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Newspapers in the United States were announcing it by the next day. The Evening Star in Washington D. C. ran a 4-column coverage on his death, and a recap of his reign. [8] He subsequently received two state funerals, one in San Francisco and the second in Honolulu. The news of his death would not be known in Hawaii until his body arrived on ...
Since the state funeral took place during the recess of the territorial legislature, Kūhiō, Iaukea, William Owen Smith and five other businessmen and politicians borrowed money from the Bank of Hawaii to cover the expenditures. The state funeral cost the territorial government a total of US$8,500 (equivalent to about $202,100 in 2023). [11]
Vol. 1. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-87022-431-X. OCLC 47008868. Kuykendall, Ralph Simpson (1953). The Hawaiian Kingdom 1854–1874, Twenty Critical Years. Vol. 2. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-87022-432-4. OCLC 47010821. Kuykendall, Ralph Simpson (1967). The Hawaiian Kingdom 1874–1893, The Kalakaua Dynasty ...
1924 James Colnett and the Princess Royal, Quarterly of the Oregon Historical Society, XXV:26-53 (March, 1924) 1924 An Hawaiian in Mexico in 1789-1790, Thirty-Second Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 37–50. (Honolulu 1924) 1925 Report of the Historical Commission for the two years ending Dec. 31, 1924. Honolulu, 1925. 49 p.
Governor Sanford B. Dole also served as President of the Society. Early members included historians Nathaniel Bright Emerson and Ralph Simpson Kuykendall. [1] In one of the Society's first meetings, on February 24, 1892, Queen Lili‘uokalani was voted Patron of the Society. [2] The Society publishes books and the Hawaiian Journal of History. [3]
Roster Legislatures of Hawaii, 1841-1918. Honolulu: Hawaiian Gazette Company. Hawaii. Dept. of the Interior (1853). Report of the Minister of the Interior. Honolulu: Polynesian Press. Greer, Richard A. (1965). "Oahu's Ordeal – The Smallpox Epidemic of 1853, Part 1". Hawaii Historical Review. 1 (12). Honolulu: Hawaiian Historical Society: 221 ...
Naihe had an advisor or assistant named Kamakau (not to be confused with Samuel Kamakau who was younger) who told the story of the death of Captain James Cook at Kaʻawaloa when he was a young boy in 1779. [13] Lord Byron returned in 1825 on HMS Blonde with the bodies of Kamehameha II and his Queen Kamāmalu who had died on a state visit to ...
Kealakekua Bay is located on the Kona coast of the island of Hawaiʻi about 12 miles (19 km) south of Kailua-Kona.Settled over a thousand years ago, the surrounding area contains many archeological and historical sites such as religious temples and also includes the spot where the first documented European to reach the Hawaiian islands, Captain James Cook, was killed.