cover of episode How Hawaii Became a State (Encore)

How Hawaii Became a State (Encore)

2025/2/2
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@主持人 :夏威夷成为美国第50个州的历程,与其他州的建州过程大相径庭。它独特的地理位置,作为世界上最偏远的群岛之一,使其与美国本土相隔甚远,这在建州过程中起到了关键作用。此外,夏威夷的历史更是波澜壮阔,充满了国王、王后、阴谋诡计、暴力威胁和漫长的等待。从卡美哈美哈一世统一夏威夷群岛开始,夏威夷便与欧洲列强,特别是美国,建立了复杂的关系。欧洲人带来的疾病导致夏威夷原住民人口锐减,而美国商人则通过种植园经济逐渐控制了夏威夷的土地和资源。1893年,美国商人发动政变推翻了夏威夷女王,建立了临时政府,最终导致夏威夷被美国吞并。这一过程充满了争议,是非法的,没有经过任何选举或公投。珍珠港事件后,夏威夷的重要性日益凸显,最终在1959年正式成为美国的第50个州。夏威夷建州之路,是美国扩张主义、文化冲突和地缘政治博弈的缩影,也是一个关于权力、独立和国家认同的复杂故事。

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This chapter explores the geographical uniqueness of Hawaii, its remoteness, and the vast distance separating it from the US mainland. It highlights the unique historical context of Hawaii's statehood compared to other US states.
  • Hawaii's geographical isolation and its distance from the US mainland.
  • The unique history of Hawaii's statehood compared to other states.
  • Hawaii's status as the most remote archipelago in the world.

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The following is an Encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily. The United States consists of 50 states, each of which is represented by a star in the American flag. Most of those states consist of some section of North America divided by lines on a map that separate them from other states, Canada or Mexico. But there's one state that is not like the others. It isn't located in North America, it doesn't have a land border with anything, and its route to statehood was unlike that of any other state in the Union.

Learn more about the long and controversial way that Hawaii became a state on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. This episode is sponsored by Chubbies. If you're like me, you probably dress casually most of the time. I almost never have to wear a suit and tie, which is one of the perks of being a podcaster. If you're interested in casual men's clothing that doesn't compromise on quality, then let me recommend Chubbies.

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Hawaii is known for many things. It has one of the most active volcanoes in the world. It's known for its many beautiful beaches. And it was the place where surfing was developed. However, in the context of the United States, what makes Hawaii special is its unique history and geography. For starters, Hawaii is a chain of islands. And it isn't just a chain of islands, it's actually the most remote archipelago of islands in the world. There really isn't anything next to Hawaii.

Its isolation makes it really far away. The closest point to the U.S. mainland is almost 2,500 miles or 4,000 kilometers. The distance from Honolulu to Washington, D.C., the capital of the country, is 4,837 miles or 7,784 kilometers. Honolulu is actually closer to the capital cities of 24 other countries than it is to Washington. While the geography of Hawaii is undoubtedly very different from every other state,

What really sets Hawaii apart is its history. Hawaii was the 50th and last state to join the Union. Why it took so long to achieve statehood, and the reason it ever even became a part of the United States in the first place, is a story filled with kings, queens, skullduggery, threats of violence, and a lot of patience. The story starts with the fact that Hawaii is a Polynesian island and part of the Polynesian Triangle.

I've mentioned the Polynesian Triangle several times before, and if you are to know anything about Polynesia, this is one of the things that you should really know. The Polynesian Triangle is the rough area that defines the islands settled by Polynesians. It consists of New Zealand in the southwest, Easter Island or Rapa Nui in the southeast, and Hawaii in the north. The Hawaiian Islands were some of the last islands in the Pacific that were settled due to their isolation and distance from other Polynesian islands.

The first humans to arrive in Hawaii probably arrived from the island of Tahiti. When they actually arrived has been subject to debate, and there's a wide range of estimates. The earliest estimates place the first Hawaiians arriving around the year 300, and the earliest carbon-14 dating has humans arriving somewhere between the years 900 to 1100. However, the story of modern Hawaii really begins in the 18th century. In particular, there are two individuals who shaped what Hawaii was to become.

The first was the British captain James Cook, a man who has made an appearance in many other episodes. He's important because he was the first European to arrive in Hawaii in 1778. Some actually claim that a Spanish captain, Rui López de Villalobos, may have found it 200 years earlier, but if that's true, nothing ever became of it. The other major figure of the 18th century was King Kamehameha I.

Kamehameha was the first person to unify all of the Hawaiian islands under a single kingdom, a process which he began in the 1790s and completed in 1810 with the capitulation of the island of Kauai. Kamehameha was a brilliant strategist and a feared warrior. There are some estimates that he may have been as much as seven feet tall, given the surviving items of his which still exist. In addition to being an excellent military strategist, Kamehameha was also willing to adopt new technologies to achieve his goals.

He received cannons and guns from Europeans, which helped him to quickly consolidate his kingdom. Kamehameha's deal with Europeans was a double-edged sword. They helped him gain power, but it ended up coming at an enormous cost. Europeans brought diseases such as smallpox and measles with them, which decimated the native population in Hawaii. Estimates vary, but prior to European contact, there may have been as many as 120,000 to 300,000 native Hawaiians.

By the late 19th century, only 100 years later, that number was down to 40,000. The biggest epidemic was a plague that hit the island in 1803. The Hawaiian royal family, the House of Kamehameha, quickly became westernized and adopted many western traditions, including Christianity. They tried to establish diplomatic relations with other countries to assure their independence and recognition. The courting of western powers can be seen in the Hawaiian state flag today, which actually has the Union Jack on it.

The flag was designed as a compromise between British and American interests. However, through the 19th century, Westerners, particularly Americans, began exerting more and more influence in Hawaii. Missionaries came to spread Christianity, and businessmen arrived to establish plantations to grow sugar cane. More and more Hawaiian land was being purchased by these foreigners, and all the while, the population of native Hawaiians was shrinking. In 1874, the Hawaiian king Lunalilo died without an heir.

After a referendum to select a new monarch, supporters of the winner of the popular vote, the wife of the previous king, attacked the Hawaiian parliament after they awarded the election to a high-ranking chief. The newly coronated king called in the American military to restore order.

In 1875, the Hawaiian king David Kalakaua went to Washington, D.C. to negotiate a treaty of reciprocity where Hawaiian imports to the U.S. could be imported without tariffs. In exchange, the United States military was granted access to Pearl Harbor as a naval facility. The treaty not only gave the United States government a toehold in Hawaii, but it caused the acreage of sugar cane in Hawaii to grow over tenfold in a period of just 15 years. Almost all of the sugar plantations were owned by American businessmen.

Hawaii entered a period of instability that resulted in a series of rebellions between 1887 and 1893. In 1887, a group of American business owners created a group called the Hawaiian Patriotic League and threatened to overthrow King Kalakaua. It resulted in the king signing what became known as the Bayonet Constitution, as it was signed under duress. In 1889 and 1892, groups of native Hawaiians unsuccessfully tried to overthrow the monarchy.

King Kalakaua died in 1891 and was replaced by his sister, Queen Liliu Kulani. In 1893, she was planning on implementing a new constitution that would strip all non-native Hawaiians of voting rights. In response, a group of American businessmen, in a very big nod to the French Revolution, set up what they called a Committee for Safety and conducted a coup d'etat over through the queen, forcing her to abdicate. They set up a provisional government with the express intent of becoming annexed by the United States.

However, the president at the time, Grover Cleveland, wanted nothing to do with it. He didn't believe the United States should be in the business of setting up overseas colonies like the Europeans. However, all the provisional government had to do was wait until March of 1897 when the very expansionistic William McKinley became president. When the Spanish-American War broke out in 1898, Hawaii was suddenly seen as the key to the United States becoming a Pacific power.

The Hawaiian monarchy had also made overtures to Japan about possibly getting their protection from the United States, and they actually proposed a royal marriage to link the two royal families. All of these factors led to the formal annexation of Hawaii as a U.S. territory on July 7, 1898. The entire overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy was a sketchy affair and, any way you look at it, completely illegal. There was no election, there was no referendum. The entire event took place with the threat of violence.

In 1900, President William McKinley appointed Sanford Dole, cousin of James Dole, the founder of the Dole Pineapple Company, as the territorial governor. The importance of Hawaii and Pearl Harbor lessened in the years immediately following annexation as coaling stations for ships became obsolete. Hawaii was mostly forgotten by most of the United States for decades, simply viewing it as a faraway outpost that most people had barely heard of. But that all changed on December 7, 1941, when Pearl Harbor was attacked.

The fact that Hawaii was an American territory suddenly became front and center, and the attack on Hawaii became a causus belli for war with Japan. Hawaii grew in importance during the war as the primary American base of operations in the Pacific. Hawaiians served admirably during the war, including such people as the Japanese-American and future U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye, who was awarded the Medal of Honor. The war and Hawaii's pivotal role in it began a movement after the war for Hawaii to achieve full statehood.

Statehood had been advocated by some ever since Hawaii became a U.S. territory, but there was always resistance in Congress. After the war, the main opponents to Hawaii statehood were Southern Dixiecrats, conservative members of the Democratic Party. Hawaii had become a very diverse place, with Europeans, Native Hawaiians, and Asians all living together. It would far and away be the most ethnically diverse state were it admitted to the Union.

The Dixiecrats feared that such a state would mean two more votes in the Senate in favor of civil rights legislation, which would threaten Southern Jim Crow laws. It would also make it that much harder to filibuster legislation. However, Hawaii's bid for statehood was unlike almost any other state since the country was formed.

When most states were admitted to the Union, they had very small populations and were mostly underdeveloped. When Nevada was admitted in 1864, they only had 6,857 people living there during the previous census in 1860. Hawaii actually had a larger population than several U.S. states, had almost half a million people, and a larger economy than several states as well. The first real push for statehood took place in 1953 after Dwight Eisenhower became president.

The Republicans controlled Congress in 1953 and 1954, one of only two times they had the majority during a period of almost 60 years. During that window, they tried to pass Hawaiian statehood, but it was blocked by the aforementioned Dixiecrats. A compromise was eventually offered, whereby Alaska would be allowed to join the union along with Hawaii.

Eisenhower, however, didn't think that Alaska had a large enough population with only 128,000 people, and he also didn't want a newly minted Alaskan governor to block the creation of Air Force bases that he wanted in Alaska. In 1955, the Democrats regained control of Congress and all the new statehood proposals were quashed. However, in the 1958 midterm elections, a host of Northern Democrats were elected, which made the Southern Democrats the minority in their own party.

The new leadership amongst the Senate Democrats, plus the rapid increase in population in Alaska over the 1950s, paved the way to renew the compromise that was agreed upon several years earlier. Alaska entered the union as the 58th state on January 3, 1959. On June 27, 1959, a referendum was held in Hawaii with 93% of the electorate voting in favor of statehood. Out of a total of 155,000 registered voters, 140,000 votes were cast.

Hawaii officially became a state on August 21, 1959. Hawaii's route to becoming a U.S. state was unlike that of any other. All it required was a monarchy, a pandemic, a coup d'etat, and a world war. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiefer.

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