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title

Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawai`i?

Jon M. Van Dyke

Publication Year: 2008

The 1846-1848 Mahele (division) transformed the lands of Hawai‘i from a shared value into private property, but left many issues unresolved. Kauikeaouli (Kamehameha III) agreed to the Mahele, which divided all land among the mô‘î (king), the ali‘i (chiefs), and the maka‘âînana (commoners), in the hopes of keeping the lands in Hawaiian hands even if a foreign power claimed sovereignty over the Islands. The king’s share was further divided into Government and Crown Lands, the latter managed personally by the ruler until a court decision in 1864 and a statute passed in 1865 declared that they could no longer be bought or sold by the mô‘î and should be maintained intact for future monarchs. After the illegal overthrow of the monarchy in 1893, Government and Crown Lands were joined together, and after annexation in 1898 they were managed as a public trust by the United States. At statehood in 1959, all but 373,720 acres of Government and Crown Lands were transferred to the State of Hawai‘i. The legal status of Crown Lands remains controversial and misunderstood to this day.In this engrossing work, Jon Van Dyke describes and analyzes in detail the complex cultural and legal history of Hawai‘i’s Crown Lands. He argues that these lands must be examined as a separate entity and their unique status recognized. Government Lands were created to provide for the needs of the general population; Crown Lands were part of the personal domain of Kamehameha III and evolved into a resource designed to support the mô‘î, who in turn supported the Native Hawaiian people. The question of who owns Hawai‘i’s Crown Lands today is of singular importance for Native Hawaiians in their quest for recognition and sovereignty, and this volume will become a primary resource on a fundamental issue underlying Native Hawaiian birthrights.

Published by:University of Hawai'i Press

Frontmatter

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Contents

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pp. v-vi

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Forward, by William S. Richardson

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pp. vii-x

This important book is designed to sort out a complex body of legal history andthereby to give us guidance about how to evaluate and act upon these historicalevents. It should prove to be a valuable resource for everyone interested in addressing...

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Acknowledgments

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p. xi

Many people have offered important resources and support during the process ofpreparing this book, but the primary impetus was provided by Richard Dwayne NakilaSteele (1934–2006), who offered both moral and financial support during the beginningof the project. His vision about the nature of the problem and the importance of...

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1. Introduction

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pp. 1-10

The history of Hawai‘i is a history of lands moving from the NativeHawaiian People into the hands of others.1 During the nineteenth century,Hawai‘i was transformed from an isolated Polynesian culture intoa multiethnic military outpost of the United States. Prior to this time, Native Hawaiians...

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2. Land Tenure on the Eve of Western Contact

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pp. 11-18

Before continuous contact with westerners began in 1778, the dominantsystem of land tenure was an intricate and interdependent arrangementbased on agricultural needs and hierarchical structure.1 Individualslived in reciprocity with the ‘Äina (land), which they believed would sustain them...

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3. Before the Mahele

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pp. 19-29

The foreigners who came to Hawai‘i brought with them a host of bacteria,viruses, and diseases. The isolation of the Islands and the limitedcontact between the natives and pathogens common elsewhere drasticallyincreased the impact of foreign illnesses on the Native Hawaiians and ravaged ...

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4. The Mahele

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pp. 30-53

In 1840, Kauikeaouli (Kamehameha III) proclaimed the Kingdom’s firstConstitution, and in the years that followed he promulgated a series oflaws designed to maintain Native Hawaiian control of the ‘Äina. Hisefforts were undercut, however, by the increasing debts of the Ali‘i to the recently ...

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5. The Government Lands

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pp. 54-58

The first division of the complex Mahele process was completed inMarch 1848.1 Entries in theBuke Mahele revealed that more than 240Ali‘i had been granted life estates in approximately 1.5 million acres ofland. Although still subject to the rights of native tenants, these lands of the Ali‘i...

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6. The Transfer of Lands from Kauikeaouli to Alexander Liholiho (1845-55)

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pp. 59-65

After the Mahele was complete, Kauikeaouli (Kamehameha III) managed‘Äina that came to be called the “Crown Lands”—then called simplythe “King’s Lands”—as an individual would manage private property.Because the Mö‘ï did not receive funding from the Government to support his...

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7. The Passing of Alexander Liholiho (1863)

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pp. 66-70

At 9:15 a.m. on November 30, 1863, the nine-year reign of King KamehamehaIV (Alexander Liholiho) ended unexpectedly and prematurely.1Afflicted by chronic asthma and still grieving over the 1862 death of hisfour-year-old son Prince Albert 2 and perhaps also from his 1859 shooting of his...

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8. In the Matter of the Estate of His Majesty Kamehameha lV (1864)

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pp. 71-88

This chapter discusses the central event in the evolution of the CrownLands—the Hawai‘i Supreme Court’s 1864 decision entitledIn theMatter of the Estate of His Majesty Kamehameha IV,1 which addressedwhether the lands should pass to the familial heirs of the deceased Mö‘ï or to the ...

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9. The 1865 Statue Making the Crown Lands Inalienable

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pp. 89-92

As a result of the 1864 Supreme Court decision,1 it was understood thatthe Crown Lands passed to the successor of the throne for the Mö‘ï’slifetime, but the apparent inconsistencies in Justice Robertson’s decisionregarding dower and the power of the Mö‘ï to sell and transfer Crown Landsremained troublesome. Recognizing the competing interests of the Queen’s entitlement...

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10. The Ascension of William Charles Lunalilo to the Throne (1872)

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pp. 93-95

On December 11, 1872, Lot Kapuäiwa (Kamehameha V) died on hisforty-second birthday.1 Like his younger brother Alexander Liholiho(Kamehameha IV), he had reigned for a nine-year period and had diedwithout naming a successor. William Charles Lunalilo, a cousin of the deceased Mö‘ï ...

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11. The Transition between the Kamehameha Line and Kalākaua's Keawe-a-Heulu Line

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pp. 96-99

Because King Lunalilo had not named a successor, Article 22 of the 1864Constitution assigned the task to the Cabinet Council and the LegislativeAssembly. The two main candidates were Queen Emma, widow ofKamehameha IV and great-grandniece of Kamehameha I, and David Kal

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12. Claus Spreckeles, Princess Ruth Ke'elikolani, and the Claim to a Half Interest in the Crown Lands

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pp. 100-110

The California sugar magnate Claus Spreckels came to Hawai‘i in 1876on the same steamer that brought word of the Reciprocity Treaty’s ratification.1 On this first trip, Spreckels gathered information on how hecould share in Hawai‘i’s future prosperity, and when he returned in 1878, he focused...

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13. The Inalienable Crown Lands (1865-93)

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pp. 111-117

Except for the episode with Princess Ruth and Claus Spreckels describedin the preceding chapter, the Crown Lands were maintained in a relativelystable condition during the twenty-eight years between the 1865statute and the 1893 overthrow of the Kingdom. The Commissioners of the CrownLands managed the land, leased the most productive lands (usually to sugar plantations...

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14. The 1887 Bayonet Constitution and the Reciprocity / Pearl Harbor Treaty: Preludes to Overthrow

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pp. 118-130

David Kaläkaua served as Mö‘ï from 1874 to 1891. As King, he stroveto maintain the Kingdom’s independence and to restore Hawaiian culturedespite the continuing decline of the Hawaiian population, theintroduction of substantial numbers of foreign contract workers, and increased pressure...

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15. Population, Voting, and Citizenship in the Kingdom of Hawai'i

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pp. 131-150

This chapter departs from the chronological approach tracing the historicalevents relevant to the Crown Lands to examine a relevant andmisunderstood topic: What was the nature of the polity or politicalcommunity in the Kingdom in the years before the 1893 overthrow? This issue is ...

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16. The 1893 Overthrow of the Kingdom

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pp. 151-171

Following King Kaläkaua’s death in San Francisco in January 1891 atthe age of 54, the Crown passed to his sister, Lili‘uokalani, pursuantto the requirements of Article 22 of the 1887 Constitution.1 As Queen,Lili‘uokalani continued her brother’s fi ght to preserve an independent Kingdom...

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17. The Republic of Hawai'i (1894-98)

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pp. 172-187

The small group of westerners who engineered the overthrow of theKingdom in January 1893, with the crucial help of U.S. military anddiplomatic personnel, wanted the United States to annex the islandsimmediately. The Republican President Benjamin Harrison supported this effort...

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18. The 1895 Land Act

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pp. 188-199

As early as 1872, when Kamehameha V (Lot) was still King, SanfordBallard Dole (then only twenty-eight years old) had attacked the restrictionsthat kept the Crown Lands from being freely sold. In a newspapercommentary, he argued that restrictions on distribution of “the Crown lands, inalienable...

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19. Annexation by the United States (1898)

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pp. 200-215

As early as 1872, when Kamehameha V (Lot) was still King, SanfordBallard Dole (then only twenty-eight years old) had attacked the restrictionsthat kept the Crown Lands from being freely sold. In a newspapercommentary, he argued that restrictions on distribution of “the Crown lands, inalienable...

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20. The Crown Lands during the Territorial Period (1898-1959)

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pp. 216-226

In the documents written around the time of annexation, the exact acreage of theCrown and Government Lands “ceded” to the United States varied, and modernauthors tend to report that “about 1,750,000 acres” or “approximately 1,800,000”acres were transferred.1 In a report written for the House of Representatives Committee...

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21. Liliuokalani v. United States (1910)

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pp. 227-236

In the years following the 1893 overthrow, Queen Lili‘uokalani workedrelentlessly to try to restore her Kingdom and to block annexation.And in the debates over annexation and in the years following the 1898annexation she (and others) asserted claims to the Crown Lands. On June 17, 1897,...

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22. The Hawaiian Homes Commission Act (1921)

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pp. 237-253

On July 9, 1921, Congress enacted the Hawaiian Homes CommissionAct (HHCA),1 which set aside about 203,500 acres of what had beenpart of the Crown and Government Lands inventory to provide ninetynine-year homestead leases of land at a nominal fee for residences and farm lots...

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23. Statehood (1959 to Present)

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pp. 254-273

On August 21, 1959, Hawai‘i became the Fiftieth State of the UnitedStates.sup>1 The vote of the people of Hawai‘i in favor of statehood was anoverwhelming 94 percent in favor, but this vote has been criticized bysome because it did not list other self-determination options as possibilities, including ...

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24. The "Painful Irony" of Rice v. Cayetano (2000)

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pp. 274-306

The efforts of Native Hawaiians to recover their lost lands, resources,and governmental authority were frustrated in February 2000, when theU.S. Supreme Court issued its opinion inRice v. Cayetano,1 declaringunconstitutional the provision in Hawai‘i’s Constitution limiting those who could ...

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25. The Kamehameha Schools

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pp. 307-323

This chapter and the one that follows depart from the Crown Lands tolook at the four main trusts established by Ali‘i Nui in the late nineteenthand early twentieth centuries. Although the ‘Äina and assets examinedin these chapters were never part of the Crown Lands, their story is relevant to the...

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26. The Other Ali'i Trusts

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pp. 324-343

The first division in the 1848 Mahele was between the Mö‘ï and theAli‘i. As explained in chapter 4, the most extensive tracts of the 1.5 millionacres allocated to the Ali‘i were distributed to the ten highest andmost prestigious chiefs, the Ali‘i Nui. They paid the commutation fee by assigning...

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27. The British Crown Lands

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pp. 344-357

The Hawaiian Monarchs looked to the royalty of Great Britain forinspiration and ideas, and so it may be helpful to examine the relationshipbetween the British Monarchs and their Crown Lands to understandhow the Crown Lands of Hawai‘i should be perceived. Such an examination...

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28. Claims of Ali'i Descendants

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pp. 358-374

Because the focus of this volume is the status of the Crown Lands—thelands specifi cally selected by Kauikeaouli (Kamehameha III) at thetime of the Mahele to be under his own personal control in order tosupport his Monarchy—the book concentrates on the unique role of the Monarchs...

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29. Summary and Conclusions

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pp. 375-384

This book has been written to serve as a resource for those concernedabout how to bring about a fair resolution of some of the disputes hauntingHawai‘i. It has been written in the hope that a review and reexaminationof the rich historical tapestry that has led to the present conundrum might ...

Appendixes

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pp. 385-454

Glossary

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pp. 455-458

Selected Bibliography

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pp. 459-470

General Index

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pp. 471-482

Case Index

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pp. 483-484

Credits for Photographs

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p. 485


E-ISBN-13: 9780824865603
Print-ISBN-13: 9780824832100

Publication Year: 2008

OCLC Number: 257449971
MUSE Marc Record: Download forWho Owns the Crown Lands of Hawai`i?

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Subject Headings

  • Crown lands -- Law and legislation -- Hawaii.
  • Public lands -- Hawaii.
  • Hawaiians -- Claims.
  • Land tenure -- Law and legislation -- Hawaii.

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