Compiled by Amelia Gora (2018)
The following information applies to the Chronological History of Land Titles in the Hawaiian Islands (Part 1)
* The Mahele does not mean a division but a Sharing.
*Lot Kamehameha as the Minister of Interior signed a document allowing the sugar planters to use some of the Crown Lands AND water.
C.W. Ashford, attorney, utilized that document and supported the use of the Crown Lands thereafter.
Reference:
Affidavit/Lien No. 96-177455 filed on 12/17/1996 (281 pages), Bureau of Conveyances, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii.
*1934 - 1942
Even after the death of Lot Kamehameha, the appointed Governor Poindexter used the document to continue the usage of the lands/fraud continued in 1934 - 1942.
Reference:
Entity State of Hawaii Department of Commerce files under Kohala Sugar Company, Hamakua Sugar Company, and purchased by the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estates.
Joseph Poindexter - Wikipedia
Joseph Poindexter | |
---|---|
8th Territorial Governor of Hawaii | |
In office March 2, 1934 – August 24, 1942 |
|
Appointed by | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
Preceded by | Lawrence M. Judd |
Succeeded by | Ingram Stainback |
6th Attorney General of Montana | |
In office 1915–1917 |
|
Governor | Sam V. Stewart |
Preceded by | D.M. Kelly |
Succeeded by | S.C. Ford |
Personal details | |
Born | Joseph Boyd Poindexter April 14, 1869 Canyon City, Oregon |
Died | December 3, 1951 (aged 82) Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii |
Nationality | American |
Spouse(s) | Margaret Conger |
Children | Everton Helen |
Alma mater | Wesleyan University Washington University in St. Louis |
1923 Ralph "Kuykendall accepted a position as history professor at the University of Hawaii in Manoa. Kuykendall continued to serve as the executive secretary of the Hawaiian Historical Commission until its dissolution in 1932. He published a few more books, including the trilogy The Hawaiian Kingdom. Volume 1: Foundation and Transformation, 1778-1854, published 1938 is about the formation of the Hawaiian Islands under a single kingdom and the development of the Hawaiian nation. The book spans the first half of the Kamehameha Dynasty; Kamehameha I, Kamehameha II, Kamehameha III. Volume 2: Twenty Critical Years, 1854-1874, published 1953, is about the “middle period” after the establishment of the Kingdom. It is about international relations, immigration, changing economics and society. Kuykendall described this period as “neglected” by academics. The book spans the last half of the Kamehameha Dynasty; Kamehameha IV, Kamehameha V, and Lunalilo and his brief dynasty. Volume 3: The Kalakaua Dynastism, 1874-1893, published 1967, is about the decline of the Kingdom, Reciprocity Treaty of 1875, and eventual overthrow. The book spans the Kalākaua Dynasty; Kalākaua, Liliʻuokalani. Volume 3 was one of Kuykendall′s posthumous publications. Also, in 1948, Ralph Kuykendall and A. Grove Day published Hawaii: A History From Polynesian Kingdom to American Statehood.
Kuykendall was diagnosed with cancer in the early 1960s and he moved to Tucson, Arizona to live with his son. Kuykendall continued to work up until his death in 1963, he left several unfinished manuscripts. The University of Hawaii at Manoa named the building in which the English Department resides after Kuykendall."
Note: Kuykendall maintained the fraud claims of the identity thieves Territory of Hawaii's Attorney General which claimed to be "the successor of the Kingdom of Hawaii..."
See: Pa Pelekane case, 1912, HAWAIIAN REPORTS, Supreme Court Law Library/Archives/Main Library, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii.
Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Simpson_Kuykendall
1923 Report of the Historical Commission for the period ending Dec. 31. 1992. Honolulu, 1923. 19p. (Publications of the Historical Commission of the Territory of Hawaii, Vol. I, No. 1
1923 A Northwest Trader at the Hawaiian Islands, Quarterly of the Oregon Historical Society, XXIV:111-131. (June, 1923)
1923 New Light on relations between Kaumualii…and Kamehameha…, Paradise of the Pacific (August 1923)
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. (Publications of the Historical Commission of the Territory of Hawaii, Vol. I, No. 2.) (Documents included: An American Diplomat in Hawaii; The Policy of Great Britain toward the Hawaiian Islands, 1824-1854)
1926 How an American Official Proposed to Save Hawaii from the French in 1851, Honolulu Advertiser, May 16, 1926.
1926 Story of Mormon Settlement on Lanai, Honolulu Star-Bulletin, June 24, 1926
1926 Hawaiian Diplomatic Correspondence in the … Archives of the Department of State, Washington, D.C. (Publications of the Historical Commission of the Territory of Hawaii, Vol. I, No. 3, 1926. 56p.)
1926 A History of Hawaii. New York, the Macmillan Company, 1926. x, 375 p. (Three introductory chapters by H.E. Gregory) Reprinted in 1933.
1927 Report of the Historical Commission for the two years ending Dec. 31, 1926. Honolulu, 1927. 57 p. (Publications of the Historical Commission of the Territory of Hawaii, Vol. I, No. 4.) (Documents included: Secret Instructions to Lord Byron, Sept. 14, 1824; Politics in Hawaii in 1853; British Influence in Hawaii during the Reigns of Kamehameha IV and Kamehameha V)
1928 Hawaii in World War I. Honolulu, 1928. xix, 474 p. (Publications of the Historical Commission … Vol. II. In collaboration with Lorin Tarr Gill; Kuykendall wrote independently somewhat more than half the book and planned and edited the whole.)
1928 Articles in Dictionary of American Biography on Henry E. Cooper, Sanford B. Dole, Gerrit P. Judd, Jonah K. Kalanianaole, William Richards, and Lorrin A Thurston.
1929 Report of the Historical Commission for the two years ending Dec. 31, 1928. Honolulu, 1929. 57 p. (Publications of the Historical Commission … Vol. I, No. 5) (Documents included: Hawaii in 1844; The Reign of Lunalilo and the Election of Kalakaua.)
1929 Some Early Commercial Adventures of Hawaii, Thirty-Seventh Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 15–33. (Honolulu, 1929)
1930 The Hawaiian Islands … Papers read during the Captain Cook sesquicentennial celebration, Honolulu, August 17, 1928. Ed. By A.P. Taylor, and R.S. Kuykendall. Honolulu, 1930 93 p.
1931 American Interests and American Influence in Hawaii in 1842, Thirty-Ninth Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 48–67, (Honolulu, 1931)
1931 Albert Pierce Taylor, December 18, 1872 – January 12, 1931 (obituary) Thirty–Ninth Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 14 (Honolulu 1931)
1931 Who was Builder of the Kings’s Highway?, Honolulu Star-Bulletin, June 20, 1931
1931 Education in the Hawaiian Islands prior to the Founding of Lahainaluna High School, Ka Lama Hawaii (Centennial Year Book of Lahainaluna High School), 1931, pp 53–58; The Friend, July 1931; and Hawaii Educational Review, XX: 60-63, 67 (November 1931)
1931 Two Neglected Graves, The Friend, July 1931.
1932 Historical Notes, Fortieth Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 34–42. (Honolulu, 1932)
1932 Report to Governor Lawrence M. Judd. Cited in full: Honolulu Star-Bulletin, March 7, 1932 (Study of Kuykendall on Morals of Hawaiians is Added to Judd’s Report) and Honolulu Advertiser, March 6, 1932 (Hawaiians Law Abiding Americans, Governor’s Answer to Naval Chief.)
1938 The Hawaiian Kingdom: 1778-1854: foundation and transformation. Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 1938. 310 p.
1940 Constitutions of the Hawaiian Kingdom: A Brief History and Analysis (Papers of the Hawaiian Historical Society, No. 21.) Honolulu, 1940. 60 p.
1941 Charles R. Bishop, ‘An Inside View of the Reign of Lunalilo.’, ed. By Ralph S. Kuykendall. Forty-Ninth Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 12–28. (Honolulu, 1941)
1943 Negotiations of the Hawaiian Annexation Treaty of 1893. edited by R.S. Kuykendall Fifty-First Annual Report of the Hawaiian Historical Society, pp. 5–64, (Honolulu, 1943)
1943 Review of Harold Bradley’s The American Frontier in Hawaii, (Stanford University Press, 1942). Pacific Historical Review, (March 1943)
1946 Introduction of the Episcopal Church into the Hawaiian Islands, Pacific Historical Review, XV: 133-146. (June, 1946)
1948 Racial Aloha in Hawaii, by R.S. Kuykendall and A.G. Day, The Nation, 167: 185-186, August 14, 1948.
1949 Hawaii’s Racial Rainbow, by R.S. Kuykendall and A.G. Day. Paradise of the Pacific, v. 61, No. 2:15-16, 32, February 1949
1950 Review of Osgood Hardy and Glenn S. Dumke’s A History of the Pacific in Modern Times (Houghton Mifflin, 1949). Pacific Historical Review, XIX: 193-195, May 1950.
1951 Destined to be an American Yankee Imperialism Absorbs the Legendary Isles. American Heritage, Vol. 2 No. 3, Spring 1951. (Also guest editor of Hawaiian Section, same issue)
1952 Review of Eugene Burns’ The Last King of Paradise. (Pellegrini and Cudahy, 1952). Pacific Historical Review, XXI: 297-298 (August 1952)
1953 The Hawaiian Kingdom: 1854-1874: Twenty Critical Years. Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 1953. 310 p.
1954 Review of Hilary Conroy’s The Japanese Frontier in Hawaii, 1868–1898, (University of California Press, 1953). Pacific Historical Review, XXIII: 75-76. (February 1954)
1955 Local History Work in the Territory of Hawaii, History News, X: 38, 40. (August 1955)
1961 Hawaii: A History, From Polynesian Kingdom to American State. Revised Edition. By R.S. Kuykendall and A.G. Day. New York, Prentice Hall, 1961. x, 331 p.
1967 The Hawaiian Kingdom: 1874-1893: the Kalakaua Dynasty, Honolulu, University of Hawaii, 1967. viii, 764 p. (Completed by Dr. Charles Hunter.)
Letters to the Editor
1926 Further Comment on Portraits of Kamehameha I Honolulu Advertiser, Oct. 5, 1926, Editorial Page.
1940 How Much do You Know About Hawaiian History Honolulu Star-Bulletin, May 20, 1940 pp. 9.
1943 Work Progresses on Hawaii War Records Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Oct. 9, 1943, Editorial Page.
Crown Lands according to Judge King:
1/2 to Queen Emma
Note: Queen Emma's estate was given over to Dr. T.C. B. Rooke's nephew who arrived from England. The Territory court allowed the English foreigner to own Queen Emma's estate.
Research incomplete.
1/2 to Bernice Pauahi Bishop
Note: Bernice Pauahi Bishop was Not the "last of the Kamehameha's". Other descendants of Kamehameha exists, other siblings of Bernice Pauahi exists.
Reference:
2018 - Donovan Preza is another Genocide Activists who promotes and perpetuates lies, fraud with the intent to injure the kanaka maoli/kanaka Hawaii maoli, the Royal Families, heirs and successors of Kamehameha.
Preza fails to do a full exposure of criminal activities surrounding aliens who premeditated the usurpation of our Queen Liliuokalani, fails to do research on the concerted efforts by usurpers who engaged in manipulating, and maneuvering genealogies, history, laws, etc.
Reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=365&v=nHqBjLhjckM
Note:
Research incomplete and updates will be added over time.
aloha.
Crown Lands according to Judge King:
1/2 to Queen Emma
Note: Queen Emma's estate was given over to Dr. T.C. B. Rooke's nephew who arrived from England. The Territory court allowed the English foreigner to own Queen Emma's estate.
Research incomplete.
1/2 to Bernice Pauahi Bishop
Note: Bernice Pauahi Bishop was Not the "last of the Kamehameha's". Other descendants of Kamehameha exists, other siblings of Bernice Pauahi exists.
Reference:
MANY OF THE REASONS WHY BERNICE PAUAHI BISHOP WAS NOT …
Why Bernice Pauahi Bishop Was NOT the "last of ... - IOLANI
Bernice Pauahi Bishop's Documented "Next of Kin": Kalola ...
IOLANI - The Royal Hawk: Legal Notice No. 2018-0408 First ...
Bernice Pauahi Bishop - Wikipedia
News from the Hawaiian Kingdom: Kamehameha's Children ...
Amelia Gora-Kanaka Maoli Truth : Kingdom of Hawaii Legal ...
Correction of Kamehameha's Children, etc. - News from the ...
OpEdNews|The Royal Families In The Hawaiian Islands and ...
2018 - Donovan Preza is another Genocide Activists who promotes and perpetuates lies, fraud with the intent to injure the kanaka maoli/kanaka Hawaii maoli, the Royal Families, heirs and successors of Kamehameha.
Preza fails to do a full exposure of criminal activities surrounding aliens who premeditated the usurpation of our Queen Liliuokalani, fails to do research on the concerted efforts by usurpers who engaged in manipulating, and maneuvering genealogies, history, laws, etc.
Reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=365&v=nHqBjLhjckM
Note:
Research incomplete and updates will be added over time.
aloha.
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