Secretary of State Daniel Webster
A key provisioning spot for American whaling ships, fertile ground for American
protestant missionaries, and a new source of sugar cane production, Hawaii's
economy became increasingly integrated with the United States. An 1875 trade
reciprocity treaty further linked the two countries and U.S. sugar plantation
owners from the United States came to dominate the economy and politics of the
islands. When Queen Liliuokalani moved to establish a stronger monarchy,
Americans under the leadership of Samuel Dole deposed her in 1893. The planters'
belief that a coup and annexation by the United States would remove the threat
of a devastating tariff on their sugar also spurred them to action. The
administration of President Benjamin Harrison encouraged the takeover, and
dispatched sailors from the USS Boston to the islands to surround the royal
palace. The U.S. minister to Hawaii, John L.
Stevens, worked closely with the new government.
U.S. Minister to Hawaii, John L. Stevens
Dole sent a delegation to Washington in 1894 seeking annexation, but the new
President, Grover Cleveland, opposed annexation and tried
to restore the Queen. Dole declared Hawaii an independent republic. Spurred by
the nationalism aroused by the Spanish-American
War, the United States annexed Hawaii in 1898 at the urging of President
William McKinley. Hawaii was made a territory in 1900, and Dole became its first
governor. Racial attitudes and party politics in the United States deferred
statehood until a bipartisan compromise linked Hawaii's status to Alaska, and
both became states in 1959.