Thursday, August 13, 2009
Bibliography and an assortment of my Hawaii pictures
Summary of Kanakas 1778-1850
The Kanakas were without a doubt, an indispensable piece of the Pacific Northwest's history. Surveyors, explorers, pioneers, and entrepreneurs all relied heavily on the labor that these native Hawaiians were ready and willing to provide. Even the American Board of of Commissioners for Foreign Missions hired Kanakas to help build their churches, missions,and Christian schools. Methodist, Evangelists, Protestants and other Christian denominations can attribute much of their presence in the Northwest to the Sandwich Islanders.
It is not certain what led so many of them to our region, but we are fortunate they did. Unfortunately, as our state developed and became more populated and "civilized," our appreciation for the Kanakas dissipated. They, like the Native Americans, Chinese, and African Americans during that time frame became more and more inferior to the Whites they had previously had positive relationships with.
Kankas Head South to California-1849
The dream of striking it rich drew many of the Kanakas down to California once thier contracts with HBC expired. John Sutter publicly praised the Kanakas for their hard work and help settling the area of Sacramento. Though many of the Kanakas went to mind gold, salmon fishing was another service that Hawaiian workers often supplied in California. At one point in the mid nineteenth century, Kanakas made up a quarter of the population in San Francisco.
A few of some of the longest serving Hawaiians stayed near the forts of the HBC as free men, many had married Native American women and had several children. Those who remained became eligible to buy land in the same fashion as their white counterparts. The conditions were to improve the land, take an oath of loyalty to the government, and pay about a dollar per acre. For the most part, the Hawaiians stayed in mixed communities of Islanders and Native Americans. Even as they purchased land, the plots were adjacent to one another.
Sources: Gold Mountain
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Hawaiians as Contracted Workers of HBC-1823
Old John Coxe 1811
Monday, August 10, 2009
John Matauray-1789

John Matauray was part of the royal family of Ni'ihau. He came with Captain James Colnett first on the Princess Royal, and then on the Argonaut which he sailed to the Northwest on. He was not only a guest on the ship, but also a great deckhand, at one point, he actually dove off the boat into the ocean after it began taking on water and discovered the leak in it's side.
Matauray had only been in the Northwest for a small amount of time before Spaniards accosted him and all of Colnett's crew. They were brought to a Spanish fort in San Blas off the coast of Mexico. The Spanish assumed that Matauray was taken unwillingly from his home, so they attempted to hold him in their custody after the release of Colnett's men. Eventually, with the help of the captain, Matauray was able to personally negotiate with the Spaniards to let him sail back to his family and home with Colnett on the Argonaut.
He sailed back and reached Washington's coast for his third and final time in 1790. He died of unknown causes. Colnett held Matauray in the highest regards, and their mutual friendship did not go unappreciated by the Hawaiian Islander. Before he died, he wrote a note of gratitude to Colnett for "all the good I had done him, and meant to do him." (Barman & Watson, 25) Matauray was known for being a quick learner and having a gift with speaking multiple languages.




