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September 29, 2016 by Peter T Young 1 Comment

Lili‘uokalani to Remarry?

“There will be a marriage before long of two distinguished personages of widely separated islands in the vast Pacific ocean. One of these personages is former Queen Lili‘uokalani of Hawaii and the other is Paea Salman, prince of Tahiti.”

“When asked as to the truth of the report that he would soon claim the former Hawaiian queen as a bride a broad smile enveloped the features of the prince – it was a happy smile, and there was love in his eyes, too.”

“He hesitated a moment before replying, and his mind seemed during that brief period to be occupied with pleasant thoughts of the queen. He toyed with a piece of twine and, almost bashfully said, ‘Now, really, l don’t like to discuss the matter. It is not for me to say. Affairs of the heart are not for the public. Do you think so?’” (San Francisco Call, September 29, 1907)

Two days later, Lili‘uokalani’s response was “couched in the single, sniffy word ‘No’ and Queen Lil had not the grace to cable herself. It was signed by her secretary.” (San Francisco Call, October 1, 1907)

Whoa; let’s look back …

Alexander Ariipaea Salmon (sometimes Salman,) known as ‘Pa‘ea,’ was the son of the Jewish Englishman Alexander Salmon, or Solomon, who had been Secretary to Tahiti’s Queen Pomare. His was from a rich and influential Tahitian family.

His mother, the ari‘i Taimai, was a historic personality in her own right. His sister Marau was the current queen of Tahiti, wife of their cousin King Pomare v. (Fischer)

By all accounts he was sincere, dedicated, honest and keenly interested in the Rapanui people – although his main concern, as a businessman, was always turning a profit.

Because of his native English and Tahitian, was well as rudimentary Rapanui, he served as principal informant for the British and Germans in 1882 and for the Americans in 1886. Pa‘ea Salmon would remain on Rapanui for a full decade.

Salmon inherited his father’s business interests and became co-owner with Brander of the Maison Brander copra and coconut oil plantations in Tahiti, the Marquesas and the Cooks. (Fischer)

“Prince Salman is a remarkably large man. He stands six feet two inches ‘in his stockings’, and weighs 300 pounds, all of which lie carries splendidly. He stands erect as any soldier, and, notwithstanding his great bulk, gets about as actively as a healthy youth of 18.”

“At his Island home, far away in the south seas, the prince, who has an abundance of riches and who owns extensive lands, is most popular. He is known as a ‘good fellow’ and probably the most easy-going of all the big chieftains of the islands.” (San Francisco Call, September 29, 1907)

“(W)hen the same prince visited Honolulu many years ago he made a very fine impression on the royal family as well as on local society in general.”

“His portrait, still preserved among the royal household treasures, shows him as a fine specimen of manhood. He must now be well above middle age and, from all accounts, is well preserved as well as abundantly wealthy and much traveled.”

“All Honolulu will join in the wish that his much reported intention of visiting Queen Liliuokalani may prove real through his arrival at an early date.” (Advertiser, March 3, 1907)

“The incident that occasioned the Queen the most inconvenience was when the Mariposa, running between San Francisco and Papeete, put in here for fuel oil.”

“A young man close to the Washington Place household, amidst an exciting misapprehension before the Mariposa docked that the steamer had been chartered to land the prince here, sent a wireless telegram to Lahaina to Queen Liliuokalani then there informing her of the prince’s arrival as a fact. She hastened to Honolulu only to find that it was all a mistake.”

“When the Queen was first apprised of the intended visit of the prince she began to make elaborate preparations, with no stint of expense, for his entertainment.”

“Her Waikiki beach villa was renovated and repainted from top to bottom, as well as improvements to the grounds made, the cost amounting to two thousand dollars or more.”

“It was Lili‘uokalani’s purpose to place the whole establishment at the prince’s disposal throughout his sojourn, or, if he preferred, the entire second floor of Washington Place in town which was also especially prepared for the purpose. (Advertiser, March 3, 1907)

“… of the courtship of Prince Salmon. It will, we hope, point a vigorous moral lesson on the dangers of overconfidence, the premature announcement that you have a thing cinched, or, to draw upon the old fable, of counting chickens before they have emerged from the shell.”

“So Prince Salmon, not conceiving how the queen could refuse an honorable offer from himself, which in the uniting of South Sea blood would not be without its political significance, announced that he was going to Honolulu, not to propose marriage, but in fact to marry the Queen.”

“He said nothing about it to her … but merely made a bid for an invitation to her Honolulu home.” (Town Talk, San Francisco Daily Times, October 26, 1907)

“Investigation, however, showed her that the prince had nothing in his own right; that his expedition in search for a wife had been financed by his friends.”

“Fearing that their prince might die and leave none of his blood to perpetuate the traditions of the island’s ruling house, certain of the prince’s faithful subjects … have banded themselves together to furnish funds by which a matrimonial campaign might be launched and carried on by the fat princeling.”

“He abandoned his suit to win ex-Queen Liliuokalani and laid his plans to capture the heart and fortune of a daughter of the Golden West, living in Berkeley. These plans came to nothing, however, through the opposition of the parents of the young woman, and sorrowfully the prince had to report another failure. His backers became furious.”

“Then came the troubles which have of late been crowding the smile from the broad, brown countenance of his majesty. The prince had been spending the money of his leal subjects as a prince should …”

“… for dinners to prima donnas, entertainments to chorus girls by the chorus full, rental of automobiles at $5 an hour, the best of everything and lots of it. It was but the due of a scion of such an illustrious house. Only the crash was fearful when it did come.”

“Beginning with the cashing of a worthless check in payment for a dinner at the Cafe Francisco, the downfall of his royal highness has been swift.”

“Fleeing from this city to Oakland to escape the jail which the proprietor of the cafe vowed should be his, the prince sent a messenger back to the hotel to fetch his clothes. But the hotel clerk refused to permit the royal garments to be moved ‘until the prince paid his bill.’” (San Francisco Call, November 11, 1907)

Shortly after, the paper noted, “Royal Suitor Languishing in a Prison Cell … Tahitian Prince Who Would Marry Hawai‘i’s Queen Goes to Jail … (and) has been sued for hotel and automobile bills.” (Pacific Commercial Advertiser, November 22, 1907)

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SFO Call-Sept 29 1907
SFO Call-Sept 29 1907
Alexander_Ariipaea_Salmon
Alexander_Ariipaea_Salmon
Prince_Kuhio_with_Alexander_Ariipaea_Salmon_(PP-97-1-048)
Prince_Kuhio_with_Alexander_Ariipaea_Salmon_(PP-97-1-048)
Ariipaea_Salmon
Ariipaea_Salmon
Salmon_family_of_Tahiti,_ca._1880s
Salmon_family_of_Tahiti,_ca._1880s

Filed Under: Ali'i / Chiefs / Governance Tagged With: Hawaii, Liliuokalani, Queen Liliuokalani, Alexander Ariipaea Salmon

September 28, 2016 by Peter T Young Leave a Comment

Kona’s Royal Centers

The ‘Peopling of the Pacific’ began about 40,000 years ago with movement from Asia; by BC 1250, people were settling in the eastern Pacific. (Kirch) By BC 800, Polynesians settled in Samoa. (PVS)

Using stratigraphic archaeology and refinements in radiocarbon dating, studies suggest it was about 900-1000 AD that “Polynesian explorers first made their remarkable voyage from central Eastern Polynesia Islands, across the doldrums and into the North Pacific, to discover Hawai‘i.” (Kirch)

“(I)n the earliest times all the people were alii … it was only after the lapse of several generations that a division was made into commoners and chiefs”. (Malo)

Kamakau noted, in early Hawaiʻi “The parents were masters over their own family group … No man was made chief over another.” Essentially, the extended family was the socio, biological, economic and political unit.

Because each ʻohana (family) was served by a parental haku (master, overseer) and each family was self-sufficient and capable of satisfying its own needs, there was no need for a hierarchal structure.

As the population increased and wants and needs increased in variety and complexity (and it became too difficult to satisfy them with finite resources,) the need for chiefly rule became apparent.

As chiefdoms developed, the simple pecking order of titles and status likely evolved into a more complex and stratified structure.

Eventually, a highly stratified society evolved consisting of the aliʻi (ruling class,) kahuna (priestly and expert class of craftsmen, fishers and professionals) and makaʻainana (commoner class.)

Most of the makaʻainana were farmers, a few were fishermen. Tenants cultivated smaller crops for family consumption, to supply the needs of chiefs and provide tributes.

The aliʻi attained high social rank in several ways: by heredity, by appointment to political office, by marriage or by right of conquest. The first was determined at birth, the others by the outcomes of war and political process.

Power and prestige, and thus class divisions, were defined in terms of mana. Although the gods were the full embodiment of this sacredness, the royalty possessed it to a high degree because of their close genealogical ties to those deities.

The kahuna ratified this relationship by conducting ceremonies of appeasement and dedication on behalf of the chiefs, which also provided ideological security for the commoners who believed the gods were the power behind natural forces.

With the stratified social system, it was important to retain the division between aliʻi and makaʻainana. This was done through a physical separation, such as the Royal Centers that were restricted to only the aliʻi and kahuna.

Royal Centers were where the aliʻi resided; aliʻi often moved between several residences throughout the year. The Royal Centers were selected for their abundance of resources and recreation opportunities, with good surfing and canoe-landing sites being favored.

When working on a planning project in Kona, we came across references to “Royal Centers.” In the centuries prior to 1778, seven large and densely-populated Royal Centers were located along the shoreline between Kailua and Hōnaunau.

The compounds were areas selected by the ali‘i for their residences; ali‘i often moved between several residences throughout the year. The Royal Centers were selected for their abundance of resources and recreation opportunities, with good surfing and canoe-landing sites being favored.

The Hawaiian court was mobile within the districts the aliʻi controlled. A Chief’s attendants might consist of as many as 700 to 1000-followers, made of kahuna and political advisors; servants which included craftsmen, guards, stewards; relatives and others. (NPS)

Aliʻi often moved between several residences throughout the year. There was no regular schedule for movement between Royal Centers. In part, periodic moves served to ensure that district chiefs did not remain isolated, or unsupervised long enough to gather support for a revolt. (NPS)

When working on a planning project in Kona, we came across references to “Royal Centers.” In the centuries prior to 1778, seven large and densely-populated Royal Centers were located along the shoreline between Kailua and Honaunau:

  1. Kamakahonu – At Kailua Bay, this was occupied by Kamehameha I between 1813 and 1819.  This was Kamehameha’s compound after unifying the islands under single rule.  The first missionaries landed here, just after the death of Kamehameha I.
  2. Hōlualoa – Three major occupation sequences: Keolonāhihi, A.D. 1300; Keakamahana (mother) and Keakealaniwahine (daughter,) A.D. 1600; and Kamehameha I, A.D. 1780.  It was split into two complexes when Ali‘i Drive was constructed in the 1800s: makai (seaward and west) designated Keolonāhihi State Historical Park; mauka (inland and east) is referred to as Keakealaniwahine’s Residence.
  3. Kahaluʻu – Complex of Lonoikamakahiki ca. 1640-1660, and the oral histories specifically note its use by Alapa‘inui, Kalani‘ōpu‘u and Kamehameha — successive rulers from mid-1740s.  The focus of this center was Kahalu‘u Bay, a sand fringed bay, with a complex of multiple heiau (many recently restored.)
  4. Keauhou – Noted for the largest hōlua slide in Hawai‘i (the volume of stone used in its construction dwarfs that of the largest known temple platforms, making it the largest surviving structure from ancient Hawai‘i.)  This is also the birthplace of Kauikeaouli; stillborn, revived and went on to become Kamehameha III (ca. 1814-1854), last son of Kamehameha I to rule Hawai‘i.
  5. Kaʻawaloa – Home of Kalani‘ōpu‘u, ruling chief in power when Captain Cook sailed into Kealakekua Bay.  Between Ka‘awaloa and Napo‘opo‘o is Pali Kapu O Keōua, a 600′ pali (cliff).  Named for the ali‘i Keōua, who ruled in the mid-1700s, the pali was kapu (off limits) as a sacred burial area.
  6. Kealakekua – Hikiʻau Heiau was dedicated to Lono (god of agriculture and prosperity.)  Kamehameha rededicated Hikiau, “the most important heiau in the district of Kona.” This is where Opukahaʻia had trained to be a kahuna after being orphaned in Kamehameha’s wars. Opukahaʻia fled Hawaiʻi, spent nine years in New England and inspired the first missionaries to come to Hawaiʻi (he died before being able to return with the missionaries to Hawaiʻi.)  When Captain James Cook landed in Kealakekua, he was received by the Hawaiians and honored as the returning god Lono.
  7. Honaunau – Early in the area’s prehistory, a portion of land on the southwest side of the bay was declared a pu‘uhonua (sanctuary protected by the gods – almost every district in the islands had at least one pu‘uhonua in it.)  There kapu breakers, defeated warriors and criminals could find safety when their lives were threatened if they could reach the enclosure before their pursuers caught them.  This way of life began disappearing with Cook’s arrival in 1778 and, ultimately, Liholiho (Kamehameha II) abolished the kapu system in 1819.

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Kamakahonu map by Rockwood based on Ii-Rechtman
Kamakahonu map by Rockwood based on Ii-Rechtman
Keauhou_to_Kailua-Aerial
Keauhou_to_Kailua-Aerial
Kamakahonu-Kailua_Bay-HerbKane
Kamakahonu-Kailua_Bay-HerbKane
Kamakahonu-Kailua_Bay-Choris-1816
Kamakahonu-Kailua_Bay-Choris-1816
Kamakahonu-Kailua_Bay-Landing-Map-Wall-Reg2560 (1913)-Kamakahonu_site_on_left
Kamakahonu-Kailua_Bay-Landing-Map-Wall-Reg2560 (1913)-Kamakahonu_site_on_left
Holualoa_Bay-Looking_At_Keolohahihi-1890
Holualoa_Bay-Looking_At_Keolohahihi-1890
Holualoa Royal Center
Holualoa Royal Center
Holualoa_Royal_Center-Kekahuna_Map-Bishop_Museum
Holualoa_Royal_Center-Kekahuna_Map-Bishop_Museum
Kahaluu-Hapaialii-Keeku-Heiau
Kahaluu-Hapaialii-Keeku-Heiau
Kahaluu-Makolea_Heiau
Kahaluu-Makolea_Heiau
Kahaluu_Royal_Center-Kekahuna-map
Kahaluu_Royal_Center-Kekahuna-map
Keauhou-Holua_Slide-(KeauhouResort)
Keauhou-Holua_Slide-(KeauhouResort)
Keauhou-Heeia-Historical_Notes-HenryEPKekahuna-SP_201865
Keauhou-Heeia-Historical_Notes-HenryEPKekahuna-SP_201865
Kealakekua Bay from the village of Kaʻawaloa in the 1820s, from Hiram Bingham I's book
Kealakekua Bay from the village of Kaʻawaloa in the 1820s, from Hiram Bingham I’s book
Kealakekua-John Webber art-1779
Kealakekua-John Webber art-1779
Kaawaloa, Kealakekua Bay. A copperplate engraving from a drawing by Lucy or Persis Thurston about 1835
Kaawaloa, Kealakekua Bay. A copperplate engraving from a drawing by Lucy or Persis Thurston about 1835
Kaawaloa_(KonaHistoricalSociety)
Kaawaloa_(KonaHistoricalSociety)
Kaawaloa-Kalakaua_at_Kealakekua_Bay
Kaawaloa-Kalakaua_at_Kealakekua_Bay
Honaunau, engraving by J. Archer after Rev. William Ellis, 1822-1823. Built by Keaweikekahialiʻiokamoku.
Honaunau, engraving by J. Archer after Rev. William Ellis, 1822-1823. Built by Keaweikekahialiʻiokamoku.
Honaunau_Sunset-(HerbKane)
Honaunau_Sunset-(HerbKane)
Honaunau-Puuhonua_o_Honaunau-Keokea-Map-1750
Honaunau-Puuhonua_o_Honaunau-Keokea-Map-1750

Filed Under: Place Names, Ali'i / Chiefs / Governance, Hawaiian Traditions, Economy Tagged With: Kahaluu, Hawaii, Kona, Royal Center, Honaunau, Kealakekua, Keauhou, Kaawaloa, Kamakahonu, Holualoa

September 26, 2016 by Peter T Young Leave a Comment

Damon Memorial

In 1887, Samual C Gale wrote a letter to the Holden town officials stating: “I am now able to say, that unless prevented by some misfortune, I shall commence the present season to erect upon the Chenery lot a building adapted to both High School and Library purposes.”

“This building and ground, together with some books which we hope to add, my wife and I will present to the Town of Holden as a free gift …”

The result of this wonderful gift is the Damon Memorial Building, built in 1888, in honor of his wife Susan Damon Gale. Susan was the daughter of Colonel Samuel Damon.

The building was designed to house both the Gale Free Library and the Holden High School. The first floor was the library with the high school on the second floor. The Worcester architect Stephen C Earle designed the Romanesque style building.

The Damon Memorial was the second high school in Holden. The first opened in 1880 as part of the second floor of the Center School.

The Damon Building served as the high school until Holden High School opened on Main Street in 1926. In 1954 Wachusett Regional High School opened as the first regional high school in Massachusetts. (Assumption College)

One of the model public buildings of the towns of central Massachusetts is the Damon Memorial of Holden. It is architecturally an ornament to the village. The Memorial stands near the Common.

From the tower wall a rough boulder projects, bearing the words ‘Damon Memorial, 1888.’ The building is trimmed with brownstone, uncut as far as possible. The clock tower is an attractive feature of the building. Inside the arrangements for school and library have been made with great care and foresight.

The Memorial was appropriately dedicated August 29, 1888. In his address Mr. Gale, the donor, said: “Thirty-four years ago I came to this village to teach school. The frame school house, still standing and in use, was then new and was a subject of much interest and pride.”

“The only instruction I received from the school committee as to the management of the school was that I should keep the scholars from marking and scratching the new school house.”

“I entirely neglected my duty in this respect. At the end of the winter, marks and scratches were very abundant; and I knew it was all my fault, for no school master ever had better boys and girls.”

“After thinking over my offense for thirty-five years I concluded that the only suitable recompense that I could make was to give the town a new school house, which I accordingly have done.”

“I do not say, however, that there were no other and more serious considerations for the enterprise. Here my wife was born and reared, and this, in the opinion of at least her husband, entitles the place to monumental honors.”

“May I also especially mention her brother, the late Dr Samuel C Damon, a resident of Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, a greathearted and broad-minded man, with a deep affection for his native town. He it was who first suggested to me the idea of aiding to establish here a public library.”

“It is in memory of him and of her other kinspeople and friends dear to us both, whose homes have been here in this and other generations, that we have sought to do this town some good thing, so important and permanent that the inhabitants will always kindly remember us.”

Charles E. Parker, who accepted the gift in behalf of the town, assured the donors that the simple conditions of the gift would be gladly observed.

At a town meeting, September 26, 1888, Holden formally accepted the gift and tendered its thanks and appreciation of the Memorial to the generous donors.

In addition to the building Mr. Gale added $3,000 for books, and John Wadsworth, of Chicago, sent $100 ‘as a slight recompense to Holden for having furnished him a wife.’

The Holden Library Association presented its library of fourteen hundred volumes to the town and the library opened in December, 1888, with forty-five hundred volumes, to which large additions have since been made. (Crane, Historic Homes, 1907)

Samuel Chenery Damon, son of Colonel Samuel Damon, was born in Holden, Massachusetts, February 15, 1815. He was graduated from Amherst College in 1836, studied at Princeton Theological Seminary in 1838-39, and was graduated at Andover Theological Seminary in 1841. He was an American missionary.

He was preparing to go to India as a missionary and was studying the Tamil language for that purpose, when an urgent call came for a seaman’s chaplain at the port of Honolulu in the Hawaiian Islands. He was ordained September 15, 1841, and he decided to accept the position at Honolulu.

He married Julia Sherman Mills of Natick, Massachusetts on October 6, 1841. Their children were: Samuel Mills, born July 9. 1843, died June 2, 1844; Samuel Mills, born March 13, 1845, who later was minister of finance under the monarchy in Hawaii; married Harriet M Baldwin, daughter of Rev. D. Baldwin, and their son (Samuel Edward Damon, born June 1, 1873) …

… Edward Chenery, born May 21, 1848; Francis Williams, born December 10, 1852; William Frederick, born January 11, 1857, died October 23, 1879.

Samuel Chenery Damon died February 7, 1885, at Honolulu, and his funeral the next day was attended by a very large congregation, including King Kalākaua and his ministers.

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Damon Memorial 1888-Assumption
Damon Memorial 1888-Assumption
Damon Memorial Holden, MA
Damon Memorial Holden, MA
Damon Memorial
Damon Memorial
Damon Memorial 1999 -Assumption
Damon Memorial 1999 -Assumption
Samuel-Chenery-Damon
Samuel-Chenery-Damon
Julia_Sherman_Mills_Damon_son_Samuel_Mills_ Damon_and_Samuel_Chenery_Damon-1850
Julia_Sherman_Mills_Damon_son_Samuel_Mills_ Damon_and_Samuel_Chenery_Damon-1850

Filed Under: Buildings, Missionaries / Churches / Religious Buildings Tagged With: Hawaii, Samuel Damon, Missionaries, Damon Memorial, Holden, Massachusetts

September 25, 2016 by Peter T Young 1 Comment

Windows into a Time

Puakea Nogelmeier gave a talk at Mission Houses related to the translation project he worked on associated with letters from the ali‘i to missionaries. The following is a transcript of portions of his talk. He speaks of the missionaries and the ali‘i and their relationship ….

“The missionary effort is more successful in Hawaii than probably anywhere in the world, in the impact that it has on the character and the form of a nation. And so, that history is incredible; but history gets so blurry …”

“The missionary success cover decades and decades becomes sort of this huge force where people feel like the missionaries got off the boat barking orders … where they just kind of came in and took over. They got off the boat and said ‘stop dancing,’ ‘put on clothes,’ don’t sleep around.’”

“And it’s so not the case ….”

“The missionaries arrived here, and they’re a really remarkable bunch of people. They are scholars, they have got a dignity that goes with religious enterprise that the Hawaiians recognized immediately. …”

“The Hawaiians had been playing with the rest of the world for forty-years by the time the missionaries came here. The missionaries are not the first to the buffet and most people had messed up the food already.”

“And the missionaries, that first bunch on the Thaddeus almost didn’t get to land. I am sure many of you know the story that Kamehameha had said, ‘yes send missionaries from England,’ so when they arrived from America, his son almost said, ‘no, we’ll wait for the pizza we ordered … this isn’t the group we asked for.’”

“But, they end up staying and the impact is immediate. They are the first outside group that doesn’t want to take advantage of you, one way or the other, get ahold of their goods, their food, or your daughter.”

“They cowered three really important things; they come with a set of skills that Hawaiians are really impressed with. Literacy, they had been waiting for it for forty years, basically. And so for forty years Hawaiians wanted everything on every ship that came. And they could get it; it was pretty easy to get. Two pigs and … a place to live, you could trade for almost anything.”

“But, they couldn’t get literacy. It was intangible, they wanted to learn to read and write, and there is proof they did. Kamehameha sets up a school for his sons in 1810. It doesn’t work very well because (his sons) aren’t particularly good students. So it lasts for only about a week or two.”

“Kamehameha tries, he signs his name to letters … they wanted, but nobody can really settle it down.”

“The missionaries were the first group of a scholarly background, but they also had the patience and endurance. So that’s part of the skill sets. … That’s really the more important things that are attracted first.”

“But the second thing is they are pono.”

“They have an interaction that is intentionally not taking advantage. It’s not crude. They don’t get drunk and throw up on the street … and they don’t take advantage and they don’t make a profit. So that pono actually is more attractive than religion.”

“They start in on the skill set and the pono, and those two that lead Hawaiians into religion.”

“But I have students who say the missionaries brainwashed the Hawaiians. Well then, how dumb were the Hawaiians?”

“This project really opens up the move from learning to read and write, which was really a big gun, and advancing the pono, which is the new sort of virtue – that everybody should be held to a standard. That led Hawaiians on a one-by-one.”

“This is not a brainwashing; it’s, as people bought in, they became Christian.”

“Not all of them did. You’ll notice that in 1840, twenty years into the project, the missionaries are still complaining about all the people who didn’t convert. So, if it was a brainwashing effort, it wasn’t that effective.”

“But, reading and writing starts immediately. And, of course, the missionaries can only teach in English. So they are teaching English reading and writing. We’re still playing with trying to open up that little window; there’s a very short window of probably a couple of months where those who have learned to read and write in English suddenly start to … write Hawaiian.…”

“The remarkable success here is that Hawaiians are given a new technology and what they started to put out in writing, they are transitioning from a … very sophisticated stone age culture into a very, very modern world. And now they’re empowered to write all that, and document it.”

“So the first ones who knew how to write are writing down history that had been held orally for hundreds of years. And then, writing becomes a national endeavor.…”

“Hawaii becomes more literate than America or England because the two things, actually Liholiho starts it Kauikeaouli takes it off and says ‘mine will be a nation of literacy.’ When he said that he could already read and write in both languages.”

“It’s not that he’s saying we should learn to read and write.’ He’s saying ‘let my people,’ and he made schools and he made teachers and he made a teachers’ college….”

“That notion that they appreciated the skill set and they appreciated the pono, and that led to appreciation of Christianity….”

An example is found in a letter written by Kalanimōku in 1826 to Hiram Bingham, in part, that letter translates to, “Greetings Mr Bingham. Here is my message to all of you, our missionary teachers.”

“I am telling you that I have not seen your wrong doing. If I had seen you to be wrong, I would tell you all. No, you must all be good.”

“Give us literacy and we will teach it. And, give us the word of God and we will heed it. Our women are prohibited, for we have learned the word of God.”

“Then foreigners come doing damage to our land. Foreigners of American and Britain. But don’t be angry, for we are to blame for you being faulted. And it is not you foreigners, the other foreigners.”

“Here’s my message according to the words of Jehovah, I have given my heart to God and my body and my spirit. I have devoted myself to the church and Jesus Christ.”

“Have a look at this letter of mine, Mr Bingham and company. And if you see it and wish to send my message on to America to our chief (President,) that is up to you. Greetings to the chief of America. Regards to you all, Kalanimōku.”

Here’s the audio of Puakea Nogelmeier’s presentation:

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Departure_of_the_Second_Company_from_the_American_Board_of_Commissioners_for_Foreign_Missions_to_Hawaii
Departure_of_the_Second_Company_from_the_American_Board_of_Commissioners_for_Foreign_Missions_to_Hawaii
Hiram Bingham I preaching to Queen at Waimea, Kauai, in 1826
Hiram Bingham I preaching to Queen at Waimea, Kauai, in 1826
The Mission Seminary at Lahainaluna on Maui in the 1830s
The Mission Seminary at Lahainaluna on Maui in the 1830s
View of Hilo, Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa in the 1820s
View of Hilo, Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa in the 1820s
View of Kealakekua Bay from the village of Kaʻawaloa in the 1820s
View of Kealakekua Bay from the village of Kaʻawaloa in the 1820s
View of southern Oʻahu from ʻEwa in the 1820
View of southern Oʻahu from ʻEwa in the 1820
Waimea, Kauai in the 1820s
Waimea, Kauai in the 1820s
Kawaiahao_Church_at_Honolulu_illustration-Bingham
Kawaiahao_Church_at_Honolulu_illustration-Bingham

Filed Under: Ali'i / Chiefs / Governance, Missionaries / Churches / Religious Buildings Tagged With: Hawaii, Missionaries, Kalanimoku, Hiram Bingham, Alii, Chiefs Letters

September 24, 2016 by Peter T Young Leave a Comment

Marconi Wireless

Until 1840 any immediate communication between human beings was limited to the range of the eye or the ear. In nations such as France, Russia and Great Britain, fire signal towers stretched the length of the country to serve as early warning systems.

During the nineteenth century scientists and inventors came to better understand electricity’s ability to transmit sound, and with this understanding came such inventions as the telegraph by Samuel Morse in 1840, the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell in 1875, and the phonograph by Thomas Alva Edison in 1877.

In addition to these new wonders came such scientific advances as James Clerk Maxwell’s 1865 theory, which postulated electromagnetic waves existed and moved at a uniform speed, but varied in length and frequency.

In 1888, Heinrich Hertz proved this theory by demonstrating that electricity could bridge a gap from one coil to produce a current in another. These all laid the groundwork for humanity’s delving into the possibility of wireless communication.

Then came Guglielmo Marconi (who was born at Bologna, Italy on April 25, 1874.) In 1895, he began laboratory experiments at his father’s country estate where he succeeded in sending wireless signals over a distance of one and a half miles.

In 1900, he took out his famous patent No. 7777 for “tuned or syntonic telegraphy” and, on an historic day in December 1901, determined to prove that wireless waves were not affected by the curvature of the Earth.

He used his system for transmitting the first wireless signals across the Atlantic between Poldhu, Cornwall, and St. John’s, Newfoundland, a distance of 2,100 miles. (Nobel Prize)

In the Islands, “Telegraph communication seems likely soon to be in operation between our islands. Marconi has successfully sent telegrams across the British channel without wire.”

“An invisible electric ray is flashed from lofty mast, directed to receiver thirty miles away, which records it. So Hawai‘i will not need an inter-island cable. Rain, fog and darkness do not obstruct the ray.” (The Friend, May 1, 1899)

Then interisland wireless came; “Just about the latest wonder accomplished by science is telegraphing without wires, communicating between far distant and mutually invisible points by means of the ether which is believed to exist as a sort of cement holding the molecules of the atmosphere together.”

“Today Hawaiians will be given their first opportunity of witnessing the workings of this marvel the marvel by which a young Italian boy named Marconi astonished the world a few years ago.” (Pacific Commercial Advertiser, June 16, 1900)

Then, the American Marconi Company began establishing global coverage with long distance, paired sending and receiving stations not only in England, France and the United States, but also Spain, Italy, Egypt, India, and Argentina.

Hawaii was viewed as a bridge facilitating wireless communication between California, Hawaii and Japan as well as Australia; he planned facilities at Koko Head and Kahuku. At the time of Kahuku’s opening, it was the largest wireless telegraph station in the world in terms of capacity and power.

Everything in the plant was in duplicate, the one system backing up the other, so there was no reason to have to shut down operations because of a need to undertake repairs. (NPS) “Quite a large staff is housed in the Marconi Hotel, some operators and some engineers.” (Marconi Service News)

“Besides being included in the great chain of wireless stations which are to be erected by the Marconi Company, Hawai‘i has been favored with being selected as the site for the largest wireless station in the world.”

“While situated in the middle of the Pacific ocean, isolated, as it were, from the rest of the world except for a single cable and a wireless station only capable of working at night …”

“… Hawai‘i will be able to throw off this isolation with the coming of the Marconi system, get into a more complete touch with the rest of the world, and be drawn into closer relations with the country of which it is a territory.” (Star Bulletin, April 19, 1913)

The transoceanic stations were officially opened on September 24, 1914, approximately two months after the start of World War I in Europe. (NPS)

The first message (from Governor Lucius Pinkham to President Woodrow Wilson) read, “With time and distance annihilated and space subdued through wireless triumphs and impulse …”

“… the Territory of Hawai‘i conveys its greetings, profound respect and sympathy to Woodrow Wilson, president of the United States, as he so earnestly seeks the blessings of peace and good will for all men and all nations. (Star Bulletin, September 24, 1914)

President responded with a short, “May God bring the nation together in thought and purpose and lasting peace.” (NPS)

“Today marks a new era in transpacific and world-communication for the people of Hawai‘i. With the opening of two great wifeless stations on Oahu by the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America ‘’

“… Uncle Sam’s midpacific territory is brought closer and is bound closer than ever to her sister commonwealth of the mainland.” (Star Bulletin to Associated Press, September 24, 1914)

The Marconi Wireless Telegraph Station at Kahuku includes four buildings: the power house/operating building, hotel, administration building, and manager’s cottage.

With the end of WWI, Radio Corporation of America (RCA) took over the facility; then, preparations and defense facilities, in anticipation of WWII, started popping up on the island.

The north-Oʻahu facility was under the overall command of the Hawaiian Air Force (HAF) headquartered at Hickam, Oʻahu. The HAF was activated on October 28, 1940, as the first air force outside the Continental US. (Bennett)

On November 25, 1941, Army Engineers took over the RCA facility and started constructing an Army Air Base in and around it. (They also constructed two other North Shore airfields at Kawaihāpai (Mokuleʻia/Dillingham) and Haleiwa.)

The old Marconi/RCA administration building was converted into air base headquarters and Commanding Officer’s quarters. The RCA buildings, with the exception of the powerhouse/operating building, were also used by the air field.

The hotel became the base headquarters, the administration building housed base operations, and the manager’s house became the commanding officer’s quarters.

The usual theater of operations support buildings were constructed (i.e., control tower, barracks for enlisted men, officer’s quarters, mess halls, chapel, dispensaries, cold storage, two fire stations, paint shop, Post Exchange, radio station, telephone exchange, etc.)

The April 1, 1946 tsunami devastated the Kahuku Air Base, destroying numerous buildings and covering the runways with debris. Following this tidal wave, military air operations ceased at Kahuku and sometime between June 12, 1946 and March 1947 the lands were returned to Campbell Estate.

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Kahuku Marconi
Kahuku Marconi
Marconi Wireless
Marconi Wireless
Marconi Wireless-Power house
Marconi Wireless-Power house
Kahuku-Marconi
Kahuku-Marconi
Marconi_Wireless
Marconi_Wireless
Marconi_Wireless-Power house
Marconi_Wireless-Power house
Marconi-UH
Marconi-UH
Kahuku_HI_-runways-radio_towers-1955
Kahuku_HI_-runways-radio_towers-1955
Kahuku-AAB-(NationalArchives)1945
Marconi_Wireless-abandoned facilities
Marconi_Wireless-abandoned facilities
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Marconi_Wireless-repairs-cassiday
Marconi_Wireless-abandoned facilities-cassiday
Marconi_Wireless-abandoned facilities-cassiday
Marconi_Wireless-abandoned_facilities_being_repaired-cassiday
Marconi_Wireless-abandoned_facilities_being_repaired-cassiday

Filed Under: Economy, General, Military, Prominent People Tagged With: Kahuku Air Base, Marconi, Hawaii, Oahu, Kahuku

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