Captive Paradise: A History of Hawaii (46 page)

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A good deal of discussion about Hawai‘i in the United States did not concern itself with who should be queen or even with the morality of the coup; the examination was about geopolitical reality in the imperialist age and the future of America after the close of the frontier. And while the frontier may have gone, the sense of Manifest Destiny had not, and there was an earnest belief that the virtues of American democracy (as it was perceived) should continue their westward march across the Pacific.

One of the first people to react to news of the coup in Hawai‘i was Capt. Alfred T. Mahan, the influential author and naval strategist, who noted the heavy importation of Chinese labor into the islands. “It is a question for the whole civilized world,” he wrote the
New York Times
, “and not for the United States only, whether the Sandwich Islands, with their geographical and military importance … shall in the future be an outpost of European civilization, or of the comparative barbarism of China.”
7
In his
Times
piece Mahan echoed the conclusion he reached in a second article, that “the annexation, even, of Hawaii, would be no mere sporadic effort … but a first fruit and a token that the [United States] in its evolution has aroused itself to the necessity of carrying its life—that has been the happiness of those under its influence—beyond the borders which heretofore have sufficed for its activities.”
8

As it developed, Cleveland withdrew the treaty, as Lili‘uokalani had surrendered her powers not to the Dole junta but to the United States, and her lawyers had made a prima facie case that the entire affair could be laid to the collusion and bad faith of the American minister in Honolulu. Cleveland decided to send a special commissioner to Hawai‘i to act as an honest broker of facts, to investigate and report on the actual conditions in the troubled country. At a glance, Cleveland’s selection of the outgoing chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, James H. Blount of Georgia, was so appropriate as to seem obvious. The choice, however, embraced a whole nest of interests and intrigues that bore materially on the question.

After nine terms in Congress, Blount had not stood for reelection in 1892, preferring to return to his plantation near Macon and, it was well believed, first seek an appointment abroad and then press his claims to the Georgia legislature for election to the U.S. Senate. He was a Confederate veteran, commonly addressed as “Colonel,” and like most Southern politicians who had survived the horrors of Reconstruction, he was more interested in building the sectional and national economies from the poor up than he was in enriching Northern tycoons with empires either in the defeated South or abroad. Cleveland was aware of Blount’s sympathies that might prejudice him against annexation, but a balance of other Southerners in his cabinet, representing the portfolios of Interior, Treasury, and Navy, pressed his case. The attorney general also favored him, respecting Blount’s reputation as a dogged investigator.
9
Moreover, the new secretary of state, Walter Q. Gresham, blamed members of the outgoing administration for reverses in his own political aspirations. He had been a leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 1888, but as a pro-West and proagrarian Republican, he fell from favor with the probusiness investor class that favored Harrison, as Harrison favored them. Thus despite Gresham’s lead in the early ballots of the 1888 convention, the nomination eventually swung to Harrison. Gresham hated Benjamin Harrison’s guts; he supported Cleveland in 1892, and as a reward became secretary of state. If the Republicans in Congress could be humiliated by torpedoing the Hawaiian annexation—well, the actual merits of the case could be looked at another day.
10

Blount was in Macon, Georgia, when he read the telegram on Friday, March 10: “I ask you to come here immediately prepared for confidential trip of great importance to the Pacific Ocean.” The following Sunday he was in Washington for briefings with Gresham in the morning; officially he was merely a fact finder, but unofficially he was to particularly investigate the conduct of Minister Stevens and American involvement in the coup. If he found it proper and advisable to do so, he was authorized to lower the American flag and raise the Hawaiian once more. On Monday, Blount was presented to the whole cabinet for a few seconds before being sent off with Cleveland’s, “Now, Blount, you will let us hear from you.”

Gresham cabled Stevens and Cleveland cabled Dole that Blount, his fact finder, was being dispatched. The full scope of his authority was not imparted. Other than the president and the cabinet, the only one who was given the whole story was Adm. John Skerrett, commanding U.S. naval forces in Honolulu. In Hawaii, members of the Dole government suspected that Cleveland was not their friend and knew some of the factors in play, but they fastened upon one bright ray of hope: Since he was a Confederate veteran and Georgia cotton planter, they could rely upon Blount’s sympathy for the notion that the dark races were incapable of providing enlightened government. “As a Southerner,” wrote Lorrin Thurston, “he is thoroughly familiar with the difficulties attendant upon government with an ignorant majority in the electorate, and will thoroughly appreciate the situation upon this point.”
11

Blount departed for San Francisco the day after he was trotted before the cabinet, finding upon his arrival there the insubstantial U.S. Coast Guard cutter
Richard Rush
waiting to take him aboard. A 140-foot schooner, displacing less than two hundred tons, rigged for sailing in case her single-screw steam engine failed, she was a minimal vessel in which to cross the vast Pacific, but she headed gamely through the Golden Gate. And at 9:30 a.m. on March 29 the telephone station on Diamond Head rang down to the city to notify the government and the American legation of the
Rush
’s imminent arrival at Honolulu. As the
Rush
coasted through the harbor the first ship she passed was a sobering one: the Japanese armored cruiser
Naniwa
, dispatched to Hawaii at first news of the coup with sufficient marines to protect Japanese citizens. British-built to Japanese specifications and armed to the teeth, the 300-foot, 3,700-ton
Naniwa
was the most powerful cruiser on earth at the time she entered service; the Emperor Meiji himself had reviewed his rapidly modernizing fleet from her deck. If violence were to suddenly erupt,
Naniwa
would be more than a match for the newer USS
Boston
, and she could give a full account of herself. Dispelling any hostile intent, however, one of
Naniwa
’s guns saluted the
Rush
smartly as she passed, which
Rush
answered with her single six-pounder. One reporter in Honolulu remarked of the comical disparity in the ships’ respective capabilities that the American cutter’s answering salute was “like the yap of a terrier echoing the deep bellow of a boar hound.”
12

This correspondent on the dock was one of a large throng who produced more flags and bunting, she wrote, than she imagined could be in all of Honolulu. Both factions, annexationists nearly all white, waving American flags, and monarchists nearly all native, waving Hawaiian flags, were present to cheer on their cause. While the junta knew whom to expect, the crowd believed that the American commission to hear the case for annexation would consist of General Schofield, Admiral Brown, and an authority on international law, Justice Thomas M. Cooley of Michigan. Thus the consternation was general when the commission proved to be the single former congressman from Georgia, “a commonplace, rather sullen-looking man of sixty, clad in ill-fitting clothes of blue homespun and a Panama hat,” accompanied by his wife and secretary.

From the moment the
Rush
dropped anchor, Blount was courted by all factions, and the games began. Minister Stevens, unaware that his own recent conduct was to be an object of Blount’s special attention, motored out on a launch to greet him, accompanied by a committee of the Annexation Club (a new one, reconstituted and no longer secret), which had rented for Blount an elegant mansion, fully furnished, including servants and carriage. Blount declined with thanks. The ex-queen sent her personal carriage to convey him to his hotel; determined to maintain his neutrality, he declined with thanks. Once it was clear that Blount would not become a partisan for their side, the proannexation press turned on him. His refusal of Dole’s favors became “insulting,” his very appearance “loathsome.” Admiral Skerrett paid his compliments, and offered use of the navy’s coded cipher for his communications back and forth to Washington. Considering the navy’s implication in the events of January 17, he declined with thanks. He did not trust Skerrett not to share his messages with Stevens.

Calling on President Dole, Blount handed him a letter from President Cleveland, advising that Blount spoke for the United States and that his authority over the American mission and military was paramount. The contents of the letter were made public, after which the ex-congressman became known as “Paramount Blount.” From the inability of virtually everyone to draw out his thoughts, he also became known as “Minister Reticent.”

From his cottage at the Hawaiian Hotel, Blount began taking testimony from virtually all comers. By the third day he had heard enough to order Dole to lower the American flag and restore the Hawaiian. That evening, before the order was carried out, Minister Stevens called on Blount, introducing and endorsing the worth of a Mr. Walter G. Smith, who Blount learned was a member of the Annexation Club and editor of the
Honolulu Star
, an American mouthpiece. Smith imparted his certain knowledge that Lili‘uokalani had colluded with the Japanese commissioner, and agreed that the removal of the American flag and marines was the signal to land troops from the
Naniwa
, and restore the monarchy in a counterinsurgency. Blount wrote, “I was not impressed much with these statements,” and his inquiries quickly exploded the story; indeed the Japanese commissioner was so mortified that the presence of an imperial warship would lend color to such a tale that he asked his government to withdraw the powerful cruiser, which it did.
13

In the days after the Hawaiian flag was restored, it became apparent that the fate of Hawai‘i and its “revolution” was being decided by the parade of witnesses trailing into Paramount Blount’s cottage at the Hawaiian Hotel. Mary Krout noticed that a huge yellow mastiff had taken up residence there, semiadopted by some Portuguese bellboys. As it happened, one day a black mongrel of equal size appeared and tried to muscle in on the arrangement, and the two hounds fell upon each other in a terrifying brawl in the hotel’s main corridor. “That,” remarked one of the foreign reporters from the safety of the staircase, “is the first real fight I have seen since the Revolution began.”
14

Blount made an almost impossibly quick study of Hawaiian history, but he succeeded to the point that, when A. F. Judd of the Hawaiian supreme court was giving him a précis of events leading up to the forced constitution of 1887, Blount interrupted him more than once with trenchant questions that induced a more even-handed narrative of events.
15
Judd found Blount’s method of operating peculiar: “Mr. Blount has not observed the usual course in Diplomatic [illegible] at all. He did not tell Mr. Stevens of his intention to remove the Protectorate.… But the Prov Govt’s authority is not questioned & maintains itself well & keeps order so that quietness reigns. The ‘Annexation Club’ now numbers about 2500 and grows daily. Mr. Blount sees everybody and is getting information from all quarters. The royalists are working [and] have at him too.”
16
Most of the
maka‘ainana
had been disenfranchised by the Bayonet Constitution of 1887. They could no longer vote, but Thurston and Dole could not keep them and their side of the issue away from Blount. Even with no more notice than they’d had, the commoners were able to give Blount petitions with more than seven thousand names on them protesting against annexation. To counter this landslide, Thurston suggested to Dole that he should collect a number of proannexation common natives and parade them before the special commissioner to bolster their case. Dole’s response was that the only way to accomplish this would be to first convince some natives that annexation was the best and only improvement they could expect over the provisional government, and then “pay their expenses.” It was probably too late for such a scheme to succeed, anyway, because Blount had already gotten an earful from the Hawaiian Patriotic League and other royalist groups.

In his assessment of the events of January 14–17, Blount was critical of Stevens’s overhasty recognition of the provisional government, and noted that the sailors and marines of the
Boston
had been positioned in the city not for the protection of American property but to support the ongoing coup. Stevens was recalled, but not before his daughter accidentally drowned. Least sorry to see Stevens depart was the queen, who referred to his bereavement as a judgment from God. With Stevens gone, Secretary of State Gresham awarded his credentials to Blount, making him both special commissioner with paramount powers, and minister as well. Blount quickly realized that representing the interest of the United States might well conflict with his interest in getting to the bottom of the Hawaiian situation, and he resigned Stevens’s job as soon as it was given him. One Panama hat was quite enough for him to wear in Honolulu.

When the Blount Report was made public in July, its shock waves rattled all the interested parties. To the extent that Thurston and Dole relied on Blount’s Southern heritage to color his view of the racial component of the situation, the Georgia planter blasted their hopes without mercy. After stating what credit the native Hawaiians reflected upon themselves with their high literacy rate, Blount went on to characterize the natives as “over-generous, hospitable, almost free from revenge, very courteous—especially to females. Their talent for oratory and the higher branches of mathematics is unusually marked.… The small amount of thieving and absence of beggary are more marked than among the best races in the world. What they are capable of under fair conditions is an unsolved problem.”
17
In his report, Blount did not venture to advise President Cleveland on a course of action. His conclusions, however, were unmistakable: “The undoubted sentiment of the people is for the Queen, against the provisional government and against annexation. A majority of the whites, especially Americans, is for annexation.”

BOOK: Captive Paradise: A History of Hawaii
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