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Kalākaua

Kalākaua (David Laʻamea Kamanakapuʻu Māhinulani Nālaʻiaʻehuokalani Lumialani Kalākaua;[2] November 16, 1836 – January 20, 1891), sometimes called The Merrie Monarch, was the last king and penultimate monarch of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, reigning from February 12, 1874, until his death in 1891. Succeeding Lunalilo, he was elected to the vacant throne of Hawaiʻi against Queen Emma. Kalākaua had a convivial personality and enjoyed entertaining guests with his singing and ukulele playing. At his coronation and his birthday jubilee, the hula, which had hitherto been banned in public in the kingdom, became a celebration of Hawaiian culture.

Kalākaua

February 12, 1874 – January 20, 1891

February 13, 1874, Kīnaʻu Hale

February 12, 1883, ʻIolani Palace, Honolulu

(1836-11-16)November 16, 1836
Honolulu, Kingdom of Hawai'i

January 20, 1891(1891-01-20) (aged 54)
San Francisco, California, U.S.

Kalākaua's signature

During Kalākaua's reign, the Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 brought great prosperity to the kingdom. Its renewal continued the prosperity but allowed United States to have exclusive use of Pearl Harbor. In 1881, Kalākaua took a trip around the world to encourage the immigration of contract sugar plantation workers. He wanted Hawaiians to broaden their education beyond their nation. He instituted a government-financed program to sponsor qualified students to be sent abroad to further their education. Two of his projects, the statue of Kamehameha I and the rebuilding of ʻIolani Palace, were expensive endeavors but are popular tourist attractions today.


Extravagant expenditures and Kalākaua's plans for a Polynesian confederation played into the hands of annexationists who were already working toward a United States takeover of Hawaiʻi. In 1887, Kalākaua was pressured to sign a new constitution that made the monarchy little more than a figurehead position. After his brother William Pitt Leleiohoku II died in 1877, the king named their sister Liliʻuokalani as heir-apparent. She acted as regent during his absences from the country. After Kalākaua's death, she became the last monarch of Hawaiʻi.

Education[edit]

At the age of four, Kalākaua returned to Oʻahu to begin his education at the Chiefs' Children's School (later renamed the Royal School). He and his classmates had been formally proclaimed by Kamehameha III as eligible for the throne of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi.[10] His classmates included his siblings James Kaliokalani and Lydia Kamakaʻeha and their thirteen royal cousins including the future kings Kamehameha IV, Kamehameha V and Lunalilo. They were taught by American missionaries Amos Starr Cooke and his wife, Juliette Montague Cooke.[11] At the school, Kalākaua became fluent in English and the Hawaiian language and was noted for his fun and humor rather than his academic prowess. The strong-willed boy defended his less robust elder brother Kaliokalani from the older boys at the school.[3][12]


In October 1840, their paternal grandfather Kamanawa II requested his grandsons to visit him on the night before his execution for the murder of his wife Kamokuiki. The next morning the Cookes allowed the guardian of the royal children John Papa ʻĪʻī to bring Kaliokalani and Kalākaua to see Kamanawa for the last time. It is not known if their sister was also taken to see him.[13][14] Later sources, especially in biographies of Kalākaua indicated that the boys witnessed the public hanging of their grandfather at the gallows.[15][16] Historian Helena G. Allen noted the indifference the Cookes' had toward the request and the traumatic experience it must have been for the boys.[15]


After the Cookes retired and closed the school in 1850, Kalākaua briefly studied at Joseph Watt's English school for native children at Kawaiahaʻo and later joined the relocated day school (also called Royal School) run by Reverend Edward G. Beckwith. Illness prevented him from finishing his schooling and he was sent back to Lāhainā to live with his mother.[3][12] Following his formal schooling, he studied law under Charles Coffin Harris in 1853. Kalākaua would appoint Harris as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Hawaiʻi in 1877.[17][18]

Political ascendancy[edit]

1873 election[edit]

King Kamehameha V, died on December 12, 1872, without naming a successor to the throne. Under the 1864 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, if the king did not appoint a successor, a new king would be appointed by the legislature to begin a new royal line of succession.[34]


There were several candidates for the Hawaiian throne including Bernice Pauahi Bishop, who had been asked to succeed to the throne by Kamehameha V on his deathbed but had declined the offer. However, the contest was centered on the two high-ranking male aliʻi, or chiefs: Lunalilo and Kalākaua. Lunalilo was more popular, partly because he was a higher-ranking chief than Kalākaua and was the immediate cousin of Kamehameha V. Lunalilo was also the more liberal of the two—he promised to amend the constitution to give the people a greater voice in the government. According to historian Ralph S. Kuykendall, there was an enthusiasm among Lunalilo's supporters to have him declared king without holding an election. In response, Lunalilo issued a proclamation stating that, even though he believed himself to be the rightful heir to the throne, he would submit to an election for the good of the kingdom.[35] On January 1, 1873, a popular election was held for the office of King of Hawaiʻi. Lunalilo won with an overwhelming majority while Kalākaua performed extremely poorly receiving 12 votes out of the more than 11,000 votes cast.[36] The next day, the legislature confirmed the popular vote and elected Lunalilo unanimously. Kalākaua conceded.[37]

1874 election[edit]

Following Lunalilo's ascension, Kalākaua was appointed as colonel on the military staff of the king.[38] He kept politically active during Lunalilo's reign, including leadership involvement with a political organization known as the Young Hawaiians; the group's motto was "Hawaiʻi for the Hawaiians".[38] He had gained political capital with his staunch opposition to ceding any part of the Hawaiian islands to foreign interests.[39][40] During the ʻIolani Barracks mutiny by the Royal Guards of Hawaiʻi in September 1873, Kalākaua was suspected to have incited the native guards to rebel against their white officers. Lunalilo responded to the insurrection by disbanding the military unit altogether, leaving Hawaiʻi without a standing army for the remainder of his reign.[41]


The issue of succession was a major concern especially since Lunalilo was unmarried and childless at the time. Queen Dowager Emma, the widow of Kamehameha IV, was considered to be Lunalilo's favorite choice as his presumptive heir.[42] On the other hand, Kalākaua and his political cohorts actively campaigned for him to be named successor in the event of the king's death.[38] Among the other candidates considered viable as Lunalilo's successor was the previously mentioned Bernice Pauahi Bishop. She had strong ties to the United States through her marriage to wealthy American businessman Charles Reed Bishop who also served as one of Lunalilo's cabinet ministers. When Lunalilo became ill several months after his election, Native Hawaiians counseled with him to appoint a successor to avoid another election. However he may have personally felt about Emma, he never put it in writing. He failed to act on the issue of a successor, and died on February 3, 1874, setting in motion a bitter election.[43] While Lunalilo did not think of himself as a Kamehameha, his election continued the Kamehameha line to some degree[44] making him the last of the monarchs of the Kamehameha dynasty.[45]


Pauahi chose not to run. Kalākaua's political platform was that he would reign in strict accordance with the kingdom's constitution. Emma campaigned on her assurance that Lunalilo had personally told her he wanted her to succeed him. Several individuals who claimed first-hand knowledge of Lunalilo's wishes backed her publicly. With Lunalilo's privy council issuing a public denial of that claim, the kingdom was divided on the issue.[46] British Commissioner James Hay Wodehouse put the British and American forces docked at Honolulu on the alert for possible violence.[47]


The election was held on February 12, and Kalākaua was elected by the Legislative Assembly by a margin of thirty-nine to six. His election provoked the Honolulu Courthouse riot where supporters of Queen Emma targeted legislators who supported Kalākaua; thirteen legislators were injured. The kingdom was without an army since the mutiny the year before and many police officers sent to quell the riot joined the mob or did nothing. Unable to control the mob, Kalākaua and Lunalilo's former ministers had to request the aid of American and British military forces docked in the harbor to put down the uprising.[47][40]

Na Mele Aimoku, Na Mele Kupuna, a Me Na Mele Ponoi O Ka Moi Kalākaua I. Dynastic Chants, Ancestral Chants, and Personal Chants of King Kalākaua I. (1886). Hawaiian Historical Society, Honolulu, 2001.

[176]

The Legends and Myths of Hawaii: The Fables and Folk-lore of a Strange People. (1888). C.E. Tuttle Company, New York, 1990.

[177]

Coins of the Hawaiian dollar

Kalākaua's Cabinet Ministers

Kalākaua's Privy Council of State

Kalākaua's 1881 world tour

Armstrong, William N. (1904). . New York, NY: F. A. Stokes Company – via HathiTrust.

Around the World with a King

Baur, John E. (1988). "When Royalty Came to California". California History. 67 (4): 244–265. :10.2307/25158494. JSTOR 25158494.

doi

Burns, Eugene (1952). . New York: Pellegrini & Cudahy. OCLC 414982.

The Last King of Paradise

Dukas, Neil Bernard (2004). A Military History of Sovereign Hawaiʻi. Honolulu: Mutual Publishing Company.  978-1-56647-636-2. OCLC 56195693.

ISBN

Girod, André (2014). American Gothic: Une mosaïque de personnalités américaines (in French). L'Harmattan.  978-2-343-04037-0.

ISBN

Hallock, Leavitt Homan (1911). . Portland, ME: Smith & Sale. OCLC 2802182 – via HathiTrust.

Hawaii Under King Kalakaua from Personal Experiences of Leavitt H. Hallock

Houston, James D. (2008). . New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-38808-7. OCLC 71552454.

Bird of Another Heaven

Ing, Tiffany (May 2015). Illuminating the American, International, and Hawaiʻi Representations of David Kalākaua and His Reign, 1874–1891 (Thesis). University of Hawaii at Manoa. :10125/50983.

hdl

. Honolulu: Bulletin Publishing Company. 1891. OCLC 82800064. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved January 29, 2017 – via HathiTrust.

Kalakaua dead. The king dies on a foreign shore ... at San Francisco, Cal., January 20, 1891. Funeral ceremonies ... Reception in Honolulu ... Notes on the king's trip through southern California, by Lieut. Gen. P. Blow, U.S.N. Reports of Rear Admiral Brown, U.S.N., and Medical Inspector Woods

Kalakaua, David; (1888). The Legends and Myths of Hawaii: The Fables and Folk-lore of a Strange People. New York, NY: Charles L. Webster & Company – via HathiTrust.

Daggett, Rollin M.

Lowe, Ruby Hasegawa (1999). . Honolulu: Kamehameha Schools Press. ISBN 978-0-87336-041-8. OCLC 40729128.

David Kalākaua

The Pacific Commercial Advertiser (1883). . Honolulu: Printed at the Advertiser Steam Printing House. OCLC 77955761 – via HathiTrust.

Coronation of the King and Queen of the Hawaiian Islands, at Honolulu, Monday, Feb 12th 1883

Poepoe, Joseph M.; Brown, George (1891). . Honolulu. OCLC 16331688.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Ka Moolelo o ka Moi Kalakaua I

Rossi, Puali'ili'imaikalani (December 2013). (Thesis). University of Hawaii at Manoa. p. 193. hdl:10125/100744.

No Ka Pono ʻOle O Ka Lehulehu : The 1874 Election of Hawaiʻi's Moʻi And The Kanaka Maoli Response

Schweizer, Niklaus R. (1991). "King Kalakaua: An International Perspective". The Hawaiian Journal of History. 25. Honolulu: Hawaiian Historical Society: 103–120. :10524/539. OCLC 60626541.

hdl

(1984). Hawaii: A History. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-30220-2.

Tabrah, Ruth M.

Tate, Merze (1960). "Hawaii's Program of Primacy in Polynesia". Oregon Historical Quarterly. 61 (4). Oregon Historical Society: 377–407.  20612586.

JSTOR

at Project Gutenberg

Works by Kalākaua

at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)

Works by Kalākaua

Lydecker, Robert C. (1918). . The Honolulu Gazette Col., Ltd. pp. 159–173.

(full text) 1887 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom and Kalakaua's November 3 speech before the Legislative Assembly

A guide to the Rough log and journal, 1880–1881, 1891

Palmer, Walter B.; Day, Clive; Viner, Jacob; Hornbeck, Stanley Kuhl (1919). . Govt. Print. Off. p. 25 – via HathiTrust.

Reciprocity and commercial treaties

. Honolulu: Hawaiʻi State Archives.

"KING KALAKAUA PHOTOGRAPH EXHIBITION"