Timothy Henry Hoʻolulu
Pitman (March 18, 1845 – February 27, 1863) was an American Union Army soldier
of Native Hawaiian descent. Considered one of the "Hawaiʻi Sons of the
Civil War", he was among a group of more than one hundred documented
Native Hawaiian and Hawaii-born combatants who fought in the American Civil War
while the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi was still an independent nation.
Born and raised
in Hilo, Hawaiʻi, he was the eldest son of Kinoʻoleoliliha, a Hawaiian high
chiefess, and Benjamin Pitman, an American pioneer settler from Massachusetts.
Through his father's business success in the whaling and sugar and coffee
plantation industries and his mother's familial connections to the Hawaiian
royal family, the Pitmans were quite prosperous and owned lands on the island of
Hawaiʻi and in Honolulu. He and his older sister were educated in the mission
schools in Hilo alongside other children of mixed Hawaiian descent. After the
death of his mother in 1855, his father remarried to the widow of a missionary,
thus connecting the family to the American missionary community in Hawaiʻi.
However, following the deaths of his first wife and later his second wife, his
father decided to leave the islands and returned to Massachusetts with his
family around 1860. He continued his education in the public schools of
Roxbury, where the Pitman family lived for a period of time.
Leaving school
without his family's knowledge, he made the decision to fight in the Civil War
in August 1862. Despite his mixed-race ancestry, Pitman avoided the racial
segregation imposed on other Native Hawaiian recruits of the time and enlisted
in the 22nd Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, a white regiment. He
served as a private in the Union Army fighting in the Battle of Antietam and
the Maryland Campaign. In his company, Private Robert G. Carter befriended the
part-Hawaiian soldier and wrote in later life of their common experience in the
22nd Massachusetts. Compiled decades afterward from old letters, Carter's
account described the details surrounding his final fate in the war. On the
march to Fredericksburg, Pitman was separated from his regiment and captured by
Confederate guerrilla forces. He was forced to march to Richmond and
incarcerated in the Confederate Libby Prison, where he contracted "lung fever"
from the harsh conditions of his imprisonment and died on February 27, 1863, a
few months after his release on parole in a prisoner exchange. Modern
historians consider Henry Hoʻolulu Pitman to be the only known Hawaiian or
Pacific Islander to die as a prisoner of war in the Civil War.
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