Translate

Friday, November 24, 2017

Repost: Short Timeline of Hawaiian History and Sanford B. Dole,Terrorist/Pirate/Privateer/Parasite

Short Timeline of Hawaiian History and Sanford B. Dole,Terrorist/Pirate/Privateer/Parasite
or
The Plundering Upon Innocents in the Hawaiian Kingdom/Ko Hawaii Pae Aina/ Kingdom of Hawaii/Hawaiian Islands/Hawaiian archipelago with a Focus On Terrorist

                                                          
Sanford Ballard Dole
(1844-1926)

                                                                      revised by Amelia Gora (2014)

300-600 A.D
Hawaiians arrived
before 1778
Japanese, Spanish/Juan Gaetano/ visitors documented
1778
Western Contact (Captain Cook);
Written Sources begin at this time.
(Before 1778, oral history were passed down through the ages.)
1778-1820
Merchants, Whalers and American Missionaries arrive
1795
Kamehameha I becomes King
1819
Kamehameha I dies; Kamehameha II becomes King
1820
1822
Missionaries/Mercenaries
Printing Begins
1824
Kamehameha II dies; Kamehameha III becomes King
1834
     1840

      1844
Newspapers Began
Sanford B. Dole’s, early American terrorist, parents arrived in the Hawaiian Islands
Sanford B. Dole was born
1848
The Great Mahele, an alodio/alodial system is signed by the King, which secures land ownership for the King, the Konohiki, and Kanaka Maoli
1852
Chinese arrive in groups
1854
Kamehameha III died
Kamehameha IV becomes King
1863
Kamehameha IV died
Kamehameha V becomes King
    1866
    
    1867

1868
      
Sanford B. Dole studied at Williams College in Williamstown, Mass.
Sanford B. Dole returned from law school in the U.S. and opened private law practice
Japanese arrive in groups

1872
Kamehameha V dies
Sanford B. Dole wrote an article “Thirty Days of Hawaiian History” stating that Kamehameha V was “the last of the Kamehamehas”
William Lunalilo voted King of Hawaii  
1874
King Lunalilo died
David Kalakaua is elected King
1878
Portuguese arrive in groups
1881
    1884
    1886
Germans arrive in groups
Sanford B. Dole elected to the Hawaiian Legislature
Sanford B. Dole elected to the Hawaiian Legislature
Sanford B. Dole was appointed to the Supreme Court as an Associate Justice
1887
1891
American businessmen forced King Kalakaua to sign a Constitution which limited his powers.  He signed with a gun to his head.  His sister Liliuokalani called it "The Bayonnet Constitution".  They were under duress.
King Kalakaua died
Liliuokalani became Queen
1893
Jan 9.  Instructions to Troops Printed in the NEW YORK TIMES.
Jan 15. The Military Troops poured off the United States Warship BOSTON complete with rifles, gatling guns, etc.
Jan 17. American businessmen/ House of Representatives/Treasonous persons who premeditated the takeover of the Queen, the Hawaiian Government and supported by the U.S. moved to dethrone Queen Liliuokalani. Under duress, stress, usurpation, coercion, etc., treasonous persons/conspirators supported by the U.S., England, and the Morgan bankers, Queen Liliuokalani "temporarily" yielded her authority to the United States Government, to its President, as a fact Finder, and Not to the terrorists/American business/treasonous persons who created the entity Provisional Government which was neither "de jure" nor "de facto".  She surrendered to avoid bloodshed. She destroyed the Constitution which included the 1887 "Bayonnet Constitution".
U.S. President Harrison suggested that a "plebiscite" be given  to 'give the appearance that the change in government was the will of the people'
1897
1898
Queen Liliuokalani and 20,000+ opposed Annexation to the U.S. The Kue Petitions were Recorded.
The U.S. disregarded the will of the Hawaiian people.
1900
Arrival of the Okinawans and Puerto Ricans
U.S. Congress created the Territory of Hawaii.
   Dole was appointed the first territorial governor by PresidentWilliam McKinley  
1903
Arrival of the Koreans
   Dole resigned to become judge of the U.S. district court of Hawaii, a post he held until his retirement in 1915
1906
1917
    1926
Arrival of the Filipinos
Queen Liliuokalani died.
Sanford B. Dole, Early American Terrorist in Hawaii died of multiple strokes.  He was cremated and buried in the Kawaiahao Church Cemetery.
1959

1978

1993

2004

2011


2014
President Eisenhower signed an Executive Order to make Hawaii the 50th State;  Opposition was documented by a Kamehameha descendant.
OHA/Office of Hawaiian Affairs created under the entity state Constitutional Convention.
U.S. President Clinton apologized for crimes in Public Law 103-150.  Royal Families did not accept.
The first step toward establishing a new Native Hawaiian governing body through "Kau Inoa" began. Targeted for Americans in Hawaii and abroad who will be a part of the new Hawaiian nation and receive benefits provided by the new government, a continuation of the Akaka Bill.
the Native Hawaiian Roll Commission’s effort to bring the Native Hawaiian people together  by enrolling Native Hawaiians onto a Native Hawaiian Roll.
OHA/Office of Hawaiian Affairs supports the Hawaiian Roll with the intent to sign up kanaka maoli who will extinguish their claims to their ancestor's lands, mineral/water rights, and support the U.S. disregarding their ancestor's alignment with Queen Liliuokalani. Criminal contracts set by the criminal occupiers.Genocide issues due to duress, etc.
 Note:























“Sanford B. Dole was a native-born Hawaiian, spoke Hawaiian fluently, was raised on the breast milk of a Hawaiian, grew up playing with natives and mastering native games and sports, and eventually became ruling chief of an independent Hawaiian nation. Sanford Dole was Hawaiian in every way, except that he lacked the magic blood with seems to be the one and only factor that the sovereignty activists truly recognize as both necessary and sufficient to establish who is Hawaiian. “ - Ken Conklin  http://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/dolebiog.html

References:

Sanford Ballard Dole
(1844-1926)

Born in the Islands to American parents, Dole became the only American to become the Chief Executive of an independent foreign nation.

Dole's parents arrived in 1840 from Maine so that his father could take over the leadership of Oahu College (Punahou School). Sanford left to attend law school on the mainland, but returned to Hawai`i in1867 and established a private law practice. Dole's legal and political roles developed side by side over the next decades, a period in which Hawaii's history changed drastically.

In 1886, under the Hawaiian Kingdom, Dole was appointed to the Supreme Court as an Associate Justice. A few years later he played a prominent and active role in the overthrow of the monarchy and was then elected president of the Provisional Government in 1893. Ignoring the illegal origins of his own government, he refused President Cleveland's request that Lili`uokalani be restored to the throne. Instead, the Provisional Government declared itself the Republic of Hawai`i and in 1898 Dole went to Washington, D.C. to press for American annexation of the Islands. In 1898, Hawai`i became a United States territory and President McKinley appointed Dole first governor of the territory.

Dole retired from political leadership in 1903 but continued to work for many years as a judge and lawyer. He was a U.S. District Judge from 1903 until 1916, then pursued private practice from 1916 until his death in 1926.
Ref:  



Sanford Ballard Dole - His Official Biography posted by Ken Conklin
Biography Hawai‘i: Five Lives
A Series of Public Remembrances

Allen, Helena G. Sanford Ballard Dole: Hawai‘i’s Only President 1844–1926. Glendale: Arthur H. Clark, 1988.
Castle, Alfred L. "Advice for Hawaii: The Dole-Burgess Letters." Hawaiian Journal of History 15 (1981): 24–30.
———. Review of Sanford Ballard Dole, by Helena G. Allen. Hawaiian Journal of History 23 (1989): 259–62.
———. "US Commercial Policy and Hawai‘i, 1890–1894." Hawaiian Journal of History 33 (1999): 69–82.
Coffman, Tom. Nation Within: The Story of America’s Annexation of the Nation of Hawai‘i. Honolulu: EPICenter, 1998.
Dole, Sanford Ballard. Memoirs of the Hawaiian Revolution. Honolulu: Advertiser Publishing, 1936.
Damon, Ethel M. Sanford Ballard Dole and His Hawaii. Palo Alto: Hawaiian Historical Society, 1957.
Thurston, Lorrin P. Memoirs of the Hawaiian Revolution. Honolulu: Advertiser Publishing, 1936.

No comments: