Liliʻuokalani (Hawaiian pronunciation: [liˌliʔuokəˈlɐni];
born Lydia Liliʻu Loloku Walania Kamakaʻeha; September 2, 1838 – November 11,
1917) was the first queen regnant and the last sovereign monarch of the
Hawaiian Kingdom, ruling from January 29, 1891, until the overthrow of the
Hawaiian Kingdom on January 17, 1893. The composer of "Aloha ʻOe" and
numerous other works, she wrote her autobiography Hawaiʻi's Story by Hawaiʻi's
Queen during her imprisonment following the overthrow.
Liliʻuokalani was born on September 2, 1838, in Honolulu, on
the island of Oʻahu. While her natural parents were Analea Keohokālole and
Caesar Kapaʻakea, she was hānai (informally adopted) at birth by Abner Pākī and
Laura Kōnia and raised with their daughter Bernice Pauahi Bishop. Baptized as a
Christian and educated at the Royal School, she and her siblings and cousins
were proclaimed eligible for the throne by King Kamehameha III. She was married
to American-born John Owen Dominis, who later became the Governor of Oʻahu. The
couple had no biological children but adopted several. After the accession of
her brother David Kalākaua to the throne in 1874, she and her siblings were
given Western style titles of Prince and Princess. In 1877, after her younger brother
Leleiohoku II's death, she was proclaimed as heir apparent to the throne.
During the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria, she represented her brother as an
official envoy to the United Kingdom.
Liliʻuokalani ascended to the throne on January 29, 1891, nine
days after her brother's death. During her reign, she attempted to draft a new
constitution which would restore the power of the monarchy and the voting
rights of the economically disenfranchised. Threatened by her attempts to
abrogate the Bayonet Constitution, pro-American elements in Hawaiʻi overthrew
the monarchy on January 17, 1893. The overthrow was bolstered by the landing of
US Marines under John L. Stevens to protect American interests, which rendered
the monarchy unable to protect itself.
The coup d'état established the Republic of Hawaiʻi, but the
ultimate goal was the annexation of the islands to the United States, which was
temporarily blocked by President Grover Cleveland. After an unsuccessful
uprising to restore the monarchy, the oligarchical government placed the former
queen under house arrest at the ʻIolani Palace. On January 24, 1895,
Liliʻuokalani was forced to abdicate the Hawaiian throne, officially ending the
deposed monarchy. Attempts were made to restore the monarchy and oppose annexation,
but with the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, the United States annexed
Hawaiʻi. Living out the remainder of her later life as a private citizen,
Liliʻuokalani died at her residence, Washington Place, in Honolulu on November
11, 1917.
Early life
Liliʻuokalani was born Lydia Liliʻu Loloku Walania
Kamakaʻeha on September 2, 1838, to the Analea Keohokālole and Caesar
Kapaʻakea. She was born in the large grass hut of her maternal grandfather,
ʻAikanaka, at the base of Punchbowl Crater in Honolulu on the island of
Oʻahu. According to Hawaiian custom, she was named
after an event linked to her birth. At the time she was born, Kuhina Nui
(regent) Elizabeth Kīnaʻu had developed an eye infection. She named the child
using the words; liliʻu (smarting), loloku (tearful), walania (a burning pain)
and kamakaʻeha (sore eyes). Upon her baptism by Reverend Levi Chamberlain,
she was given the Christian name Lydia.
Her family were of the aliʻi class of the Hawaiian nobility
and were collateral relations of the reigning House of Kamehameha, sharing
common descent from the 18th-century aliʻi nui (supreme monarch)
Keaweʻīkekahialiʻiokamoku. From her biological parents, she descended from
Keaweaheulu and Kameʻeiamoku, two of the five royal counselors of Kamehameha I
during his conquest of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Kameʻeiamoku, the grandfather of
both her mother and father, was depicted, along with his royal twin Kamanawa, on
the Hawaiian coat of arms. Liliʻuokalani
referred to her family line as the "Keawe-a-Heulu line" after her
mother's line. The third surviving child
of a large family, her biological siblings included: James Kaliokalani, David
Kalākaua, Anna Kaʻiulani, Kaʻiminaʻauao, Miriam Likelike and William Pitt
Leleiohoku II. She and her siblings were hānai (informally
adopted) to other family members. The Hawaiian custom of hānai is an informal
form of adoption between extended families practiced by Hawaiian royals and commoners
alike. She was given at birth to Abner Pākī and his
wife Laura Kōnia and raised with their daughter Bernice Pauahi.
In 1842, at the age of four, she began her education at the
Chiefs' Children's School (later known as the Royal School). She, along with
her classmates, had been formally proclaimed by Kamehameha III as eligible for
the throne of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Liliʻuokalani later noted that these
"pupils were exclusively persons whose claims to the throne were acknowledged." She,
along with her two older brothers James Kaliokalani and David Kalākaua, and her
thirteen royal cousins, was taught in English by American missionaries Amos
Starr Cooke and his wife, Juliette Montague Cooke. The children were taught reading, spelling,
penmanship, arithmetic, geometry, algebra, physics, geography, history,
bookkeeping, singing and English composition by the missionary couple who had
to control the moral and sexual development of their charges. Liliʻuokalani was placed in the youngest
section of the class with Princess Victoria Kamāmalu, Mary Polly Paʻaʻāina, and
John William Pitt Kīnaʻu. In later life, Liliʻuokalani would look back
unfavorably on her early education remembering being "sent hungry to
bed" and the 1848 measles epidemic that claimed the life of a classmate
Moses Kekūāiwa and her younger sister Kaʻiminaʻauao. The boarding school run by the Cookes was
discontinued around 1850, so she, along with her former classmate Victoria, was
sent to the relocated day school (also called Royal School) run by Reverend
Edward G. Beckwith. On May 5, 1853, she
finished third in her class with Victoria and Nancy Sumner in the final exams. In 1865, after her marriage, she informally
attended Oʻahu College (modern day Punahou School) and received instruction
under Susan Tolman Mills, who later cofounded Mills College in California.
Courtship and married
life
After the boarding school was discontinued in 1850,
Liliʻuokalani lived with her hānai parents at Haleʻākala, which she referred to
in later life as her childhood home. Around this time, her hānai sister Pauahi
married the American Charles Reed Bishop against the wishes of their parents
but reconciled with them shortly before Pākī's death in 1855. Kōnia died two
years afterward and Liliʻuokalani came under the Bishops' guardianship. During
this period, Liliʻuokalani became a part of the young social elite under the
reign of Kamehameha IV who ascended to the throne in 1855. In 1856, Kamehameha IV announced his intent to
marry Emma Rooke, one of their classmates. However, according to Liliʻuokalani,
certain elements of the court argued "there is no other chief equal to you
in birth and rank but the adopted daughter of Paki," which infuriated the
King and brought the Queen to tears. Despite this upset, Liliʻuokalani was
regarded as a close friend of the new Queen, and she served as a maid of honor
during the royal wedding alongside Princess Victoria Kamāmalu and Mary
Pitman. At official state occasions, she served as an
attendant and lady-in-waiting in Queen Emma's retinue. Visiting British
dignitaries Lady Franklin and her niece Sophia Cracroft noted in 1861 that the
"Honble. Lydia Paki" was "the highest unmarried woman in the
Kingdom".
Marriage consideration had begun early on for her
. American
merchant Gorham D. Gilman, a houseguest of the Pākīs, had courted her
unsuccessfully when she was fifteen. Around the time of Kōnia's final illness
in 1857, Liliʻuokalani was briefly engaged to William Charles Lunalilo. They
shared an interest in music composition and had known each other from
childhood. He had been betrothed from birth to Princess Victoria, the king's
sister, but disagreements with her brothers prevented the marriage from
materializing. Thus, Lunalilo proposed to Liliʻuokalani during a trip to
Lahaina to be with Kōnia. A short-lived dual engagement occurred in which
Liliʻuokalani was matched to Lunalilo and her brother Kalakaua to Princess
Victoria. She ultimately broke off the engagement because of the urging of King
Kamehameha IV and the opposition of the Bishops to the union. Afterward, she became romantically involved
with the American-born John Owen Dominis, a staff member for Prince Lot
Kapuāiwa (the future Kamehameha V) and secretary to King Kamehameha IV. Dominis
was the son of Captain John Dominis, of Trieste, and Mary Lambert Jones, of
Boston. According to Liliʻuokalani's memoir, they had known each other from
childhood when he watched the royal children from a school next to the Cookes'.
During a court excursion, Dominis escorted her home despite falling from his
horse and breaking his leg.
John Owen Dominis,
who later became Governor of Oʻahu
From 1860 to 1862, Liliʻuokalani and Dominis were engaged
with the wedding set on her twenty-fourth birthday. This was postponed to
September 16, 1862, out of respect for the death of Prince Albert Kamehameha,
son of Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma. The wedding was held at Haleʻākala, the
residence of the Bishops. The ceremony was officiated by Reverend Samuel
Chenery Damon in the Anglican rites. Her bridesmaids were her former classmates
Elizabeth Kekaʻaniau and Martha Swinton. King Kamehameha IV and other members
of the royal family were honored guests. The couple moved into the Dominises'
residence, Washington Place in Honolulu. Through his wife and connections with
the king, Dominis would later become Governor of Oʻahu and Maui. The union was reportedly an unhappy one with
much gossip about Dominis' infidelities and domestic strife between
Liliʻuokalani and Dominis' mother Mary who disapproved of the marriage of her
son with a Hawaiian. They never had any
children of their own, but, against the wish of her husband, Liliʻuokalani
adopted three hānai children: Lydia Kaʻonohiponiponiokalani Aholo, the daughter
of a family friend; Joseph Kaiponohea ʻAeʻa, the son of a retainer; and John
ʻAimoku Dominis, her husband's son.
After her marriage, she retained her position in the court
circle of Kamehameha IV and later his brother and successor Kamehameha V. She
assisted Queen Emma and King Kamehameha IV in raising funds to build The
Queen's Hospital. In 1864, she and Pauahi helped Princess Victoria established
the Kaʻahumanu Society, a female-led organization aimed at the relief of the
elderly and the ill. At the request of Kamehameha V, she composed "He Mele
Lāhui Hawaiʻi" in 1866 as the new Hawaiian national anthem. This was in
use until replaced by her brother's composition "Hawaiʻi Ponoʻī".
During the 1869 visit of Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh and the Galatea, she
entertained the British prince with a traditional Hawaiian luau at her Waikiki
residence of Hamohamo.
Heir apparent and
regency
Elections of 1874
When Kamehameha V died in 1872 with no heir, the 1864
Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom called for the legislature to elect the
next monarch. Following a non-binding referendum and subsequent unanimous vote
in the legislature, Lunalilo became the first elected king of Hawaii. Lunalilo died without an heir in 1874. In the
election that followed, Liliʻuokalani's brother, David Kalākaua, ran against
Emma, the dowager queen of Kamehameha IV. The choice of Kalākaua by the legislature, and
the subsequent announcement, caused a riot at the courthouse. US and British
troops were landed, and some of Emma's supporters were arrested. The results of
the election strained the relationship between Emma and the Kalākaua family.
After his accession, Kalākaua gave royal titles and styles
to his surviving siblings, his sisters, Princess Lydia Kamakaʻeha Dominis and
Princess Miriam Likelike Cleghorn, as well as his brother William Pitt
Leleiohoku, whom he named heir to the Hawaiian throne as Kalākaua and Queen
Kapiʻolani had no children of their own. Leleiohoku died without an heir in
1877. Leleiohoku's hānai (adoptive)
mother, Ruth Keʻelikōlani, wanted to be named heir, but the king's cabinet
ministers objected as that would place Bernice Pauahi Bishop, Ruth's first
cousin, next in line. This would put the
Kamehamehas back in succession to the throne again, which Kalākaua did not
wish. On top of that, Kalākaua's court genealogists had already cast doubt on
Ruth's direct lineage, and in doing so placed doubt on Bernice's. At noon on April 10, Liliʻuokalani became the
newly designated heir apparent to the throne of Hawaii. It was at this time that Kalākaua had her
name changed to Liliʻuokalani (the "smarting of the royal ones"),
replacing her given name of Liliʻu and her baptismal name of Lydia. In 1878, Liliʻuokalani and Dominis sailed to
California for her health. They stayed in San Francisco and Sacramento where
she visited the Crocker Art Museum.
First regency
During Kalākaua's 1881 world tour, Liliʻuokalani served as
Regent in his absence. One of her first
responsibilities was handling the smallpox epidemic of 1881 likely brought to
the islands by Chinese contracted laborers. After meeting her with her
brother's cabinet ministers, she closed all the ports, halted all passenger
vessels out of Oʻahu, and initiated a quarantine of the affected. The measures
kept the disease contained in Honolulu and Oʻahu with only a few cases on
Kauaʻi. The disease mainly affected Native Hawaiians with the total number of
cases at 789 with 289 fatalities, or a little over thirty-six percent.
It was during this regency that Liliʻuokalani visited the
leper settlement at Kalaupapa on Molokaʻi in September. She
was too overcome to speak and John Makini Kapena, one of her brother's
ministers, had to address the people on her behalf. After the visit, in the
name of her brother, Liliʻuokalani made Father Damien a knight commander of the
Royal Order of Kalākaua for his service to her subjects. She also convinced the
governmental board of health to set aside land for a leprosy hospital at
Kakaʻako. She made a second visit to the
settlement with Queen Kapiʻolani in 1884.
Liliʻuokalani was active in philanthropy and the welfare of
her people. In 1886, she founded a bank for women in Honolulu named
Liliuokalani’s Savings Bank and helped Isabella Chamberlain Lyman establish
Kumukanawai o ka Liliuokalani Hui Hookuonoono, a money lending group for women
in Hilo. In the same year, she also founded the Liliʻuokalani Educational
Society, an organization “to interest the Hawaiian ladies in the proper
training of young girls of their own race whose parents would be unable to give
them advantages by which they would be prepared for the duties of life.” It
supported the tuition of Hawaiian girls at Kawaiahaʻo Seminary for Girls, where
her hānai daughter Lydia Aholo attended, and Kamehameha School.
Golden Jubilee of Queen
Victoria
In April 1887, Kalākaua sent a delegation to attend the
Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria in London. It included his wife Queen
Kapiʻolani, the Princess Liliʻuokalani and her husband, as well as Court
Chamberlain Colonel Curtis P. Iaukea acting as the official envoy of the King. The party landed in San Francisco and traveled
across the United States visiting Washington, D.C., Boston and New York City,
where they boarded a ship for the United Kingdom. While in the American
capital, they were received by President Grover Cleveland and his wife Frances
Cleveland. In London, Kapiʻolani and Liliʻuokalani received an official
audience with Queen Victoria at Buckingham Palace. Queen Victoria greeted both
Hawaiian royals with affection, and recalled Kalākaua's visit in 1881. They
attended the special Jubilee service at Westminster Abbey and were seated with
other foreign royal guests, and with members of the Royal Household. Shortly after the Jubilee celebrations, they
learned of the Bayonet Constitution that Kalākaua had been forced to sign under
the threat of death. They canceled their tour of Europe and returned to Hawaii.
Liliʻuokalani was approached on December 20 and 23 by James
I. Dowsett, Jr. and William R. Castle, members of the legislature's Reform
(Missionary) Party, proposing her ascension to the throne if her brother
Kalākaua were removed from power. Historian Ralph S. Kuykendall stated that she
gave a conditional "if necessary" response; however, Liliʻuokalani's
account was that she firmly turned down both men. In 1889, a part Native Hawaiian officer Robert
W Wilcox, who resided in Liliʻuokalani's Palama residence, instigated an
unsuccessful rebellion to overthrow the Bayonet Constitution.
Second regency and
death of Kalākaua
Kalākaua arrived in California aboard the USS Charleston on
November 25, 1890. There was uncertainty as to the purpose of the king's trip.
Minister of Foreign Affairs John Adams Cummins reported that the trip was
solely for the king's health and would not extend beyond California, while
local newspapers and the British commissioner James Hay Wodehouse speculated
that the king might go further east to Washington, D.C. to negotiate a treaty
to extend the existing exclusive US access rights to Pearl Harbor, or the
annexation of the kingdom. The McKinley Tariff Act had crippled the Hawaiian
sugar industry by removing the duties on sugar imports from other countries
into the US, eliminating the previous Hawaiian duty-free advantage under the
Reciprocity Treaty of 1875. After
failing to persuade the king to stay, Liliʻuokalani wrote that he and Hawaiian
ambassador to the United States Henry A. P. Carter planned to discuss the tariff
situation in Washington. In his absence,
Liliʻuokalani was left in charge as regent for the second time. In her memoir,
she wrote that "Nothing worthy of record transpired during the closing
days of 1890, and the opening weeks of 1891."
Upon arriving in California, Kalākaua, whose health had been
declining, stayed in a suite at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. Traveling throughout Southern California and
Northern Mexico, the monarch suffered a stroke in Santa Barbara and was rushed
back to San Francisco. Kalākaua fell into a coma in his suite on January 18,
and died two days later on January 20. The official cause of death was "Bright's
Disease with Uremic Blood Poisoning." The news of Kalākaua's death did not reach
Hawaii until January 29 when the Charleston returned to Honolulu with the
remains of the king.
Reign
On January 29, 1891, in the presence of the cabinet
ministers and the Supreme Court justices, Liliʻuokalani took the oath of office
to uphold the constitution, and became the first and only queen of the Hawaiian
Kingdom. The first few weeks of her
reign were obscured by the funeral of her brother. After the end of the period
of mourning, one of her first acts was to request the formal resignation of the
holdover cabinet from her brother's reign. These ministers refused, and asked
for a ruling by the Hawaii Supreme Court. All the justices but one ruled in
favor of the Queen's decision, and the ministers resigned. Liliʻuokalani
appointed Samuel Parker, Hermann A. Widemann, and William A. Whiting, and
reappointed Charles N. Spencer (from the hold-over cabinet), as her new cabinet
ministers. On March 9, with the approval of the House of Nobles, as required by
the Hawaiian constitution, she named as successor her niece Kaʻiulani, the only
daughter of Archibald Scott Cleghorn and her sister Princess Likelike, who had
died in 1887. From April to July,
Liliʻuokalani paid the customary visits to the main Hawaiian Islands, including
a third visit to the leper settlement of Kalaupapa. Historian Ralph Simpson
Kuykendall noted, "Everywhere she was accorded the homage traditionally
paid by the Hawaiian people to their alii."
Liliʻuokalani at
Waipiʻo during her royal circuit of Oʻahu, 1891
Following her accession, John Owen Dominis was given the
title Prince Consort and restored to the Governorship of Oʻahu, which had been
abolished following the Bayonet Constitution of 1887. Dominis' death on August 27, seven months
into her reign, greatly affected the new Queen. Liliʻuokalani later wrote:
"His death occurred at a time when his long experience in public life, his
amiable qualities, and his universal popularity, would have made him an adviser
to me for whom no substitute could possibly be found. I have often said that it
pleased the Almighty Ruler of nations to take him away from me at precisely the
time when I felt that I most needed his counsel and companionship." Cleghorn, her sister's widower, was appointed
to succeed Dominis as Governor of Oʻahu. In 1892, Liliʻuokalani would also
restore the positions of governor for the other three main islands for her
friends and supporters.
From May 1892 to January 1893, the legislature of the
Kingdom convened for an unprecedented 171 days, which later historians such as
Albertine Loomis and Helena G. Allen dubbed the "Longest Legislature".
This session was dominated by political
infighting between and within the four parties: National Reform, Reform,
National Liberal and Independent; none were able to gain a majority. Debates
heard on the floor of the houses concerned the popular demand for a new
constitution and the passage of a lottery bill and an opium licensing bill,
aimed at alleviating the economic crisis caused by the McKinley Tariff. The
main issues of contention between the new monarch and the legislators were the
retention of her cabinet ministers, since political division prevented
Liliʻuokalani from appointing a balanced council and the 1887 constitution gave
the legislature the power to vote for the dismissal of her cabinet. Seven
resolutions of want of confidence were introduced during this session, and four
of her self-appointed cabinets (the Widemann, Macfarlane, Cornwell, and Wilcox
cabinets) were ousted by votes of the legislature. On January 13, 1893, after
the legislature dismissed the George Norton Wilcox cabinet (which had political
sympathies to the Reform Party), Liliʻuokalani appointed the new Parker cabinet
consisting of Samuel Parker, as minister of foreign affairs; John F. Colburn,
as minister of the interior; William H. Cornwell, as minister of finance; and
Arthur P. Peterson, as attorney general. She chose these men specifically to support
her plan of promulgating a new constitution while the legislature was not in
session.
Promulgating a new
constitution
The precipitating event leading to the 1893 overthrow of the
Hawaiian Kingdom was the attempt by Queen Liliʻuokalani to promulgate a new
constitution to regain powers for the monarchy and Native Hawaiians that had
been lost under the Bayonet Constitution. Her opponents, who were led by two
Hawaiian citizens Lorrin A. Thurston and W. O. Smith and included six Hawaiian
citizens, five US citizens and one German citizen. Outraged by her attempt to promulgate a new
constitution, they moved to depose the Queen, overthrow the monarchy, and seek
Hawaii's annexation to the United States.
Shortly after her accession, Liliʻuokalani began to receive
petitions to re-write the Bayonet Constitution through the two major political
parties of the time, Hui Kālaiʻāina and the National Reform Party. Supported by
two-thirds of the registered voters, she moved to abrogate the existing 1887
constitution, but her cabinet withheld their support, knowing what her
opponents' likely response would be.
The proposed constitution (co-written by the Queen and two
legislators, Joseph Nāwahī and William Pūnohu White) would have restored the
power to the monarchy, and voting rights to economically disenfranchised native
Hawaiians and Asians. Her ministers and
closest friends were all opposed to this plan; they tried unsuccessfully to
dissuade her from pursuing these initiatives, both of which came to be used
against her in the brewing constitutional crisis.
Overthrow of the
Hawaiian Kingdom
The political fallout led to citywide political rallies and
meetings in Honolulu. Anti-monarchists, annexationists, and leading Reform
Party politicians that included Lorrin A. Thurston, a grandson of American
missionaries, and Kalākaua's former cabinet ministers under the Bayonet
Constitution, formed the Committee of Safety in protest of the
"revolutionary" action of the queen and conspired to depose her. Thurston and the Committee of Safety derived
their support primarily from the American and European business class residing
in Hawaiʻi. Most of the leaders of the overthrow were American and European
citizens who were also Kingdom subjects. They also included legislators,
government officers, and a justice of the Hawaiian Supreme Court.
In response, royalists and loyalists formed the Committee of
Law and Order and met at the palace square on January 16, 1893. Nāwahī, White,
Robert W. Wilcox, and other pro-monarchist leaders gave speeches in support for
the queen and the government. To try to appease the instigators, the queen and
her supporters abandoned attempts to unilaterally promulgate a constitution.
The same day, the Marshal of the Kingdom, Charles Burnett
Wilson, was tipped off by detectives to the imminent planned coup. Wilson requested
warrants to arrest the 13-member council of the Committee of Safety, and put
the Kingdom under martial law. Because the members had strong political ties to
United States Minister to Hawaii John L. Stevens, the requests were repeatedly
denied by the queen's cabinet, which feared that the arrests would escalate the
situation. After a failed negotiation with Thurston, Wilson began to collect
his men for the confrontation. Wilson and captain of the Royal Household Guard
Samuel Nowlein had rallied a force of 496 men who were kept at hand to protect
the queen. Marines from the USS Boston and two companies
of US sailors landed and took up positions at the US Legation, the Consulate,
and Arion Hall. The sailors and Marines did not enter the palace grounds or
take over any buildings, and never fired a shot, but their presence served
effectively in intimidating royalist defenders. Historian William Russ states,
"the injunction to prevent fighting of any kind made it impossible for the
monarchy to protect itself".
The queen was deposed on January 17, and the provisional
government established under pro-annexation leader Sanford B. Dole was
officially recognized by Stevens as the de facto government. She
temporarily relinquished her throne to the United States, rather than the
Dole-led government, in hopes that the United States would restore Hawaii's
sovereignty to the rightful holder. The
government under Dole began using ʻIolani Palace as its executive
building. A delegation departed for Washington D.C. on
January 19, to ask for immediate annexation by the United States. At the request of the provisional government,
Stevens proclaimed Hawaii a protectorate of the United States on February 1, to
temporarily provide a buffer against domestic upheaval and interference by
foreign governments. The US flag was
raised over the palace, and martial law was enforced. The annexation treaty
presented to the US Senate contained a provision to grant Liliʻuokalani a
$20,000 per annum lifetime pension, and Kaʻiulani a lump-sum payment of
$150,000. The queen protested the proposed annexation in a January 19 letter to
President Benjamin Harrison. She sent Prince David Kawānanakoa and Paul Neumann
to represent her.
Neumann delivered a letter from the queen to Grover
Cleveland, who began his second non-consecutive term as president on March 4. The Cleveland administration commissioned the
Blount Report, and based on its findings, concluded that the overthrow of
Liliʻuokalani was illegal, and that Stevens and American military troops had
acted inappropriately in support of those who carried out the overthrow. On
November 16, Cleveland sent his minister Albert S. Willis to propose a return
of the throne to Liliʻuokalani if she granted amnesty to everyone responsible.
Her first response was that Hawaiian law called for property confiscation and
the death penalty for treason, and that only her cabinet ministers could put
aside the law in favor of amnesty. Liliuokalani's extreme position lost her the
goodwill of the Cleveland administration.
Cleveland sent the issue to the Congress, stating, "The
Provisional Government has not assumed a republican, or other constitutional
form, but has remained a mere executive council, or oligarchy, without the
consent of the people". The queen
changed her position on the issue of amnesty, and on December 18, Willis
demanded the provisional government reinstate her to the throne, but was
refused. Congress responded with a US Senate investigation that resulted in the
Morgan Report on February 26, 1894. It found Stevens and all parties except the
queen "not guilty", absolving them of responsibility for the
overthrow. The provisional government
formed the Republic of Hawaii on July 4 with Dole as its president, maintaining
oligarchical control and a limited system of suffrage.
Arrest and
imprisonment
At the beginning of January 1895, Robert W. Wilcox and
Samuel Nowlein launched a rebellion against the forces of the Republic with the
aim of restoring the queen and the monarchy. Its ultimate failure led to the
arrest of many of the participants and other sympathizers of the monarchy.
Liliʻuokalani was also arrested and imprisoned in an upstairs bedroom at the
palace on January 16, several days after the failed rebellion, when firearms
were found at her home of Washington Place after a tip from a prisoner.
During her imprisonment, she abdicated her throne in return
for the release (and commutation of the death sentences) of her jailed
supporters; six had been sentenced to be hanged including Wilcox and
Nowlein. She signed the document of abdication on
January 24. In 1898, Liliʻuokalani wrote:
For myself, I would
have chosen death rather than to have signed it; but it was represented to me
that by my signing this paper all the persons who had been arrested, all my
people now in trouble by reason of their love and loyalty towards me, would be
immediately released. Think of my position, — sick, a lone woman in prison,
scarcely knowing who was my friend, or who listened to my words only to betray
me, without legal advice or friendly counsel, and the stream of blood ready to
flow unless it was stayed by my pen.— Queen
Liliʻuokalani, Hawaii's Story By Hawaii's Queen
She was tried by the military commission of the Republic led
by her former attorney general Whiting in the palace throne room on February 8.
Defended at trial by another one of her former attorneys general Paul Neumann,
she claimed ignorance but was sentenced to five years of hard labor in prison
by the military tribunal and fined $5,000. The sentence was commuted on September 4, to
imprisonment in the palace, attended by her lady-in-waiting Eveline Townsend
Wilson (aka Kitty), wife of Marshal Wilson. In confinement she composed songs including
"The Queen's Prayer" (Ke Aloha o Ka Haku – "The Grace of the
Lord").
On October 13, 1896, the Republic of Hawaii gave her a full
pardon and restored her civil rights. "Upon
receiving my full release, I felt greatly inclined to go abroad," Liliʻuokalani
wrote in her memoir. From December 1896
through January 1897, she stayed in Brookline, Massachusetts, with her
husband's cousins William Lee and Sara White Lee, of the Lee & Shepard
publishing house.[130] During this period her long-time friend Julius A. Palmer
Jr. became her secretary and stenographer, helping to write every letter, note,
or publication. He was her literary support in the 1897 publication of the
Kumulipo translation, and helped her in compiling a book of her songs. He
assisted her as she wrote her memoir Hawaii's Story by Hawaii's Queen. Sara
Lee edited the book published in 1898 by Lee & Shepard.
Annexation
At the end of her visit in Massachusetts, Liliʻuokalani
began to divide her time between Hawaii and Washington, D.C., where she worked
to seek indemnity from the United States.
She attended the inauguration of US President William
McKinley on March 4, 1897, with a Republic of Hawaii passport personally issued
to "Liliuokalani of Hawaii" by the republic's president Sanford B.
Dole. On June 16, McKinley presented the United
States Senate with a new version of the annexation treaty, one that eliminated
the monetary compensation for Liliʻuokalani and Kaʻiulani. Liliʻuokalani filed an official protest with
Secretary of State John Sherman the next day. The protest was witnessed by her
agent and private secretary Joseph Heleluhe, Wekeki Heleluhe, and Captain
Julius A. Palmer Jr., reported to be her American secretary.
In June 1897 President McKinley signed the "Treaty for
the Annexation for the Hawaiian Islands", but it failed to pass in the
United States Senate after the Kūʻē Petitions were submitted by a commission of
Native Hawaiian delegates consisting of James Keauiluna Kaulia, David
Kalauokalani, William Auld, and John Richardson. Members of Hui Aloha ʻĀina
collected over 21,000 signatures opposing an annexation treaty. Another 17,000
signatures were collected by members of Hui Kālaiʻāina but not submitted to the
Senate because those signatures were also asking for restoration of the Queen.
The petitions collectively were presented as evidence of the strong grassroots
opposition of the Hawaiian community to annexation, and the treaty was defeated
in the Senate— however, following its failure, Hawaii was annexed anyway via
the Newlands Resolution, a joint resolution of Congress, in July 1898, shortly
after the outbreak of the Spanish–American War.
The annexation ceremony was held on August 12, 1898, at
ʻIolani Palace, now being used as the executive building of the government.
President Sanford B. Dole handed over "the sovereignty and public property
of the Hawaiian Islands" to United States Minister Harold M. Sewall. The
flag of the Republic of Hawaii was lowered and the flag of the United States
was raised in its place. Liliʻuokalani and her family members and
retainers boycotted the event and shuttered themselves away at Washington Place.
Many Native Hawaiians and royalists followed suit and refused to attend the
ceremony.
Crown Lands of Hawaii
Prior to the 1848 division of land known as the Great
Māhele, during the reign of Kamehameha III, all land in Hawaii was owned by the
monarchy. The Great Māhele subdivided the land among the monarchy, the
government, and private ownership by tenants living on the land. What was
reserved for the monarchy became known as the Crown Lands of Hawaii. When Hawaii was annexed, the Crown Lands were
seized by the United States government. The Queen gave George Macfarlane her
power of attorney in 1898 as part of her legal defense team in seeking
indemnity for the government's seizure of the Crown Lands. She filed a protest
with the United States Senate on December 20, 1898, requesting their return and
claiming the lands were seized without due process or recompense.
That, the portion of the public domain heretofore known as
Crown land is hereby declared to have been, on the twelfth day of August,
eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, and prior thereto, the property of the
Hawaiian government, and to be free and clear from any trust of or concerning
the same, and from all claim of any nature whatsoever, upon the rents, issues,
and profits thereof. It shall be subject to alienation and other uses as may be
provided by law. — Hawaiian Organic Act,
Sec. 99
On April 30, 1900, the US Congress passed the Hawaii Organic
Act establishing a government for the Territory of Hawaii. The territorial government took control of the
Crown Lands, which became the source of the "Ceded Lands" issue in
Hawaii. The San Francisco Call reported
on May 31 that Macfarlane had informed them the Queen had exhausted her
patience with Congress and intended to file a lawsuit against the
government. Former United States
Minister to Hawaii Edward M. McCook said he believed that once President
McKinley began his second term on March 1, 1901, that the government would
negotiate a generous settlement with Liliʻuokalani.
During a 1900 Congressional deadlock, she departed for
Honolulu with her Washington, D.C. physician Charles H. English (sometimes
referred to as John H. English). Newspapers speculated that the Queen, having
been diagnosed with cancer, was going home to die. Historian Helena G. Allen made the case that
English intended to gain title to crown lands for himself. According to Allen,
the Queen balked at his draft of a settlement letter to Senator George Frisbie
Hoar that he wanted her to copy in her handwriting and sign. The doctor was terminated "without
cause" a month after her returns and sued her.
The Pacific Commercial Advertiser lamented in 1903,
"There is something pathetic in the appearance of Queen Liliuokalani as a
waiting claimant before Congress." It detailed her years-long residencies
in the nation's capital seeking indemnity, while legislators offered empty
promises, but nothing of substance.
Liliʻuokalani v. the
United States
In 1909, Liliʻuokalani brought an unsuccessful lawsuit
against the United States under the Fifth Amendment seeking the return of the
Hawaiian Crown Lands. The US courts
invoked an 1864 Kingdom Supreme Court decision over a case involving the
Dowager Queen Emma and Kamehameha V, using it against her. In this decision the
courts found that the Crown Lands were not necessarily the private possession of
the monarch in the strictest sense of the term.
Later life and death
Although Liliʻuokalani was never successful in more than a
decade of legal pursuits for recompense from the United States government for
seized land, in 1911 she was finally granted a lifetime pension of $1,250 a
month by the Territory of Hawaii. Historian Sydney Lehua Iaukea noted that the
grant never addressed the question of the legality of the seizure itself, and the
figure was greatly reduced from what she had requested for recompense.
In April 1917, Liliʻuokalani raised the American flag at
Washington Place in honor of five Hawaiian sailors who had perished in the
sinking of the SS Aztec by German U-boats. Her act was interpreted by many as
her symbolic support of the United States. Subsequent historians have disputed the true
meaning of her act; Neil Thomas Proto argued that "[h]er gesture that day
was intended to reflect the dignity with which she still held the right of her
people to choose their own fate long after she was gone".
By the end of that summer, the Honolulu Star-Bulletin
reported that she was too frail to hold her birthday reception for the public,
an annual tradition dating back to the days of the monarchy. As one of her last public appearances in
September, she officially became a member of the American Red Cross. Following several months of deteriorating
health that left her without the use of her lower limbs, as well as a
diminished mental capacity rendering her incapable of recognizing her own
house, her inner circle of friends and caregivers sat vigil for the last two
weeks of her life knowing the end was near. In accordance with Hawaiian
tradition, the royal kāhili fanned her as she lay in bed. On the morning of
November 11, Liliʻuokalani died at the age of seventy-nine at her residence at
Washington Place.
Burial Vault of Queen
Liliʻuokalani at the Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii
The bells of Saint Andrew Cathedral and Kawaiahaʻo Church
announced her death, tolling 79 times to signify her age. In keeping with
Hawaiian tradition regarding deceased royalty, her body was not removed from
her home until nearly midnight. Her body
lay in state at Kawaiahaʻo Church for public viewing, after which she received
a state funeral in the throne room of Iolani Palace, on November 18. Composer
Charles E. King led a youth choir in "Aloha ʻOe" as her catafalque
was moved from the palace up Nuuanu Avenue with 1200-foot ropes pulled by 200
people, for entombment with her family members in the Kalākaua Crypt at the
Royal Mausoleum of Mauna ʻAla. The song was picked up by the procession
participants and the crowds of people along the route. Films were taken of the funeral procession and
later stored at ʻĀinahau, the former residence of her sister and niece. A fire
on August 1, 1921, destroyed the home and all its contents, including the footage
of the Queen's funeral.
Religious beliefs
Educated by American Protestant missionaries from a young
age, Liliʻuokalani became a devout Christian and adherent to the principles of
Christianity. These missionaries were largely of Congregationalist and
Presbyterian extractions, subscribing to Calvinist theology, and Liliʻuokalani
considered herself a "regular attendant on the Presbyterian worship".
She was the first member of the royal
family to consistently and regularly attend service at Kawaiahaʻo Church since
King Kamehameha IV converted to Anglicanism. On Sundays, she played the organ
and led the choir at Kawaiahaʻo. She also regularly attended service at
Kaumakapili Church and held a special interest in the Liliʻuokalani Protestant
Church, to which she donated the Queen Liliʻuokalani Clock in 1892.
Historian Helena G. Allen noted that Liliʻuokalani and
Kalākaua "believed all religions had their 'rights' and were entitled to
equal treatment and opportunities". Throughout her life, Liliʻuokalani
showed a broad interest in the different Christian faiths including Catholicism,
Mormonism, Episcopalianism and other Protestant denominations. In 1896, she became a regular member of the
Hawaiian Congregation at St. Andrew's Cathedral associated with the Reformed
Catholic (Anglican/Episcopal) Church of Hawaii, which King Kamehameha IV and
Queen Emma had founded. During the
overthrow and her imprisonment, Bishop Alfred Willis of St. Andrew's Cathedral
had openly supported the Queen while Reverend Henry Hodges Parker of Kawaiahaʻo
had supported her opponents. Bishop
Willis visited and wrote to her during her imprisonment and sent her a copy of the
Book of Common Prayer. Shortly after her release on parole, the former queen
was baptized and confirmed by Bishop Willis on May 18, 1896, in a private
ceremony in the presence of the sisters of St. Andrew's Priory. In her memoir, Liliʻuokalani stated:
That first night of my
imprisonment was the longest night I have ever passed in my life; it seemed as
though the dawn of day would never come. I found in my bag a small Book of
Common Prayer according to the ritual of the Episcopal Church. It was a great
comfort to me, and before retiring to rest Mrs. Clark and I spent a few minutes
in the devotions appropriate to the evening. Here, perhaps, I may say, that
although I had been a regular attendant on the Presbyterian worship since my
childhood, a constant contributor to all the missionary societies, and had
helped to build their churches and ornament the walls, giving my time and my
musical ability freely to make their meetings attractive to my people, yet none
of these pious church members or clergymen remembered me in my prison. To this conduct
contrast that of the Anglican bishop, Rt. Rev. Alfred Willis, who visited me
from time to time in my house, and in whose church I have since been confirmed
as a communicant. But he was not allowed to see me at the palace.
She traveled to Utah in 1901 for a visit with Mormon
president Joseph F. Smith, a former missionary to the Hawaiian Island. There
she joined in services at the Salt Lake Tabernacle, and was feted at a Beehive
House reception, attended by many expatriate Native Hawaiians. In 1906, she was baptized into The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Elder Abraham Kaleimahoe Fernandez. However,
her interest in Mormonism later waned.
The Queen was also remembered for her support of Buddhist
and Shinto priests in Hawaii and became one of the first Native Hawaiians to
attend a Buddha's Birthday celebration of May 19, 1901, at the Honwangji
mission. Her attendance in the celebration helped Buddhism and Shinto gain
acceptance into Hawaiian society and prevented the possible banning of the two
religions by the Territorial government. Her presence was also widely reported
in Chinese and Japanese newspapers throughout the world, and earned her the
respect of many Japanese people both in Hawaii and in Japan itself.
Compositions
Liliʻuokalani was an accomplished author and songwriter. Her
book Hawaiʻi's Story by Hawaiʻi's Queen gave her view of the history of her
country and her overthrow. She is said to have played guitar, piano, organ,
ʻukulele and zither, and also sang alto, performing Hawaiian and English sacred
and secular music. In her memoirs she
wrote:
To compose was as
natural to me as to breathe; and this gift of nature, never having been
suffered to fall into disuse, remains a source of the greatest consolation to
this day.[…] Hours of which it is not yet in place to speak, which I might have
found long and lonely, passed quickly and cheerfully by, occupied and soothed
by the expression of my thoughts in music.
Liliʻuokalani helped preserve key elements of Hawaiʻi's
traditional poetics while mixing in Western harmonies brought by the
missionaries. A compilation of her works, titled The Queen's Songbook, was
published in 1999 by the Queen Liliʻuokalani Trust. Liliʻuokalani used her musical compositions as
a way to express her feelings for her people, her country, and what was
happening in the political realm in Hawaiʻi. One example of the way her music reflected her
political views is her translation of the Kumulipo, the Hawaiian creation
chant. While under house arrest, Liliʻuokalani feared she would never leave the
palace alive, so she translated the Kumulipo in hopes that the history and
culture of her people would never be lost. The ancient chants record her family's
genealogy back to the origin story of Hawaiʻi.
After Liliʻuokalani was imprisoned in the ʻIolani Palace,
she was denied literature and newspapers, essentially cutting her off from her
people, but she continued to compose music with paper and pencil while she was
in confinement. Another of her compositions was "Aloha
ʻOe", a song she had written previously and transcribed during her
confinement. In her writings, she says, "At first I had no instrument, and
had to transcribe the notes by voice alone; but I found, notwithstanding
disadvantages, great consolation in composing, and transcribed a number of
songs. Three found their way from my prison to the city of Chicago, where they
were printed, among them the 'Aloha ʻOe' or 'Farewell to Thee', which became a
very popular song." Originally
written as a lover's good-bye, the song came to be regarded as a symbol of, and
lament for, the loss of her country. Today, it is one of the most recognizable
Hawaiian songs.
Legacy
Captain Julius A. Palmer Jr. of Massachusetts was her friend
for three decades, and became her spokesperson when she was in residence at
Boston and Washington D.C., protesting the annexation of Hawaiʻi. In the
nation's capital, he estimated that she had 5,000 visitors. When asked by an
interviewer, "What are her most distinctive personal graces?", Palmer
replied, "Above everything else she displayed a disposition of the most
Christian forgiveness." In covering
her death and funeral, the mainstream newspapers in Hawaii that had supported
the overthrow and annexation recognized that she had been held in great esteem
around the world. In March 2016, Hawaiʻi
Magazine listed Liliʻuokalani as one of the most influential women in Hawaiian
history.
The Queen Liliʻuokalani Trust was established on December 2,
1909, for the care of orphaned and destitute children in Hawaii. Effective upon
her death, the proceeds of her estate, with the exception of twelve individual
inheritances specified therein, were to be used for the Trust. The largest of these hereditary estates were
willed to her hānai sons and their heirs: John ʻAimoku Dominis would receive
Washington Place while Joseph Kaiponohea ʻAeʻa would receive Kealohilani, her
residence at Waikiki. Both men predeceased the Queen. Before
and after her death, lawsuits were filed to overturn her will establishing the
Trust. One notable litigant was Prince Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole, the nephew of
her brother Kalākaua and his wife Kapiʻolani and Liliʻuokalani's second cousin,
who brought a suit against the Trust on November 30, 1915, questioning the
Queen's competency in executing the will and attempting to break the Trust.
These lawsuits were resolved in 1923 and the will went into probate. The Queen Liliʻuokalani Children's Center was
created by the Trust.
Liliʻuokalani and her siblings are recognized by the
Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame as Na Lani ʻEhā (The Heavenly Four) for their
patronage and enrichment of Hawaii's musical culture and history. In
2007, Honolulu magazine rated "Aloha ʻOe" as the greatest song in the
history of Hawaiian music. Songwriter
Charles E. King, known as the composer of "Ke Kali Nei Au", was tutored
in music by her. Entertainer Bina
Mossman led the Bina Mossman Glee Club that rehearsed regularly at Washington
Place, while Liliʻuokalani helped them with pronunciation of the Hawaiian
language. At the queen's funeral, the glee club was part of the kahili bearers
who stood watch over the coffin for two hours at a time, waving the kahilis and
singing Liliʻuokalani's compositions.
The annual Queen Liliʻuokalani Outrigger Canoe Race, which
follows an 18-mile course from Kailua Bay to Honaunau Bay, was organized in
1972 as an endurance training course for men, in preparation for the
traditional Molokaʻi to Oʻahu canoe races. Women canoe teams were added in
1974. The race is held over Labor Day Weekend each year to coincide with
Liliʻuokalani's birthday on September 2.
In the 2001 naming of the "Queen Liliʻuokalani Center
for Studies Services", on the University of Hawaii at Manoa campus, the
Board of Regents noted, "As the last Hawaiian monarch, Queen Liliʻuokalani
symbolizes an important link to traditional Hawaiian culture and society. Her
influence is well understood, widely respected and has been a strong motivating
factor in the widespread emergence of Hawaiian culture and the values embodied
in it."
In 2017, Edgy Lee researched and filmed Liliuokalani –
Reflections of Our Queen, a documentary looking at the legacy of the queen in
Hawaii. A showing at Washington Place fundraised for the museum. Liliʻuokalani and the overthrow have been
subject of documentaries including The American Experience: Hawaii's Last Queen
(1994) and Conquest of Hawaii (2003).
Numerous hula events are held to honor her memory, including
the Queen Liliʻuokalani Keiki Hula Competition Honolulu, organized in 1976. The County of Hawaii holds an annual He Hali'a
Aloha no Lili'uokalani Festival, Queen's Birthday Celebration at Liliʻuokalani
Park and Gardens in Hilo, in partnership with the Queen Lili'uokalani Trust.
The event begins with several hundred dancers showered by 50,000 orchid
blossoms.
Titles, styles and
arms
Titles and styles
·
1838 – September 16, 1862: The Honorable Miss Lydia
Kamakaʻeha Pākī
·
September 16, 1862–1874: The Honorable Mrs.
Lydia Kamakaʻeha Dominis
·
1874 – April 10, 1877: Her Royal Highness The
Princess Lydia Kamakaʻeha Dominis
·
April 10,
1877 – January 29, 1891: Her Royal Highness The Princess Liliʻuokalani, Heir
Apparent
·
January 20, 1881 – October 29, 1881 and November
25, 1890 – January 29, 1891: Her Royal Highness The Princess Regent
·
January 29, 1891 – January 17, 1893: Her Majesty
The Queen
Kalākaua and Liliʻuokalani held formal titles in both
English and Hawaiian. The official title of Queen Liliʻuokalani was Ma ka
Lokomaikaʻi o ke Akua, Moʻi Wahine o ko Hawaiʻi Pae ʻAina ("By the grace
of God, Queen of the Hawaiian Islands).
Comments
Post a Comment