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Collection of Songs Composed By Her Royal Highness Princess Liliuokalani. San Francisco: Pacific Music Company. OCLC 68697922. Liliuokalani; Gillett, Dorothy K.; Smith, Barbara Barnard (1999). The Queen's Songbook. Honolulu: Hui Hānai. ISBN 978-0-9616738-7-1. OCLC 42648468.
Prior to the 1906 earthquake, the address was an apartment building called The Cecil. [9] After the earthquake and resulting fire, it was rebuilt as a theater and known by many names over the years, including the Kamokila, Fack's II, [10] The Royal Hawaiian Theater, [11] The Bush Street Music Hall, The Balalaika Music Hall, The Troubadour North, [12] in 1970, finally becoming The Boarding ...
Flying the Hawaiian royal standard, the ship docked in San Francisco the evening of November 28. A formal reception by local dignitaries, along with a 21-gun salute from the Alcatraz Citadel, took place the next morning. [34]
Admission was by printed invitation only. The royal family sat at the head of the casket, and Kalākaua's cabinet ministers sat at the foot of the casket. The entire service and its music was in the Hawaiian language. As with the service that had been held in San Francisco, the clergy reading was 1 Corinthians 15:20–55.
On January 17, 1893, the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown and the Provisional Government was established until a treaty of annexation could be ratified by the United States Congress. [26] Pratt continued as Hawaiian Consul in San Francisco under the Provisional Government under the presidency of Sanford B. Dole.
Rosenberg traveled from San Francisco to Hawaii, possibly on a whaler, arriving in Oahu sometime before December 1886. [1] [7] At that time, Hawaii was a predominantly Christian kingdom; [1] Christian missionaries had successfully converted a large segment of the population after traditional Hawaiian religion was suppressed by the monarchy. [5]
"Betrothal of Royal Hawaiians", published in The San Francisco Call, 1898. Records indicate that there may have been a written agreement of betrothal with Kawānanakoa, that was quickly aborted. An unsubstantiated announcement dated February 3, 1898, was printed in The San Francisco Call and later reprinted in newspapers across the United ...
The City of Sydney arrived at San Francisco during a rain storm a week later, and Kalākaua's party ensconced themselves in the Palace Hotel. [30] On arrival of this port the "royal standard" was flown on the mainmast, and acknowledged by the 21-gun salute, and this recurred at subsequent ports entered by the king's suite during the trip. [31 ...