Tuesday, April 24, 2018

1899 View of Hawaii and the Pacific Islands NEW WONDER LANDS HISTORY, DESCRIPTION OF OUR PHILIPPINE WONDERLAND and Photographic Panorama of Hawaii, Cuba, Porto Rico, Samoa, Guam and Wake Island With Entertaining Accounts of Their Peoples and Modes of Living, Customs, Industries, Climates and Present Conditions by Adjutant E. Hannaford (1899)

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt/search?q1=hawaii;id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=7;start=1;sz=10;page=search;orient=0

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Showing 1 - 10 of 30 Results for hawaii
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  • Page 207  - 6 matching terms 

    • …TRIAL HAWAII 207 small farmers, and the homestead laws were carefully framed to that end. At present the Hawaiian popula- tion, leaving out the trades-people, may be roughly classified as great landholders, poor though rarely pauperized natives, and contract laborers. The contract laborers, a very b…
    • …us of Hawaii, consist, with unimportant exceptions, of Portuguese (mainly from the Madeira islands), Japanese and Chinese. The leaps which the sugar business took after 1870 drove the planters into a state of clamorous perplexity how to obtain the labor their estates required, the aborig- inal Hawai…
    • …se in Hawaii now number 16,000. 30,000 and 24,000 respectively, as against 39,000 of the native race, 4,000 Americans and 2,300 British. Some of the contract laborers are serving their second term, while oth- ers, instead of returning to the home land.as many did when their contract expired, changed…
    • …. For Hawaii the sugar era followed the whaling era, which practically came to an end in 1873. Sugar- raising has been the commercial backbone of the islands during more than twenty years of their great- est prosperity. Nowhere else in the world have cap- ital, business enterprise and scientific and…
    • …st of Hawaii Island It was here that Miss Stevens, daughter of the United States minister, lost her life has a capacity ranging from fifteen to sixty tons a day. On the coasts are landing-places built merely for plantation use that have each cost $25,000 and upward, besides the expense of fitting up…
    • … that Hawaii expends annually a million of dollars for food products for man and beast, including nearly twenty thousand dollars for California-grown fruits. The coffee craze bids fair to be the next one, sugar and rice having appropriated about all the land …
  • Page 183  - 4 matching terms 

    • …lands Hawaii produces no metal, and the only cut- ting instruments the islanders had were from the teeth of sharks or made from stone, and so eager were they for iron that the ship's safety was endangered Idolatrous Temple of Ancient Hawaii, Walled but Unroofed Monument to Captain James Cook, Isla…
    • …nd of Hawaii from their diving under it and pulling the nails out of the keel. Their persistent thievery, coupled with the unbridled license of the sailors, brought on trouble, ending, February 14, 1779, in the unplanned murder of Captain Cook, whose bones, however, were preserved by the priests, an…
    • …nd of Hawaii, a sheet of copper with an inscription fastened to the stump of a cocoanut-palm was all that marked the fatal spot until 1874, when a neat mon- ument was erected by lead- ing British and American residents of Honolulu. 183 …
  • Page 191  - 4 matching terms 

    • …NIZED HAWAII: ANNEXATION 191 interests. The annexation treaty which President Harrison promptly sent to the United States was withdrawn by President Cleveland three weeks later, and the latter further made overtures tendering the good offices of the administration in restoring Lil- iuokalani to powe…
    • …ic of Hawaii was formally proclaimed, on July 4, 1894, with Mr. Dole as its president, and at the same time a new consti- tution, duly liberal, was promulgated; and the re- public was recognized by President Cleveland as the de facto government. The world soon grew accustomed to the idea of the abso…
    • …on of Hawaii hy the United States, and at length the self-evident advantages of utilizing the islands as a naval base for opera- tions in the Philippines broke down the opposi- tion of Congress. President McKinley had negotiated a new annexation treaty and sent it to the Senate, where it hung fire f…
    • …bt of Hawaii, to an amount not exceeding four million dollars; pro- hibited Chinese immigra- tion; abrogated all ex- isting Hawaiian treaties with other nationalities; and, pending permanent legislation by Congress, placed the island under control of the president, who was likewise empow- ered to ap…
  • Page 193  - 4 matching terms 

    • …NIZED HAWAII: ANNEXATION 193 be entirely passive and sentimental. Under the Republic of Hawaii, offi- cered chieflyby men born on the soil, the vanishing native race was consider- ately and even paternally cared for, and annexation brought no change for them, unless to extend their franchise. When t…
    • …lt in Hawaii. The area of the several Hawaiian islands is as follows: Hawaii, 4,210 square miles; Maui, 760; Oahu, 6OO; Kaui, 590; Molokai, 270; Lanai,150; Xiihau, 97; Kahoolawe, i13: total, 6,740 square miles. The tiny western- most island (northwest of Niihau) is named Lay- son, and is valuable as…
  • Page 178  - 3 matching terms 

    • …co to Hawaii, 2,089 miles. That from Hawaii to Wake island would be 2,040, from Wake island to Guam 1,290, from Guam to Manila 1,700, and from Manila to the Asiatic coast 630 miles. While the depth of the Pacific ocean is some- what greater than that at which any cable has been laid, the difference …
    • …es at Hawaii, Wake island, Guam and the Philippines, however, no section of a cable stretching from the United States to Asia would have a length equal to that now in operation between France and the United States, which (from Brest, France, to Cape Cod, Massachusetts) is 3,250 miles, while the grea…
  • Page 189  - 3 matching terms 

    • …NIZED HAWAII: ANNEXATION 189 Indigenous Cocoanut Grove, with the Invariable Mountain Background AMERICANIZED HAWAII: ANNEXATION IT WAS inevitable, considering their geographical and trade relations, and the molding of their whole civilization by New England mission- aries, that the Hawaiian islands …
    • …exing Hawaii to the United States was strongly agita- ted in Honolulu, and Kamehameha III. favored it. In September, 1876, under the operation of a new commercial treaty, the manufactures of the United States Old Hawaiian Idol and the chief agricultural products of …
  • Page v  - 2 matching terms 

    • …nized Hawaii: Annexation 189 Introductory Sketch 209 Description and Climate 209 Cuba Under Spain 210 Old Glory's Triumphal March 214 Havana: Harbor, Streets and Improvements 218! Honolulu and Suburbs 194 A Vanishing Race 199 Volcanoes: Industrial Hawaii 204 Life in Havana ? 222 Santiago, Matauzas, …
  • Page 195  - 2 matching terms 

    • …ot is Hawaii." Of course, this is spread-eagle exaggeration, but the truth remains that Hawaii marks the cross-roads of the Pacific, and is the great supply-point en route for the whole transpacific carrying trade. Leading dis- tances are: San Krancisco, 2,089 miles; Auckland, New Zealand, 3,810; Sy…
  • Page 204  - 2 matching terms 

    • …TRIAL HAWAII OF VOLCANIC origin, like most of the Pacific two thousand feet deep and twenty miles in circum- islands, the Hawaiian group is entirely com- ference, the largest on earth. The only volcanoes posed of the products of eruption. On the island of still active are on the island of Hawaii, wh…
  • Page 206  - 2 matching terms 

    • …il of Hawaii, the palm as regards fertility belonging to the valleys, enriched from the washings of the mountain-sides and long accumulations of vegetable-mold deposits. The quality of the upland soils varies considerably, and in some places on the leeward side of the mountains irrigation is needed …
    • …nd in Hawaii cannot be regarded as permanently desirable. The Bishop estate includes nearly six hundred thousand acres, or about three twentieths of the total area of the group, and is scattered over sev- eral different islands. The entire island of Niihau is ow:ned by one family, which has stocked …
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  • Page 208  - 2 matching terms 

    • …nd of Hawaii passengers are hoisted from the rowboat with a huge crane, to which a chair is attached (or sometimes a stout sling adapted to the human form) and swung two hundred feet in the air to the top of a cliff, which there forms the water-front. Departing travelers are lowered by the same cont…
    • …rt in Hawaii, where inter-island traffic is in the hands of a single company, and freights are so excessive as to seriously handicap industrial develop- ment outside of Oahu. Aside from this, however, the getting about from one island to another is, in places, less easy than could be desired. There …
  • Page iii  - 1 matching term 

    • …MA OF HAWAII, CUBA, PORTO RICO, SAMOA, GUAM, AND WAKE ISLAND WITH Entertaining- Accounts of Their Peoples and Modes of Living-, Customs, Industries, Climate and Present Conditions OVER 300 ILLUSTRATIONS And Large Colored Maps BY ADJUTANT E. HANNAFORD Author of "The Story of a Regiment," "History of …
  • Page vii  - 1 matching term 

    • …cient Hawaii 183 Monument to Captain Cook 183 Hawaiian Surf-rider 1H4 Carved Idols of Ancient Hawaiian Temple 185 Bronze Statue of Kamehameha the Great 185 Harbor of Honolulu 180 Aged Kanaka Woman in Holaku 186 The Pali, at the Head of Nuuanu Valley 187 A Pineapple Orchard ,187 Nuuanu Avenue, Honolu…
  • Page 27  - 1 matching term 

    • …as in Hawaii. The Philippine War—American Troops Clearing a Thicket of Insurgents …
  • Page 173  - 1 matching term 

    • …o and Hawaii, or for a distance of say eighteen hundred miles, from the one hun- dred and thirty-eighth to the one hundred and six- ty-fifth meridians of east longitude. The Car- olines were so named in honor of Charles V. by Villabolos (see page 11), who sighted them in 1643. They embrace not less …
  • Page 179  - 1 matching term 

    • …st of Hawaii, in an almost direct line between San Francisco and Australia. They are also slightly south of the direct steam- ship line that will even- tually connect the Phil- ippines and Hong-Kong with the Panama or Nic- aragua isthmian canal. Thus their chief signif- icance springs from their bei…
  • Page 184  - 1 matching term 

    • …st of Hawaii died, and in the division of his estates a nephew, Kamehameha, got. control of two districts of that island. A warrior of dis- tinction, Kamehameha formed the plan of subjugating the entire group. For this ambi- tious task alertness of mind and force of cbaracter well adapted him, while…
  • Page 185  - 1 matching term 

    • …rn to Hawaii a severe struggle took place with the neighboring chiefs there, but again Kamehameha proved victorious. Then came the really daring exploit of attacking the chief paramount of Oahu island, one hundred and fifty miles distant. From a fleet of canoes and several small sail-boats the littl…
  • Page 188  - 1 matching term 

    • …ative Hawaii- ans merely, and foreign residents as alien invaders. He did his best to change the form of government and make himself a little czar. In 1887, by which time he had swollen the national debt to almost two millions of dollars, a revolution, headed by business men of Honolulu, obliged him…
  • Page 190  - 1 matching term 

    • …nited Hawaii began to be reciprocally admitted duty free, a policy that bound the little island kingdom very closely to the great republic. The resultant develop- ment of Hawaiian resources surpassed all expectation, and intimately connected with this development came a very large increase in the fo…

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  • Page 192  - 1 matching term 

    • …nd in Hawaii the most profitable of foreign customers; after all but one hundred and ninety-nine dollars' worth of Hawaii's sugar exports (18t)7), amounting in value to $15,390,442, had come to this country; after twenty- two and one half millions out of the thirty millions of dollars invested in it…
  • Page 194  - 1 matching term 

    • …nd of Hawaii, that has even pretended to adopt modern airs and to emulate modern stir. Ages ago the upheaval of an old reef converted a former bay into a plain a mile wide and two miles long, about twenty-five feet above the sea, and over this plain spreads Honolulu, running back for miles up the be…
  • Page 196  - 1 matching term 

    • …Blood Hawaii shares with Samoa the poetic title of "the good size Paradise of the Pacific." The climate is almost perfect. The only slighting allusion to it that a foreigner ever makes concerns merely its sameness, as to which suffice it to say the range of the ther- mometer is between sixty and eig…
  • Page 197  - 1 matching term 

    • …em of Hawaii is patterned after the American, and education is compulsory, and the only people who cannot read and write are ER-VENDERS IN HONOLULU found among those who come from abroad, chiefly among the Portuguese and Asiatics. In Honolulu Princess Ruth's Palace, a very large and beautiful mansio…
  • Page 198  - 1 matching term 

    • …on of Hawaii there. is a telephone for every fifty-two inhabitants, and on Oahu for every forty-one. The Honolulu telephone system runs everywhere, even far into the suburbs, most of the private houses, as well as the stores, hav- ing communication with the central station at very low rentals. The a…
  • Page 200  - 1 matching term 

    • …nd of Hawaii, as much as three to one. Old superstitions, too, such as the efficacy of certain charms, linger among the older people, and oppose a barrier to the physician's skill in case of sickness. On these sun-kissed islands the dark shadow of leprosy rests more deeply than anywhere else on eart…
  • Page 203  - 1 matching term 

    • …ds in Hawaii, with half-blood daughters of fine education and womanly excellence, and withal of typical loveliness. Such a young woman was the Princess Kaiulani, niece of Queen Liliuokalani and heir presumptive to the throne, the daughter of Gov- ernor A. S. C'leghorn, an Englishman, and a princess …
  • Page 205  - 1 matching term 

    • …TRIAL HAWAII 205 Loa, where the hardened flow is estimated to be nearly or quite a hundred feet thick, it lies in great corrugated, twisted masses resembling innumerable huge mummi- fied serpents, and in some places large fissures have opened in the lava, and are bridged for the convenience of touri…
  • Page 240  - 1 matching term 

    • …is as Hawaii. Numbers of the American investors will make fortunes,and hundreds more do well. But unless startling discoveries are made of thus far unsuspected mineral resources, Por- to Rico in a very few years will chiefly stand to most of Americans as a charming pleasure resort, and above all a d…
  • Page 245  - 1 matching term 

    • …xcept Hawaii. The time is eoming when Porto Rico will be a veritable Mecca for win- ter tourists, and health-seek- ers of nearly every type. The brcezy, steaming, sun- kissed isle brings forth all manner of tropical products, 10fj^jmK including fruits and vegeta- bles in countless variety, the garde…

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Americans Indoctrination of A Neutral Nation Hawaii/Kingdom of Hawaii, Philippines, Samoa, etc. Exposed



                                                                NEW WONDER LANDS

HISTORY, DESCRIPTION OF OUR PHILIPPINE WONDERLAND

                                                  and

Photographic Panorama of Hawaii, Cuba, Porto Rico, Samoa, Guam and Wake Island


With Entertaining Accounts of Their Peoples and Modes of Living, Customs, Industries,

Climates and Present Conditions


                                                            by  Adjutant E. Hannaford (1899)


Our Philippine Wonderland

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=13


Aguinaldo of the Philippines

'Aguinaldo and the Insurrection of 1896'

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=126



American Micronesia

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=185


Guam Islands - The Chamorros

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=186


The Samoan Islands

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=191


Hawaiian America

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=195

*Note - Americans give themselves credit for the laws claiming it followed the Americans laws but in reality it is the other way around......for example, Kamehameha III passed the anti-slavery law in 1852, and the Americans engaged in the American Civil War in 1863-1865 then passed their anti-slavery law which was worded nearly the same as Kamehameha III's law after U.S. President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1865 or 13 years later!

It appears that this book was the deliberate indoctrination used on all the people, the school children, adults in Hawaii and the World since 1899.

Indoctrination was the plan and implemented which affected all of the independent islands which were pirated by the United States and their 'Manifest Destiny', imperialistic moves against others disregarding the rules of law, the recognition of the Hawaiian Kingdom as part of the family of nations with the status under the law of nation, and "most favored nation status" with treaties which were ratified by Kamehameha III - Kauikeaouli.

The treaties were permanent friendship and amity treaties applicable to the U.S. Constitution.  Rule of Law was not followed since U.S. President McKinley became President and therefore, a documented pirate applicable to Article XIV of the 1849/1850 Treaty of the Kingdom of Hawaii and the United States of America.

The bankers made a secret Constitution in 1871, an illegal Constitution due to the bankruptcy issues of the United States.

U.S. President Cleveland is on record as having given back Hawaii to Queen Liliuokalani in 1893, and 1897.

It was in February of 1893 that the United States was shown to have very little gold in their treasury.

The pirating of the Kingdom of Hawaii's gold, etc. brought wealth to a bankrupt, documented pirate nation which premeditated the theft of a nation who denied their requests for loans since the time of King Kalakaua.  The payments would only be towards the interest and the principal would not be paid back for thousands of years.

It was in 1899 that the United States of America became a two-nation setup without their citizens knowing.  The two-nation setup were as follows:  (1)  United States - dealt with nations who had treaties with them and (2) the American Empire - dealt with territories with a lesser status than nation status, along with those territories labeled barbaric lands.

The claim to annexation by the United States was illegal.

References:  
 
Note:  U.S. President Cleveland Gave Hawaii Back to Queen Liliuokalani and Anticipated on Giving the Philippines Back to Aguinaldo
Reference:  
DRIVE.GOOGLE.COM
 Also see at:  http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9406E5D6153AE733A25752C2A9649C946597D6CF


Cuba In Transition

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=221


Porto Rico - The Faithful Island

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015028745365;view=1up;seq=254


**********

Liars documented for the records.

aloha.










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