2009 marks the fiftieth anniversary of Hawaii’s statehood. It was only through a complicated series of events that this independent island kingdom, thousands of miles away from the west coast of North America, joined the United States. One of the pivotal figures in this history is also surprisingly little known, though the story of Princess Ka’iulani is both tragic and inspiring.
“Princess Ka’iulani is an important person in the history of Hawaii, but not necessarily because of the things she accomplished in her life,” says DeSoto Brown, archivist at Hawaii’s Bishop Museum. “She never got to be a ruler, so you can’t really look at her political career…You could almost say that she is known for what she wasn’t able to do. Circumstances intervened to prevent her going farther with her life.” Jennifer Fahrni, coauthor of the new play Ka’iulani: The Island Rose, explains “The circumstances and sadness surrounding her death have gained more attention than any of the details of her life. It’s unfortunate that Ka’iulani’s heroic stand for her people is not better known.”
Victoria Ka’iulani Cleghorn was born in Honolulu in 1875, the daughter of Princess Miriam Likelike (sister of the reigning King Kalakaua) and Archibald Scott Cleghorn, a prominent Scottish businessman. Since both King Kalakaua and Lili’uokalani, the sister who was to succeed him, were childless, the birth of Ka’iulani (meaning “royal sacred one”) assured the future of the dynasty.
As a child, Ka’iulani led a charmed life. She lived at Ainahau, a sprawling estate in Waikiki, a then-pristine rural area east of Honolulu. Her mother was a wonderful entertainer who welcomed many people into their home, including the poet and author Robert Louis Stevenson, who befriended the young Ka’iulani. It was Stevenson who first referred to Ka’iulani as “the island rose” in a poem he wrote for her and inscribed in her autograph book.
But the Princess’s life was also filled with loss at an early age. She was just six when both her beloved governess and her godmother died, and eleven when her mother died of a mysterious illness, purportedly leaving the child with a frightening deathbed prediction that Ka’iulani’s life would be filled with loneliness and loss, and that she would never fulfill her destiny as Hawaii’s queen.
At the age of 13 Ka’iulani was sent to boarding school in England. “Her father wanted her to have the best education possible, to be educated like a proper young lady” Brown explains, “especially since she was royalty and it was anticipated that she would have important responsibilities in connection with her position.” It would be nine years before she would see her native land again; and when she finally returned, Hawaii was no longer an independent nation.
In January 1893, Ka’iulani’s aunt, Queen Lili’uokalani, was forced from her throne by a group of local businessmen of American and British descent, backed by the U.S. Marines. Calling themselves the Committee of Safety, they sought to overthrow the queen and annex Hawaii to the United States. The Queen yielded her power and appealed to the American people to restore Hawaii’s constitutional monarchy as the legitimate government of the people.
At the time of these events, Ka’iulani was still in England. Just 17 years old, she sailed to New York to make her own direct appeal to the American people for the restoration of the government to her people. She made an immediate impression on the reporters who met her ship when it docked. A reporter from the San Francisco Examiner countered earlier disparaging reports about the Hawaiian royal family and described her as "...the very flower...of civilization," and added, "The Princess Kaiulani is a charming, fascinating individual."


Comments
Thank you to Janet Hulstrand and The Smithsonian for focusing on Ka'iulani's accomplishments, as her courageous efforts for Hawaii are so often overlooked or misinterpreted. Jennifer Fahrni, The Princess Ka'iulani Project
Posted by Jennifer Fahrni on May 15,2009 | 05:31PM
Thank you for this article. I am planning a trip to Hawaii in September, and this provides much background information about its history. I always enjoy reading the monthly issues.
Posted by Mary Lofquist on July 1,2009 | 08:20PM
I read this essay as part of a communications class. I have been to Hawaii and that is why your article caught my eye. This article helped fill in the details of the story. It is truely a shame what the United States did to Hawaii. We should have let them maintain their government. Why do we always think if things are not our way they are not the right way? It would be nice to think we would learn from our history, but alas we are destined to repeat it. Wonderful, well-written article. Thank you.
Posted by Teri Synovec on August 4,2009 | 12:54PM
Mahalo, Janet for the great article!
Having been immersed in Hawaiian history for almost 20 years now, I am constantly amazed at how little the 'western' world knows or understands about Hawai'i or Polynesia. Currently, I'm working on the first of a historical fiction trilogy on the Hawaiian story and writing about Ka'iulani's ancestors! Hawaiians/Polynesians were some of the finest navigators in the world, were "green" long before western culture even thought about it. They did aqua culture with fish ponds, were careful about fishing in certain seasons to make sure they didn't deplete their resources and with no 'goods' coming in from anywhere else, were able to have a thriving society that supported close to a million people! It was that last hundred years or so after western contact that devastated their culture far more than any of the inter-island wars and Ka'iulani was among a small group that tried valiantly to try to save their island home. Thank you so much for your article and your work that opens windows of understanding into the complex history of Hawai'i!
Posted by Robyn Eastman on October 4,2009 | 09:53AM
Princess Ka'iulani did what any young princess would do under similar circumstances -- she tried to protect her birthright to inherit a kingdom. So far as I know, that failed effort was her only "accomplishment."
But today the memory of her is used as a political weapon to seek race-based political sovereignty for ethnic Hawaiians. Please see the book "Hawaiian Apartheid: Racial Separatism and Ethnic Nationalism in the Aloha State" at
http://tinyurl.com/2a9fqa
Posted by Ken Conklin on October 4,2009 | 05:04PM
I will always have to use her skills on my country. Never give up.
Posted by anonymous princess on October 25,2009 | 09:22PM
There is nothing "race-based" About Hawaii's sovereignty. the racial composite of Hawaiian Nationals Are intermingled with the origins of the many immigrants that settled in Hawaii.(A true melting pot long before America emerged). Today we carry on that tradition and Include the many descendants of non-Kanaka Maoli (non Native Hawaiian) Nationals in the nation RE-building proses. The sovereignty of Hawaii still exists, a recognized Governing Body is in the Proses of being chosen. At witch time a change of land-lordship will be sought. This an Ugly chapter in American history, one that I would think every American would support rectifying. If all the facts were known! www.freehawaii.info
Posted by A Hawaiian on October 30,2009 | 01:09PM