Governor McCarthy [Makate] of the Territory of Hawaii will vacate the Home of the deceased Queen Liliuokalani, Continue reading
Category Archives: Alii
Queen Kapiolani on Kauai, 1877.
THE QUEEN AT HAENA.
O Lahui Hawaii; Aloha oe:—
While I was in the village of my dear home, enjoying the breaking of the Kahoaloha wave, gazing at the green leaves of the Hinahina of Makana, and the good ways of my dear loving blossom Esther Kanani [Esetera Kanani] who believes in introducing friends to live while doing the good works of God. Continue reading
Theresa Wilcox Belliveau to serve sentence, 1919.
THERESA BEGINS HER PRISON TERM
Mrs. Theresa Wilcox Belliveau, often called “Princess” Theresa, began serving yesterday her three-year sentence of imprisonment. She and James M. Kealoha were convicted by a jury in Judge Heen’s division of the circuit court of conspiracy in connection with a forged instrument purporting to have been a last will of the late Queen Liliuokalani. Continue reading
Death of Samuel K. Kamakaia, 1919.
Obituaries
REV SAMUEL K. KAMAKAIA
Following a long illness Rev. Samuel K. Kamakaia, one of the oldest of the “bandboys” of the Hawaiian band, died yesterday morning at 3:30 o’clock at Queen’s Hospital. The funeral will take place a 3 o’clock this afternoon from Williams’ Undertaking parlors, interment to be in Puea Cemetery. Continue reading
Samuel Kamakea Kamakaia’s medal from King Kalakaua to go to Bishop Museum? 1919.
Medal Kalakaua I Gave Sam Kamakaia Passed to Bandsman
A silver medal awarded by King Kalakaua to Sam Kamakaia, who died Monday morning at the Queen’s Hospital, who was formerly a member of the Hawaiian Band, is now in the possession on Malulani Beckley Kahea, also a bandsman, to be retained by him until it may be necessary to transfer it to another bandsman, but according to the dying wish of Kamakaia it is eventually to go to the Bishop Museum. Continue reading
Kamehameha Day proclaimed, 1871.
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE
M. RAPLEE,
DIRECTOR OF THE GOVERNMENT PRESS
HONOLULU:
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1871.
MA KE KAUOHA.
Ma ka Lokomaikai o ke Akua, o Makou o Kamehameha V., ka Moi o ko Hawaii Pae Aina, ma keia, ke kukala aku nei o ko makou makemake a me ka oluolu, e malamaia ma keia hope aku ka La Umikumakahi o Iune, Continue reading
Kamehameha V proclaims the 11th of June a holiday in honor of Kamehameha Paiea, 1872.
KE AU OKOA.
JOHN M. KAPENA
EDITOR
HONOLULU, JANUARY 4, 1872
BY AUTHORITY.
We, Kamehameha V, by the Grace of God, of the Hawaiian Islands, King, do hereby proclaim, that it is Our will and pleasure that the eleventh day of June of each year be hereafter observed as a Public Holiday in memory of Our Grand-father and Predecessor, Kamehameha I., Continue reading
No Prejudice, 1893.
NO PREJUDICE!
There is None, Thank Heaven, In America Now.
None So Poor We Do Not Do Them Reverence,
Provided They Have a Title in the Family.
Kanaka, Negro, the Child of Adventurer or Throned Lewdness, It Matters Not If the Title is Good.
Correspondence of the Mail.]
New York, May 30.—This is the age of liberality and emancipation—liberty of thought and emancipation from all confining prejudices. We live in an age in which all men and women may do as they please, provided they do not infringe on the rights of others, and we have found the happy millennium when all men are free and equal in age as they were at the time of their creation. Continue reading
Charles Burnette Wilson dies, conclusion, 1926.
CHARLES BURNETTE WILSON, ADVISOR TO LILIUOKALANI DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS
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Liliuokalani that she lost her throne due to the landing of troops from the U. S. S. Boston, the name of Marshal Wilson figured frequently. In the printed reports of Congress, containing the correspondence of Minister Stevens prior to the overthrow, his dispatches include the name of Wilson frequently in connection with the monarchy and especially refer to him as a very intimate friend of the queen. Continue reading
Charles Burnette Wilson dies, 1926.
CHARLES BURNETTE WILSON, ADVISOR TO LILIUOKALANI DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS
Father of Mayor Ends Notable Career, Which Included Activity in Prominent Public Positions During Stirring Events of Kingdom, Republic and Territory of Hawaii
Charles Burnette Wilson, one of the notable figures during the reigns of King Kalakaua and Queen Liliuokalani, who was marshal of the kingdom from 1891 to 1893, and was the last to surrender armed resistance to the provisional government forces on January 17, 1893, died at 12:25 o’clock yesterday morning at the residence of his son, Mayor John H. Wilson, at Kaimuki.
CHARLES B. WILSON Continue reading