The following priests, religious and lay people with a connection with the Catholic Church in Hawaii died in 2014. They are listed in alphabetical order.
- Sacred Hearts Father James Anguay, parish priest, novice master, chaplain and pioneer of the Sacred Hearts’ mission in the Cook Islands
- Franciscan Sister Mary Andrew Bomba, worked in Kalaupapa twice for a total of 12 years
- Sister Mary Caroline Chow, one of the original seven Carmelite nuns who came for Hong Kong 40 years ago to open Hawaii’s first cloistered community
- Don Chu, prominent leader in the Catholic Marriage Encounter movement and head of the diocesan family life ministry office in the 1980s
- Sacred Hearts Sister Jeanne Cordeiro, Maui-born nun who taught for 38 years at Sacred Hearts Convent
- Franciscan Sister M. Laurenza Fernandez, Maui native who worked as a teacher and nurse in Hawaii, New York, Ohio, California and Rome
- Maryknoll Sister Helen Louise Gleason, spent nearly three decades as a teacher in Hawaii parish schools
- Father Robert P. Guerrero, priest of the Diocese of San Bernardino, California; was ordained by Bishop Joseph A. Ferrario in 1992 and served for a short time at St. Michael Church in Kona and St. Anthony Church in Kailua
- Franciscan Sister Marion Inouye, Honolulu native who taught at St. Joseph School in Hilo, Our Lady of Good Counsel School in Pearl City and St. Francis School in Manoa
- Maryknoll Sister Marie Patrice Kehoe, served in Hawaii for nearly 50 years as a teacher and a nurse
- Maryknoll Sister Mary Camilla Kennedy, missioner-educator to Hawaii and the Marshall Islands
- Sister Mary Joel Kramer, a Sister of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, taught at Catholic elementary schools on Kauai
- Catherine “Marie” Kuhn, prominent leader in the pro-life movement in Hawaii
- Maryknoll Sister Margaret Frances Kulage, the congregation’s oldest member at age 107; served her first mission assignment as a nun in Hawaii for 20 years
- Franciscan Sister Rosanne Lamanche, worked in Kalaupapa and at St. Francis Hospital in Honolulu
- John J. and Joyce A. Mondoy, husband and wife parishioners of St. Damien Parish in Kaunakakai who were active members in various parish ministries and community work
- Father Cletus Mooya, Zambian-born priest who was ordained in Hawaii in 2007 and served at St. Jude Parish in Kapolei, St. John Apostle and Evangelist Parish in Mililani and St. Michael Parish in Kona
- Msgr. Alan A. Nagai, served as a priest in the Islands for 56 years; worked in 10 parishes and several high diocesan positions
- Nettie Lou Peiler, worked in the diocese since 1999, first as a volunteer for the Hawaii Catholic Conference then as secretary for the diocesan Tribunal and Canonical Affairs Office, and Office of the Chancellor
- Marianist Father Joseph Priestly, part-Hawaiian priest who served as an educator, preacher and musician
- Franciscan Sister Florence Remata, Kauai native who served as minister of the Hawaii-Southwest Region of the Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities; also taught in Catholic schools and parish religious education
- Sister of St. Joseph of Carondelet Mary Jane Ruoff, served as an educator at Christ the King School in Kahului, St. Anthony School in Kailua and St. Theresa School in Honolulu; also worked as assistant director of the diocesan Religious Education Office
- Dominican Sister Aurelia Sanchez, director of Rosary Preschool in Waipio Gentry; served as an educator and congregational leader in Hawaii for 45 years
- Leonora “Nora” R. Santos, former teacher, principal and Hawaii Catholic Schools associate superintendent
- Sacred Hearts Sister Gertrude Maria Schroeder, born in Germany and came to Hawaii as a youth in 1936; served as teacher, artist and eucharistic minister for the homebound elderly of St. Patrick Parish in Kaimuki
- Father Robert Siu, one of Hawaii’s first local-born diocesan priests, who later went to serve on the Mainland as a parish priest and hospital chaplain
- Sister of St. Joseph of Carondelet Anne Bryan Smollin, popular mainland speaker known as the “Laughing Nun” who was featured at several Hawaii events including the Marianist Big Island Liturgy and Arts Conference
- Deacon Edward Vargas, served in the diaconate for 13 years at St. Jude Parish in Kapolei and was diocesan port chaplain since 2011
- Franciscan Sister of Christian Charity Arlene Virlee, earned her master’s degree in education at the University of Hawaii in Manoa and taught at Cathedral School in Honolulu
- Mother Agnes Marie Wong, superior of the Carmelite Monastery in Hawaii and one of the first seven Carmelite nuns who arrived here 40 years ago from Hong Kong