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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Amos Starr Cooke | |
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COOKE, Amos Starr, missionary, born in Danbury, Connecticut, 1Dec., 1810; died in Honolulu, Sandwich islands, 20 March, 1871. He was graduated at Yale in 1834, entered the service of the American board of commissioners for foreign missions in 1836, and arrived at, the Sandwich islands in April, 1837, where, in June, 1839, he took charge of the education of the royal family and nobility. He retained the direction of the royal school for ten years, educating the last two Kamehamehas, and doing much toward shaping their characters.
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