b. 1823
d. 1878
Henry Rhodes was an affluent businessman heavily involved in trade and communication
relations for
Vancouver Island and the West Coast. In
1860, Rhodes was appointed to act as Hawaiian Consul at
Vancouver Island. Within the following year, Rhodes worked to further establish trading relationships
and improve mail communications. In
August of 1864,
Governor Kennedy appointed Rhodes to a vacant seat in the Legislative Council of
Vancouver Island.
Outside of his bureaucratic duties, Rhodes continually invested in and prospered
from multiple business ventures, including importing sugar from Honolulu in exchange for fish, timber and coal,
which made him one of the Island's leading businessmen.
Rhodes was married to Sophia Harriet Cape, and together they had a son and a daughter.
Both his wife and children outlived him, and his son, who was raised in the family
business, took it over upon Rhodes's death.