Samuel Gardner Wilder was born June 20, 1831, in
Leominster, Massachusetts. His father was William Chauncey Wilder (1804–1858) and mother was Harriet Waters (died 1850). They moved to
Canada for a few years, and then to New York in 1840, and
Chicago in 1844. Part of the
California Gold Rush, the family moved west in 1852. He worked for the
Adams Express Company which allowed him to travel to and from the coast of
California. His first visit to the Hawaiian Islands was in 1856. He married Elizabeth Kinaʻu Judd (1831–1918), daughter of missionary doctor and politician
Gerrit P. Judd September 29, 1857 in
Honolulu. She was namesake of the
native Hawaiian civil leader
Elizabeth Kīnau, who was daughter of
Kamehameha I.
Business from
Jarvis Island Wilder chartered the clipper ship
White Swallow and returned in 1858. He took a load of
guano (bird excrement used as fertilizer) from
Jarvis Island to New York City, He then started a
sugarcane plantation with his father-in-law (now the
Kualoa Ranch) in 1864. He sent for his brother, William Chauncey Wilder (1835–1901) who had served in the cavalry in the
American Civil War. The plantation failed by 1868 and William returned to
Geneva, Illinois. In 1870 other sugar planters had Wilder sent to China to bring back low-cost workers. He encountered resistance from the British administration in Hong Kong, and only 188 Chinese came as a result. In 1871 he took over the lumber business of James I. Dowsett. He also became agent for the government-owned
steamship Kilauea, named for
Kīlauea volcano, which ran passenger service between the islands. In 1872 with C. H. Lewers, he established Wilder & Company for the shipping and related businesses. In 1873 his brother William brought out his wife and family to help in the shipping business. After the
reciprocity Treaty of 1875, the sugar business boomed, and created demand to use steamships to move the raw sugar to the
port of Honolulu where it was taken to the sugar refinery in California owned by
Claus Spreckels, who invested in Wilder's company. In 1877 the government ordered a second steamer
Likelike (named for Princess
Likelike) from
San Francisco. After one voyage, the government promptly sold it to Wilder. The
Likelike was about 50% larger than the aged
Kilauea, which needed frequent repairs. Part of his agreement was to carry the mail on his ships. Over time more ships were added to his fleet, and railroads built to meet the ports. The
Hawaiian Railroad was constructed from 1881 to 1883. It ran from plantations in the
Kohala district of the
island of Hawaii to a harbor he built at
Māhukona. The company was incorporated as Wilder Steamship Company in 1883.
Politics In 1868, Wilder was elected to the House of Representatives of the
legislature of the Hawaiian Kingdom. In 1874, King
Lunalilo appointed him to the upper House of Nobles of the legislature. Lunalilo died after reigning only one year, so the first job of the 1874 legislature was to elect a new king; Wilder was selected to count and announce the votes. Wilder used his steamer to campaign for David
Kalākaua, who won the election in the Legislative Assembly (and subsequently rewarded Wilder with honors), even though
Queen Emma was more popular with the people. In 1878, Wilder established the first telephone line on Oahu, from his government office to his lumber business. Wilder was awarded the
Royal Order of Kalākaua and Royal Order of the Crown of Hawaii. On July 3, 1878, Kalākaua appointed him minister of the interior. He was considered the most powerful member of what was then called the "Wilder Cabinet". Although concerned with efficiency in administration and reducing government debt instead of ideology, one of his projects was to lay the cornerstone of a new royal residence,
ʻIolani Palace. On August 14, 1880, the king replaced all his ministers with a controversial and short-lived cabinet headed by
Celso Caesar Moreno with
John Edward Bush in the interior post.
Legacy operated 1882–1943 The Wilders' children were: • William Chauncey Wilder was born May 12, 1859, and died August 21, 1868. • Laura Reed Wilder was born October 17, 1861. On December 27, 1881, she married Charles Leslie Wight in
Boston and had five children. • Gerrit Parmele Wilder was born November 5, 1863. He married Lillian Kimball at
Mills College in
California on November 7, 1887. After a few years in the family business, he became a
horticulturalist in 1898, going on expeditions and publishing several books on plants of the Pacific. He died September 28, 1935. • Samuel Gardner Wilder was born January 12, 1866. He married Molly Alatau Atkinson on July 20, 1896, and had four children. One of them was also named Samuel Gardner Wilder, born August 8, 1898. •
James Austin "Kimo" Wilder was born May 22, 1868. He married Sarah Harnden on September 12, 1899, at
Alameda, California and had two children. He attended
Harvard University and
Harvard Law School in 1893–1896. He became an artist and founded the first
Boy Scout troop in Hawaii with
D. Howard Hitchcock, another artist who married Wilder's cousin. He wrote and played a scoutmaster in the 1917 film
Knights of the Square Table. His daughter Kinaʻu Wilder (1902–1992) married
Charles B. McVay III and had son
Kimo Wilder McVay (1927–2001), who managed
Don Ho when he popularized the song
Tiny Bubbles. • Helen Kinaʻu Wilder was born November 27, 1869, and married Horace Joseph Craft on May 16, 1899, but they divorced in 1903. She helped re-establish the
Hawaiian Humane Society in 1897. Another younger brother, John Knight Wilder (1833–1905) came out to Hawaii, as well as two younger sisters. On May 17, 1864, John married Caroline Crowningburg, who was related to royalty of
Maui. Sister Mary Caroline Wilder (1836–1915) married P. P. Shepard. In 1870, sister Harriet Emily Wilder (1842–1904) married Joseph Platt Cooke (1869–1904), great-grandson of
Joseph Platt Cooke (1730–1816) and son of
Castle & Cooke founder
Amos Starr Cooke (1810–1871). Their son, also named Joseph Platt Cooke (1870–1918), married Maud Mansfield Baldwin (1872–1961), daughter of
Henry Perrine Baldwin, co-founder of
Alexander & Baldwin. This connected the extended family to several of the "
Big Five" corporations that dominated the economy of the
Territory of Hawaii in the 20th century. His sister-in-law's son
George R. Carter (1866–1933) was the second
Territorial Governor. The Wilder Steamship Company merged into the
Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company in 1905. The company started the first scheduled commercial airplane service in 1929 as Inter-Island Airways, and became
Hawaiian Airlines in 1941.
James A. King, who started as master of Wilder's ships and became superintendent of the Wilder shipping business, named a son
Samuel Wilder King, who became
Governor of the Territory of Hawaii. Wilder Avenue which runs past the
Punahou School at in the
Makiki neighborhood of Honolulu was named for him. ==References==