(Redirected from Liliuokalani of Hawaii)
'Liliuokalani, Queen of Hawaii' (
September 2,
1838 –
November 11,
1917), originally named 'Lydia Kamakaeha', and Lydia Liliuokalani Paki. And she was also known as 'Lydia Kamakaeha Paki', with the chosen royal name of 'Liliuokalani', and later named 'Lydia K. Dominis', was the last
monarch of the
Kingdom of Hawaii.
Early life
Hawaii’s last sovereign queen was born on September 2, 1838, in
Honolulu. In accordance with Hawaiian tradition, she was adopted at birth by Abner Paki and his wife, Laura Konia (a granddaughter of
King Kamehameha I). Liliuokalani’s childhood years were spent studying and playing with Bernice Pauahi, the Pakis' natural daughter.
Liliuokalani received her education at the Royal School originally known as the Chief's Children's School and became fluent in English.
Reign
On
September 16,
1862, she married
John Owen Dominis, who became Governor of
Oahu and
Maui. They had no children; Liliuokalani's heiress for several years was her niece
Victoria Kaiulani (1875–1899), although Kaiulani predeceased her.
Liliuokalani inherited the throne from her brother
KalÄkaua on
January 17,
1891. Shortly after she gained power, she tried to abrogate the existing "
Bayonet Constitution", so named because it had been signed by the previous monarch under the threat of force, and draft a new constitution that would restore power to the monarchy. American and European subjects of the Kingdom of Hawaii, threatened by the elimination of
suffrage by the queen's proposed constitution, asserted that the queen had "virtually abdicated" by trying to subvert the constitution and organized to depose her. Besides the threatened loss of suffrage, business interests within the Kingdom were concerned about the removal of foreign tariffs in the American sugar trade due to the McKinley Act (which effectively eliminated the favored status of Hawaiian sugar due to the Reciprocity Treaty), and considered the possibility of annexation to the United States (and enjoying the same sugar bounties as domestic producers) as a welcome side effect of ending the monarchy. During the overthrow in 1893 the American minister in Hawaii at the time,
John L. Stevens, ordered troops from the
U.S.S. ''Boston'' ashore, to protect American businesses and property. The Queen was deposed on January 17, 1893, and a provisional government was instituted.
The administration of
Grover Cleveland commissioned the
Blount Report, and based on its findings, concluded that the overthrow of Liliuokalani was illegal and offered November 16, 1893 to give the throne back to her if she granted amnesty to everyone responsible. She initially refused, and it was reported that she said she would have them beheaded - she denied that specific accusation, but admitted that she intended them to suffer the punishment of death.
[1] With this development, then-President
Grover Cleveland sent the issue to the
United States Congress. Although she changed her mind on
December 18,
1893, and U.S. Minister Willis demanded her reinstatement by the Provisional Government, the Provisional Government refused. Congress responded to Cleveland's referral with another investigation, and submitted the
Morgan Report by the U.S. Senate on
February 26,
1894, which exonerated both Minister Stevens and the U.S. troops from any responsibility for the overthrow. On
July 4,
1894, the
Republic of Hawaii was proclaimed and
Sanford B. Dole, one of the first people who originally called on the institution of the monarchy to be abolished, became President. The Republic of Hawaii was recognized immediately by the United States government, although
Walter Q. Gresham, Cleveland's Secretary of State, remained antagonistic towards the new government.
[2]
Abdication
Liliuokalani was arrested on
January 16,
1895 (several days after a failed rebellion by
Robert Wilcox) when
firearms were found in the gardens of her home, of which she denied any knowledge. She was sentenced to five years of hard labor in prison and fined $5000, but the sentence was commuted to imprisonment in an upstairs bedroom of
Iolani Palace until she was released in 1896, with the establishment of the Republic of Hawaii. After eight months, she abdicated her throne in return for the release of her jailed supporters. Failing in her appeals to the American government to regain her throne, she unsuccessfully entered against the federal government claims totaling $450,000 for property and other losses, making personal claim to the crown lands. The territorial legislature of Hawaii finally voted her an annual pension of $4,000 and permitted her to receive the income from a sugar plantation of 6,000 acres (24 km²). She went home to
Washington Place, where she lived as a private citizen until her death in 1917 due to complications from a stroke. She was 79. Along with Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines, Hawaii was annexed to the United States as a result of the Spanish-American War through a joint resolution of the
United States Congress in 1898. Cuba, where the precipitating event of the war occurred (the explosion of the battleship ''USS Maine'' in Havana), was never annexed by the United States.
Liliuokalani was an accomplished
author and
songwriter. Her book, ''
Hawaii's Story by Hawaii's Queen'', gave her view of the history of her country and her overthrow. Some of her best-known musical compositions include the song, "
Aloha Oe".

The statue of Queen Liliuokalani on the grounds of the State Capitol in Honolulu, Hawaii
Dramatisation
The story of Liliuokalani inspired the
composer Paul Abraham for his
operetta ''
Die Blume von Hawaii''.
[3]
Footnotes and citations
1. Hawaii's Story by Hawaii's Queen, CHAPTER XL
2. ''The Pacific Historical Review'', Vol. 52, No. 3 (Aug. 1983), pp. 292-311 "Morality and Spite: Walter Q. Gresham and U.S. Relations with Hawaii"
3. Joachim Reisaus, The Return of "Blume von Hawaii" to Leipzig, (German)
External links
★
Queen Lydia Liliuokalani - a page on the website of the
University of Illinois at Chicago
★
Hawaii's story by Hawaii's Queen, Queen Lydia Liliuokalani
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