Chapter 8 test Flashcards

1
Q

How did Native Hawaiians view the ʻāina?

A

They believed the land belonged to the Gods and should be treated with respect and cared for, no one owned it. They thought everyone should have access to land and resources.

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2
Q

How did foreigners view land?

A

Foreigners saw land as a commodity. They thought land should be used for personal gain.

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3
Q

What were the pressures that made certain missionaries appoint a Board, who where the missionaries and what was the Board?

A

The pressures were that in the 1840s, sandalwood and fur trades had come to an end, whaling was declining, Hawaiʻi was in an economic slump. Commercial agriculture required vast expanses of land and many laborers to produce crops at a profit. The missionaries who pressured the King were Gerrit Judd and William Richards and the board was “Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles”, or the Land Commission.

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4
Q

Who was “the King” during this time?

A

Kamehameha III

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5
Q

Know which groups the Land Commission decided had rights to land

A

After thoroughly studying Hawaiʻi’s land system, they gave vested rights to the king, the chiefs, and the makaʻāinana

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6
Q

What does Māhele mean and what and when was the Māhele or the Great Māhele?

A

Māhele means to divide. The Māhele happened in 1848 and it was a division of lands of Hawaiʻi among several groups. In January, 1848, the King divided all land of the kingdom between the crown and 251 chiefs

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7
Q

What was the original proposal for land division that was never adopted?

A

The land was divided into thirds: one-third to the King, one-third to the chiefs, and one-third to the makaʻāinana

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8
Q

The Māhele did not automatically grant title to chiefs, so how did chiefs get title?

A

They had to present a claim to the Land of Commission, pay a commutation fee to the government, then they got the land after the King signed the land title.

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9
Q

How did the King divide his lands?

A

His private lands (Crown Lands) and land for government. Many chiefs followed his example and gave up land they had claimed during the Māhele to the government. The government ended up with a large amount of land.

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10
Q

When was the Kuleana act of 1850 passed?

A

i KNOW you know this, the title gives it away, but incase she just puts “The Kuleana Act” or something, you want to know. SO, it was 1850.

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11
Q

What did the Kuleana Act of 1850 do?

A

It authorized the Land Commission to award fee simple title to Hawaiian tenants who occupied and cultivated any portion of the Crown, government, or Konohiki lands.

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12
Q

What happened the same year the Kuleana Act of 1850 was passed?

A

Legislature passed a law allowing foreigners who lived in Hawaiʻi (resident foreigners) the same rights as Native Hawaiians to own and sell land. Foreigners could buy and sell land for profit, and all of a sudden, competition for land was fierce.

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13
Q

What was the process for makaʻāinana to get land claim?

A

They had to their land surveyed, file a claim with Land Commission, prove the land being claimed was cultivated for the purpose of earning a living, attend a Land Commission hearing, and have at least two witnesses to confirm their land was used for cultivating and making a living and that the boundaries described were correct.

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14
Q

How were people notified of the process to get land claim?

A

Notices were placed in news papers and churches to inform the makaʻāinana of their rights

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15
Q

Was the process to get land claim easy for the makaʻāinana?

A

No. They were often unfamiliar with the process of how to gain ownership of land and the process was complicated and did not always work.

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16
Q

When was the deadline for the mākaʻāinana to get land claim?

A

1854

17
Q

Did many mākaʻāinana make the deadline?

A

No. When the deadline passed, very few people had made it.

18
Q

Were any extensions allowed to the deadline for land claim for makaʻāinana?

A

No. Those who failed to apply for their kuleana awards by 1854 lost their claim forever.

19
Q

What happened to chiefs who did not make the deadline for land claim?

A

They were given extensions up to 1895, so with the extension, almost all chiefs and konohiki, or their heirs, eventually received title to their land.

20
Q

What happened as a result of the Māhele and Kuleana Act of 1850?

A

The Native Hawaiians were dispossessed of their land. 26% of Native Hawaiian adult males received land awards, leaving the other 74%, children and women without their ʻāina.

21
Q

What started happening to the land after the Kuleana Act of 1850?

A

Large areas of land were being cleared of trees to make plantations on. Resources like access to fresh water, access to land to hunt or harvest, and firewood were cut off to Native Hawaiians.

22
Q

What happened to the makaʻāinana with no place to live?

A

Many became part of an unpaid labor force used by chiefs and foreigners on large land holdings, others started working on sugar plantations, and others became homeless wanderers. Even those who got kuleana grant lost their land if they were not able to pay tax on it. Many foreigners began to buy land at an alarming rate.

23
Q

Did the Land Commission reach the goal of giving one-third of the land to the makaʻāinana? Why or why not?

A

They did not succeed because of pressure from foreigners (mostly on the King)