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Queen Emma of Hawaii

Emma Kalanikaumakaʻamano Kaleleonālani Naʻea Rooke (January 2, 1836 – April 25, 1885) was queen of Hawaii as the wife of King Kamehameha IV from 1856 to his death in 1863. She was later a candidate for the throne but King Kalākaua was elected instead.

Emma
Oil on canvas by William F. Cogswell, 1890
Queen consort of the Hawaiian Islands
TenureJune 19, 1856 – November 30, 1863
Born(1836-01-02)January 2, 1836
Honolulu, Oahu
DiedApril 25, 1885(1885-04-25) (aged 49)
Honolulu, Oahu
Burial(1885-05-17)May 17, 1885[1][2]
SpouseKamehameha IV
IssueAlbert Edward Kauikeaouli Kaleiopapa a Kamehameha
Names
Emalani Kalanikaumakaʻamano Kaleleonālani Naʻea (Hawaiian)
Emma Alexandrina Francis Agnes Lowder Byde Rooke Young Kaleleokalani (Anglican)
HouseKamehameha
FatherHigh Chief George Naʻea
Thomas Rooke (hānai)
MotherHigh Chiefess Fanny Kekelaokalani Young
High Chiefess Grace Kamaʻikuʻi Young Rooke (hānai)
ReligionChurch of Hawaii
Signature

Names

After her son's death and before her husband's death, she was referred to as "Kaleleokalani", or "flight of the heavenly one". After her husband also died, it was changed into the plural form as "Kaleleolani", or the "flight of the heavenly ones". She was baptized into the Anglican faith on October 21, 1862 as "Emma Alexandrina Francis Agnes Lowder Byde Rooke Young Kaleleokalani.[3]

Queen Emma was also honoured in the 19th century mele "Wahine Holo Lio" (horseback riding lady) referring to her renowned horsemanship.[4]

Early life

Emma was born on January 2, 1836,[5] in Honolulu and was often called Emalani ("royal Emma"). Her father was High Chief George Naʻea and her mother was High Chiefess Fanny Kekelaokalani Young. She was adopted under the Hawaiian tradition of hānai by her childless maternal aunt, chiefess Grace Kamaʻikuʻi Young Rooke, and her husband, Dr. Thomas C. B. Rooke.[6]

Emma's father Naʻea was the son of High Chief Kamaunu and High Chiefess Kukaeleiki.[7] Kukaeleiki was daughter of Kalauawa, a Kauaʻi noble, and she was a cousin of Queen Keōpūolani, the most sacred wife of Kamehameha I. Among Naʻea's more notable ancestors were Kalanawaʻa, a high chief of Oʻahu, and High Chiefess Kuaenaokalani, who held the sacred kapu rank of Kekapupoʻohoʻolewaikala (so sacred that she could not be exposed to the sun except at dawn).[8]

 
Emma and her hānai parents.

On her mother's side, Emma was the granddaughter of John Young, Kamehameha I's British-born military advisor known as High Chief Olohana, and Princess Kaʻōanaʻeha Kuamoʻo.[9][10] Her maternal grandmother, Kaʻōanaʻeha, was generally called the niece of Kamehameha I. Chiefess Kaʻōanaʻeha's father is disputed; some say she was the daughter of Prince Keliʻimaikaʻi, the only full brother of Kamehameha; others state Kaʻōanaʻeha's father was High Chief Kalaipaihala.[11][12] This confusion is due to the fact that High Chiefess Kalikoʻokalani, the mother of Kaʻōanaʻeha, married both to Keliʻimaikaʻi and to Kalaipaihala. Through High Chief Kalaipaihala, she could be descended from Kalaniʻopuʻu, King of Hawaii before Kīwalaʻō and Kamehameha. King Kalākaua and Queen Liliʻuokalani criticized Queen Emma's claim of descent from Kamehameha's brother, supporting the latter theory of descent. Liliʻuokalani claimed that Keliʻimaikaʻi had no children, and that Kiilaweau, Keliʻimaikaʻi's first wife, was a man.[13] This was to strengthen their claim to the throne, since their great-grandfather was Kamehameha I's first cousin. But even through the second theory Queen Emma would still have been descendant of Kamehameha I's first cousin since Kalaniʻopuʻu was the uncle of Kamehameha I.[14] It can be noted that one historian of the time, Samuel Kamakau, supported Queen Emma's descent from Keliʻimaikaʻi and the genealogy stated by Liliuokalani have been contested in her own lifetime.[15]

Emma grew up in her adoptive parents' English mansion, the Rooke House, in Honolulu. Emma was educated at the Royal School, which was established by American missionaries. Other Hawaiian royals attending the school included Emma's half-sister Mary Paʻaʻāina. Like her classmates Bernice Pauahi Bishop, David Kalākaua and Lydia Liliʻuokalani, Emma was cross-cultural — both Hawaiian and Euro-American in her habits. When the school closed, Dr. Rooke hired an English governess, Sarah Rhodes von Pfister, to tutor the young Emma. He also encouraged reading from his extensive library. As a writer, he influenced Emma's interest in reading and books. By the time she was 20, she was an accomplished young woman. She was 5' 2" and slender, with large black eyes. Her musical talents as a vocalist, pianist and dancer were well known. She was also a skilled equestrian.[citation needed]

Married life and reign

 
Emma and Kamehameha IV

Emma became engaged to the king of Hawaii, Alexander Liholiho. At the engagement party, a Hawaiian charged that Emma's Caucasian blood made her unfit to be the Hawaiian queen and her lineage was not suitable enough to be Alexander Liholiho's bride. She broke into tears and the king was infuriated. On June 19, 1856, she married Alexander Liholiho, who a year earlier had assumed the throne as Kamehameha IV. He was also fluent in both Hawaiian and English. Each nation and even the Chinese hosted balls and celebrations in honor of the newlyweds. Two years later on May 20, 1858 Emma gave birth to a son, Prince Albert Edward Kamehameha.[citation needed]

The queen tended palace affairs, including the expansion of the palace library. In 1861 she sang in the chorus of a performance of Verdi's opera Il Trovatore in Honolulu while her husband the king acted as stage manager.[16] She was known for her humanitarian efforts. Inspired by her adoptive father's work, she encouraged her husband to establish a public hospital to help the Native Hawaiians who were in decline due to foreign-borne diseases like smallpox. In 1859, Emma established Queen's Hospital and visited patients there almost daily whenever she was in residence in Honolulu. It is now called the Queen's Medical Center. She also founded St. Andrewʻs Priory school for girls. Queen Emma recognized the educational needs of the young women of Hawaiʻi and founded St. Andrew's Priory so that Hawaiian girls would receive an education equivalent to what was traditionally offered only to boys.[17]

Prince Albert, who was always called "Baby" by Emma, had been celebrated for days at his birth and every public appearance. Mary Allen, wife of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Elisha Hunt Allen, had a son Frederick about the same age, and they became playmates. In 1862, Queen Victoria agreed to become godmother by proxy, and sent an elaborate silver christening cup. Before the cup could arrive, the prince fell ill in August and condition worsened. The Prince died on August 27, 1862. Her husband died a year later, and Emma would not have any more children.[18]

Religious legacy

 
Laying of the cornerstone of St. Andrew's Cathedral in 1867

In 1860, Queen Emma and King Kamehameha IV petitioned the Church of England to help establish the Church of Hawaii. Upon the arrival of Anglican bishop Thomas Nettleship Staley and two priests, they both were baptized on October 21, 1862 and confirmed in November 1862. With her husband, she championed the Anglican (Episcopal) church in Hawaii and founded St. Andrew's Cathedral, raising funds for the building. In 1867 she founded Saint Andrew's Priory School for Girls.[19] She also laid the groundwork for an Episcopal secondary school for boys originally named for Saint Alban, and later ʻIolani School in honor of her husband.

The Feast of the Holy Sovereigns is celebrated annually in the Episcopal Church in Hawaii on November 28, honoring Kamehameha IV and Emma.[20] The rest of the Episcopal Church observes this as the feast day of Kamehameha and Emma, King and Queen of Hawaii, but does not use the name "Feast of the Holy Sovereigns".[21]

Visit to Europe and United States, 1865–1866

 
Queen Emma with Anglican church dignitaries at Oxford, 1866

From 1865 to 1866, she traveled to England and the United States for her health and to help the burgeoning Anglican mission in Hawaii. She visited London and spent the winter at Hyères in the French Rivera and then toured Northern Italy and Southern Germany before visiting Paris. She returned to London in June 1866 and went sightseeing in Ireland before sailing for New York. In her time in Europe, she met with Queen Victoria, Emperor Napoleon III, Empress Eugénie of France, Grand Duke Frederick II and Grand Duchess Louise of Baden and other Europeans royals, government dignitaries and Anglican clergy.[22]

In the United States, she had a reception given for her on August 14, 1866 by President Andrew Johnson and First Lady Eliza McCardle Johnson at the White House.[22][23] Some note this as the first time anyone with the title "Queen" had had an official visit to the U.S. presidential residence.[24] Secretary of State William H. Seward hosted the queen at his house and gave her state dinner on August 18. The following evening she attended a private dinner at the White House with the president, his family and Seward.[25] While in Washington, she also met the Choctaw chief Peter Pitchlynn and his country's delegation, along with delegations of Chickasaw and Cherokee.[26][27] This was the only instance of bilateral relations between the Hawaiian Kingdom and the three tribal republics.[citation needed] After visiting Washington, she visited Niagara Falls and Canada. The news of her hānai mother Grace's death in Hawaii on July 26 prompted her to end her trip and journey home. The United States government dispatched the USS Vanderbilt at San Francisco to bring her back to Honolulu.[22][28][29]

A pamphlet Queen Emma: A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England describing her travel and mission in England was published anonymously in London in December 1865.[30][31] American missionary Samuel C. Damon published this in his newspaper The Friend in June 1866 and pointed out some errors in the work.[30][32]

Royal election of 1874

After the death of King Lunalilo, Emma decided to run in the constitutionally-mandated royal election against future King Kalākaua. She claimed that Lunalilo had wanted her to succeed him, but died before a formal proclamation could be made.

The day after Lunalilo died, Kalākaua declared himself candidate for the throne. The next day Queen Emma did the same. The first real animosity between the Kamehamehas and Kalākaua begun to appear, as he published a proclamation:

To the Hawaiian Nation.

Salutations to You—Whereas His Majesty Lunalilo departed this life at the hour of nine o'clock last night; and by his death the Throne of Hawaii is left vacant, and the nation is without a head or a guide. In this juncture it is proper that we should seek for a Sovereign and Leader, and doing so, follow the course prescribed by Article 22nd of the Constitution. My earnest desire is for the perpetuity of the Crown and the permanent independence of the government and people of Hawaii, on the basis of the equity, liberty, prosperity, progress and protection of the whole people.

It will be remembered that at the time of the election of the late lamented Sovereign, I put forward my own claim to the Throne of our beloved country, on Constitutional grounds — and it is upon those grounds only that I now prefer my claims, and call upon you to listen to my call, and request you to instruct your Representatives to consider, and weigh well, and to regard your choice to elect me, the oldest member of a family high in rank in the country.

Therefore, I, David Kalakaua, cheerfully call upon you, and respectfully ask you to grant me your support.

D. KALAKAUA

Iolani Palace, Feb. 4, 1874.

 
Her supporters styled themselves as Emmaites or Queenites and were made up of mostly Hawaiians and British subjects of Hawaii.

Queen Emma issued her proclamation the next day:

To the Hawaiian People:

Whereas, His late lamented Majesty Lunalilo died on the 3rd of February, 1874, without having publicly proclaimed a Successor to the Throne; and whereas, "His late Majesty did before his final sickness declare his wish and intention that the undersigned should be his Successor on the Throne of the Hawaiian Islands, and enjoined upon me not to decline the same under any circumstances; and whereas. "Many of the Hawaiian people have since the death of His Majesty urged me to place myself in nomination at the ensuing session of the Legislature; "Therefore, in view of the foregoing considerations and my duty to the people and to the memory of the late King, I do hereby announce and declare that I am a Candidate for the Throne of these Hawaiian Islands, and I request my beloved people throughout the group, to assemble peacefully ad orderly in their districts, and to give formal expression to their views on this important subject, and to instruct their Representatives in the coming session of the Legislature.

God Protect Hawaii!

Honolulu, Feb. 5, 1874.

EMMA KALELEONALANI.[33]

Emma's candidacy was agreeable to many Native Hawaiians, not only because her husband was a member of the Kamehameha Dynasty, but she was also closer in descent to Hawaii's first king, Kamehameha The Great, than her opponent. On foreign policy, she (like her husband) was pro-British while Kalākaua, although being pro-Hawaiian and somewhat pro-British, was more leaning toward the American. She also strongly wished to stop Hawaii's dependence on American industry and to give the Native Hawaiians a more powerful voice in government. While the people supported Emma, the Legislative Assembly, which actually elected the new monarch, favored Kalākaua, who won the election 39 – 6. News of her defeat caused a large-scale riot in which thirteen legislators supporting Kalākaua were injured; one, J. W. Lonoaea, ultimately died of his injuries.[34] In order to quell the civil disruption, American and British troops stationed on warships in Honolulu Harbor were landed with the permission of the Hawaiian government, and the rioters were arrested.[35]

After the election, she retired from public life. While she would come to recognize Kalākaua as the rightful king, she would never speak with his wife Queen Kapiʻolani.

She was known affectionately as the "Old Queen". King Kalākaua left a seat for her at any royal occasion, even though she rarely attended.

Friendship with Queen Victoria

 
Emma and Queen Victoria silver christening cup

Despite the great differences in their kingdoms, Queen Emma and Queen Victoria became lifelong friends; both had lost sons and spouses.[22] They exchanged letters, and Emma met Victoria for the first time on September 9, 1865 on her trip to England and later spent a night at Windsor Castle on November 27.[36]

Queen Victoria recorded in her journal on the afternoon of September 9, 1865:

After luncheon I received Queen Emma, the widowed Queen of the Sandwich Islands or Hawaii. Met her in the Corridor & nothing could be nicer or more dignified than her manner. She is dark, but not more so than an Indian, with fine feathers [features?] & splendid soft eyes. She was dressed in just the same widow's weeds as I wear. I took her into the White Drawing room, where I asked to sit down next to me on the sofa. She was moved when I spoke to her of her great misfortune in losing her only child. She was very discreet & would only remain a few minutes. She presented her lady, Mrs. Hoopile whose husband is her Chaplain, both being Hawaiians....[37]

Death and legacy

 
Funeral procession of Queen Emma, May 17, 1885.

In 1883, Emma suffered the first of several small strokes and died two years later on April 25, 1885 at the age of 49.

At first she was laid in state at her house; but Alexander Cartwright and a few of his friends moved the casket to Kawaiahaʻo Church, saying her house was not large enough for the funeral. This was evidently not popular with those in charge of the church, since it was Congregational; Queen Emma had been a supporter of the Anglican Mission, and was an Episcopalian. Queen Liliʻuokalani said it "...showed no regard for the sacredness of the place". However, for the funeral service, Bishop Alfred Willis of the English Church officiated in the Congregational church with his ritual. She was given a royal procession and was interred in the Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii known as Mauna ʻAla, next to her husband and son.[38]

The Queen Emma Foundation was set up to provide continuous lease income for the hospital. Its landholding in the division known as the Queen Emma Land Company include the International Marketplace and Waikiki Town Center buildings.[39][40] Some of the 40 year leases expire in 2010.[41] The area known as Fort Kamehameha in World War II, the site of several coastal artillery batteries, was the site of her former beach-front estate. After annexation it was acquired by the U.S. federal government in 1907.[42]

The Emalani festival, Eo e Emalani i Alakaʻi held in October on the island of Kauaʻi in Koke'e State Park celebrates an 1871 visit.[43]

Honours

Family tree

See also

References

  1. ^ Rose, Conant & Kjellgren 1993, pp. 278–279.
  2. ^ Forbes 2003, pp. 144–145.
  3. ^ Kanahele 1999, p. 152.
  4. ^ Kaeppler 1972, pp. 42–44.
  5. ^ Kanahele 1999, p. 1.
  6. ^ Kanahele 1999, pp. 1–4.
  7. ^ McKinzie 1983, p. 73.
  8. ^ Kanahele 1999, pp. 4–7.
  9. ^ Apple 1978, pp. 39–41.
  10. ^ Cahill 1999, p. 147.
  11. ^ Kapiikauinamoku (June 20, 1955). "The Story of Maui Royalty: Princess Kamamalu Was Kamehamehaʻs Daughter". Honolulu Advertiser. from the original on June 14, 2015. Retrieved January 1, 2010.
  12. ^ Kapiikauinamoku (October 25, 1955). "The Story of Hawaiian Royalty: Princess Princess Kaoanaeha Is Married to John Young: The Kaleipaihala Controversy: 2". Honolulu Advertiser. from the original on June 14, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
  13. ^ Liliuokalani 1898, p. 404.
  14. ^ Kanahele 1999, p. 357–358.
  15. ^ Robert William Wilcox (May 27, 1898). "Some Geneology. R. W. Wilcox Corrects Statements in Ex-Queen's Book. Ancestry of Liliuokalani. Only Surviving Members of Royal School Destined to Be Rulers of Hawaii". Hawaiian Gazette. hdl:10524/3150.
  16. ^ Junker, J. W. "Song of the Islands". Hana Hou!. Retrieved July 7, 2020.
  17. ^ "History & Legacy – St. Andrew's Schools". www.standrewsschools.org. from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved November 29, 2017.
  18. ^ Hackler 1992, pp. 21–44.
  19. ^ "St. Andrew's Priory School". official web site. from the original on July 12, 2016. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on March 5, 2013. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  21. ^ Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018. Church Publishing, Inc. December 17, 2019. ISBN 978-1-64065-235-4.
  22. ^ a b c d Kanahele 1999, pp. 189–226.
  23. ^ Esther Singleton (1907). The story of the White House, Volume 2. The McClure Company. p. 109. from the original on June 3, 2016. Retrieved November 22, 2015.
  24. ^ Steven Anzovin; Janet Podell (2001). Famous first facts about American politics. H.W. Wilson. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-8242-0971-1. from the original on May 20, 2016. Retrieved November 22, 2015.
  25. ^ Seward & Seward 1891, pp. 333–337.
  26. ^ Byrd, Jodi (2011). The Transit of Empire: Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 177–184.
  27. ^ "Washington – Movements of Queen Emma – Visit to the Tomb of Washington". The Evening Telegraph. Vol. VI, no. 40. Philadelphia. August 17, 1866. p. 1.
  28. ^ Kuykendall 1953, p. 205.
  29. ^ Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States: transmitted to Congress with the Annual message of the President. 1866. Washington, DC: US Government Print Office. 1867. pp. 490, 491, 494, 495, 498.
  30. ^ a b Forbes 2001, p. 398.
  31. ^ "Queen Emma. A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England". The Era. London. December 31, 1865. p. 9.
  32. ^ Damon, Samuel C. (June 1, 1866). "Queen Emma's Visit to England and Reprint of Queen Emma: A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England" (PDF). The Friend. Vol. 23, no. 6. Honolulu: Samuel C. Damon. pp. 41–44.
  33. ^ Kanahele 1999, p. 283.
  34. ^ Dabagh, Lyons & Hitchcock 1974, pp. 76–89.
  35. ^ Kuykendall 1967, pp. 9–11; Kanahele 1999, pp. 288–292; Osorio 2002, pp. 154–157; Kaeo & Queen Emma 1976, pp. 165–166
  36. ^ Hackler 1988, pp. 109–112.
  37. ^ Kanahele 1999, pp. 199–200.
  38. ^ Liliuokalani 1898, pp. 108–109.
  39. ^ Janis L. Magin (September 24, 2008). "New plan for International Market Place announced". Pacific Business News (Honolulu).
  40. ^ "Queen Emma Kaleleonalani". International Market Place and Waikiki Town Center web site. Queen Emma Land Company. from the original on August 3, 2013. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  41. ^ Allison Schaefers (May 19, 2009). "Queen Emma has tract ideas: No agreement could be reached on the Waikiki land parcel". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. from the original on May 24, 2009. Retrieved March 2, 2010.
  42. ^ Gregg K. Kakesako (October 27, 1997). "Fort Kamehameha looks nothing like it did in 1920: The post used to guard Pearl Harbor's entrance but is now part of Hickam". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. from the original on November 12, 2011. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  43. ^ . Hui o Laka, Kōkeʻe Museum. Archived from the original on July 4, 2010. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  44. ^ "The Kamehameha Dynasty". royalark.net. Retrieved November 6, 2022.

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  • Rose, Roger G.; Conant, Sheila; Kjellgren, Eric P. (September 1993). "Hawaiian Standing Kāhili in the Bishop Museum: An Ethnological and Biological Analysis". Journal of the Polynesian Society. Wellington, NZ: Polynesian Society. 102 (3): 273–304. JSTOR 20706518.
  • Rossi, Pualiʻiliʻimaikalani (December 2013). No Ka Pono ʻOle O Ka Lehulehu: The 1874 Election of Hawaiʻi's Moʻi And The Kanaka Maoli Response (PDF) (MA thesis). Honolulu: University of Hawaii at Manoa. hdl:10125/100744.
  • Seward, William Henry; Seward, Frederick William (1891). Autobiography of William H. Seward, from 1801 to 1834: With a Memoir of His Life, and Selections from His Letters from 1831 to 1846. New York: D. Appleton and Company. pp. 333–337. OCLC 4112122.
  • Tsai, Tiffany Ing (2016). "The 1873 Election in Hawaiʻi between Prince William Charles Lunalilo and the Other Candidate". The Hawaiian Journal of History. Honolulu: Hawaiian Historical Society. 50 (50): 53–73. doi:10.1353/hjh.2016.0002. hdl:10524/59459. OCLC 60626541. S2CID 164663327 – via Project MUSE.
  • Van Dyke, Jon M. (2008). Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawaiʻi?. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-6560-3. OCLC 257449971 – via Project MUSE.
  • Zambucka, Kristin (1977). The High Chiefess: Ruth Keelikolani. Honolulu: Mana Publishing Company. OCLC 3836213.
  • Zambucka, Kristin (2002). Kalakaua: Hawaiʻi's Last King. Honolulu: Māna Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-931897-04-7. OCLC 123305738.

Further reading

  • A. I. (1866). Queen Emma: A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England (Second ed.). London. OCLC 1062251450.
  • Benton, Russell E. (1988). Emma Naea Rooke (1836–1885), Beloved Queen of Hawaii. Vol. 5, Mellen Studies in History. Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0-88946-039-3. OCLC 1016183512.
  • Bray, David Kaonohiokala; Low, Douglas (1990). The Kahuna Religion of Hawai'i. Garberville, CA: Borderland Sciences & Research Foundation, Inc. ISBN 978-0-945685-05-0. OCLC 25599949.
  • Harper's Weekly (August 19, 1865). "Emma, Queen Dowager of Hawaii". Harper's Weekly, A Journal of Civilization. New York: Harper & Brothers. IX (451): 513, 518.
  • Harper's Weekly (August 25, 1866). "Queen Emma in America". Harper's Weekly, A Journal of Civilization. New York: Harper & Brothers. X (504): 533, 541–542.
  • Ing, Tiffany Lani (2019). Reclaiming Kalākaua: Nineteenth-Century Perspectives on a Hawaiian Sovereign. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-8156-6. OCLC 1085155006.
  • Kalākaua, David (1888). Daggett, Rollin Mallory (ed.). The Legends and Myths of Hawaii: The Fables and Folk-lore of a Strange People. New York: C.L. Webster & Company. OCLC 1036300398.
  • Korn, Alfons L.; Peterson, Barbara Bennett (2003). Emalani: Queen Emma Kaleleonālani. Honolulu: [[Daughters of Hawaii]] Publications Committee. ISBN 978-0-938851-14-1. OCLC 243602254.
  • Mackenzie, Anne, ed. (1866). Hawaiian Mission. The Net: Cast In Many Waters: Sketches From The Life Of Missionaries of 1866. London: Lothian & Co. pp. 10–13, 17–24, 39–43, 57–60, 87–95, 123–128, 161–167.
  • Manuscript No. M-45, Queen Emma Collection Finding Aid (PDF). Hawaii State Archives.
  • Obermer, Nesta; Larsen, Paul (1960). E Ola o Emmalani (Queen Emma speaks). Honolulu: The Queen's Hospital. OCLC 16332758.
  • Pukui, Mary Kawena; Elbert, Samuel H. (1986). Hawaiian Dictionary: Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-0703-0. OCLC 12751521.
  • Queen Emma (2001). He lei no ʻEmalani. Translated by Puakea Nogelmeier. Honolulu: Queen Emma Foundation, Bishop Museum Press. ISBN 978-1-58178-009-3. OCLC 46991952.
  • Queen Emma (2017). Forbes, David W. (ed.). In Haste with Aloha: Letters and Diaries of Queen Emma, 1881–1885. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-5783-7. JSTOR j.ctvvmzwx. OCLC 1002258964.
  • Rappolt, Miriam E. (1990). Queen Emma: A Woman of Vision. Kailua, HI: Press Pacifica. ISBN 978-0-916630-68-3. OCLC 2270748.
  • Volkmar, Janine S. (1987). A Selected Bibliography on Queen Emma. Honolulu: Paper, University of Hawaii, Hamilton Library. OCLC 663423771.
  • Walker, Jerry; Ahlo, Charles; Johnson, Rubellite Kawena (2016) [2000]. Kamehameha's Children Today. Honolulu: Native Books, Inc. ISBN 978-0-9967803-0-8. OCLC 1035718896.

External links

  • Jeffrey Bingham Mead (March 9, 2011). "Japanese Bow to Queen Emma, Western Women and Hoop Skirts in Hawaii". 1860: Japanese Embassy to America Visits Hawaii. Retrieved July 5, 2015.
  • "Biography of Founder Queen Emma". The Queen's Medical Center. Retrieved December 30, 2009.
  • Jessica from Pukalani. "Woman Hero: Queen Emma". My Hero web site. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  • Will Hoover (July 2, 2006). "Queen Emma". The Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  • Emma Kaleleonalani at Find a Grave
  • Laurie Schoonmaker. . Horizons 2001. Kapiolani Community College. Archived from the original on June 9, 2010. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  • James Kiefer (October 1, 2009). "King Kamehameha and Queen Emma of Hawaii (28 NOV 1864)". The Lectionary: A collection of Lectionary resources for the Episcopal Church.
Royal titles
Preceded by Queen consort of Hawaiʻi
1856–1863
Succeeded by

queen, emma, hawaii, emma, kalanikaumakaʻamano, kaleleonālani, naʻea, rooke, january, 1836, april, 1885, queen, hawaii, wife, king, kamehameha, from, 1856, death, 1863, later, candidate, throne, king, kalākaua, elected, instead, emmaoil, canvas, william, cogsw. Emma Kalanikaumakaʻamano Kaleleonalani Naʻea Rooke January 2 1836 April 25 1885 was queen of Hawaii as the wife of King Kamehameha IV from 1856 to his death in 1863 She was later a candidate for the throne but King Kalakaua was elected instead EmmaOil on canvas by William F Cogswell 1890Queen consort of the Hawaiian IslandsTenureJune 19 1856 November 30 1863Born 1836 01 02 January 2 1836Honolulu OahuDiedApril 25 1885 1885 04 25 aged 49 Honolulu OahuBurial 1885 05 17 May 17 1885 1 2 Mauna ʻAla Royal MausoleumSpouseKamehameha IVIssueAlbert Edward Kauikeaouli Kaleiopapa a KamehamehaNamesEmalani Kalanikaumakaʻamano Kaleleonalani Naʻea Hawaiian Emma Alexandrina Francis Agnes Lowder Byde Rooke Young Kaleleokalani Anglican HouseKamehamehaFatherHigh Chief George Naʻea Thomas Rooke hanai MotherHigh Chiefess Fanny Kekelaokalani Young High Chiefess Grace Kamaʻikuʻi Young Rooke hanai ReligionChurch of HawaiiSignature Contents 1 Names 2 Early life 3 Married life and reign 4 Religious legacy 5 Visit to Europe and United States 1865 1866 6 Royal election of 1874 7 Friendship with Queen Victoria 8 Death and legacy 9 Honours 10 Family tree 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksNames EditAfter her son s death and before her husband s death she was referred to as Kaleleokalani or flight of the heavenly one After her husband also died it was changed into the plural form as Kaleleonalani or the flight of the heavenly ones She was baptized into the Anglican faith on October 21 1862 as Emma Alexandrina Francis Agnes Lowder Byde Rooke Young Kaleleokalani 3 Queen Emma was also honoured in the 19th century mele Wahine Holo Lio horseback riding lady referring to her renowned horsemanship 4 Early life EditEmma was born on January 2 1836 5 in Honolulu and was often called Emalani royal Emma Her father was High Chief George Naʻea and her mother was High Chiefess Fanny Kekelaokalani Young She was adopted under the Hawaiian tradition of hanai by her childless maternal aunt chiefess Grace Kamaʻikuʻi Young Rooke and her husband Dr Thomas C B Rooke 6 Emma s father Naʻea was the son of High Chief Kamaunu and High Chiefess Kukaeleiki 7 Kukaeleiki was daughter of Kalauawa a Kauaʻi noble and she was a cousin of Queen Keōpuolani the most sacred wife of Kamehameha I Among Naʻea s more notable ancestors were Kalanawaʻa a high chief of Oʻahu and High Chiefess Kuaenaokalani who held the sacred kapu rank of Kekapupoʻohoʻolewaikala so sacred that she could not be exposed to the sun except at dawn 8 Emma and her hanai parents On her mother s side Emma was the granddaughter of John Young Kamehameha I s British born military advisor known as High Chief Olohana and Princess Kaʻōanaʻeha Kuamoʻo 9 10 Her maternal grandmother Kaʻōanaʻeha was generally called the niece of Kamehameha I Chiefess Kaʻōanaʻeha s father is disputed some say she was the daughter of Prince Keliʻimaikaʻi the only full brother of Kamehameha others state Kaʻōanaʻeha s father was High Chief Kalaipaihala 11 12 This confusion is due to the fact that High Chiefess Kalikoʻokalani the mother of Kaʻōanaʻeha married both to Keliʻimaikaʻi and to Kalaipaihala Through High Chief Kalaipaihala she could be descended from Kalaniʻopuʻu King of Hawaii before Kiwalaʻō and Kamehameha King Kalakaua and Queen Liliʻuokalani criticized Queen Emma s claim of descent from Kamehameha s brother supporting the latter theory of descent Liliʻuokalani claimed that Keliʻimaikaʻi had no children and that Kiilaweau Keliʻimaikaʻi s first wife was a man 13 This was to strengthen their claim to the throne since their great grandfather was Kamehameha I s first cousin But even through the second theory Queen Emma would still have been descendant of Kamehameha I s first cousin since Kalaniʻopuʻu was the uncle of Kamehameha I 14 It can be noted that one historian of the time Samuel Kamakau supported Queen Emma s descent from Keliʻimaikaʻi and the genealogy stated by Liliuokalani have been contested in her own lifetime 15 Emma grew up in her adoptive parents English mansion the Rooke House in Honolulu Emma was educated at the Royal School which was established by American missionaries Other Hawaiian royals attending the school included Emma s half sister Mary Paʻaʻaina Like her classmates Bernice Pauahi Bishop David Kalakaua and Lydia Liliʻuokalani Emma was cross cultural both Hawaiian and Euro American in her habits When the school closed Dr Rooke hired an English governess Sarah Rhodes von Pfister to tutor the young Emma He also encouraged reading from his extensive library As a writer he influenced Emma s interest in reading and books By the time she was 20 she was an accomplished young woman She was 5 2 and slender with large black eyes Her musical talents as a vocalist pianist and dancer were well known She was also a skilled equestrian citation needed Married life and reign Edit Emma and Kamehameha IV Emma became engaged to the king of Hawaii Alexander Liholiho At the engagement party a Hawaiian charged that Emma s Caucasian blood made her unfit to be the Hawaiian queen and her lineage was not suitable enough to be Alexander Liholiho s bride She broke into tears and the king was infuriated On June 19 1856 she married Alexander Liholiho who a year earlier had assumed the throne as Kamehameha IV He was also fluent in both Hawaiian and English Each nation and even the Chinese hosted balls and celebrations in honor of the newlyweds Two years later on May 20 1858 Emma gave birth to a son Prince Albert Edward Kamehameha citation needed The queen tended palace affairs including the expansion of the palace library In 1861 she sang in the chorus of a performance of Verdi s opera Il Trovatore in Honolulu while her husband the king acted as stage manager 16 She was known for her humanitarian efforts Inspired by her adoptive father s work she encouraged her husband to establish a public hospital to help the Native Hawaiians who were in decline due to foreign borne diseases like smallpox In 1859 Emma established Queen s Hospital and visited patients there almost daily whenever she was in residence in Honolulu It is now called the Queen s Medical Center She also founded St Andrewʻs Priory school for girls Queen Emma recognized the educational needs of the young women of Hawaiʻi and founded St Andrew s Priory so that Hawaiian girls would receive an education equivalent to what was traditionally offered only to boys 17 Prince Albert who was always called Baby by Emma had been celebrated for days at his birth and every public appearance Mary Allen wife of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Elisha Hunt Allen had a son Frederick about the same age and they became playmates In 1862 Queen Victoria agreed to become godmother by proxy and sent an elaborate silver christening cup Before the cup could arrive the prince fell ill in August and condition worsened The Prince died on August 27 1862 Her husband died a year later and Emma would not have any more children 18 Religious legacy Edit Laying of the cornerstone of St Andrew s Cathedral in 1867 In 1860 Queen Emma and King Kamehameha IV petitioned the Church of England to help establish the Church of Hawaii Upon the arrival of Anglican bishop Thomas Nettleship Staley and two priests they both were baptized on October 21 1862 and confirmed in November 1862 With her husband she championed the Anglican Episcopal church in Hawaii and founded St Andrew s Cathedral raising funds for the building In 1867 she founded Saint Andrew s Priory School for Girls 19 She also laid the groundwork for an Episcopal secondary school for boys originally named for Saint Alban and later ʻIolani School in honor of her husband The Feast of the Holy Sovereigns is celebrated annually in the Episcopal Church in Hawaii on November 28 honoring Kamehameha IV and Emma 20 The rest of the Episcopal Church observes this as the feast day of Kamehameha and Emma King and Queen of Hawaii but does not use the name Feast of the Holy Sovereigns 21 Visit to Europe and United States 1865 1866 Edit Queen Emma with Anglican church dignitaries at Oxford 1866 From 1865 to 1866 she traveled to England and the United States for her health and to help the burgeoning Anglican mission in Hawaii She visited London and spent the winter at Hyeres in the French Rivera and then toured Northern Italy and Southern Germany before visiting Paris She returned to London in June 1866 and went sightseeing in Ireland before sailing for New York In her time in Europe she met with Queen Victoria Emperor Napoleon III Empress Eugenie of France Grand Duke Frederick II and Grand Duchess Louise of Baden and other Europeans royals government dignitaries and Anglican clergy 22 In the United States she had a reception given for her on August 14 1866 by President Andrew Johnson and First Lady Eliza McCardle Johnson at the White House 22 23 Some note this as the first time anyone with the title Queen had had an official visit to the U S presidential residence 24 Secretary of State William H Seward hosted the queen at his house and gave her state dinner on August 18 The following evening she attended a private dinner at the White House with the president his family and Seward 25 While in Washington she also met the Choctaw chief Peter Pitchlynn and his country s delegation along with delegations of Chickasaw and Cherokee 26 27 This was the only instance of bilateral relations between the Hawaiian Kingdom and the three tribal republics citation needed After visiting Washington she visited Niagara Falls and Canada The news of her hanai mother Grace s death in Hawaii on July 26 prompted her to end her trip and journey home The United States government dispatched the USS Vanderbilt at San Francisco to bring her back to Honolulu 22 28 29 A pamphlet Queen Emma A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England describing her travel and mission in England was published anonymously in London in December 1865 30 31 American missionary Samuel C Damon published this in his newspaper The Friend in June 1866 and pointed out some errors in the work 30 32 Royal election of 1874 EditAfter the death of King Lunalilo Emma decided to run in the constitutionally mandated royal election against future King Kalakaua She claimed that Lunalilo had wanted her to succeed him but died before a formal proclamation could be made The day after Lunalilo died Kalakaua declared himself candidate for the throne The next day Queen Emma did the same The first real animosity between the Kamehamehas and Kalakaua begun to appear as he published a proclamation To the Hawaiian Nation Salutations to You Whereas His Majesty Lunalilo departed this life at the hour of nine o clock last night and by his death the Throne of Hawaii is left vacant and the nation is without a head or a guide In this juncture it is proper that we should seek for a Sovereign and Leader and doing so follow the course prescribed by Article 22nd of the Constitution My earnest desire is for the perpetuity of the Crown and the permanent independence of the government and people of Hawaii on the basis of the equity liberty prosperity progress and protection of the whole people It will be remembered that at the time of the election of the late lamented Sovereign I put forward my own claim to the Throne of our beloved country on Constitutional grounds and it is upon those grounds only that I now prefer my claims and call upon you to listen to my call and request you to instruct your Representatives to consider and weigh well and to regard your choice to elect me the oldest member of a family high in rank in the country Therefore I David Kalakaua cheerfully call upon you and respectfully ask you to grant me your support D KALAKAUAIolani Palace Feb 4 1874 Her supporters styled themselves as Emmaites or Queenites and were made up of mostly Hawaiians and British subjects of Hawaii Queen Emma issued her proclamation the next day To the Hawaiian People Whereas His late lamented Majesty Lunalilo died on the 3rd of February 1874 without having publicly proclaimed a Successor to the Throne and whereas His late Majesty did before his final sickness declare his wish and intention that the undersigned should be his Successor on the Throne of the Hawaiian Islands and enjoined upon me not to decline the same under any circumstances and whereas Many of the Hawaiian people have since the death of His Majesty urged me to place myself in nomination at the ensuing session of the Legislature Therefore in view of the foregoing considerations and my duty to the people and to the memory of the late King I do hereby announce and declare that I am a Candidate for the Throne of these Hawaiian Islands and I request my beloved people throughout the group to assemble peacefully ad orderly in their districts and to give formal expression to their views on this important subject and to instruct their Representatives in the coming session of the Legislature God Protect Hawaii Honolulu Feb 5 1874 EMMA KALELEONALANI 33 Emma s candidacy was agreeable to many Native Hawaiians not only because her husband was a member of the Kamehameha Dynasty but she was also closer in descent to Hawaii s first king Kamehameha The Great than her opponent On foreign policy she like her husband was pro British while Kalakaua although being pro Hawaiian and somewhat pro British was more leaning toward the American She also strongly wished to stop Hawaii s dependence on American industry and to give the Native Hawaiians a more powerful voice in government While the people supported Emma the Legislative Assembly which actually elected the new monarch favored Kalakaua who won the election 39 6 News of her defeat caused a large scale riot in which thirteen legislators supporting Kalakaua were injured one J W Lonoaea ultimately died of his injuries 34 In order to quell the civil disruption American and British troops stationed on warships in Honolulu Harbor were landed with the permission of the Hawaiian government and the rioters were arrested 35 After the election she retired from public life While she would come to recognize Kalakaua as the rightful king she would never speak with his wife Queen Kapiʻolani She was known affectionately as the Old Queen King Kalakaua left a seat for her at any royal occasion even though she rarely attended Friendship with Queen Victoria Edit Emma and Queen Victoria silver christening cup Despite the great differences in their kingdoms Queen Emma and Queen Victoria became lifelong friends both had lost sons and spouses 22 They exchanged letters and Emma met Victoria for the first time on September 9 1865 on her trip to England and later spent a night at Windsor Castle on November 27 36 Queen Victoria recorded in her journal on the afternoon of September 9 1865 After luncheon I received Queen Emma the widowed Queen of the Sandwich Islands or Hawaii Met her in the Corridor amp nothing could be nicer or more dignified than her manner She is dark but not more so than an Indian with fine feathers features amp splendid soft eyes She was dressed in just the same widow s weeds as I wear I took her into the White Drawing room where I asked to sit down next to me on the sofa She was moved when I spoke to her of her great misfortune in losing her only child She was very discreet amp would only remain a few minutes She presented her lady Mrs Hoopile whose husband is her Chaplain both being Hawaiians 37 Death and legacy Edit Funeral procession of Queen Emma May 17 1885 In 1883 Emma suffered the first of several small strokes and died two years later on April 25 1885 at the age of 49 At first she was laid in state at her house but Alexander Cartwright and a few of his friends moved the casket to Kawaiahaʻo Church saying her house was not large enough for the funeral This was evidently not popular with those in charge of the church since it was Congregational Queen Emma had been a supporter of the Anglican Mission and was an Episcopalian Queen Liliʻuokalani said it showed no regard for the sacredness of the place However for the funeral service Bishop Alfred Willis of the English Church officiated in the Congregational church with his ritual She was given a royal procession and was interred in the Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii known as Mauna ʻAla next to her husband and son 38 The Queen Emma Foundation was set up to provide continuous lease income for the hospital Its landholding in the division known as the Queen Emma Land Company include the International Marketplace and Waikiki Town Center buildings 39 40 Some of the 40 year leases expire in 2010 41 The area known as Fort Kamehameha in World War II the site of several coastal artillery batteries was the site of her former beach front estate After annexation it was acquired by the U S federal government in 1907 42 The Emalani festival Eo e Emalani i Alakaʻi held in October on the island of Kauaʻi in Koke e State Park celebrates an 1871 visit 43 Honours Edit Dame Grand Cross of the Most Noble Order of Kamehameha I 04 02 1879 44 Family tree EditFamily treevteJohn Young Hawaii family treeKeliʻimaikaʻi died 1809 KalikoʻokalaniKalaipaihalaRobert YoungGraceDavis FamilyKaʻōanaʻeha died 1850 John Young 1742 1835 Namokuelua died 1804 Robert 1796 1813 HaʻaleJames Kanehoa 1797 1851 Sarah Kaniaulono 1797 1867 Henry C LewisFanny Kekelaokalani 1806 1880 George Naʻea 1797 1852 Jane LahilahiNuʻuanuMary Paʻaʻaina 1833 1853 James Augustus Griswold 1823 Dr T C B Rooke 1806 1858 Grace Kamaʻikuʻi 1808 1866 Governor Cox Keʻeaumoku 1784 1824 Samuel NuʻuanuHouse of KamehamehaQueen Emma 1836 1885 Kamehameha IV 1836 1885 Kamehameha III 1813 1854 Jane Lahilahi 1813 1862 Joshua Kaʻeo c 1808 1858 Keoni Ana 1810 1857 Julia Alapaʻi died 1849 Albert Kamehameha 1858 1862 Kiwalaʻo died 1851 Albert Kunuiakea 1851 1903 Mary Lonokahikini 1851 1904 Peter Kekuaokalani 1836 1880 Keliʻimaikaʻi Alebada died 1851 Notes Apple Russel A 1978 Appendix A Young Family Geneology Pahukanilua Homestead of John Young Kawaihae Kohala Island of Hawaiʻi Historical Data Section of the Historic Structure Report Honolulu National Park Office Hawaii State Office pp 39 41 OCLC 4962701 John Young s Family The Daily Bulletin Vol XV no 51 Honolulu March 2 1891 p 2 Retrieved September 26 2016 Kanahele George S 1999 Emma Hawaii s Remarkable Queen Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 8248 2240 8 OCLC 40890919 McKinzie Edith Kawelohea 1983 Stagner Ishmael W ed Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Vol 1 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press pp 38 39 ISBN 0 939154 28 5 OCLC 12555087 See also Edit Hawaii portal Biography portal Saints portalHanaiakamalama Queen Emma Summer Palace The Queen s Medical CenterReferences Edit Rose Conant amp Kjellgren 1993 pp 278 279 Forbes 2003 pp 144 145 Kanahele 1999 p 152 Kaeppler 1972 pp 42 44 Kanahele 1999 p 1 Kanahele 1999 pp 1 4 McKinzie 1983 p 73 Kanahele 1999 pp 4 7 Apple 1978 pp 39 41 Cahill 1999 p 147 Kapiikauinamoku June 20 1955 The Story of Maui Royalty Princess Kamamalu Was Kamehamehaʻs Daughter Honolulu Advertiser Archived from the original on June 14 2015 Retrieved January 1 2010 Kapiikauinamoku October 25 1955 The Story of Hawaiian Royalty Princess Princess Kaoanaeha Is Married to John Young The Kaleipaihala Controversy 2 Honolulu Advertiser Archived from the original on June 14 2015 Retrieved March 5 2010 Liliuokalani 1898 p 404 Kanahele 1999 p 357 358 Robert William Wilcox May 27 1898 Some Geneology R W Wilcox Corrects Statements in Ex Queen s Book Ancestry of Liliuokalani Only Surviving Members of Royal School Destined to Be Rulers of Hawaii Hawaiian Gazette hdl 10524 3150 Junker J W Song of the Islands Hana Hou Retrieved July 7 2020 History amp Legacy St Andrew s Schools www standrewsschools org Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved November 29 2017 Hackler 1992 pp 21 44 St Andrew s Priory School official web site Archived from the original on July 12 2016 Retrieved January 29 2010 Diocesan Home Episcopal Diocese of Hawaii Archived from the original on March 5 2013 Retrieved March 1 2013 Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018 Church Publishing Inc December 17 2019 ISBN 978 1 64065 235 4 a b c d Kanahele 1999 pp 189 226 Esther Singleton 1907 The story of the White House Volume 2 The McClure Company p 109 Archived from the original on June 3 2016 Retrieved November 22 2015 Steven Anzovin Janet Podell 2001 Famous first facts about American politics H W Wilson p 136 ISBN 978 0 8242 0971 1 Archived from the original on May 20 2016 Retrieved November 22 2015 Seward amp Seward 1891 pp 333 337 Byrd Jodi 2011 The Transit of Empire Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism University of Minnesota Press pp 177 184 Washington Movements of Queen Emma Visit to the Tomb of Washington The Evening Telegraph Vol VI no 40 Philadelphia August 17 1866 p 1 Kuykendall 1953 p 205 Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States transmitted to Congress with the Annual message of the President 1866 Washington DC US Government Print Office 1867 pp 490 491 494 495 498 a b Forbes 2001 p 398 Queen Emma A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England The Era London December 31 1865 p 9 Damon Samuel C June 1 1866 Queen Emma s Visit to England and Reprint of Queen Emma A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England PDF The Friend Vol 23 no 6 Honolulu Samuel C Damon pp 41 44 Kanahele 1999 p 283 Dabagh Lyons amp Hitchcock 1974 pp 76 89 Kuykendall 1967 pp 9 11 Kanahele 1999 pp 288 292 Osorio 2002 pp 154 157 Kaeo amp Queen Emma 1976 pp 165 166 Hackler 1988 pp 109 112 Kanahele 1999 pp 199 200 Liliuokalani 1898 pp 108 109 Janis L Magin September 24 2008 New plan for International Market Place announced Pacific Business News Honolulu Queen Emma Kaleleonalani International Market Place and Waikiki Town Center web site Queen Emma Land Company Archived from the original on August 3 2013 Retrieved February 1 2010 Allison Schaefers May 19 2009 Queen Emma has tract ideas No agreement could be reached on the Waikiki land parcel Honolulu Star Bulletin Archived from the original on May 24 2009 Retrieved March 2 2010 Gregg K Kakesako October 27 1997 Fort Kamehameha looks nothing like it did in 1920 The post used to guard Pearl Harbor s entrance but is now part of Hickam Honolulu Star Bulletin Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved February 1 2010 Eo e Emalani i Alaka i The Emalani Festival Hui o Laka Kōkeʻe Museum Archived from the original on July 4 2010 Retrieved February 1 2010 The Kamehameha Dynasty royalark net Retrieved November 6 2022 Bibliography EditAllen Helena G 1982 The Betrayal of Liliuokalani Last Queen of Hawaii 1838 1917 Glendale CA Arthur H Clark Company ISBN 978 0 87062 144 4 OCLC 9576325 Apple Russel A 1978 Appendix A Young Family Geneology Pahukanilua Homestead of John Young Kawaihae Kohala Island of Hawaiʻi Historical Data Section of the Historic Structure Report Honolulu National Park Office Hawaii State Office pp 39 41 OCLC 4962701 Cahill Emmett 1999 The Life and Times of John Young Confidant and Advisor to Kamehameha the Great Aiea HI Island Heritage Publishing ISBN 978 0 89610 449 5 OCLC 42656570 Cooke Amos Starr Cooke Juliette Montague 1937 Richards Mary Atherton ed The Chiefs Children School A Record Compiled from the Diary and Letters of Amos Starr Cooke and Juliette Montague Cooke by Their Granddaughter Mary Atherton Richards Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin OCLC 1972890 Cracroft Sophia Franklin Jane Queen Emma 1958 Korn Alfons L ed The Victorian Visitors An Account of the Hawaiian Kingdom 1861 1866 Including the Journal Letters of Sophia Cracroft Extracts from the Journals of Lady Franklin and Diaries and Letters of Queen Emma of Hawaii PDF Honolulu University of Hawaii Press hdl 10125 39981 ISBN 978 0 87022 421 8 OCLC 8989368 Dabagh Jean Lyons Curtis Jere Hitchcock Harvey Rexford 1974 Dabagh Jean ed A King is Elected One Hundred Years Ago PDF The Hawaiian Journal of History Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 8 76 89 hdl 10524 112 OCLC 60626541 Forbes David W ed 2001 Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780 1900 Volume 3 1851 1880 Vol 3 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2503 4 OCLC 123279964 Forbes David W ed 2003 Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780 1900 Volume 4 1881 1900 Vol 4 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2636 9 OCLC 123279964 Haley James L 2014 Captive Paradise A History of Hawaii New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 60065 5 OCLC 865158092 Hackler Rhoda E A 1988 My Dear Friend Letters of Queen Victoria and Queen Emma The Hawaiian Journal of History Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 22 101 130 hdl 10524 202 OCLC 60626541 Hackler Rhoda E A 1992 Albert Edward Kauikeaouli Leiopapa a Kamehameha Prince of Hawai i The Hawaiian Journal of History Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 26 21 44 hdl 10524 349 OCLC 60626541 Inglis Kerri A 2013 Ma i Lepera A History of Leprosy in Nineteenth Century Hawai i Honolulu HI University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 6579 5 Kaeo Peter Queen Emma 1976 Korn Alfons L ed News from Molokai Letters Between Peter Kaeo amp Queen Emma 1873 1876 Honolulu The University Press of Hawaii hdl 10125 39980 ISBN 978 0 8248 0399 5 OCLC 2225064 Kam Ralph Thomas 2017 Death Rites and Hawaiian Royalty Funerary Practices in the Kamehameha and Kalakaua Dynasties 1819 1953 S I McFarland Incorporated Publishers ISBN 978 1 4766 6846 8 OCLC 966566652 Kamakau Samuel 1992 1961 Ruling Chiefs of Hawaii Revised ed Honolulu Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 0 87336 014 1 OCLC 25008795 Kanahele George S 1999 Emma Hawaii s Remarkable Queen Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2240 8 OCLC 40890919 Kanahele George S 2002 1986 Pauahi The Kamehameha Legacy Honolulu Kamehameha Schools Press ISBN 978 0 87336 005 0 OCLC 173653971 Kaeppler Adrienne L 1972 Acculturation in Hawaiian Dance Yearbook of the International Folk Music Council Cambridge University Press 4 42 44 doi 10 2307 767671 JSTOR 767671 Kuykendall Ralph Simpson 1953 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1854 1874 Twenty Critical Years Vol 2 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 87022 432 4 Kuykendall Ralph Simpson 1967 The Hawaiian Kingdom 1874 1893 The Kalakaua Dynasty Vol 3 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 87022 433 1 OCLC 500374815 Law Anwei Skinsnes 2012 Kalaupapa A Collective Memory Ka Hokuwelowelo Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 6580 1 OCLC 830023588 Liliuokalani 1898 Hawaii s Story by Hawaii s Queen Liliuokalani Boston Lee and Shepard ISBN 978 0 548 22265 2 OCLC 2387226 Lydecker Robert Colfax ed 1918 Roster Legislatures of Hawaii 1841 1918 Honolulu Hawaiian Gazette Company OCLC 60737418 McKinzie Edith Kawelohea 1983 Stagner Ishmael W ed Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Vol 1 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 939154 28 5 OCLC 12555087 McKinzie Edith Kawelohea 1986 Stagner Ishmael W ed Hawaiian Genealogies Extracted from Hawaiian Language Newspapers Vol 2 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 939154 37 1 OCLC 12555087 Osorio Jon Kamakawiwoʻole 2002 Dismembering Lahui A History of the Hawaiian Nation to 1887 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2549 2 OCLC 48579247 Parker David Kawika 2008 Crypts of the Ali i The Last Refuge of the Hawaiian Royalty Tales of Our Hawaiʻi PDF Honolulu Alu Like Inc OCLC 309392477 Archived from the original PDF on November 11 2013 Peterson Barbara Bennett ed 1984 Notable Women of Hawaii Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0820 4 OCLC 11030010 Pratt Elizabeth Kekaaniauokalani Kalaninuiohilaukapu 1920 History of Keoua Kalanikupuapa i nui Father of Hawaii Kings and His Descendants with Notes on Kamehameha I First King of All Hawaii Honolulu Honolulu Star Bulletin OCLC 154181545 Restarick Henry Bond 1924 Hawaii 1778 1920 from the Viewpoint of a Bishop Being the Story of English and American Churchmen in Hawaii with Historical Sidelights Honolulu Paradise of the Pacific OCLC 1337282 Rose Roger G Conant Sheila Kjellgren Eric P September 1993 Hawaiian Standing Kahili in the Bishop Museum An Ethnological and Biological Analysis Journal of the Polynesian Society Wellington NZ Polynesian Society 102 3 273 304 JSTOR 20706518 Rossi Pualiʻiliʻimaikalani December 2013 No Ka Pono ʻOle O Ka Lehulehu The 1874 Election of Hawaiʻi s Moʻi And The Kanaka Maoli Response PDF MA thesis Honolulu University of Hawaii at Manoa hdl 10125 100744 Seward William Henry Seward Frederick William 1891 Autobiography of William H Seward from 1801 to 1834 With a Memoir of His Life and Selections from His Letters from 1831 to 1846 New York D Appleton and Company pp 333 337 OCLC 4112122 Tsai Tiffany Ing 2016 The 1873 Election in Hawaiʻi between Prince William Charles Lunalilo and the Other Candidate The Hawaiian Journal of History Honolulu Hawaiian Historical Society 50 50 53 73 doi 10 1353 hjh 2016 0002 hdl 10524 59459 OCLC 60626541 S2CID 164663327 via Project MUSE Van Dyke Jon M 2008 Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawaiʻi Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 6560 3 OCLC 257449971 via Project MUSE Zambucka Kristin 1977 The High Chiefess Ruth Keelikolani Honolulu Mana Publishing Company OCLC 3836213 Zambucka Kristin 2002 Kalakaua Hawaiʻi s Last King Honolulu Mana Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 931897 04 7 OCLC 123305738 Further reading EditA I 1866 Queen Emma A Narrative of the Object of Her Mission to England Second ed London OCLC 1062251450 Benton Russell E 1988 Emma Naea Rooke 1836 1885 Beloved Queen of Hawaii Vol 5 Mellen Studies in History Lewiston NY E Mellen Press ISBN 978 0 88946 039 3 OCLC 1016183512 Bray David Kaonohiokala Low Douglas 1990 The Kahuna Religion of Hawai i Garberville CA Borderland Sciences amp Research Foundation Inc ISBN 978 0 945685 05 0 OCLC 25599949 Harper s Weekly August 19 1865 Emma Queen Dowager of Hawaii Harper s Weekly A Journal of Civilization New York Harper amp Brothers IX 451 513 518 Harper s Weekly August 25 1866 Queen Emma in America Harper s Weekly A Journal of Civilization New York Harper amp Brothers X 504 533 541 542 Ing Tiffany Lani 2019 Reclaiming Kalakaua Nineteenth Century Perspectives on a Hawaiian Sovereign Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 8156 6 OCLC 1085155006 Kalakaua David 1888 Daggett Rollin Mallory ed The Legends and Myths of Hawaii The Fables and Folk lore of a Strange People New York C L Webster amp Company OCLC 1036300398 Korn Alfons L Peterson Barbara Bennett 2003 Emalani Queen Emma Kaleleonalani Honolulu Daughters of Hawaii Publications Committee ISBN 978 0 938851 14 1 OCLC 243602254 Mackenzie Anne ed 1866 Hawaiian Mission The Net Cast In Many Waters Sketches From The Life Of Missionaries of 1866 London Lothian amp Co pp 10 13 17 24 39 43 57 60 87 95 123 128 161 167 Manuscript No M 45 Queen Emma Collection Finding Aid PDF Hawaii State Archives Obermer Nesta Larsen Paul 1960 E Ola o Emmalani Queen Emma speaks Honolulu The Queen s Hospital OCLC 16332758 Pukui Mary Kawena Elbert Samuel H 1986 Hawaiian Dictionary Hawaiian English English Hawaiian Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0703 0 OCLC 12751521 Queen Emma 2001 He lei no ʻEmalani Translated by Puakea Nogelmeier Honolulu Queen Emma Foundation Bishop Museum Press ISBN 978 1 58178 009 3 OCLC 46991952 Queen Emma 2017 Forbes David W ed In Haste with Aloha Letters and Diaries of Queen Emma 1881 1885 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 5783 7 JSTOR j ctvvmzwx OCLC 1002258964 Rappolt Miriam E 1990 Queen Emma A Woman of Vision Kailua HI Press Pacifica ISBN 978 0 916630 68 3 OCLC 2270748 Volkmar Janine S 1987 A Selected Bibliography on Queen Emma Honolulu Paper University of Hawaii Hamilton Library OCLC 663423771 Walker Jerry Ahlo Charles Johnson Rubellite Kawena 2016 2000 Kamehameha s Children Today Honolulu Native Books Inc ISBN 978 0 9967803 0 8 OCLC 1035718896 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article The New York Times Obituary Queen Emma Wikimedia Commons has media related to Queen Emma of Hawaii Jeffrey Bingham Mead March 9 2011 Japanese Bow to Queen Emma Western Women and Hoop Skirts in Hawaii 1860 Japanese Embassy to America Visits Hawaii Retrieved July 5 2015 Biography of Founder Queen Emma The Queen s Medical Center Retrieved December 30 2009 Jessica from Pukalani Woman Hero Queen Emma My Hero web site Retrieved February 1 2010 Will Hoover July 2 2006 Queen Emma The Honolulu Advertiser Retrieved February 1 2010 Emma Kaleleonalani at Find a Grave Laurie Schoonmaker Thoughts of a Queen Horizons 2001 Kapiolani Community College Archived from the original on June 9 2010 Retrieved February 1 2010 James Kiefer October 1 2009 King Kamehameha and Queen Emma of Hawaii 28 NOV 1864 The Lectionary A collection of Lectionary resources for the Episcopal Church Royal titlesPreceded byKalama Queen consort of Hawaiʻi1856 1863 Succeeded byKapiʻolani Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Queen Emma of Hawaii amp oldid 1130770180, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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