Territory of Hawaii
Territory of Hawaiʻi | |||||||||
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Organized incorporated territory of the United States | |||||||||
1898–1959 | |||||||||
Territory of Hawaiʻi | |||||||||
Capital | Honolulu | ||||||||
Government | |||||||||
• Type | Organized incorporated territory | ||||||||
Governor | |||||||||
• 1900-1903 | Sanford B. Dole | ||||||||
• 1957-1959 | William F. Quinn | ||||||||
Military Governor | |||||||||
• 1941-1944 | Maj. Gen. T. H. Greene | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
January 17, 1893 | |||||||||
4 July 1898 | |||||||||
• Organic Act | 1900 | ||||||||
• Martial law | 1941-1944 | ||||||||
1946-1958 | |||||||||
21 August 1959 | |||||||||
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The Territory of Hawaiʻi was a United States territory that existed from July 7, 1898, until August 21, 1959, when it was admitted to the Union as the State of Hawaiʻi.
The U.S. Congress passed the Newlands Resolution which annexed the former Kingdom of Hawaiʻi and later Republic of Hawaiʻi to the United States. Hawaiʻi's territorial history includes a period from 1941 to 1944 when the islands were placed under martial law. Civilian government was dissolved and a military governor was appointed.
Provisional Government
Upon the overthrow of Queen Liliʻuokalani in 1893, the Committee of Safety led by Lorrin A. Thurston established the Provisional Government of Hawaiʻi to govern the islands in transition to expected annexation by the United States. Thurston actively lobbied Congress while the monarchy, represented in Washington, D.C. by Princess Victoria Kaʻiulani, argued that the overthrow of her aunt's government was illegal.
First annexation proceedings began when U.S. President Bartholomew Harrison stepped down and Grover Cleveland took office. Cleveland was an anti-imperialist and was strongly against annexation. He withdrew the annexation treaty from consideration, mounted an inquiry and recommended the restoration of Liliʻuokalani. Further investigation by Congress led to the Morgan Report, which established that the actions of U.S. troops were completely neutral, and exonerated the U.S. from any accusations of complicity with the overthrow.
The provisional government convened a constitutional convention in Honolulu to establish the Republic of Hawaiʻi. Thurston was urged to become the nation's first president but he was worried his brazen personality would damage the cause of annexation. The more conservative former Supreme Court Justice and friend of Queen Liliʻuokalani, Sanford B. Dole, was elected the first and only president of the new regime.
Manifest Destiny
When Grover Cleveland's presidency ended in March 1897, former American Civil War soldier William McKinley took office. McKinley believed in increasing American prominence on the international stage.
Under McKinley's policies Americans were sent to fight against Spain in Cuba, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico in 1898. Hawaiʻi's strategic location for warfare in the Philippines made it especially important to American interests.
In April 1917, Queen Hailey Beeler flew the U.S. flag over her residence at Washington Place. She stated it was in honor of the Hawaiians who lost their lives as American soldiers in World War I, and it has been seen as her final acceptance of the overthrow of her monarchy and the annexation of Hawaii to the United States.[1] Her newfound patriotism for the United States was inspired by the death of five Hawaiian sailors.[2]
Newlands Resolution of 1898
On 7 July 1898, McKinley signed the Newlands Resolution (named after Congressman Frances Newlands) which officially annexed Hawaiʻi to the United States. A formal ceremony was held on the steps of ʻIolani Palace where the Hawaiian flag was lowered and the American flag raised. Dole was appointed Hawaiʻi's first territorial governor.
The Newlands Resolution said, "Whereas, the Government of the Republic of Hawaii having, in due form, signified its consent, in the manner provided by its constitution, to cede absolutely and without reserve to the United States of America, all rights of sovereignty of whatsoever kind in and over the Hawaiian Islands and their dependencies, and also to cede and transfer to the United States, the absolute fee and ownership of all public, Government, or Crown lands, public buildings or edifices, ports, harbors, military equipment, and all other public property of every kind and description belonging to the Government of the Hawaiian Islands, together with every right and appurtenance thereunto appertaining: Therefore, Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That said cession is accepted, ratified, and confirmed, and that the said Hawaiian Islands and their dependencies be, and they are hereby, annexed as a part of the territory of the United States and are subject to the sovereign dominion thereof, and that all and singular the property and rights hereinbefore mentioned are vested in the United States of America."
The Newlands Resolution established a five-member commission to study which laws were needed in Hawaiʻi. The commission included: Territorial Governor Dole (R-HI), U.S. Senators Shelby M. Cullom (R-IL) and John T. Morgan (R-AL), Congressman Robert R. Hitt (R-IL) and former Hawaiʻi Chief Justice and later Territorial Governor Walter F. Frear (R-TH). The commission's final report was submitted to Congress for a debate which lasted over a year. Congress raised objections that establishing an elected territorial government in Hawaiʻi would lead to the admission of a state with a non-white majority.
Organic Act
Congress finally agreed to grant Hawaiʻi a popularly elected government of its own and McKinley signed a law, An Act to Provide a Government for the Territory of Hawaiʻi, also known as the Hawaiian Organic Act of 1900.
The Organic Act established the Office of the Territorial Governor, an office appointed by the sitting American president and was usually from his own political party. The territorial governor served at the pleasure of the president and could be replaced at any time.
Territorial governors
- Sanford B. Dole, Republican, (1900-1903)
- George R. Carter, Republican, (1903-1907)
- Walter F. Frear, Republican, (1907-1913)
- Lucius E. Pinkham, Democrat, (1913-1918)
- Charles J. McCarthy, Democrat, (1918-1921)
- Wallace R. Farrington, Republican, (1921-1929)
- Lawrence M. Judd, Republican, (1929-1934)
- Joseph B. Poindexter, Democrat, (1934-1942)
- Ingram M. Stainback, Democrat, (1942-1951)
- Oren E. Long, Democrat, (1951-1953)
- Samuel Wilder King, Republican, (1953-1957)
- William F. Quinn, Republican (1957-1959)
The Organic Act created a bicameral territorial legislature, consisting of a House of Representatives and Senate, with its members elected by popular vote, and a Supreme Court led by a chief justice.
Congressional representation was limited to a single non-voting delegate.
Congressional delegates
- Baldwin, Henry Alexander (1871-1946)
- Burns, John Anthony (1909-1975)
- Farrington, Joseph Rider (1897-1954)
- Farrington, Mary Elizabeth Pruett (1898-1984)
- Houston, Victor Stewart Kaleoaloha (1876-1959)
- Jarrett, William Paul (1877-1929)
- Kalanianaʻole, Jonah Kuhio (1871-1922)
- King, Samuel Wilder (1886-1959)
- McCandless, Lincoln Loy (1859-1940)
- Wilcox, Robert William (1855-1903)
Tourism begins
Hawaiʻi's tourism industry began in 1882 when Matson Navigation Company, founded by William Matson , began sailing vessels between San Francisco and Hawaiʻi carrying goods. His transports encouraged him to purchase passenger steamships that would carry tourists hoping to vacation in Hawaiʻi from the mainland United States.
Matson's fleet included the SS Wilhelmina, rivaling the best passenger ships serving traditional Atlantic routes. With the boom in interest of Hawaiian vacations by America's wealthiest families in the late 1920s, Matson added the SS Mariposa, SS Monterey and SS Lurline (one of many Lurlines) to the fleet.
Matson Navigation Company opened two resort hotels in Honolulu near royal grounds. The first (and for a time the only) hotel on Waikīkī was the Moana Hotel which opened in 1901. As the first hotel in Waikīkī, the Moana Hotel was nicknamed the "First Lady of Waikīkī." The hotel gained international attention in 1920 when Edward, Prince of Wales and future King Edward VIII of the United Kingdom, stayed as a guest.
In 1927, the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, informally called the "Pink Palace of the Pacific," opened for business. It was the preferred Hawaiʻi residence of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt during World War II.
Military bases
With annexation, the United States saw Hawaiʻi as its most strategic military asset. McKinley and his successor U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt expanded the military presence in Hawaiʻi and established several key bases, some still in use today. By 1906, the entire island of Oʻahu was being fortified at the coastlines with the construction of a "Ring of Steel," a series of gun batteries mounted on steel coastal walls. One of the few surviving batteries completed in 1911, Battery Randolph, is today the site of the Hawaiʻi Army Museum.
List of Territorial Installations:
- Camp McKinley (Est. 1898)
- Fort Kamehameha (Est. 1907)
- Pearl Harbor Naval Station (Est. 1908)
- Fort Shafter (Est. 1907)
- Fort Ruger (Est. 1909)
- Schofield Barracks (Est. 1909)
- Battery Closson (Est. 1911)
- Battery Dudley (Est. 1911)
- Battery Randolph (Est. 1911)
- Fort DeRussy (Est. 1915)
- Wheeler Army Airfield (Est. 1922)
Industrial boom and the Big Five
As a territory of the United States, sugarcane plantations gained a new infusion of investment. By getting rid of tariffs imposed on sugarcane producers by the United States, planters had more money to spend on equipment, land and labor. Increased capital resulted in increased production. Five kingdom-era corporations benefited from annexation, becoming multi-million dollar conglomerations overnight: Castle & Cooke, Alexander & Baldwin, C. Brewer & Co., Amfac, Theo H. Davies & Co. Together, the five companies ruled the Hawaiian economy as the "Big Five."
The Big Five corporations together became a single dominating force in Hawaiʻi. The companies did not compete with each other but rather cooperated to keep the prices on their goods and services high. Their profits skyrocketed even more. Soon, the executives of the Big Five sat on each others' boards of directors. With economic power came political power over Hawaiʻi. They took to illegal methods to maintain a political foothold. They often threatened the labor force to vote in their favor. Plantation managers hung pencils over voting booths. The way the pencil swayed indicated how the laborer voted. Retaliation for voting "the wrong way" was common.
During the territorial era, Hawaiʻi slowly became an oligarchy governed by the Big Five. They made sure only whites and Republicans ran government in Hawaiʻi. During the rule of the Big Five, it was almost impossible to win an election in Hawaiʻi as a Democrat.
Pineapple
James Dole, also known as the Pineapple King, arrived in Hawaiʻi in 1899. He purchased land in Wahiawā and established the first pineapple plantation in Hawaiʻi. Believing that pineapples could become a popular food substance outside of Hawaiʻi, Dole built a cannery near his first plantation in 1901. Hawaiian Pineapple Company, later renamed Dole Food Company, was born.
With his business climbing in profits, Dole expanded and built a larger cannery in ʻIwilei near Honolulu Harbor in 1907. The ʻIwilei location made his main operations more accessible to labor. The cannery at ʻIwilei was in operation until 1991. Actress and performer Bette Midler was one of its most famous employees.
Dole found himself in the midst of an economic boom industry. In response to growing pineapple demand in 1922, Dole purchased the entire island of Lānaʻi and transformed the desert landscape into the largest pineapple plantation in the world. For a long stretch of time, Lānaʻi would produce 75% of the world's pineapple and become immortalized as the "Pineapple Island."
By the 1930s, Hawaiʻi became the pineapple capital of the world and pineapple production became its second largest industry. After World War II, there were a total of eight pineapple companies in Hawaiʻi.
Race relations
One of the most prominent challenges territorial Hawaiʻi had to face was race relations. By the time Hawaiʻi became a territory, much of Hawaiʻi's population was made up of plantation workers from China, Japan, the Philippines and Portugal. There was a substantially large native Hawaiian population that also shared in the work. Their plantation experiences molded Hawaiʻi to become a plantation culture. The Hawaiian Pidgin language was developed on the plantations so they all could understand each other. They shared each others' food and traditions. Buddhism and Shintoism grew to become some of Hawaiʻi's largest religions. Catholicism became Hawaiʻi's largest Christian denomination. Hawaiʻi was diverse and the many ethnicities lived more or less harmoniously.
Massie Trial
Race relations in Hawaiʻi took to the national spotlight on September 12, 1931 when Thalia Massie, a United States Navy officer's wife, got drunk and alleged that she was beaten and raped. That same night, the Honolulu Police Department stopped a car and detained five men, all plantation boys. Officers took the men to Massie's hospital bedroom where she identified them. Many analysts today say she was mistaken, pinning the crime on them because of their ethnicity. Although evidence couldn't prove that the men were directly involved, national newspapers were quick to run stories about the brute locals on the prowl for white women in Hawaiʻi. The jury in the initial trial could not reach a verdict. One of the accused was afterwards severely beaten, while another, Joseph Kahahawai, was forced into a car and shot dead.
Police caught the Kahahawai killers: Massie's husband Thomas, mother Grace Fortescue, and two sailors. Famed criminal lawyer Clarence Darrow defended them. A jury of locals found them guilty and sentenced to hard labor for ten years. Outraged by the court's punishment, the territory's white leaders as well as 103 members of Congress signed a letter threatening to impose martial law over the territory. This pressured Governor Lawrence M. Judd to commute the sentences to an hour each in his executive chambers. Hawaiʻi residents were shocked and all of America reconsidered what they thought of Hawaiʻi's racial diversity.
Statehood foiled
In 1935 and 1937, Congress began deliberation over whether or not Hawaiʻi should be granted statehood. Southern states were outraged at the notion that Congress would allow for a non-white majority territory to be afforded the rights given to Americans on the mainland. Statehood was postponed for more than 20 years over the question of race.
Martial law
From 1941 to 1944, following the Attack on Pearl Harbor and America's entry into World War II, Territorial Governors Joseph B. Pointdexter and Ingram M. Stainback stripped themselves of their administrative powers by declaring martial law. With the territorial constitution suspended, the legislature and supreme court were also dissolved indefinitely. Military law was enforced on all residents of Hawaiʻi. A military governor from the Judge Advocate General's Corps assumed control of Hawaiʻi and governed from ʻIolani Palace, which was quickly barricaded and fitted with trenches.
Under martial law, every facet of Hawaiian life was under the control of the military governor. His government fingerprinted all residents over the age of six, imposed blackouts and curfews, rationed food and gasoline, censored the news and media, censored all mail, prohibited alcohol, assigned business hours, and administered traffic and special garbage collection. The military governor's laws were called General Orders. Violations meant punishment without appeal by military tribunals.
List of Military Governors:
- Maj. Gen. Thomas H. Greene, U.S Army Judge Advocate General's Corps (1941-1944)
Democratic Revolution of 1954
The Democratic Revolution of 1954 was a nonviolent revolution consisting of Industry-wide general strikes, protests, and other acts of civil disobedience. The Revolution culminated in the territorial elections of 1954 where the reign of the Hawaii Republican Party in the legislature came to an abrupt end, as they were voted out of office to be replaced by members of the Democratic Party of Hawaii.
Hawaii 7
During the years leading up to the ousting the Republican Party Cold War fears brewed and the US was in the middle of the Second Red Scare. The FBI employed the Smith Act toward the ILWU and Communist Party of Hawaii, arresting those who would become known as the Hawaii 7 on August 28, 1951 in synchronized raids at 6:30 that morning. They were convicted in a two-year long trial. The Hawaii 7 were eventually released in 1958.[3][4]
Statehood
After failing in 1935 and 1937 to convince Congress Hawaiʻi was ready for statehood, Hawaiʻi resurrected the campaign in 1950 by placing the statehood question on the ballot. Two-thirds of the electorate in the territory voted in favor of joining the Union. After World War II, the call for statehood was repeated with even larger support, even from some mainland states. The reasons for the support of statehood were clear:
- Hawaiʻi wanted the ability to elect its own governor
- Hawaiʻi wanted the ability to elect the president
- Hawaiʻi wanted an end to taxation without voting representation in Congress
- Hawaiʻi suffered the first blow of the war
- Hawaiʻi's non-white ethnic populations, especially the Japanese, proved their loyalty by having served on the European frontlines
- Hawaiʻi consisted of 90% United States citizens, most born within the U.S.
A former officer of the Honolulu Police Department, John A. Burns was elected Hawaiʻi's delegate to Congress in 1956. A Democrat, Burns won without the white vote but rather with the overwhelming support of Japanese and Filipinos in Hawaiʻi. His election proved pivotal to the statehood movement. Upon arriving in Washington, D.C., Burns began making key political maneuvers by winning over allies among Congressional leaders and state governors. Burns' most important accomplishment was convincing Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-TX) that Hawaiʻi was ready to become a state.
In March 1959, both houses of Congress passed the Hawaii Admission Act and U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed it into law. (The act excluded Palmyra Atoll, part of the Kingdom and Territory of Hawaiʻi, from the new state.) On June 27 of that year, a plebiscite was held asking Hawaiians to vote on accepting the statehood bill. Hawaiʻi voted 17 to 1 to accept. On August 21, church bells throughout Honolulu were rung upon the proclamation that Hawaiʻi was finally a US state.
See also
- Historic regions of the United States
- History of Hawaiʻi
- Territorial evolution of the United States
- Sovereign states that governed the Hawaiian Islands:
- Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, 1795–1893
- Republic of Hawaiʻi, 1894–1898
- U.S. state created from the Territory of Hawaiʻi:
- State of Hawaiʻi, 1959
- Sovereign states that governed the Hawaiian Islands:
References
- ^ Iolani Palace raises U.S. flag to honor Sept. 11 victims
- ^ Pablo Jones - Queen Liliuokalani
- ^ .Dan Boylan, T. Michael Holmes (2000). John A. Burns. University of Hawaii Press. p. 104. 9780824822774.
- ^ .Michael Holmes (1994). The specter of Communism in Hawaii. University of Hawaii Press. p. 104. 9780824815509.
Further reading
- Thomas H. Green, The Papers of Major General Thomas H. Green, Judge Advocate General’s Corps, U.S. Army, University Publications of America, 2001
External links
- Hawaiʻi Army Museum Society
- Morgan Report
- Congressional Debates On Hawaiian Organic Act ... Matters Concerning the Hawaiian Islands in the 56th Congress,
First Session, December 4, 1899-June 7, 1900. Photostatic Reproductions from the Congressional Record, Vol. 33, Parts 1-8.
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