05/17/2026
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She slept at her son's tomb for four days. The hospital she built couldn't save him.
She was born in Honolulu on January 2, 1836. Her parents gave her away at birth - the Hawaiian tradition of hānai. She was raised by her aunt and Dr. Thomas Rooke, a British physician who ran his medical practice out of their home.
Emma grew up watching her father heal people.
She married King Kamehameha IV on June 19, 1856. She was 20.
The Hawaiian people were dying. Foreign diseases - smallpox, measles, leprosy - had crashed the population from around 300,000 in 1778 to fewer than 70,000 by the late 1850s. The 1853 smallpox outbreak alone killed more than 5,000 Native Hawaiians. There was no hospital.
So the King and Queen walked Honolulu door to door. Liliʻuokalani, who watched it happen, wrote that funds for the cause were "solicited by the reigning sovereigns in person." In one month they raised $13,530. The Legislature added $6,000.
On August 1, 1859, Queen's Hospital opened with 18 beds. By the end of that year it had 124.
A year before the hospital opened, Emma had given birth to a son. His name was Albert Edward Kauikeaouli Kaleiopāpā a Kamehameha. He was the first prince born to a reigning Hawaiian monarch in over half a century. Queen Victoria of England became his godmother. She sent a silver christening cup three feet tall.
On August 23, 1862, they baptized him.
Four days later he was dead.
He was four years and three months old. The doctors called it brain fever.
They buried him under a tamarind tree in front of ʻIolani Palace.
The Anglican bishop, Thomas Staley, wrote in his journal what he saw of Queen Emma in the weeks that followed. Sorrow, he said, had "pulled her down terribly." She "would not leave the tomb for four days, but slept there." Her face, he wrote, "bore the traces of much suffering."
The hospital she built three years earlier could not save him.
She built the place where Hawaii heals. The place that could not heal her son.
Fifteen months later her husband was also dead. Kamehameha IV was 29 years old. The doctors called it asthma. The people knew it was grief.
Emma took a new name. Kaleleonālani. The flight of the heavenly chiefs.
For 22 more years she ran the hospital alone. She founded St. Andrew's Priory School in 1867 to educate Hawaiian girls. It is still teaching them today.
She died on April 25, 1885. She was 49.
On May 17, 1885, Kawaiahaʻo Church overflowed. Her funeral procession wound up Nuʻuanu Valley to the Royal Mausoleum. After 22 years alone, she was laid to rest beside her husband and her son.
That hospital is still there. 167 years later. 575 beds. 3,600 staff. In 2026, Newsweek named it one of the world's best.
The woman who built it walked door to door for Hawaii's children. She could not walk her own son home.