Foreign Affairs during the reign of
Liliʻuokalani. He was a member of the
Committee of Safety that drafted the
Bayonet Constitution of 1887 which codified the legislature as the supreme authority over any actions by the monarchy. He twice helped financially bail out the Hawaiian government. M.P.'s son James Lawrence Prever was a founder of the Hawaiian Broadcasting System. •
Mary Robinson (1844–1930) was a philanthropist. Her husband
Thomas R. Foster (1835–1889), along with his brother William,
George Norton Wilcox, William B. Godfrey, and John Ena, created the
Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company in 1883. The service transported passengers and cargo between the islands until 1947. The site of
Foster Botanical Garden had been their homestead, bequeathed to the city of Honolulu upon her death. •
Victoria Robinson (1846–1935) wed
Curtis Perry Ward (1826–1882), who had ties to
Liliʻuokalani and Hawaii's royal court. The couple had seven daughters, including Victoria Kathleen Ward (1878–1958) who is mentioned in S. C.'s will as his adopted daughter "Victoria Kathleen Ward Allen". The site of the Ward family coconut plantation home is now the
Neal S. Blaisdell Center. • Annie Robinson (1855–1921) wed Albert Jaeger (1845–1900), a German immigrant who was appointed Hawaii's commissioner of the Bureau of Forestry. He became a manager at Allen & Robinson Lumber Company. His uncle
Hermann A. Widemann was Minister of Finance under
Liliʻuokalani. Together, Jaeger and Widemann ran an amateur planting operation on Kauai. A biology hobbyist, Jaeger planted numerous trees on
Mount Tantalus, and amassed a large collection of rare plants. Upon his death, the government was given the collection to re-plant on public lands. ==References==