Adsactly Education: Hawaii: The History
Hawaii
The Aloha State
Capital: Honolulu
Largest City: Island of O'ahu
10,931 sq. mi. 28,311 sq. Km
43rd Largest State
Admitted to US: 1959 (50th)
Population: 1,427,000 (40th)
Highest Point: 13,796 ft (4,205 m)
Lowest Point: Sea Level
State Bird: Nene (Hawaiian Goose)
State Flower: Pua Aloalo (Yellow Hibiscus)
Motto: Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻĀina i ka Pono
The Life of the Land is Perpetuated in Righteousness
Bordered By: Pacific Ocean
Hawaii
Named for the 'big island' Hawai'i which was named for a mythical figure who was prominent in the settlement lore of the Native Islanders. There are over 1500 islands in the state which are all of volcanic origin.
Hawaiian language was added as an official language of the State in 1978 which leads to some spelling difficulty. For instance the state name in the local language is Hawai’i. I will use English where ever it is appropriate, but know that some terms may appear misspelled as Hawaiian words.
Native Hawaiians
There is much room for debate but archeology tells us that the first settlers came to Hawaii in about 300 AD from elsewhere in Polynesia. There was a second wave of migration from Bora Bora and Tahiti in around 1000 AD that greatly influenced the history of the islands. By the time of European contact there were monarchies established on the main islands that were independently ruled by Chiefs or Kings. These tribes were warriors with property, people and territory changing hands often. The original Hawaiians were caste based societies.
European Contact
Though the first recorded contact with Hawaii was Englishman Captain James Cook in 1788 it is entirely possible that Spanish explorers made contact as much as 200 years earlier. They sailed the area routinely travelling between Mexico and the Philippines. Their routes were top secret but there are Spanish maps that show a group of Islands near where Hawaii is. Official first contact belongs to Cook.
Within a very few years of Cook’s arrival (with military help from the English) the entire island chain was united under King Kamehameha I and creating the Kingdom of Hawaii. The kingdom would last until it was dissolved (mainly by American businessmen) during the reign of Queen Liliuokalani in 1893 when it officially became first a Republic and then an American Territory.
Hawaii’s native population suffered the same fate as many being decimated by Smallpox. From an estimated 300,000 population at first contact to less than 60,000 in the 1850s reaching a low of 24,000 in the 1920s.
American Influence
American missionaries started arriving in Hawaii in the 1790s. These missionaries recognized the value of the land for farming and were soon followed by American businessmen that seized huge plantations and started raising sugar and pineapples. After the run of Smallpox on the islands there were not enough native Hawaiians to service the labor intensive plantations so the Americans brought in large numbers of workers from China, Japan and the Philippines. The natives were, for the most part, disenfranchised. A great many of them took to subsistence living in the areas that were not so attractive to plantations.
Americans within the government rewrote the Kingdom’s constitution to limit the power of the Monarch and to establish property and income restrictions to voting rights which, in effect, ceded control to the Plantation owners. Queen Liliuokalani attempted to restore the rule of the Monarch in 1893 which led to her being placed under house arrest and the Republic of Hawaii being formed. That government negotiated the deal with the United States which led to Hawaii being declared a territory in 1898.
Expansionist America had recognized not only the value of Hawaii in agricultural terms but also in terms of military value as an important link between North America and Asia. The US leased Pearl Harbor from the Monarchy and American troops and Navy played a part in the overthrow of that institution.
Pearl Harbor and Ford Island would become a key military base during the Spanish American war and remains so today.
The ‘territorial period’ would be dominated by sugar production and sugar producers. The owners and companies came to completely dominate the economy of the Islands by controlling not only the agriculture but also banking and transportation.
After Puerto Rico was completely devastated by a hurricane the plantations hired and imported large numbers of experienced Puerto Rican field hands to work their plantations. At roughly the same time, two large groups of Koreans came to the islands as workers. Hawaii became a huge melting pot of incredible racial diversity and language.
World War I mostly passed Hawaii by except for Pearl Harbor which became a major refuel and refit stop for the US Navy.
World War II
For America World War II began on December 7, 1941 with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The US declared war on Japan and Germany on December 8. Though the Navy and Pearl Harbor were severely damaged by the attack (over 3000 were killed) it became a rallying cry and a matter of extreme national pride to rebuild. It was done in a stunningly short time and Hawaii became the key to the American war in the Pacific.
Literally millions of American servicemen spent at least some time in Hawaii, which would ultimately alter the Islands again. This time from post war tourism. A lot of those servicemen took their wives and families to Hawaii to experience paradise.
The end of the ‘Plantation Era’ of government came fairly rapidly after WWII. With over 50 years of people being born in Hawaii being US citizens by virtue of being a territory the plantation owners were simply outvoted.
The move toward statehood came under President Eisenhower in the mid 50s. The United States Senate and House passed a joint resolution offering Hawaii statehood that the Islanders would vote on. The measure passed in Hawaii by 95%. Hawaii was admitted to the Union as a state in 1959. The 50th star on the flag.
Though Agriculture still plays a huge part in the economy and well being of the state it was soon vastly outgunned by tourism. In the 1970s there was a huge push among Hawaiians to restore and honor the native traditions. This led to a constitutional revision and Hawaiian became one of two official languages of the state.
Hawaii had arrived. It is a state that is totally unique in many ways. We will look into those in the next installment of this series. Thank you for following along!
Dumb Laws
In Hawaii you will be fined for riding in the back of a passenger car without a seatbelt, however you can ride in the bed of a pickup truck with no safety equipment.
Billboards are outlawed.
All images in this post are properly licensed and used.
This is part of a series on the various states. We will finish up Hawaii in the next installment, I hope you will return. I do hope you have enjoyed this synpsis of Hawaii. The words and ideas are mine but I used Wikipedia Hawaii as the source for the information.
Authored by: @bigtom13
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This is one of the kinds of post I enjoy reading: they have fun and educate at the same time. Hawaii is one of the places par excellence that anyone imagines ever knowing. It is one of the tourist sites par excellence. From its clothing, drinks, beaches, volcanoes, music, are synonymous with paradisiacal vacations. Obviously there is the historical side that represents the Pearl Harbor and all the history that we all already know and that we must never forget. I remember once seeing images of Honokohau Falls, in Maui, and they made me dizzy. The nature of this island is truly enviable and from another world. Oh, and he's already given a president! A thousand points for Hawaii. As for the silly laws, is it my imagination, or did they not seem so silly to me? Or do I get used to reading sillier laws? LOL. ;). Thanks for thispost, @bigtom13
I think a lot of those dumb laws were written a long time ago and Hawaii, as a state, has only been writing them since 1959. I actually had a pretty limited selection of dumb laws...
I'm really looking forward to the next part of the story where we go into the Geology and Fauna and Flora. It really is an impressive place. I know a guy that lives in Wyemeai Canyon. Among other things he harvests wild coffee every year. Amazing.
Thanks for the kind words Nancy!
Visiting his interesting new delivery, @bigtom13. Hawaii would be one more of those U.S. states formed as a result of its expansionist ambition. It is very significant that it is a place where there was a high degree of mixing with people from other Asian backgrounds, including Caribbean Americans. Also, as expected, that tourism has become the main source of its economy (although I think it is never good that agriculture is displaced). We know about the exotic beauty of Hawaii, but I prefer to wait for its next delivery (I was already struck by the national bird and flora). Thank you for your gratifying post, @bigtom13. Greetings.
Hawaii is indeed a part of the US expansionist policies. I've never quite understood some of those, most notably Puerto Rico. How is that not a state?
The melting pot that is Hawaii is pretty amazing. The food alone is worth the trip there. As poorly as the Natives were treated in Hawaii, it's nothing compared to the Continental US. So it is a really unique place in more ways than just the islands.
Hawai from the side of history we certainly cannot let go of the second world war. Japan attacked Pearl Harbor with its lightning attack and was able to destroy the United States military army. Until Douglas Mc Arthur vowed to take revenge with his oath "I shall be. The United States of America which was the key for allied forces at that time became the target of Japan to start the East Asia war, so that Japan could control China, and Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, my country.
but from your posts I know more especially there is the king of Kamehameha I who founded the kingdom. I know Kamehameha not from history, but from Dragon Ball comics, one of whose characters is Son Go Ku, has great power after spell KAMEHAMEHA's mantra or magic spell.
Thank you @bigtom13
Thank you @adsactly
Thank you steemit
Warm regard from Indonesia
You are most welcome. The Japanese did indeed occupy most of the Pacific Basin and had they actually taken Hawaii it would have been most difficult to prosecute the War. There is no way to understate the importance of Hawaii.
One of my ancestors came through Hawaii on their way to the mainland US. He was the engineer for a couple of bridges in the Kingdom before he came to Oregon to stay.
Wow, so you have Hawaiian blood.
No, the blood was strictly Scots, but the story goes through the Kingdom!
Oh I see now.
Coming to adsactly blog is not an error. I had no idea about this country Hawaii. Now i see, as a result of settlement of the Americans in Hawaii country, they were able to see the usefulness of Haiwaii in terms of Agriculture and Military. And usefulness led to Haiwaii becoming a Territory thereaftter. Finally Haiwai is a nice country. Thank you @adsactly for the update
You are most welcome. I hope you will return for the second part of this series next week.
thanks for sharing this precious information about hawaii, and i like a lot of things there.For me hawaii is unique because of a plenty of facts,for example hawaii is the only state that grows coffee,Kilauea volcano is the world's most active and it is the most isolated population center on the face of the earth.:)
It is a long ways to anyplace in Hawaii. I am a fan of the Hawaiian Coffee, I have a burlap coffee bag from Hawaii hanging as artwork in my living room.
Nice lil history on Hawaii I visited 2 times once as a kid and once with my wife and kids. Both times I visited Oahu and went to Pearl Harbor. I got to go on the USS Arizona Memorial. Very beautiful island I recommend everyone to give it a visit if you ever get the opportunity.
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It is a lovely place and the Arizona memorial is one of the best anyplace.
It sure is. I was so disappointed when they stoped allowing people on the memorial due to a crack in the structure. The timeline was to open it back up March 2019. I hope they get to it. It is a shame to visit the island and not be able to visit the memorial. You can take small boat tours around it but cant get on the memorial. Im just glad I got the opportunity to get on the memorial the first time I visited the island.
I really wanted to visit the volcano on the big island also but did not get the chance to. This was before the eruption the last time I visited the island.
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Muy interesante tu post, excelente trabajo
Thank you.
Interesting and if it comes to it the biggest part of the world is sharing the same history... being conquered and conquering themselves and making business out of it.
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We humans seem to have that conquering and being conquered business down fairly well, don't we? There was a slogan from the protesters during Vietnam that I've never forgotten. "War is good Business".
War is business, good business. We sell weapons, we send the army, wecome to save, help te poor, rebuild and sell the weapons... we are the enemy and saviour...
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