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History of Hawaii

The history of Hawaii is the story of human settlements in the Hawaiian Islands.

Polynesians arrived sometime between 1000 and 1200 AD.[1] Kamehameha I, the ruler of the island of Hawaii, conquered and unified the islands for the first time, establishing the Kingdom of Hawaii in 1795.[2] The kingdom became prosperous and important for its agriculture and strategic location in the Pacific. Kamehameha was aided by European military technology that became available once an expedition led by British explorer James Cook reached the islands in 1778, the first sustained contact with Europeans.

American immigration, led by Protestant missionaries, and Native Hawaiian emigration, mostly on whaling ships, began almost immediately after Cook's arrival.[3] Americans established plantations to grow crops for export. Their farming methods required substantial labor. Waves of permanent immigrants came from Japan, China, and the Philippines to work in the cane and pineapple fields. The government of Japan organized and gave special protection to its people, who comprised about 25 percent of the Hawaiian population by 1896.[4] The Hawaiian monarchy encouraged this multi-ethnic society, initially establishing a constitutional monarchy in 1840 that promised equal voting rights regardless of race, gender, or wealth.[5][6][7]

The population of Native Hawaiians declined precipitously from an unknown number prior to 1778 (estimated to be around 300,000). It fell to around 142,000 in the 1820s based on a census conducted by American missionaries, 82,203 in the 1850 Hawaiian Kingdom census, 40,622 in the final Hawaiian Kingdom census of 1890, 39,504 in the sole census by the Republic of Hawaii in 1896, and 37,656 in the first census conducted by the United States in 1900. Thereafter the Native Hawaiian population in Hawaii increased with every census, reaching 680,442 in 2020 (including people of mixed heritage).[8][3][9]

In 1893 Queen Liliʻuokalani was deposed and placed under house arrest by businessmen with help from the United States military. The Republic of Hawaii governed for a short time until Hawaii was annexed by the United States in 1898 as the Territory of Hawaii. In 1959, the islands became the 50th American state.

Ancient Hawaii edit

Discovery and settlement edit

 
Chronological dispersal of Austronesian people across the Pacific

The date of the first settlements is a continuing debate.[10] Kirch's textbooks on Hawaiian archeology date the first Polynesian settlements to about 300, although his more recent estimates are as late as 600. Other theories suggest dates as late as 700 to 800.[10] The most recent survey of carbon-dating evidence puts the arrival of the first settlers at around 940–1130.[11]

The history of the ancient Polynesians was passed down through genealogy chants recited at formal and family functions. The high chiefs' genealogy traced back to the period believed to be inhabited only by gods. The pua aliʻi ("flower of royalty") were considered to be living gods.[12]

By about 1000, coastal settlements were beginning to cultivate food.[13]

Tahitian priest Pā‘ao is said to have brought a new order around 1200. It included laws and a social structure that separated the people into classes. The aliʻi nui was the king, with his ʻaha kuhina just below them. The aliʻi were the royal nobles with the kahuna (high priest) below them, the makaʻāinana (commoners) next with the kauā as the lowest class.[14]

The rulers (noho aliʻi o ko Hawaiʻi Pae ʻAina) were independent rulers of geographic areas. Their genealogy traces to Hānalaʻanui and others.[15] The aliʻi nui were responsible for making sure that people observed a strict kapu (code of conduct). The system governed many aspects of Hawaiian social order, fishing rights and even where women could eat.[16]

By 1500 Hawaiians began to spread to the interiors of the islands and religion was more emphasized.[13]

The group of islands did not have a single name, and each island was ruled separately.[7] The names of the islands recorded by Captain Cook reflect this fact.[17] Kamehameha I, as ruler of the island of Hawaii, imposed the name "Hawaii" on his kingdom.[18]

Religion edit

 
Kailua-Kona, Island of Hawaii

Atheists were known as 'aia.[19] However, the dominant religion as in many other Polynesian societies, was the kapu/taboo religion. It had a theology, ritual, and a code of conduct.[20] It included many gods and heroes that people worshiped in different ways.[19] In one tradition, Wākea, the Sky Father, wed Papahānaumoku, the Earth Mother and from their union came all Hawaiians, including the other gods.[20] In traditional Pu-anue genealogy, Kumukumu-ke-kaa and her husband Paia-a-ka-lani were the mother and father of the earth and heavens. Another genealogy declared that Ka-mai-eli and Kumu-honua were the mother and father.[19]

The kapu religion in Hawaii was polytheistic, led by the gods Kāne, , Lono, and Kanaloa. Other notable deities included Laka, Kihawahine, Haumea, Papahānaumoku, and, most famously, Pele. Each Hawaiian family is considered to have one or more guardian spirits or family gods known as ʻaumakua.[21] One such god is Iolani, the god of aliʻi.[20]

One breakdown of the Kapu pantheon[22] noted the following groups:

  • four major gods (ka hā) – Kū, Kāne, Lono, Kanaloa
  • forty male gods or aspects of Kāne (ke kanahā)
  • four hundred gods and goddesses (ka lau)
  • a multitude of gods and goddesses (ke kini akua)
  • spirits (na ʻunihipili)
  • guardians (na ʻaumākua)

Another breakdown[23] consists of three major groups:

  • four gods, or akua: Kū, Kāne, Lono, Kanaloa
  • many lesser gods, or kupua, each associated with certain professions
  • guardian spirits, ʻaumakua, associated with particular families

Rulers of Hawaii island edit

Līloa edit

Līloa was a legendary ruler of the island of Hawaii in the late 15th century.[24] His royal compound was in Waipiʻo Valley. His line traces to Hawaiian creation.[25]

Līloa had two sons; his firstborn Hākau from his wife/aunt Pinea, (his mother's sister), and his second son, ʻUmi a Līloa from his lesser wife, Akahi a Kuleana.[26] Upon his death, Hākau became ruler and delegated religious authority to ʻUmi.[27] Akahi a Kuleana was of a lesser line of chiefs who Līloa had fallen in love with when he discovered her bathing in a river. The couple met when Līloa was visiting Hamakua. He asserted his right to her as King and she accepted.

Līloa's Kāʻei is his sacred feathered sash, now kept at the Bishop Museum.[28][29]: p. 120 

Līloa was the first son of Kiha nui lulu moku who descended from Hāna laʻa nui.[15][30] Līloa's mother, Waioloa, his grandmother, Neʻula and great-grandmother, Laʻa kapu were of the ʻEwa aliʻi lines of Oahu.[15][27] Līloa's father ruled Hawaii as aliʻi nui and upon his death elevated Līloa. Kiha had had four other sons, Kaunuamoa, Makaoku, Kepailiula and Hoolana, whose descendants are the Kaiakea family of Molokai, distant relatives of Abraham Fornander's daughter.[31]

Hākau edit

Just before his death, Līloa elevated Hākau as Chief, telling Umi that he was to serve as his "man" (Prime Minister) and that each was to respect the other and should either have issue with the other it would be for them to decide. At first a decent king, Hākau soon became brutal. To avoid his brother's anger, 'Umi exiled himself to another district.

Hākau refused to help Nunu and Ka-hohe, his father's two favorite, ailing Kahuna who had requested food. This was considered highly insulting.[32] The two were of Lono's priestly class. They resented their treatment and plotted to see the kingdom in someone else's hand.[33] Hākau did not believe the priests to have any power and showed them no respect as 'Umi was the spiritual authority.[25] In this period no King could defy a Kahuna. Many had a royal bloodline, land and could leave their temples as warriors when needed, but could never relinquish their spiritual responsibilities.[34] Through a messenger of Kaoleioku, of Waipunalei, the high-priest of the temple of Manini, the two priests contacted Umi's court at Koholalele. The two priests traveled to Waipunalei where they supported Umi's revolt.[25]

When Hākau received news that his brother was preparing to war against him, he sent his main forces to prepare by seeking feathers to adorn their regalia. After the warriors had left and Hākau was undefended, Umi's warriors came forward claiming that they bore offerings for the king. They dropped the bundles and used the rocks within to stone Hākau to death.

 
Umi was given a number of royal tokens to prove he was the son of Līloa, including a Niho Palaoa. The lei (necklace) was made of braided human hair and whale bone.

ʻUmi-a-Līloa edit

ʻUmi-a-Līloa was a ruling aliʻi ai moku (district high chief of Hawai'i). He became chief after his half brother's death[35] and was considered a just ruler, religious[36] and the first to unite most of the Hawaii Island.[37] The legend of ʻUmi-a-Līloa is one of Hawaii's most popular hero sagas.[38]

ʻUmi's wife was Princess Piʻikea,[39] daughter of Piʻilani. They had one son, Kumalae[40][41] and one daughter, Aihākōkō.

Līloa told Akahi that, if she were to have a male child, she should present the boy to him along with royal tokens he gave her as gifts, to prove her boy was the son of the king. Akahi hid the tokens from her husband and later gave birth to a son. At the age of 15 or 16, his stepfather was punishing the boy when his mother intervened and told the man not to touch him because the boy was his lord and chief. She uncovered the tokens to present to her husband to prove the high treason he would have committed. Akahi gave her son the royal malo and lei niho palaoa given to her by 'Umi's biological father. Only high chiefs wore these items. She sent 'Umi to Waipiʻo Valley to present himself to the king as his son.

Līloa's palace was guarded and attended by several Kahuna. The entire enclosure was sacred. Entering without permission carried the death penalty. 'Umi entered the enclosure with attendants afraid to stop someone wearing the royal insignia and walked straight to Līloa's sleeping quarters, waking him there. When Līloa asked who he was, he said "It is I, 'Umi your son". He then placed tokens at his father's feet and Līloa proclaimed him to be his son. After learning of 'Umi, Hākau became upset. Līloa assured his first born that he would be king after his death and that his brother would serve him. 'Umi was brought to court on an equal footing with Hākau. 'Umi found great favor from his father, increasing Hākau's dislike.[42]

In exile, 'Umi took wives and began building forces and followers. Chiefs began to see him as of the highest chiefly nature from signs they observed. He gave food to people and became known for caring for all.

After Hākau's death the other aliʻi claimed their districts for themselves. 'Umi took the advice of the two priests by marrying many women of high noble rank, including his half sister Kapukini and the daughter of the ruler of Hilo, where he had been given sanctuary during Hākau's reign. Eventually 'Umi conquered the entire island.[35][38]

After unifying the island of Hawaii, 'Umi was faithful to those who had supported him, and allowed his three most faithful companions, and the two Kahuna who had aided him, to help him govern.[38]

Aikāne edit

Aikāne relationships or (mostly male) homosexual or bisexual activity in the pre-colonial era was an accepted tradition.[43] These relationships were accepted as part of Hawaiian culture.[44] Such sexual relationships may have begun as teenagers and continued thereafter, even though they also had heterosexual partners. Cook and his associates provided extensive eyewitness accounts and analyses of such young men.[45] were connected to chiefs whose functions were sexual, social, and political.[46] The Hawaiian aikāne relationship was a part of Hawaiian noble life, including that of Kamehameha I. Some myths refer to women's desires and therefore some women may have been involved in aikāne relationships.[47] Līloa originated this practice[48] among the aliʻi, which was then copied by the other classes. Warriors engaged in the practice. In many cases, the men involved felt it an honor and responsibility to honor their hana lawelawe.[48]

Lieutenant James King stated that "all the chiefs had them" and recounted a tale that Cook was asked by one chief to leave King behind, as a great honor. American adventurer and sailor John Ledyard commented in detail about the tradition.[49]

Land division system edit

Land was divided in accord with the wishes of the Ali‘i Nui. The system had four hierarchical levels:

  • mokupuni (island)
  • moku (subdivision of an island)
  • ahupuaʻa (subdivision of moku)
  • ʻili (two or three per ahupuaʻa, but Kahoolawe for example had eight)

Some oral history relates that ʻUmi a Līloa created the ahupuaʻa system.[50]

Each ahupuaʻa included a lowland mala and upland forested region.[51] The divisions typically went from the ridge top to the coast, often following the boundary of a stream. Ahupuaʻa varied in size depending on the economic means of the location and political divisions of the area. The system exploited the fact that communities were organized along stream systems. The community governance system of Kānāwai is attributed specifically to shared water usage.

Each ahupuaʻa was divided into ʻili that in turn were divided into kuleana, individual plots of land that were cultivated by commoners who paid taxes to the land overseer each week. These taxes went to support the chief.[52] Possible reasons for this radial division include:

  • travel: in many areas, it is easier to travel up- and downstream than from valley to valley.
  • economy: having all climate and economic exploitation zones in each land division ensured that each could be self-sufficient for much of its needs.

"As the native Hawaiians used the resources within their ahupuaʻa, they practiced aloha (respect), laulima (cooperation) and malama (stewardship), which resulted in a desirable pono (balance)". The Hawaiians believed that the land, the sea, the clouds and all of nature were interconnected, which is why they used these resources to reach the desired balance in life.[53] Sustainability was maintained by the konohiki and kahuna (priests who restricted the fishing of certain species during specific seasons). They also regulated the gathering of plants.[52]

Ahupuaʻa is derived from the Hawaiian words ahu (heap, cairn) and puaʻa (pig). Ahupuaʻa boundary markers were traditionally heaps of stones used to hold offers (typically a pig) to the island chief.

Agriculture edit

 
Kalaniōpu`u, King of Owyhee bringing Presents to Captain Cook, by John Webber c. 1781

The Hawaiian agricultural system used both irrigated and rain-fed (dryland) systems. Irrigated systems mainly supported taro (kalo) cultivation. Rain-fed systems were known as the mala. There they cultivated uala (sweet potatoes), yams, and dryland taro[54] along with niu (coconuts), ʻulu (breadfruit), maiʻa (bananas) and ko (sugarcane). The kukui tree (Aleurites moluccanus) was sometimes used as shade to protect mala.[55] Each crop was cultivated in an area most suitable to its needs.[56]

Hawaiians domesticated dogs, chickens, and pigs. They grew personal gardens at home. Water was important to Hawaiian life; it was used for fishing, bathing, drinking, and gardening, and for loko i'a (fishpond aquaculture systems).[54]

Governance edit

The Kingdom was administered by an ali'i chief.[52][57] Divisions were under the control of other smaller chiefs and managed by a steward.[58] The headman of a land division or ahupua`a is a konohiki.[52] Mokus were ruled by an aliʻi ʻaimoku. Ahupua'as were run by a headman or chief called a Konohiki.[28][59]: p. 71 

Konohiki edit

In the Keelikolani vs Robinson court case, kononiki is defined as land agent. In the Territory vs Bishop Trust Co. LTD. case, when the agent was appointed by a chief, they were referred to as konohiki. The term also referred to a designated area of land owned privately (not by the government).[60] A konohiki retained life tenure on the land even when discharged from the position, but a head man overseeing the same land had no such protection.[61]

Often ali'i and konohiki are treated synonymously. However, while most konohiki were ali'i, not all ali'i were konohiki. A konohiki could also be a headman of a land division or to describe fishing rights. Kono means to entice or prompt. Hiki refers to something that can be done. The oversaw the property, managing water rights, land distribution, agricultural use and any maintenance. Konohiki also ensured that the right amounts of gifts and tribute were properly made at the right times.[62]

As capitalism was incorporated into the kingdom, konohiki became tax collectors, landlords, and fishery wardens.[62]

End of Kapu edit

Hawaiians overthrew the kapu theocracy in 1819 by themselves, before the missionaries' arrival. On October 4, 1819, Kamehameha II, dined with Queen Ka'ahumanu, Kamehameha I's favored wife, and his own mother, Queen Keopuolani. The prohibition on men and women eating together, the ‘ai kapu, was one of the most ancient kapu or prohibitions: the penalty for its violation was death. Queen Ka‘ahumanu, however, despised the prohibition as it prevented her from entering certain religious temples where men made decisions over meals. Queen Keopuolani also violated the prohibition even before the public breaking.[63] Violating ‘ai kapu at a public dinner, as Kamehameha II did, was a clear signal that the kapu system was abolished. The guests at the dinner cried out ai noa! (free eating). Afterwards, Kamehameha II – with the support of his high priest Hewahewa – ordered the destruction of the heiau temples. Afterwards, Kamehameha I's nephew, Kekuaokalani launched a brief civil war. his forces were defeated by Kamehameha II's at Kuamo‘o, reinforcing the new way.[64][65][7]

Contact edit

 
HMS Resolution and HMS Discovery. On February 14, 1779, Capt. James Cook was killed on the island of Hawaii.

Captain James Cook (1728–1779) led three voyages (1768–1779) to chart unknown seas for Great Britain.[66] On his third voyage he encountered Hawaii[67] on January 18, 1778.[68][69] He anchored off the coast of Kauai and met local inhabitants to trade and obtain water and food for his voyage. On February 2, 1778, Cook continued on to the North American continent, searching for a Northwest Passage for approximately nine months. He returned to the islands to resupply, initially exploring the coasts of Maui and Hawaii Island to trade. He anchored in Kealakekua Bay in January 1779. After departing Kealakekua, he returned in February 1779 after a ship's mast broke in bad weather.[70]

On the night of February 13, while Cook's expedition lay at anchor, Hawaiians stole one of his only two longboats (lifeboats used to ferry to/from ship/shore).[71] In retaliation, Cook tried to kidnap the aliʻi nui of Hawaii Island, Kalaniʻōpuʻu. On February 14, 1779, Cook confronted an angry crowd. Kanaʻina approached Cook, who reacted by striking the royal attendant with the broad side of his sword. Kanaʻina picked up the navigator and dropped him[clarification needed] while another attendant, Nuaa, killed Cook with a knife.[72] Thereafter, European and American vessels began to visit and influence the trajectory of Hawaiian history.

Spanish captain Ruy López de Villalobos may have preceded Cook in 1542, while traveling between Philippines and Mexico, both then part of New Spain. The Spanish called the islands "Isla de Mesa, de los Monjes y Desgraciada".[73][74][75]

Kingdom of Hawaii edit

The Kingdom of Hawaii lasted from 1795 until its overthrow in 1893 with the fall of the House of Kalakaua.[76]

House of Kamehameha edit

 
Kamehameha I, founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii

The House of Kamehameha (Hale O Kamehameha), or the Kamehameha dynasty, was the reigning Royal Family of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, beginning with its founding by Kamehameha I in 1795 and ending with the deaths of Kamehameha V in 1872 and William Charles Lunalilo in 1874.[77]

Its origins can be traced to half brothers, Kalaniʻōpuʻu and Keōua. Kalaniʻōpuʻu's father was Kalaninuiʻīamamao while Keōua's father was Kalanikeʻeaumoku, both sons of Keaweʻīkekahialiʻiokamoku.[78] They shared a common mother, Kamakaʻīmoku. Both brothers served Alapaʻinui, the ruling King of Hawaii Island. Hawaiian genealogy leaves the possibility that Kahekili II might have been his biological father.[78][79] Regardless, Kamehameha I's descent from Keawe flowed through his mother, Kekuʻiapoiwa II, a granddaughter of Keawe. Keōua acknowledged him as his son and this relationship is recognized by official genealogies.[78]

The traditional ole chant of Keaka, wife of Alapainui, indicates that Kamehameha I was born in ikuwā (winter) around November.[80] Kamehameha was allegedly born during the passing of Halley's Comet. In Hawaiian culture a comet indicated an important birth.[81] Hawaiian prophecy said that this baby would one day unite the islands.[81] Alapai gave the young Kamehameha to his wife Keaka and her sister Hākau to care for after the ruler discovered the boy had lived.[82][83] Samuel Kamakau, wrote, "during the time of the warfare among the chiefs of [the island of] Hawaii which followed the death of Keawe, chief over the whole island (Ke-awe-i-kekahi-aliʻi-o-ka-moku) that Kamehameha I was born". However, his general dating was challenged.[84] Abraham Fornander wrote, "when Kamehameha died in 1819 he was past eighty years old. His birth would thus fall between 1736 and 1740, probably nearer the former".[85] William De Witt Alexander listed the birth year as 1736.[86] He was first named Paiea but took the name Kamehameha, meaning "The very lonely one" or "The one set alone".[87][88]

Kamehameha's uncle Kalaniʻōpuʻu raised him after Keōua's death. Kalaniʻōpuʻu ruled Hawaii as had his grandfather Keawe. He had advisors and priests. When word reached the ruler that chiefs were planning to murder the boy, he told Kamehameha:

 
The god Kū-ka-ili-moku was left to Kamehameha I by his uncle Kalaniʻōpuʻu

"My child, I have heard the secret complaints of the chiefs and their mutterings that they will take you and kill you, perhaps soon. While I am alive they are afraid, but when I die they will take you and kill you. I advise you to go back to Kohala." "I have left you the god; there is your wealth."[78]

After Kalaniʻōpuʻu's death, Kīwalaʻō took his father's place as first born and ruled the island, while Kamehameha became the religious authority. Some chiefs preferred Kamehameha and war broke out to overthrow Kīwalaʻō. After multiple battles the king was killed and envoys sent for the last two brothers to meet with Kamehameha. Keōua and Kaōleiokū arrived in separate canoes. Keōua came to shore first where a fight broke out and he and all aboard were killed. Before the same could happen to the second canoe, Kamehameha intervened. In 1793 Captain George Vancouver sailed from Britain and presented the Union Flag to Kamehameha, who was fighting to unite the islands. The Union Jack flew unofficially as Hawaii's flag until 1816,[89] including during a brief spell of formal British rule after Kamehameha ceded Hawaii to Vancouver in 1794.

By 1795, Kamehameha had conquered all but Kaua'i of the main islands. For his first royal residence, the new King built the first western-style structure in the Hawaiian Islands, known as the "Brick Palace".[90] The location became the seat of government until 1845.[91][92] The structure was built at Keawa'iki point in Lahaina, Maui.[93] Two ex-convicts from Australia's Botany Bay penal colony built the home.[94] It was begun in 1798 and was completed in 1802.[95][96] The house was intended for Kaʻahumanu,[97] but she rejected it in favor of an adjacent, traditional home.[93]

Kamehameha I had many wives, but held two in the highest regard. Keōpūolani was the highest ranking aliʻi of her time[98] and mother to his sons, Liholiho and Kauikeaouli. Kaʻahumanu was his favorite. Kamehameha I died in 1819, succeeded by Liholiho.[99]

Kamehameha II edit

 
Kamehameha II in England with Queen and entourage

After Kamehameha I's death, Liholiho left Kailua for a week and returned to be crowned king. At the ceremony, attended by commoners and nobles, he approached the circle of chiefs, as Kaʻahumanu, the central figure in the group and Dowager Queen, said, "Hear me O Divine one, for I make known to you the will of your father. Behold these chiefs and the men of your father, and these your guns, and this your land, but you and I shall share the realm together". Liholiho agreed officially, which began a unique system of dual-government consisting of a King and co-ruler similar to a regent.[100] Kamehameha II shared his rule with his stepmother, Kaʻahumanu. She defied Hawaiian kapu by dining with the young king, leading to the end of the Hawaiian religion. Kamehameha II died, along with his wife, Queen Kamāmalu in 1824 on a state visit to England, succumbing to measles. He was King for 5 years.[99]

The couple's remains were returned to Hawaii by Boki. Aboard the ship The Blond, his wife Liliha and Kekūanaōʻa were baptized as Christians. Kaʻahumanu also converted and became a powerful Christian influence on Hawaiian society until her death in 1832.[101] Since the new king was only 12 years old, Kaʻahumanu reigned as senior ruler and named Boki as her Kuhina Nui.

Boki left Hawaii on a trip to find sandalwood to cover a debt and was lost at sea. His wife, Liliha took the governorship of Maui and unsuccessfully attempted to revolt against Kaʻahumanu, who upon Boki's departure, had installed Kīnaʻu as a co-governor.[101]

Kaʻahumanu edit

 
Kaʻahumanu with Charles Kanaʻina

Kaʻahumanu was born on Maui around 1777. Her parents were aliʻi of a lower-ranking line. She became Kamehameha's consort at fourteen. George Vancouver states: "[O]ne of the finest woman we had yet seen on any of the islands".[102] To wed the young woman, Kamehameha had to consent to make her children his heirs, but she had no issue.[25]

Before his death, Kamehameha selected Kaʻahumanu to rule along with his son. Kaʻahumanu adopted the boy.[103] She became the senior ruler. A portrait artist remarked of her: "This Old Dame is the most proud, unbending Lady in the whole island. As the widow of [Kamehameha], she possesses unbound authority and respect, not any of which she is inclined to lay aside on any occasion whatsoever".[104] She was one of Hawaii's most influential leaders.[105]

Kamehameha III edit

 
Picture of King Kamehameha III

Kauikeaouli was the second son of Kamehameha I and was born in Keauhou Bay on the island of Hawai'i.[106] Kauikeaouli's birthdate is not known, but historians estimated it to be on March 17, 1814, making him about 14 years younger than Liholiho.[106] After his birth, Kuakini refused to take him, because Kauikeaouli appeared to be lifeless.[107] However, the prophet of another chief declared that the baby would live. They cleaned him and put him on a sacred area where the seer fanned him and sprinkled him with water while reciting a prayer.[107] The baby started to move and make sounds. Kaikioewa was chosen as the baby's guardian and raised him in a remote location.

Kauikeaouli became King after Liholiho's death in 1824. Kamehameha III began the writing of Hawaii's first formal laws and created a governmental structure. He replacedindigenous traditions with Anglo-American common law.[108] The action was prompted from increasing threat of colonization who were intrigued by the location of the islands.[109] Kamehameha III was advised by William Richards, a former missionary. Richards travelled to the United States in an attempt to learn more about its politics and government structure. He taught Kamehameha III his findings and together they created the first constitution of Hawaii in 1840.[109] Kamehameha III enacted laws that recognized human rights and established a new system for land ownership called Mahele.[110] Another major decision was to move the capital from Lahaina to Honolulu.[111]

 
King Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama with their nephews, Prince Alexander Liholiho, Prince Lot Kapuaiwa and niece Princess Victoria Kamamalu

In 1843, for a five-month period, Kamehameha III allowed British captain Lord George Paulet to control the islands.[112] Kamehameha III wrote a letter to the British government informing them of Paulet's actions. Great Britain then reestablished the islands independence on July 31, 1843,[112] and Kamehameha III uttered what became the Hawaiian motto, "Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻĀina i ka Pono," meaning, "The life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness." The day became a national holiday known as Lā Hoʻihoʻi Ea.[113]

Kamehameha III married Queen Kalama on February 14, 1837. Kamehameha had one son with his mistress Jane Lahilahi who survived to adulthood, Albert Edward Kūnuiakea. He had two boys with Queen Kalama who died young: Prince Keaweaweʻulaokalani I and Prince Keaweaweʻulaokalani II.[114] Alexander Liholiho, Kamehameha III's nephew, was taken in by the King and pronounced as heir to the throne.[115] In 1854 he became king as a result of a sudden death of Kamehameha III, likely by stroke.[114]

Kamehameha IV edit

 
Picture of Kamehameha IV

Alexander Liholiho was born on February 9, 1834, in the capital of the country, Honolulu. 21 years later he took the throne and the name Kamehameha IV. He studied at the Chiefs' Children's School and learned French from Protestant missionaries.[116] The princes did not have a happy experience at the school and were often sent to bed hungry.[117] Liholiho left the school when he was 14 and began studying law. In his late teens, Liholiho began traveling with his brother, Lot Kapuāiwa, in an attempt to establish Hawaii's presence as an independent nation. They travelled to nations such as the United States, France, and Panama.[116] After an 1849 French attack by Admiral de Tromelin, Liholiho was tasked with trying to improve relations with France. Liholiho and Kapuaiwa were accompanied by Gerrit P. Judd to France with hopes of a treaty.[118][116] After three months they ultimately failed and returned to the islands. Following his return he was appointed to Kamehameha III's privy council in 1852.[119]

 
Portrait of Queen Emma Rooke

After taking the throne in 1855, Kamehameha IV's main goal was to limit United States influence. He ended negotiations over the annexation of Hawaii to the United States[117] that had been started by Kamehameha III. In 1856 Kamehameha IV had an Anglican wedding with Emma Rooke. Emma Rook was the great-grandniece of King Kamehameha I and was an ali'i.[117] Queen Emma was very pro-British due to her British adoptive parents. In 1858 the Queen and King had their only child, Prince Albert Edward Kauikeaouli Kaleiopapa a Kamehameha. The prince died in 1862, but was described as kind and cheerful. Kamehameha IV established the Anglican church in Hawaii.[117] The cause of death for the prince is believed to have been appendicitis.[120] Kamehameha IV blamed himself for the death. As a result, the Queen and the King prioritized healthcare, because diseases like leprosy and influenza were destroying the Hawaiian people. The king's plan was struck down because a healthcare plan had been part of the Constitution of 1852.[117]

The King's rule came to an end on November 30, 1863, when he died from chronic asthma.[121] The King had been experiencing deteriorating health for several months before the tragic passing. Kamehameha IV was succeeded by his brother Lot who became Kamehameha V. Queen Emma remained involved in politics until she ultimately lost the race to become the Kingdom's ruling monarch to David Kalakaua.

Royal election edit

 
King David Kalākaua

The legislature decided to hold a public referendum and to choose who the public voted for. Queen Emma and David Kalākaua both declared their candidacy. Kalākaua won the 1874 election. While the legislature was formally voting to certify Kalākaua as King, Queen Emma's supporters descended on the capitol and attacked the legislators. 13 legislators supporting Kalākaua were injured, including one who died after he was tossed from a window. The monarchy had no army and the police deserted, leading the government to request the support of American troops to quell the riot.[122]

The new ruler was pressured by the U.S. government to surrender Pearl Harbor to the Navy.[122] Kalākaua was concerned that this would lead to annexation by the U.S. and to violating the traditions of the Hawaiian people, who believed that the 'Āina was fertile, sacred and not for sale.[122]

Whaling edit

In 1816, the populations of Honolulu was around 3,000, almost all Hawaiians, although16 Americans lived on Oahu, all before whaling. As whaling grew, the population grew with it, reaching 23,000 in 1890. One ship arrived in Honolulu in 1820, 62 visited in 1822, 98 in 1829, and 110 in 1833. In Lahaina, 17 whaleships anchored in 1824, 62 in 1830 and 80 in 1832. The crews typically numbered around 30 men. They visited once or twice/year, to restock supplies.[123] US whaling peaked in the 1850s, and was mostly over by the end of the Hawaiian Kingdom.[124]

Sugar reciprocity edit

 
Charles Reed Bishop, Minister of Foreign Affairs (Hawaii)

The first permanent sugar plantation began in Kauai in 1835. William Hooper leased 980 acres of land from Kamehameha III. Within thirty years plantations operated on all four main islands. Sugar upended Hawaii's economy.[125][126]

American influence in Hawaiian government began when U.S. plantation owners demanded a say in Kingdom politics. Pressure from these plantation owners was felt by the King and chiefs as demands for land tenure. Kamehameha III responded to the demands with the Mahele, distributing land to all Hawaiians as advocated by missionaries including Gerrit P. Judd.[127]

During the 1850s, the U.S. import tariff on sugar from Hawaii was much higher than the tariffs Hawaiians were charging the U.S. Kamehameha III sought reciprocity.[128] The monarch wished to lower U.S. tariffs and make Hawaiian sugar competitive with other foreign suppliers. In 1854 Kamehameha III's proposal of reciprocity between the countries died in the U.S. Senate.[129]

U.S. control of Hawaii was considered vital for the defense of its west coast. The military was especially interested in Pu'uloa, Pearl Harbor.[130] The sale of one harbor was proposed by Charles Reed Bishop, a foreigner who had married into the Kamehameha family, had risen to be Hawaiian Minister of Foreign Affairs and owned a country home near Pu'uloa. He showed two U.S. officers around the lochs, although his wife, Bernice Pauahi Bishop, privately disapproved of selling Hawaiian lands. As monarch, Kamehameha, was content to let Bishop run most business affairs, but the ceding of lands was unpopular with Hawaiians. Many islanders thought that all the islands, rather than just Pearl Harbor, might be lost and opposed any cession. By November 1873, Lunalilo canceled negotiations, but he died on February 3, 1874.[130]

From 1874 through 1875, Kalākaua made a state visit to Washington DC to gather support for a new treaty.[131][132] Congress agreed to the Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 for seven years in exchange for Ford Island (Pearl Harbor).[133][134] After the treaty, sugar production expanded from 12,000 acres to 125,000 acres in 1891.[135] At the end of the seven-year term, the treaty lapsed given little interest in the United States.[136]

Rebellion of 1887 and the Bayonet Constitution edit

On January 20, 1887, the United States began leasing Pearl Harbor.[137] Shortly afterwards, a group of mostly non-Hawaiians calling themselves the Hawaiian Patriotic League began the Rebellion of 1887.[138] They drafted a constitution,[139] written by Lorrin Thurston, the Hawaiian Minister of the Interior who used the Hawaiian militia to threaten Kalākaua.[137] Kalākaua was forced to dismiss his cabinet ministers and sign the constitution, lessening his power.[122] It became known as the Bayonet Constitution due to the threat of force.[137]

 
Lorrin Thurston, Minister of the Interior (Hawaii)

Grover Cleveland was president at the time, and his secretary of state Thomas F. Bayard instructed American minister George W. Merrill that in the event of another revolution in Hawaii, the priority was to protect American commerce, lives and property. Bayard specified, "the assistance of the officers of our Government vessels, if found necessary, will therefore be promptly afforded to promote the reign of law and respect for orderly government in Hawaii."[140] In July 1889, a small scale rebellion ensued, and Minister Merrill landed Marines to protect Americans; the State Department explicitly approved this action. Merrill's replacement, minister John L. Stevens, followed those instructions in his controversial actions of 1893.[141]

Although Kalākaua's signature alone had no legal power, the constitution allowed him to appoint cabinet ministers, but stripped him of the power to dismiss them without approval from the Legislature.[142] Eligibility to vote for the House of Nobles was altered, requiring that both candidates and voters own property valued three thousand dollars or more, or have an annual income of six hundred dollars or more.[143] This disenfranchised two thirds of native Hawaiians and other ethnic groups who had previously been eligible to vote.[144] This constitution benefited the foreign plantation owners. With the legislature now responsible for naturalizing aliens, Americans and Europeans could retain their home country citizenship and vote as citizens of the kingdom.[145] Along with voting privileges, Americans could hold office and retain their US citizenship, something not afforded in any other nation[146] and even allowed Americans to vote without becoming naturalized.[147] Asian immigrants were no longer able to acquire citizenship or vote.[148]

Wilcox Rebellion of 1888 edit

 
ʻIolani Barracks, 2007

The Wilcox Rebellion of 1888 was a plot to overthrow King David Kalākaua and replace him with his sister in a coup d'état. This was in response to increased political tension between the legislature and the king.[18]

Kalākaua's distant cousin, a native Hawaiian officer and veteran of the Italian military, Robert William Wilcox returned to Hawaii[149] in October 1887 when the funding for his study program stopped. Wilcox, Charles B. Wilson, Princess Liliʻuokalani, and Sam Nowlein plotted to overthrow Kalākaua and replace him with Liliʻuokalani. 300 Hawaiian conspirators hid in Iolani Barracks and an alliance was formed with the Royal Guard, but the plot was accidentally discovered in January 1888, less than 48 hours before the revolt.[150] No one was prosecuted, but Wilcox was exiled. On February 11, 1888, Wilcox left Hawaii for San Francisco, intending to return to Italy with his wife.

Princess Liliʻuokalani was offered the throne several times by the Missionary Party who had forced the Bayonet Constitution on her brother, but she rejected the offers.[151] In January 1891, Kalākaua traveled to San Francisco for his health, staying at the Palace Hotel. He died there on January 20.[152] Liliʻuokalani then ascended the throne. She called her brother's reign "a golden age materially for Hawaii".[153]

Liliʻuokalani's attempt to re-write Constitution edit

 
Queen Liliʻuokalani

Liliʻuokalani assumed the throne in the middle of an economic crisis. The McKinley Act had crippled the Hawaiian sugar industry by removing the duties on sugar imports from other countries into the US, eliminating Hawaii's advantage.[154] Many Hawaii businesses and citizens lost revenue; in response Liliʻuokalani proposed a lottery and opium licensing.[155] Her ministers and closest friends were all opposed to this plan; they unsuccessfully tried to dissuade her from pursuing these initiatives, both of which came to be used against her in the brewing constitutional crisis.[156]

Liliʻuokalani's chief desire was to restore power to the monarch by abrogating the 1887 Bayonet Constitution and promulgating a new one.[157] The 1893 Constitution would have extended suffrage by reducing some property requirements. It would have disenfranchised many non-citizen Europeans and Americans. The Queen toured several islands on horseback, talking to the people about her ideas and receiving strong support, including a lengthy petition. However, when the Queen informed her cabinet of her plans, they withheld their support, because of what they expected to be her opponent's likely response.[158]

Liliʻuokalani's attempt to promulgate a new constitution on January 14, 1893, precipitated the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii three days later.[159] The conspirators' stated goals were to depose the queen, overthrow the monarchy, and seek US annexation.[160][161]

Overthrow edit

The overthrow was led by Thurston, who was the grandson of American missionaries[162] and derived his support primarily from the American and European business class and other supporters of the Reform Party of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Most of the leaders of the 13-member Committee of Safety that deposed the queen were American and European citizens who were Kingdom subjects.[163][164][165] They included legislators, government officers, and a Supreme Court Justice.[166]

 
John L. Stevens, an American diplomat, conspired to overthrow the Kingdom of Hawaii

On January 16, the Marshal of the Kingdom, Charles B. Wilson was tipped off by detectives of the planned coup. Wilson requested warrants to arrest the 13 Council members and put the Kingdom under martial law. Because the members had strong political ties with U.S. Government Minister John L. Stevens, the requests were repeatedly denied by Attorney General Arthur P. Peterson and the Queen's cabinet. They feared that the arrests would escalate the situation. After a failed negotiation with Thurston,[167] Wilson began to collect his troops. Wilson and Captain of the Royal Household Guard Samuel Nowlein rallied a force of 496 troops to protect the Queen.[168]

The overthrow began on January 17, 1893. A policeman was shot and wounded while trying to stop a wagon carrying weapons to the Honolulu Rifles, the Committee's paramilitary wing. The Committee feared the shooting would bring government forces and stop the coup before it could begin. The Committee of Safety initiated the overthrow by organizing the Honolulu Rifles made of about 1,500 armed non-native men. The Rifles garrisoned Ali'iolani Hale across the street from ʻIolani Palace and waited for the Queen's response.

United States military support edit

 
USS Boston

The coup efforts were supported by Stevens.[169] The coup placed the queen under house arrest at Iolani Palace. Advised about supposed threats to non-combatant American lives and property by the Committee,[170] Stevens summoned a company of U.S. Marines from the USS Boston and two companies of U.S. sailors to take up positions at the U.S. Legation, Consulate, and Arion Hall on January 16. 162 armed sailors and Marines aboard the USS Boston in Honolulu Harbor came ashore under orders of neutrality. The sailors and Marines did not participate, but their presence intimidated royalist defenders. Historian William Russ states, "the injunction to prevent fighting of any kind made it impossible for the monarchy to protect itself."[171]

United States territory edit

Annexation edit

 
Political cartoon of 1898

In March 1897, William McKinley, a Republican expansionist, succeeded Democrat Grover Cleveland as U.S. president. He prepared a treaty of annexation but it lacked the needed 2/3 majority in the Senate given Democratic opposition. A joint resolution, written by Democratic Congressman Francis G. Newlands to annex Hawaii passed both the House and Senate; it needed only majority support. The U.S. Supreme Court gave tacit recognition to the annexation in De Lima v. Bidwell, 182 U.S. 1, 196 (1901).[172] The Spanish–American War had broken out and many leaders wanted control of Pearl Harbor to help the United States become a Pacific power and protect the West Coast. Kalākaua was concerned over a possible United States seizure and in Kalākaua's 1881 world tour, he met secretly with the Japanese Emperor to discuss bringing Hawaii under Japan's protection. He proposed to unite the two nations with an arranged marriage between his 5-year-old niece Princess Kaʻiulani and 13-year-old Prince Yamashina Sadamaro. Japan rejected his proposal over concerns that this would worsen relations between Japan and the United States.[173] In 1897 Japan sent warships to Hawaii to oppose annexation. This made the decision more urgent, especially since the islands' fourth-largest population was of Japanese heritage. They were largely aligned with Japan.[174]

McKinley signed the Newlands Resolution annexing Hawaii on July 7, 1898, creating the Territory of Hawaii. On February 22, 1900, the Hawaiian Organic Act established a territorial government. Annexation opponents held that this was illegal, claiming the Queen was the only legitimate ruler. McKinley appointed Sanford B. Dole as territorial governor. The territorial legislature convened for the first time on February 20, 1901. Hawaiians formed the Hawaiian Independent Party, under the leadership of Robert Wilcox, Hawaii's first congressional delegate.[175]

Plantations edit

Sugarcane plantations in Hawaii expanded during the territorial period. Some companies diversified and dominated related industries such as transportation, banking and real estate. Economic and political power was concentrated in what were known as the "Big Five".

A 1909 strike by Japanese farm workers led to a brief experiment importing Russian laborers, mostly from Siberia. False promises of land grants by a recruiter named A.W. Perelstrous resulted in strikes among the Russian workers. Hardships included a measles outbreak, lack of ability to communicate with Hawaiians, and culture clashes. Most Russians ended up moving to California, New York, or back to Russia (mostly after the 1917 Russian Revolution).[176]

World War II edit

Attack on Pearl Harbor edit

 
USS Arizona during the attack on Pearl Harbor

Pearl Harbor was attacked on December 7, 1941, by the Imperial Japanese Navy, killing almost 2,500 people and sinking the main Pacific battleship fleet. Fortuitously for the Americans, the four Pacific aircraft carriers were at sea and escaped damage. Hawaii was put under martial law until 1945.[177]

Unlike the Pacific Coast where 100,000 ethnic Japanese-American citizens were interned, the Japanese-American population in Hawaii avoided internment, although hundreds of pro-Japan leaders were arrested.[177]

Pearl Harbor was the U.S.' main forward base for the Pacific War. The Japanese planned to attack in summer 1942 but were defeated at the Battle of Midway. Hundreds of thousands of American soldiers, sailors, Marines, and airmen passed through the islands. The islands were used for training and bivouac throughout the war.[177]

Hawaii residents formed the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a U.S. Army infantry regiment. The regiment was composed almost entirely of American soldiers of Japanese ancestry. It fought primarily in Italy, southern France and Germany. The 442nd Regiment was the most decorated unit for its size and length of service in American history. Its 4,000 members had to be reinforced nearly 2.5 times to replace casualties. In total, about 14,000 Hawaiians served in the regiment, earning 9,486 Purple Hearts. The unit was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations (five in one month). Twenty-one of its members, including Hawaii's former U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye, were awarded Medals of Honor. Its motto was "Go for Broke".[178]

Politics edit

Initially, the Hawaii Republican Party dominated territorial politics. However, in 1954 a series of non-violent industry-wide strikes, protests and other civil disobedience transpired. In the territorial elections of 1954 the Democratic Party of Hawaii gained the majority and lobbied for statehood. The labor force unionized, hastening the plantations' decline.

Statehood edit

 
Hawaii residents overwhelmingly voted in favor of statehood in 1959

President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Hawaii Admission Act on March 18, 1959, which created the means for Hawaiian statehood. After a referendum in which over 93% of Hawaiian citizens voted in favor of statehood, Hawaii was admitted as the 50th state on August 21, 1959.[citation needed]

Annexation legacy edit

From contact through to annexation, the number of Native Hawaiians in Hawaii declined. Bottom was reached in the first census conducted by the United States in 1900 at 37,656. Thereafter the Native Hawaiian population in Hawaii increased with every census.[3]

For many Native Hawaiians, the relationship between the islands and the mainland is problematic, in part because of how Hawaii lost its independence. By contrast the ultimate step of becoming a U.S. State was done properly.

The 1960s Hawaiian Renaissance led to renewed interest in the Hawaiian language, culture and identity.

Congress passed the Apology Resolution (US Public Law 103-150) and it was signed by President Bill Clinton on November 23, 1993. This resolution apologized "to Native Hawaiians on behalf of the people of the United States for the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii on January 17, 1893... and the deprivation of the rights of Native Hawaiians to self-determination." The implications of this resolution have been debated.[179][180] The resolution's description of Hawaiian history has been criticized,[181] for example, for ignoring the fact that the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom was led by Hawaiian citizens on the Committee of Safety. The resolution also does not explain why it applies only to people descended from persons living in pre-contact Hawaii, as opposed to all subjects of the Kingdom at the time of the overthrow.[182][6][7]

In 2000, Senator Daniel Akaka proposed what was called the Akaka Bill to extend federal recognition to those of Native Hawaiian ancestry as a sovereign group similar to Native American tribes. The bill did not pass.[183]

See also edit

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Specialty studies edit

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  • Brown, DeSoto and Anne Ellett. Hawaii goes to war: life in Hawaii from Pearl Harbor to peace (1989).
  • Chapin, Helen. Shaping history: The role of newspapers in Hawai'i (University of Hawaii Press, 1996).
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  • Melendy, Howard Brett. Walter Francis Dillingham, 1875–1963: Hawaiian Entrepreneur and Statesman (Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 1996).
  • Morgan, William Michael. "The Anti-Japanese Origins of the Hawaiian Annexation Treaty Of 1897" Diplomatic History. (1982) 6#1 pp. 23–44.
    • Morgan, William Michael (2011). Pacific Gibraltar: U.S.-Japanese Rivalry Over the Annexation of Hawai'i, 1885-1898. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-529-5. See online review by Kenneth R. Conklin, PhD
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  • Russ, William Adam. The Hawaiian Republic (1894–98) and its struggle to win annexation (Susquehanna U Press, 1992).
  • Schmitt, Robert C. Historical Statistics of Hawaii (University Press of Hawaii, 1977).
  • Schmitt, Robert C. "Religious statistics of Hawaii, 1825-1972." Hawaiian Journal of History (1973), Vol. 7, pp 41–47.
  • Schmitt, Robert C. Demographic Statistics of Hawaii." Demographic Statistics of Hawaii (University of Hawaii Press, 2021).
  • Siler, Julia Flynn. Lost Kingdom: Hawaii's Last Queen, the Sugar Kings and America's First Imperial Adventure (2012).
  • Sumida, Stephen H. And the View from the Shore: Literary Traditions of Hawai'i (University of Washington Press, 2015).
  • Teodoro, Luis V., ed. Out of this struggle: The Filipinos in Hawaii (U. University of Hawaii Press, 2019).
  • Tregaskis, Richard. The warrior king: Hawaii's Kamehameha the Great (1973).
  • Van Dyke, Jon M. (2008). Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawai'i? (PDF). U of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3211-7. Via Google Books
  • Wilson, Rob. "Exporting Christian Transcendentalism, Importing Hawaiian Sugar: The Trans-Americanization of Hawai'i." American Literature 72#.3 (2000): 521–552. online

External links edit

  • Audio of Dwight D. Eisenhower Hawaii Statehood Proclamation Speech[permanent dead link]
  • Public Law 103-150
  • Scots in Hawai`i May 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • , by Chris Cook in The Islander Magazine
  • in The Islander Magazine
  • Today in Hawai`i History May 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • "Russians in Hawai'i". Hawaii History Community Learning Center. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  • "The French in Hawai'i". Hawaii History Community Learning Center. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  • . Hawaiian Historical Society. Archived from the original on January 24, 2010. Retrieved November 12, 2014.

history, hawaii, history, hawaii, story, human, settlements, hawaiian, islands, polynesians, arrived, sometime, between, 1000, 1200, kamehameha, ruler, island, hawaii, conquered, unified, islands, first, time, establishing, kingdom, hawaii, 1795, kingdom, beca. The history of Hawaii is the story of human settlements in the Hawaiian Islands Polynesians arrived sometime between 1000 and 1200 AD 1 Kamehameha I the ruler of the island of Hawaii conquered and unified the islands for the first time establishing the Kingdom of Hawaii in 1795 2 The kingdom became prosperous and important for its agriculture and strategic location in the Pacific Kamehameha was aided by European military technology that became available once an expedition led by British explorer James Cook reached the islands in 1778 the first sustained contact with Europeans American immigration led by Protestant missionaries and Native Hawaiian emigration mostly on whaling ships began almost immediately after Cook s arrival 3 Americans established plantations to grow crops for export Their farming methods required substantial labor Waves of permanent immigrants came from Japan China and the Philippines to work in the cane and pineapple fields The government of Japan organized and gave special protection to its people who comprised about 25 percent of the Hawaiian population by 1896 4 The Hawaiian monarchy encouraged this multi ethnic society initially establishing a constitutional monarchy in 1840 that promised equal voting rights regardless of race gender or wealth 5 6 7 The population of Native Hawaiians declined precipitously from an unknown number prior to 1778 estimated to be around 300 000 It fell to around 142 000 in the 1820s based on a census conducted by American missionaries 82 203 in the 1850 Hawaiian Kingdom census 40 622 in the final Hawaiian Kingdom census of 1890 39 504 in the sole census by the Republic of Hawaii in 1896 and 37 656 in the first census conducted by the United States in 1900 Thereafter the Native Hawaiian population in Hawaii increased with every census reaching 680 442 in 2020 including people of mixed heritage 8 3 9 In 1893 Queen Liliʻuokalani was deposed and placed under house arrest by businessmen with help from the United States military The Republic of Hawaii governed for a short time until Hawaii was annexed by the United States in 1898 as the Territory of Hawaii In 1959 the islands became the 50th American state Contents 1 Ancient Hawaii 1 1 Discovery and settlement 1 2 Religion 1 3 Rulers of Hawaii island 1 3 1 Liloa 1 3 2 Hakau 1 3 3 ʻUmi a Liloa 1 4 Aikane 1 5 Land division system 1 6 Agriculture 1 6 1 Governance 1 7 Konohiki 1 8 End of Kapu 2 Contact 3 Kingdom of Hawaii 3 1 House of Kamehameha 3 2 Kamehameha II 3 3 Kaʻahumanu 3 4 Kamehameha III 3 5 Kamehameha IV 3 6 Royal election 3 7 Whaling 3 8 Sugar reciprocity 3 9 Rebellion of 1887 and the Bayonet Constitution 3 10 Wilcox Rebellion of 1888 3 11 Liliʻuokalani s attempt to re write Constitution 3 12 Overthrow 3 13 United States military support 4 United States territory 4 1 Annexation 4 2 Plantations 4 3 World War II 4 3 1 Attack on Pearl Harbor 4 4 Politics 5 Statehood 5 1 Annexation legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Specialty studies 9 External linksAncient Hawaii editMain article Ancient Hawaii Discovery and settlement edit Main article Discovery and settlement of Hawaii nbsp Chronological dispersal of Austronesian people across the Pacific The date of the first settlements is a continuing debate 10 Kirch s textbooks on Hawaiian archeology date the first Polynesian settlements to about 300 although his more recent estimates are as late as 600 Other theories suggest dates as late as 700 to 800 10 The most recent survey of carbon dating evidence puts the arrival of the first settlers at around 940 1130 11 The history of the ancient Polynesians was passed down through genealogy chants recited at formal and family functions The high chiefs genealogy traced back to the period believed to be inhabited only by gods The pua aliʻi flower of royalty were considered to be living gods 12 By about 1000 coastal settlements were beginning to cultivate food 13 Tahitian priest Pa ao is said to have brought a new order around 1200 It included laws and a social structure that separated the people into classes The aliʻi nui was the king with his ʻaha kuhina just below them The aliʻi were the royal nobles with the kahuna high priest below them the makaʻainana commoners next with the kaua as the lowest class 14 The rulers noho aliʻi o ko Hawaiʻi Pae ʻAina were independent rulers of geographic areas Their genealogy traces to Hanalaʻanui and others 15 The aliʻi nui were responsible for making sure that people observed a strict kapu code of conduct The system governed many aspects of Hawaiian social order fishing rights and even where women could eat 16 By 1500 Hawaiians began to spread to the interiors of the islands and religion was more emphasized 13 The group of islands did not have a single name and each island was ruled separately 7 The names of the islands recorded by Captain Cook reflect this fact 17 Kamehameha I as ruler of the island of Hawaii imposed the name Hawaii on his kingdom 18 Religion edit nbsp Kailua Kona Island of Hawaii Atheists were known as aia 19 However the dominant religion as in many other Polynesian societies was the kapu taboo religion It had a theology ritual and a code of conduct 20 It included many gods and heroes that people worshiped in different ways 19 In one tradition Wakea the Sky Father wed Papahanaumoku the Earth Mother and from their union came all Hawaiians including the other gods 20 In traditional Pu anue genealogy Kumukumu ke kaa and her husband Paia a ka lani were the mother and father of the earth and heavens Another genealogy declared that Ka mai eli and Kumu honua were the mother and father 19 The kapu religion in Hawaii was polytheistic led by the gods Kane Ku Lono and Kanaloa Other notable deities included Laka Kihawahine Haumea Papahanaumoku and most famously Pele Each Hawaiian family is considered to have one or more guardian spirits or family gods known as ʻaumakua 21 One such god is Iolani the god of aliʻi 20 One breakdown of the Kapu pantheon 22 noted the following groups four major gods ka ha Ku Kane Lono Kanaloa forty male gods or aspects of Kane ke kanaha four hundred gods and goddesses ka lau a multitude of gods and goddesses ke kini akua spirits na ʻunihipili guardians na ʻaumakua Another breakdown 23 consists of three major groups four gods or akua Ku Kane Lono Kanaloa many lesser gods or kupua each associated with certain professions guardian spirits ʻaumakua associated with particular families Rulers of Hawaii island edit Liloa edit Liloa was a legendary ruler of the island of Hawaii in the late 15th century 24 His royal compound was in Waipiʻo Valley His line traces to Hawaiian creation 25 Liloa had two sons his firstborn Hakau from his wife aunt Pinea his mother s sister and his second son ʻUmi a Liloa from his lesser wife Akahi a Kuleana 26 Upon his death Hakau became ruler and delegated religious authority to ʻUmi 27 Akahi a Kuleana was of a lesser line of chiefs who Liloa had fallen in love with when he discovered her bathing in a river The couple met when Liloa was visiting Hamakua He asserted his right to her as King and she accepted Liloa s Kaʻei is his sacred feathered sash now kept at the Bishop Museum 28 29 p 120 Liloa was the first son of Kiha nui lulu moku who descended from Hana laʻa nui 15 30 Liloa s mother Waioloa his grandmother Neʻula and great grandmother Laʻa kapu were of the ʻEwa aliʻi lines of Oahu 15 27 Liloa s father ruled Hawaii as aliʻi nui and upon his death elevated Liloa Kiha had had four other sons Kaunuamoa Makaoku Kepailiula and Hoolana whose descendants are the Kaiakea family of Molokai distant relatives of Abraham Fornander s daughter 31 Hakau edit Just before his death Liloa elevated Hakau as Chief telling Umi that he was to serve as his man Prime Minister and that each was to respect the other and should either have issue with the other it would be for them to decide At first a decent king Hakau soon became brutal To avoid his brother s anger Umi exiled himself to another district Hakau refused to help Nunu and Ka hohe his father s two favorite ailing Kahuna who had requested food This was considered highly insulting 32 The two were of Lono s priestly class They resented their treatment and plotted to see the kingdom in someone else s hand 33 Hakau did not believe the priests to have any power and showed them no respect as Umi was the spiritual authority 25 In this period no King could defy a Kahuna Many had a royal bloodline land and could leave their temples as warriors when needed but could never relinquish their spiritual responsibilities 34 Through a messenger of Kaoleioku of Waipunalei the high priest of the temple of Manini the two priests contacted Umi s court at Koholalele The two priests traveled to Waipunalei where they supported Umi s revolt 25 When Hakau received news that his brother was preparing to war against him he sent his main forces to prepare by seeking feathers to adorn their regalia After the warriors had left and Hakau was undefended Umi s warriors came forward claiming that they bore offerings for the king They dropped the bundles and used the rocks within to stone Hakau to death nbsp Umi was given a number of royal tokens to prove he was the son of Liloa including a Niho Palaoa The lei necklace was made of braided human hair and whale bone ʻUmi a Liloa edit ʻUmi a Liloa was a ruling aliʻi ai moku district high chief of Hawai i He became chief after his half brother s death 35 and was considered a just ruler religious 36 and the first to unite most of the Hawaii Island 37 The legend of ʻUmi a Liloa is one of Hawaii s most popular hero sagas 38 ʻUmi s wife was Princess Piʻikea 39 daughter of Piʻilani They had one son Kumalae 40 41 and one daughter Aihakōkō Liloa told Akahi that if she were to have a male child she should present the boy to him along with royal tokens he gave her as gifts to prove her boy was the son of the king Akahi hid the tokens from her husband and later gave birth to a son At the age of 15 or 16 his stepfather was punishing the boy when his mother intervened and told the man not to touch him because the boy was his lord and chief She uncovered the tokens to present to her husband to prove the high treason he would have committed Akahi gave her son the royal malo and lei niho palaoa given to her by Umi s biological father Only high chiefs wore these items She sent Umi to Waipiʻo Valley to present himself to the king as his son Liloa s palace was guarded and attended by several Kahuna The entire enclosure was sacred Entering without permission carried the death penalty Umi entered the enclosure with attendants afraid to stop someone wearing the royal insignia and walked straight to Liloa s sleeping quarters waking him there When Liloa asked who he was he said It is I Umi your son He then placed tokens at his father s feet and Liloa proclaimed him to be his son After learning of Umi Hakau became upset Liloa assured his first born that he would be king after his death and that his brother would serve him Umi was brought to court on an equal footing with Hakau Umi found great favor from his father increasing Hakau s dislike 42 In exile Umi took wives and began building forces and followers Chiefs began to see him as of the highest chiefly nature from signs they observed He gave food to people and became known for caring for all After Hakau s death the other aliʻi claimed their districts for themselves Umi took the advice of the two priests by marrying many women of high noble rank including his half sister Kapukini and the daughter of the ruler of Hilo where he had been given sanctuary during Hakau s reign Eventually Umi conquered the entire island 35 38 After unifying the island of Hawaii Umi was faithful to those who had supported him and allowed his three most faithful companions and the two Kahuna who had aided him to help him govern 38 Aikane edit Aikane relationships or mostly male homosexual or bisexual activity in the pre colonial era was an accepted tradition 43 These relationships were accepted as part of Hawaiian culture 44 Such sexual relationships may have begun as teenagers and continued thereafter even though they also had heterosexual partners Cook and his associates provided extensive eyewitness accounts and analyses of such young men 45 were connected to chiefs whose functions were sexual social and political 46 The Hawaiian aikane relationship was a part of Hawaiian noble life including that of Kamehameha I Some myths refer to women s desires and therefore some women may have been involved in aikane relationships 47 Liloa originated this practice 48 among the aliʻi which was then copied by the other classes Warriors engaged in the practice In many cases the men involved felt it an honor and responsibility to honor their hana lawelawe 48 Lieutenant James King stated that all the chiefs had them and recounted a tale that Cook was asked by one chief to leave King behind as a great honor American adventurer and sailor John Ledyard commented in detail about the tradition 49 Land division system edit Main article Ahupuaʻa Land was divided in accord with the wishes of the Ali i Nui The system had four hierarchical levels mokupuni island moku subdivision of an island ahupuaʻa subdivision of moku ʻili two or three per ahupuaʻa but Kahoolawe for example had eight Some oral history relates that ʻUmi a Liloa created the ahupuaʻa system 50 Each ahupuaʻa included a lowland mala and upland forested region 51 The divisions typically went from the ridge top to the coast often following the boundary of a stream Ahupuaʻa varied in size depending on the economic means of the location and political divisions of the area The system exploited the fact that communities were organized along stream systems The community governance system of Kanawai is attributed specifically to shared water usage Each ahupuaʻa was divided into ʻili that in turn were divided into kuleana individual plots of land that were cultivated by commoners who paid taxes to the land overseer each week These taxes went to support the chief 52 Possible reasons for this radial division include travel in many areas it is easier to travel up and downstream than from valley to valley economy having all climate and economic exploitation zones in each land division ensured that each could be self sufficient for much of its needs As the native Hawaiians used the resources within their ahupuaʻa they practiced aloha respect laulima cooperation and malama stewardship which resulted in a desirable pono balance The Hawaiians believed that the land the sea the clouds and all of nature were interconnected which is why they used these resources to reach the desired balance in life 53 Sustainability was maintained by the konohiki and kahuna priests who restricted the fishing of certain species during specific seasons They also regulated the gathering of plants 52 Ahupuaʻa is derived from the Hawaiian words ahu heap cairn and puaʻa pig Ahupuaʻa boundary markers were traditionally heaps of stones used to hold offers typically a pig to the island chief Agriculture edit nbsp Kalaniōpu u King of Owyhee bringing Presents to Captain Cook by John Webber c 1781 The Hawaiian agricultural system used both irrigated and rain fed dryland systems Irrigated systems mainly supported taro kalo cultivation Rain fed systems were known as the mala There they cultivated uala sweet potatoes yams and dryland taro 54 along with niu coconuts ʻulu breadfruit maiʻa bananas and ko sugarcane The kukui tree Aleurites moluccanus was sometimes used as shade to protect mala 55 Each crop was cultivated in an area most suitable to its needs 56 Hawaiians domesticated dogs chickens and pigs They grew personal gardens at home Water was important to Hawaiian life it was used for fishing bathing drinking and gardening and for loko i a fishpond aquaculture systems 54 Governance edit The Kingdom was administered by an ali i chief 52 57 Divisions were under the control of other smaller chiefs and managed by a steward 58 The headman of a land division or ahupua a is a konohiki 52 Mokus were ruled by an aliʻi ʻaimoku Ahupua as were run by a headman or chief called a Konohiki 28 59 p 71 Konohiki edit Main article Konohiki In the Keelikolani vs Robinson court case kononiki is defined as land agent In the Territory vs Bishop Trust Co LTD case when the agent was appointed by a chief they were referred to as konohiki The term also referred to a designated area of land owned privately not by the government 60 A konohiki retained life tenure on the land even when discharged from the position but a head man overseeing the same land had no such protection 61 Often ali i and konohiki are treated synonymously However while most konohiki were ali i not all ali i were konohiki A konohiki could also be a headman of a land division or to describe fishing rights Kono means to entice or prompt Hiki refers to something that can be done The oversaw the property managing water rights land distribution agricultural use and any maintenance Konohiki also ensured that the right amounts of gifts and tribute were properly made at the right times 62 As capitalism was incorporated into the kingdom konohiki became tax collectors landlords and fishery wardens 62 End of Kapu edit Hawaiians overthrew the kapu theocracy in 1819 by themselves before the missionaries arrival On October 4 1819 Kamehameha II dined with Queen Ka ahumanu Kamehameha I s favored wife and his own mother Queen Keopuolani The prohibition on men and women eating together the ai kapu was one of the most ancient kapu or prohibitions the penalty for its violation was death Queen Ka ahumanu however despised the prohibition as it prevented her from entering certain religious temples where men made decisions over meals Queen Keopuolani also violated the prohibition even before the public breaking 63 Violating ai kapu at a public dinner as Kamehameha II did was a clear signal that the kapu system was abolished The guests at the dinner cried out ai noa free eating Afterwards Kamehameha II with the support of his high priest Hewahewa ordered the destruction of the heiau temples Afterwards Kamehameha I s nephew Kekuaokalani launched a brief civil war his forces were defeated by Kamehameha II s at Kuamo o reinforcing the new way 64 65 7 Contact editMain articles Battle of Kealakekua Bay and Death of James Cook nbsp HMS Resolution and HMS Discovery On February 14 1779 Capt James Cook was killed on the island of Hawaii Captain James Cook 1728 1779 led three voyages 1768 1779 to chart unknown seas for Great Britain 66 On his third voyage he encountered Hawaii 67 on January 18 1778 68 69 He anchored off the coast of Kauai and met local inhabitants to trade and obtain water and food for his voyage On February 2 1778 Cook continued on to the North American continent searching for a Northwest Passage for approximately nine months He returned to the islands to resupply initially exploring the coasts of Maui and Hawaii Island to trade He anchored in Kealakekua Bay in January 1779 After departing Kealakekua he returned in February 1779 after a ship s mast broke in bad weather 70 On the night of February 13 while Cook s expedition lay at anchor Hawaiians stole one of his only two longboats lifeboats used to ferry to from ship shore 71 In retaliation Cook tried to kidnap the aliʻi nui of Hawaii Island Kalaniʻōpuʻu On February 14 1779 Cook confronted an angry crowd Kanaʻina approached Cook who reacted by striking the royal attendant with the broad side of his sword Kanaʻina picked up the navigator and dropped him clarification needed while another attendant Nuaa killed Cook with a knife 72 Thereafter European and American vessels began to visit and influence the trajectory of Hawaiian history Spanish captain Ruy Lopez de Villalobos may have preceded Cook in 1542 while traveling between Philippines and Mexico both then part of New Spain The Spanish called the islands Isla de Mesa de los Monjes y Desgraciada 73 74 75 Kingdom of Hawaii editThe Kingdom of Hawaii lasted from 1795 until its overthrow in 1893 with the fall of the House of Kalakaua 76 House of Kamehameha edit Main article House of Kamehameha nbsp Kamehameha I founder of the Kingdom of Hawaii The House of Kamehameha Hale O Kamehameha or the Kamehameha dynasty was the reigning Royal Family of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi beginning with its founding by Kamehameha I in 1795 and ending with the deaths of Kamehameha V in 1872 and William Charles Lunalilo in 1874 77 Its origins can be traced to half brothers Kalaniʻōpuʻu and Keōua Kalaniʻōpuʻu s father was Kalaninuiʻiamamao while Keōua s father was Kalanikeʻeaumoku both sons of Keaweʻikekahialiʻiokamoku 78 They shared a common mother Kamakaʻimoku Both brothers served Alapaʻinui the ruling King of Hawaii Island Hawaiian genealogy leaves the possibility that Kahekili II might have been his biological father 78 79 Regardless Kamehameha I s descent from Keawe flowed through his mother Kekuʻiapoiwa II a granddaughter of Keawe Keōua acknowledged him as his son and this relationship is recognized by official genealogies 78 The traditional ole chant of Keaka wife of Alapainui indicates that Kamehameha I was born in ikuwa winter around November 80 Kamehameha was allegedly born during the passing of Halley s Comet In Hawaiian culture a comet indicated an important birth 81 Hawaiian prophecy said that this baby would one day unite the islands 81 Alapai gave the young Kamehameha to his wife Keaka and her sister Hakau to care for after the ruler discovered the boy had lived 82 83 Samuel Kamakau wrote during the time of the warfare among the chiefs of the island of Hawaii which followed the death of Keawe chief over the whole island Ke awe i kekahi aliʻi o ka moku that Kamehameha I was born However his general dating was challenged 84 Abraham Fornander wrote when Kamehameha died in 1819 he was past eighty years old His birth would thus fall between 1736 and 1740 probably nearer the former 85 William De Witt Alexander listed the birth year as 1736 86 He was first named Paiea but took the name Kamehameha meaning The very lonely one or The one set alone 87 88 Kamehameha s uncle Kalaniʻōpuʻu raised him after Keōua s death Kalaniʻōpuʻu ruled Hawaii as had his grandfather Keawe He had advisors and priests When word reached the ruler that chiefs were planning to murder the boy he told Kamehameha nbsp The god Ku ka ili moku was left to Kamehameha I by his uncle Kalaniʻōpuʻu My child I have heard the secret complaints of the chiefs and their mutterings that they will take you and kill you perhaps soon While I am alive they are afraid but when I die they will take you and kill you I advise you to go back to Kohala I have left you the god there is your wealth 78 After Kalaniʻōpuʻu s death Kiwalaʻō took his father s place as first born and ruled the island while Kamehameha became the religious authority Some chiefs preferred Kamehameha and war broke out to overthrow Kiwalaʻō After multiple battles the king was killed and envoys sent for the last two brothers to meet with Kamehameha Keōua and Kaōleioku arrived in separate canoes Keōua came to shore first where a fight broke out and he and all aboard were killed Before the same could happen to the second canoe Kamehameha intervened In 1793 Captain George Vancouver sailed from Britain and presented the Union Flag to Kamehameha who was fighting to unite the islands The Union Jack flew unofficially as Hawaii s flag until 1816 89 including during a brief spell of formal British rule after Kamehameha ceded Hawaii to Vancouver in 1794 By 1795 Kamehameha had conquered all but Kaua i of the main islands For his first royal residence the new King built the first western style structure in the Hawaiian Islands known as the Brick Palace 90 The location became the seat of government until 1845 91 92 The structure was built at Keawa iki point in Lahaina Maui 93 Two ex convicts from Australia s Botany Bay penal colony built the home 94 It was begun in 1798 and was completed in 1802 95 96 The house was intended for Kaʻahumanu 97 but she rejected it in favor of an adjacent traditional home 93 Kamehameha I had many wives but held two in the highest regard Keōpuolani was the highest ranking aliʻi of her time 98 and mother to his sons Liholiho and Kauikeaouli Kaʻahumanu was his favorite Kamehameha I died in 1819 succeeded by Liholiho 99 Kamehameha II edit nbsp Kamehameha II in England with Queen and entourage After Kamehameha I s death Liholiho left Kailua for a week and returned to be crowned king At the ceremony attended by commoners and nobles he approached the circle of chiefs as Kaʻahumanu the central figure in the group and Dowager Queen said Hear me O Divine one for I make known to you the will of your father Behold these chiefs and the men of your father and these your guns and this your land but you and I shall share the realm together Liholiho agreed officially which began a unique system of dual government consisting of a King and co ruler similar to a regent 100 Kamehameha II shared his rule with his stepmother Kaʻahumanu She defied Hawaiian kapu by dining with the young king leading to the end of the Hawaiian religion Kamehameha II died along with his wife Queen Kamamalu in 1824 on a state visit to England succumbing to measles He was King for 5 years 99 The couple s remains were returned to Hawaii by Boki Aboard the ship The Blond his wife Liliha and Kekuanaōʻa were baptized as Christians Kaʻahumanu also converted and became a powerful Christian influence on Hawaiian society until her death in 1832 101 Since the new king was only 12 years old Kaʻahumanu reigned as senior ruler and named Boki as her Kuhina Nui Boki left Hawaii on a trip to find sandalwood to cover a debt and was lost at sea His wife Liliha took the governorship of Maui and unsuccessfully attempted to revolt against Kaʻahumanu who upon Boki s departure had installed Kinaʻu as a co governor 101 Kaʻahumanu edit nbsp Kaʻahumanu with Charles Kanaʻina Kaʻahumanu was born on Maui around 1777 Her parents were aliʻi of a lower ranking line She became Kamehameha s consort at fourteen George Vancouver states O ne of the finest woman we had yet seen on any of the islands 102 To wed the young woman Kamehameha had to consent to make her children his heirs but she had no issue 25 Before his death Kamehameha selected Kaʻahumanu to rule along with his son Kaʻahumanu adopted the boy 103 She became the senior ruler A portrait artist remarked of her This Old Dame is the most proud unbending Lady in the whole island As the widow of Kamehameha she possesses unbound authority and respect not any of which she is inclined to lay aside on any occasion whatsoever 104 She was one of Hawaii s most influential leaders 105 Kamehameha III edit nbsp Picture of King Kamehameha III Kauikeaouli was the second son of Kamehameha I and was born in Keauhou Bay on the island of Hawai i 106 Kauikeaouli s birthdate is not known but historians estimated it to be on March 17 1814 making him about 14 years younger than Liholiho 106 After his birth Kuakini refused to take him because Kauikeaouli appeared to be lifeless 107 However the prophet of another chief declared that the baby would live They cleaned him and put him on a sacred area where the seer fanned him and sprinkled him with water while reciting a prayer 107 The baby started to move and make sounds Kaikioewa was chosen as the baby s guardian and raised him in a remote location Kauikeaouli became King after Liholiho s death in 1824 Kamehameha III began the writing of Hawaii s first formal laws and created a governmental structure He replacedindigenous traditions with Anglo American common law 108 The action was prompted from increasing threat of colonization who were intrigued by the location of the islands 109 Kamehameha III was advised by William Richards a former missionary Richards travelled to the United States in an attempt to learn more about its politics and government structure He taught Kamehameha III his findings and together they created the first constitution of Hawaii in 1840 109 Kamehameha III enacted laws that recognized human rights and established a new system for land ownership called Mahele 110 Another major decision was to move the capital from Lahaina to Honolulu 111 nbsp King Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama with their nephews Prince Alexander Liholiho Prince Lot Kapuaiwa and niece Princess Victoria Kamamalu In 1843 for a five month period Kamehameha III allowed British captain Lord George Paulet to control the islands 112 Kamehameha III wrote a letter to the British government informing them of Paulet s actions Great Britain then reestablished the islands independence on July 31 1843 112 and Kamehameha III uttered what became the Hawaiian motto Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻAina i ka Pono meaning The life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness The day became a national holiday known as La Hoʻihoʻi Ea 113 Kamehameha III married Queen Kalama on February 14 1837 Kamehameha had one son with his mistress Jane Lahilahi who survived to adulthood Albert Edward Kunuiakea He had two boys with Queen Kalama who died young Prince Keaweaweʻulaokalani I and Prince Keaweaweʻulaokalani II 114 Alexander Liholiho Kamehameha III s nephew was taken in by the King and pronounced as heir to the throne 115 In 1854 he became king as a result of a sudden death of Kamehameha III likely by stroke 114 Kamehameha IV edit nbsp Picture of Kamehameha IV Alexander Liholiho was born on February 9 1834 in the capital of the country Honolulu 21 years later he took the throne and the name Kamehameha IV He studied at the Chiefs Children s School and learned French from Protestant missionaries 116 The princes did not have a happy experience at the school and were often sent to bed hungry 117 Liholiho left the school when he was 14 and began studying law In his late teens Liholiho began traveling with his brother Lot Kapuaiwa in an attempt to establish Hawaii s presence as an independent nation They travelled to nations such as the United States France and Panama 116 After an 1849 French attack by Admiral de Tromelin Liholiho was tasked with trying to improve relations with France Liholiho and Kapuaiwa were accompanied by Gerrit P Judd to France with hopes of a treaty 118 116 After three months they ultimately failed and returned to the islands Following his return he was appointed to Kamehameha III s privy council in 1852 119 nbsp Portrait of Queen Emma Rooke After taking the throne in 1855 Kamehameha IV s main goal was to limit United States influence He ended negotiations over the annexation of Hawaii to the United States 117 that had been started by Kamehameha III In 1856 Kamehameha IV had an Anglican wedding with Emma Rooke Emma Rook was the great grandniece of King Kamehameha I and was an ali i 117 Queen Emma was very pro British due to her British adoptive parents In 1858 the Queen and King had their only child Prince Albert Edward Kauikeaouli Kaleiopapa a Kamehameha The prince died in 1862 but was described as kind and cheerful Kamehameha IV established the Anglican church in Hawaii 117 The cause of death for the prince is believed to have been appendicitis 120 Kamehameha IV blamed himself for the death As a result the Queen and the King prioritized healthcare because diseases like leprosy and influenza were destroying the Hawaiian people The king s plan was struck down because a healthcare plan had been part of the Constitution of 1852 117 The King s rule came to an end on November 30 1863 when he died from chronic asthma 121 The King had been experiencing deteriorating health for several months before the tragic passing Kamehameha IV was succeeded by his brother Lot who became Kamehameha V Queen Emma remained involved in politics until she ultimately lost the race to become the Kingdom s ruling monarch to David Kalakaua Royal election edit nbsp King David Kalakaua The legislature decided to hold a public referendum and to choose who the public voted for Queen Emma and David Kalakaua both declared their candidacy Kalakaua won the 1874 election While the legislature was formally voting to certify Kalakaua as King Queen Emma s supporters descended on the capitol and attacked the legislators 13 legislators supporting Kalakaua were injured including one who died after he was tossed from a window The monarchy had no army and the police deserted leading the government to request the support of American troops to quell the riot 122 The new ruler was pressured by the U S government to surrender Pearl Harbor to the Navy 122 Kalakaua was concerned that this would lead to annexation by the U S and to violating the traditions of the Hawaiian people who believed that the Aina was fertile sacred and not for sale 122 Whaling edit Main article Whaling in the United States In 1816 the populations of Honolulu was around 3 000 almost all Hawaiians although16 Americans lived on Oahu all before whaling As whaling grew the population grew with it reaching 23 000 in 1890 One ship arrived in Honolulu in 1820 62 visited in 1822 98 in 1829 and 110 in 1833 In Lahaina 17 whaleships anchored in 1824 62 in 1830 and 80 in 1832 The crews typically numbered around 30 men They visited once or twice year to restock supplies 123 US whaling peaked in the 1850s and was mostly over by the end of the Hawaiian Kingdom 124 Sugar reciprocity edit Main articles Ford Island Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 and Great Mahele nbsp Charles Reed Bishop Minister of Foreign Affairs Hawaii The first permanent sugar plantation began in Kauai in 1835 William Hooper leased 980 acres of land from Kamehameha III Within thirty years plantations operated on all four main islands Sugar upended Hawaii s economy 125 126 American influence in Hawaiian government began when U S plantation owners demanded a say in Kingdom politics Pressure from these plantation owners was felt by the King and chiefs as demands for land tenure Kamehameha III responded to the demands with the Mahele distributing land to all Hawaiians as advocated by missionaries including Gerrit P Judd 127 During the 1850s the U S import tariff on sugar from Hawaii was much higher than the tariffs Hawaiians were charging the U S Kamehameha III sought reciprocity 128 The monarch wished to lower U S tariffs and make Hawaiian sugar competitive with other foreign suppliers In 1854 Kamehameha III s proposal of reciprocity between the countries died in the U S Senate 129 U S control of Hawaii was considered vital for the defense of its west coast The military was especially interested in Pu uloa Pearl Harbor 130 The sale of one harbor was proposed by Charles Reed Bishop a foreigner who had married into the Kamehameha family had risen to be Hawaiian Minister of Foreign Affairs and owned a country home near Pu uloa He showed two U S officers around the lochs although his wife Bernice Pauahi Bishop privately disapproved of selling Hawaiian lands As monarch Kamehameha was content to let Bishop run most business affairs but the ceding of lands was unpopular with Hawaiians Many islanders thought that all the islands rather than just Pearl Harbor might be lost and opposed any cession By November 1873 Lunalilo canceled negotiations but he died on February 3 1874 130 From 1874 through 1875 Kalakaua made a state visit to Washington DC to gather support for a new treaty 131 132 Congress agreed to the Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 for seven years in exchange for Ford Island Pearl Harbor 133 134 After the treaty sugar production expanded from 12 000 acres to 125 000 acres in 1891 135 At the end of the seven year term the treaty lapsed given little interest in the United States 136 Rebellion of 1887 and the Bayonet Constitution edit Main articles Hawaiian rebellions 1887 1895 and 1887 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom On January 20 1887 the United States began leasing Pearl Harbor 137 Shortly afterwards a group of mostly non Hawaiians calling themselves the Hawaiian Patriotic League began the Rebellion of 1887 138 They drafted a constitution 139 written by Lorrin Thurston the Hawaiian Minister of the Interior who used the Hawaiian militia to threaten Kalakaua 137 Kalakaua was forced to dismiss his cabinet ministers and sign the constitution lessening his power 122 It became known as the Bayonet Constitution due to the threat of force 137 nbsp Lorrin Thurston Minister of the Interior Hawaii Grover Cleveland was president at the time and his secretary of state Thomas F Bayard instructed American minister George W Merrill that in the event of another revolution in Hawaii the priority was to protect American commerce lives and property Bayard specified the assistance of the officers of our Government vessels if found necessary will therefore be promptly afforded to promote the reign of law and respect for orderly government in Hawaii 140 In July 1889 a small scale rebellion ensued and Minister Merrill landed Marines to protect Americans the State Department explicitly approved this action Merrill s replacement minister John L Stevens followed those instructions in his controversial actions of 1893 141 Although Kalakaua s signature alone had no legal power the constitution allowed him to appoint cabinet ministers but stripped him of the power to dismiss them without approval from the Legislature 142 Eligibility to vote for the House of Nobles was altered requiring that both candidates and voters own property valued three thousand dollars or more or have an annual income of six hundred dollars or more 143 This disenfranchised two thirds of native Hawaiians and other ethnic groups who had previously been eligible to vote 144 This constitution benefited the foreign plantation owners With the legislature now responsible for naturalizing aliens Americans and Europeans could retain their home country citizenship and vote as citizens of the kingdom 145 Along with voting privileges Americans could hold office and retain their US citizenship something not afforded in any other nation 146 and even allowed Americans to vote without becoming naturalized 147 Asian immigrants were no longer able to acquire citizenship or vote 148 Wilcox Rebellion of 1888 edit nbsp ʻIolani Barracks 2007 The Wilcox Rebellion of 1888 was a plot to overthrow King David Kalakaua and replace him with his sister in a coup d etat This was in response to increased political tension between the legislature and the king 18 Kalakaua s distant cousin a native Hawaiian officer and veteran of the Italian military Robert William Wilcox returned to Hawaii 149 in October 1887 when the funding for his study program stopped Wilcox Charles B Wilson Princess Liliʻuokalani and Sam Nowlein plotted to overthrow Kalakaua and replace him with Liliʻuokalani 300 Hawaiian conspirators hid in Iolani Barracks and an alliance was formed with the Royal Guard but the plot was accidentally discovered in January 1888 less than 48 hours before the revolt 150 No one was prosecuted but Wilcox was exiled On February 11 1888 Wilcox left Hawaii for San Francisco intending to return to Italy with his wife Princess Liliʻuokalani was offered the throne several times by the Missionary Party who had forced the Bayonet Constitution on her brother but she rejected the offers 151 In January 1891 Kalakaua traveled to San Francisco for his health staying at the Palace Hotel He died there on January 20 152 Liliʻuokalani then ascended the throne She called her brother s reign a golden age materially for Hawaii 153 Liliʻuokalani s attempt to re write Constitution edit Main article Proposed 1893 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom nbsp Queen Liliʻuokalani Liliʻuokalani assumed the throne in the middle of an economic crisis The McKinley Act had crippled the Hawaiian sugar industry by removing the duties on sugar imports from other countries into the US eliminating Hawaii s advantage 154 Many Hawaii businesses and citizens lost revenue in response Liliʻuokalani proposed a lottery and opium licensing 155 Her ministers and closest friends were all opposed to this plan they unsuccessfully tried to dissuade her from pursuing these initiatives both of which came to be used against her in the brewing constitutional crisis 156 Liliʻuokalani s chief desire was to restore power to the monarch by abrogating the 1887 Bayonet Constitution and promulgating a new one 157 The 1893 Constitution would have extended suffrage by reducing some property requirements It would have disenfranchised many non citizen Europeans and Americans The Queen toured several islands on horseback talking to the people about her ideas and receiving strong support including a lengthy petition However when the Queen informed her cabinet of her plans they withheld their support because of what they expected to be her opponent s likely response 158 Liliʻuokalani s attempt to promulgate a new constitution on January 14 1893 precipitated the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii three days later 159 The conspirators stated goals were to depose the queen overthrow the monarchy and seek US annexation 160 161 Overthrow edit Main article Overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom The overthrow was led by Thurston who was the grandson of American missionaries 162 and derived his support primarily from the American and European business class and other supporters of the Reform Party of the Hawaiian Kingdom Most of the leaders of the 13 member Committee of Safety that deposed the queen were American and European citizens who were Kingdom subjects 163 164 165 They included legislators government officers and a Supreme Court Justice 166 nbsp John L Stevens an American diplomat conspired to overthrow the Kingdom of Hawaii On January 16 the Marshal of the Kingdom Charles B Wilson was tipped off by detectives of the planned coup Wilson requested warrants to arrest the 13 Council members and put the Kingdom under martial law Because the members had strong political ties with U S Government Minister John L Stevens the requests were repeatedly denied by Attorney General Arthur P Peterson and the Queen s cabinet They feared that the arrests would escalate the situation After a failed negotiation with Thurston 167 Wilson began to collect his troops Wilson and Captain of the Royal Household Guard Samuel Nowlein rallied a force of 496 troops to protect the Queen 168 The overthrow began on January 17 1893 A policeman was shot and wounded while trying to stop a wagon carrying weapons to the Honolulu Rifles the Committee s paramilitary wing The Committee feared the shooting would bring government forces and stop the coup before it could begin The Committee of Safety initiated the overthrow by organizing the Honolulu Rifles made of about 1 500 armed non native men The Rifles garrisoned Ali iolani Hale across the street from ʻIolani Palace and waited for the Queen s response United States military support edit nbsp USS Boston The coup efforts were supported by Stevens 169 The coup placed the queen under house arrest at Iolani Palace Advised about supposed threats to non combatant American lives and property by the Committee 170 Stevens summoned a company of U S Marines from the USS Boston and two companies of U S sailors to take up positions at the U S Legation Consulate and Arion Hall on January 16 162 armed sailors and Marines aboard the USS Boston in Honolulu Harbor came ashore under orders of neutrality The sailors and Marines did not participate but their presence intimidated royalist defenders Historian William Russ states the injunction to prevent fighting of any kind made it impossible for the monarchy to protect itself 171 United States territory editAnnexation edit nbsp Political cartoon of 1898 In March 1897 William McKinley a Republican expansionist succeeded Democrat Grover Cleveland as U S president He prepared a treaty of annexation but it lacked the needed 2 3 majority in the Senate given Democratic opposition A joint resolution written by Democratic Congressman Francis G Newlands to annex Hawaii passed both the House and Senate it needed only majority support The U S Supreme Court gave tacit recognition to the annexation in De Lima v Bidwell 182 U S 1 196 1901 172 The Spanish American War had broken out and many leaders wanted control of Pearl Harbor to help the United States become a Pacific power and protect the West Coast Kalakaua was concerned over a possible United States seizure and in Kalakaua s 1881 world tour he met secretly with the Japanese Emperor to discuss bringing Hawaii under Japan s protection He proposed to unite the two nations with an arranged marriage between his 5 year old niece Princess Kaʻiulani and 13 year old Prince Yamashina Sadamaro Japan rejected his proposal over concerns that this would worsen relations between Japan and the United States 173 In 1897 Japan sent warships to Hawaii to oppose annexation This made the decision more urgent especially since the islands fourth largest population was of Japanese heritage They were largely aligned with Japan 174 McKinley signed the Newlands Resolution annexing Hawaii on July 7 1898 creating the Territory of Hawaii On February 22 1900 the Hawaiian Organic Act established a territorial government Annexation opponents held that this was illegal claiming the Queen was the only legitimate ruler McKinley appointed Sanford B Dole as territorial governor The territorial legislature convened for the first time on February 20 1901 Hawaiians formed the Hawaiian Independent Party under the leadership of Robert Wilcox Hawaii s first congressional delegate 175 Plantations edit Sugarcane plantations in Hawaii expanded during the territorial period Some companies diversified and dominated related industries such as transportation banking and real estate Economic and political power was concentrated in what were known as the Big Five A 1909 strike by Japanese farm workers led to a brief experiment importing Russian laborers mostly from Siberia False promises of land grants by a recruiter named A W Perelstrous resulted in strikes among the Russian workers Hardships included a measles outbreak lack of ability to communicate with Hawaiians and culture clashes Most Russians ended up moving to California New York or back to Russia mostly after the 1917 Russian Revolution 176 World War II edit Further information Pacific Islands home front during World War II Attack on Pearl Harbor edit Main article Attack on Pearl Harbor nbsp USS Arizona during the attack on Pearl Harbor Pearl Harbor was attacked on December 7 1941 by the Imperial Japanese Navy killing almost 2 500 people and sinking the main Pacific battleship fleet Fortuitously for the Americans the four Pacific aircraft carriers were at sea and escaped damage Hawaii was put under martial law until 1945 177 Unlike the Pacific Coast where 100 000 ethnic Japanese American citizens were interned the Japanese American population in Hawaii avoided internment although hundreds of pro Japan leaders were arrested 177 Pearl Harbor was the U S main forward base for the Pacific War The Japanese planned to attack in summer 1942 but were defeated at the Battle of Midway Hundreds of thousands of American soldiers sailors Marines and airmen passed through the islands The islands were used for training and bivouac throughout the war 177 Hawaii residents formed the 442nd Regimental Combat Team a U S Army infantry regiment The regiment was composed almost entirely of American soldiers of Japanese ancestry It fought primarily in Italy southern France and Germany The 442nd Regiment was the most decorated unit for its size and length of service in American history Its 4 000 members had to be reinforced nearly 2 5 times to replace casualties In total about 14 000 Hawaiians served in the regiment earning 9 486 Purple Hearts The unit was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations five in one month Twenty one of its members including Hawaii s former U S Senator Daniel Inouye were awarded Medals of Honor Its motto was Go for Broke 178 Politics edit Main article Hawaii Democratic Revolution of 1954 Initially the Hawaii Republican Party dominated territorial politics However in 1954 a series of non violent industry wide strikes protests and other civil disobedience transpired In the territorial elections of 1954 the Democratic Party of Hawaii gained the majority and lobbied for statehood The labor force unionized hastening the plantations decline Statehood edit nbsp Hawaii residents overwhelmingly voted in favor of statehood in 1959 President Dwight D Eisenhower signed the Hawaii Admission Act on March 18 1959 which created the means for Hawaiian statehood After a referendum in which over 93 of Hawaiian citizens voted in favor of statehood Hawaii was admitted as the 50th state on August 21 1959 citation needed Annexation legacy edit From contact through to annexation the number of Native Hawaiians in Hawaii declined Bottom was reached in the first census conducted by the United States in 1900 at 37 656 Thereafter the Native Hawaiian population in Hawaii increased with every census 3 For many Native Hawaiians the relationship between the islands and the mainland is problematic in part because of how Hawaii lost its independence By contrast the ultimate step of becoming a U S State was done properly The 1960s Hawaiian Renaissance led to renewed interest in the Hawaiian language culture and identity Congress passed the Apology Resolution US Public Law 103 150 and it was signed by President Bill Clinton on November 23 1993 This resolution apologized to Native Hawaiians on behalf of the people of the United States for the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii on January 17 1893 and the deprivation of the rights of Native Hawaiians to self determination The implications of this resolution have been debated 179 180 The resolution s description of Hawaiian history has been criticized 181 for example for ignoring the fact that the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom was led by Hawaiian citizens on the Committee of Safety The resolution also does not explain why it applies only to people descended from persons living in pre contact Hawaii as opposed to all subjects of the Kingdom at the time of the overthrow 182 6 7 In 2000 Senator Daniel Akaka proposed what was called the Akaka Bill to extend federal recognition to those of Native Hawaiian ancestry as a sovereign group similar to Native American tribes The bill did not pass 183 See also edit nbsp History portal nbsp North America portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Hawaii portal Women s suffrage in Hawaii Legal status of Hawaii List of conflicts in Hawaii List of Missionaries to Hawaii National Register of Historic Places listings in Hawaii Timeline of HonoluluReferences edit Smith Philippa Mein 2012 A Concise History of New Zealand Cambridge 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Thurston later wrote that his motion was substantially as follows I move that it is the sense of this meeting that the solution of the present situation is annexation to the United States Memoirs p 250 Lt Lucien Young The Boston at Hawaii p 175 gives the following version of the motion Resolved That it is the sense of this committee that in view of the present unsatisfactory state of affairs the proper course to pursue is to abolish the monarchy and apply for annexation to the United States Russ William Adam 1992 The Hawaiian Revolution 1893 94 Associated University Presses p 90 ISBN 0 945636 53 9 Roark James L Johnson Michael P Cohen Patricia Cline Stage Sarah Hartmann Susan M January 9 2012 The American Promise Combined Volume A History of the United States Bedford St Martin s p 660 ISBN 978 0 312 66312 4 Briggs Vernon M 2003 Mass Immigration and the National Interest Policy Directions for the New Century M E Sharpe p 72 ISBN 978 0 7656 0934 2 Archived from the original on February 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2022 Hanifin Patrick 1982 Hawaiian Reparations Nothing Lost Nothing Owed PDF Hawaii Bar Journal XVII 2 Archived PDF from the original on February 21 2022 Retrieved January 23 2022 Aloha Apartheid A court strikes down a race based policy in Hawaii while Congress considers enshrining one Wall Street Journal August 8 2005 Bibliography editBeechert Edward D Working in Hawaii A labor history University of Hawaii Press 1985 Craig Robert D Historical dictionary of Honolulu and Hawaiʻi Scarecrow Press 1998 Daws Gavan 1968 Shoal of Time A History of the Hawaiian Islands University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 0324 8 Fuchs Lawrence H Hawaii Pono Hawaii the Excellent An Ethnic and Political History 1961 Haley James L Captive Paradise A History of Hawaii St Martin s Press 2014 Kuykendall Ralph Simpson Day Arthur Grove 1926 A History of Hawaii Macmillan La Croix Sumner Hawai i Eight Hundred Years of Political and Economic Change U of Chicago Press 2019 309 pp EH net online review by Lee J Alston La Croix Sumner Economic history of Hawai i Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance 2021 Tabrah Ruth M Hawaii a history WW Norton amp Company 1984 Vowell Sarah March 22 2011 Unfamiliar Fishes Penguin ISBN 978 1 101 48645 0 Wyndette Olive Islands of Destiny A History of Hawaii 1968 Specialty studies edit Aquino Belinda The Filipino Century in Hawaii Out of the Crucible 2006 Brown DeSoto and Anne Ellett Hawaii goes to war life in Hawaii from Pearl Harbor to peace 1989 Chapin Helen Shaping history The role of newspapers in Hawai i University of Hawaii Press 1996 Cochran Thomas C and Ray Ginger The American Hawaiian Steamship Company 1899 1919 Business History Review 1954 28 4 pp 342 365 Forbes David W Encounters with paradise views of Hawaii and its people 1778 1941 Honolulu Academy of Arts 1992 Greenlee John Wyatt Eight Islands on Four Maps The Cartographic Renegotiation of Hawai i 1876 1959 Cartographica 50 3 2015 119 140 online MacLennan Carol A Sovereign Sugar Industry and 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Susquehanna U Press 1992 Schmitt Robert C Historical Statistics of Hawaii University Press of Hawaii 1977 Schmitt Robert C Religious statistics of Hawaii 1825 1972 Hawaiian Journal of History 1973 Vol 7 pp 41 47 Schmitt Robert C Demographic Statistics of Hawaii Demographic Statistics of Hawaii University of Hawaii Press 2021 Siler Julia Flynn Lost Kingdom Hawaii s Last Queen the Sugar Kings and America s First Imperial Adventure 2012 Sumida Stephen H And the View from the Shore Literary Traditions of Hawai i University of Washington Press 2015 Teodoro Luis V ed Out of this struggle The Filipinos in Hawaii U University of Hawaii Press 2019 Tregaskis Richard The warrior king Hawaii s Kamehameha the Great 1973 Van Dyke Jon M 2008 Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawai i PDF U of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3211 7 Via Google Books Wilson Rob Exporting Christian Transcendentalism Importing Hawaiian Sugar The Trans Americanization of Hawai i American Literature 72 3 2000 521 552 onlineExternal links editAudio of Dwight D Eisenhower Hawaii Statehood Proclamation Speech permanent dead link Public Law 103 150 Scots in Hawai i Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine How Spain Cast Its Spell On Hawai i by Chris Cook in The Islander Magazine History of Hawaii The Pokiki Portuguese Traditions in The Islander Magazine Today in Hawai i History Archived May 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine Russians in Hawai i Hawaii History Community Learning Center Retrieved November 12 2014 The French in Hawai i Hawaii History Community Learning Center Retrieved November 12 2014 Significant Dates in the History of Hawaiʻi Hawaiian Historical Society Archived from the original on January 24 2010 Retrieved November 12 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Hawaii amp oldid 1217972351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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