Showing 639 results

Authority record

Professional and Vocational Licensing Division

  • Corporate body
  • 1959

The reorganization of the government of Hawaii, which took place following statehood, placed 27 independent boards and commissions under the Department of Treasury and Regulation for administrative purposes. This permitted consolidation of many administrative and housekeeping functions at the Division level and permitted the individual boards to concentrate on their primary functions of examining and licensing. These boards and commissions are presently consolidated within the Professional and Vocational Licensing Division of the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs.

Property Technical Office

  • Corporate body
  • 1932-1980

The Property Technical Office was created to take over the functions of the Property Assessment Division, Department of Taxation.
Predecessor agencies included: Bureau of Tax Maps, Territorial Surveyor's Office, 1896-1947; Bureau of Taxation Maps, Office of Tax Commissioner of the Territory of Hawaii, 1947-1959; Real Property Tax Office, Department of Taxation, 1960-1961.

In 1981, the power of real property taxation was transferred to the counties, per Article XVIII, Section 6 of the State Constitution, effective July 1, 1981.

Pu‘uku

  • Corporate body

Public Utilities Commission

  • Corporate body

The Public Utilities Commission was established by Act 89, Laws of the Territory of Hawaii, 1913.

In 1976 the Commission was placed under the administrative powers of the Department of Budget and Finance.

Public Works Division

  • Corporate body
  • 1959

The 1900 Organic Act for the Territory of Hawaii abolished the Office of the Minister of Interior and empowered the Governor of Hawaii to appoint a Superintendent of Public Works. The Superintendent of Public Works succeeded to the powers and duties of the Minister of Interior relating to streets, highways, harbor improvements, wharves, landings, waterworks, railways, electric light and power, telephone lines, fences, pounds, brands, weights and measures, fires and fireproof buildings, parks and cemeteries, and other grounds and lands previously under the control and management of the Minister of Interior. The Superintendent also assumed the powers and duties of the Minister of Finance and Collector General of Customs relating to pilots and harbor masters.

The Reorganization Act of 1959 abolished the Office of Superintendent of Public Works and its functions passed on to the Public Works Engineer.

Queen Kapi‘olani

  • Person
  • 1834-12-31 / 1899-06-24

Julia Napelakapuokakaʻe Kapi‘olani was born on December 31, 1834, in Hilo, Hawaiʻi. Her father was high chief Kūhiō, and her mother Kinoiki was the daughter of Mōʻī (King) Kaumualiʻi of Kauaʻi who negotiated peace with Kamehameha Paiea to unify the islands in 1810. Her first marriage was to Bennet Namakeha – a man thirty-five years her senior – making her an aunt of Mōʻī wahine (Queen) Emma. She served as the wet nurse to Prince Albert, the son of Mōʻī Kamehameha IV and Mōʻī wahine Emma, who died when he was only four years old. Kapiʻolani married David Kalākaua in 1863, the first postmaster general of the Hawaiian Kingdom.

In 1882, Mōʻī wahine Kapi‘olani took legal custody of 11-year-old Kamāli‘i kāne (Prince) Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaole, and his two brothers—Kamāli‘i kāne David Laʻamea Kawānanakoa and Kamāli‘i kāne Edward Abnel Keliʻiahonui after their mother had passed.

According to the 1864 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, if a king died without naming a successor to the throne, the legislature must elect a new king from a pool of candidates of noble birth. Thus, David Kalākaua was elected to replace the deceased MōʻīLunalilo in 1874, making Kapiʻolani the Queen Consort to King Kalākaua. Kapiʻolani was a visible monarch, often traveling throughout the kingdom. In 1887, en route to England to attend Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee celebrations, Kapiʻolani made headlines when President and Mrs. Grover Cleveland hosted a formal state dinner at the White House in her honor. She also visited schools, hospitals, and other public institutions in San Francisco, Washington D.C, Boston, and New York. As the first queen to visit the United States, her activities received extensive coverage in various U.S. newspapers.

Queen Kapiʻolani reigned for nearly seventeen years and was much beloved by the Hawaiian people. The king named Kapiʻolani Park in Waikīkī in honor of his queen. She visited Kalauapapa in 1884 to learn how she could assist those who were diagnosed with leprosy and exiled there, and she raised the funds to build the Kapiʻolani Home for Girls whose parents had leprosy. Though childless, the Queen cherished the Hawaiian family and the role of mother. In 1890, she established the Kapiʻolani Maternity Home, which is today the Kapiʻolani Medical Center for Women and Children.

In 1891, King Kalākaua passed away at the age of fifty-four. Since the royal couple bore no children, the king’s sister Lili‘uokalani succeeded the throne. Mōʻī wahine Kapiʻolani was sixty-four years old when she died on June 24, 1899, at Pualeilani, her modest home in Waikiki.

Ralph Simpson Kuykendall

  • Person
  • 1885-1963

Appointed executive secretary of the Hawaiian Historical Commission that was tasked with prodcuing a general history of Hawaiʻi from 1778-1893. The outcome was the three-volume series "Hawaiian Kingdom."

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