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Welcome to the home of Sun, Sand and Fantastic Basketball.
We at the University of Hawai'i are proud to have the
opportunity to share with you Basketball in Paradise and
we hope you get an opportunity to see us play this year
either on the mainland or when you visit us here on the
Island.
- Mahalo, Coach Riley Wallace
HISTORY... The exact date is unknown and probably
will remain so forever. But sometime after the beginning
of the Christian era, Polynesians first set foot on these
islands. Linguistic and cultural evidence suggest that the
first inhabitants came from the Marquesas Group, to the
north of Tahiti.
During the 13th and 14th centuries, waves of immigrants
from Tahiti overwhelmed and absorbed the original people.
Since the earliest Hawaiians were possibly somewhat
smaller than the later immigrants, they may form the basis
for the legends of the menehunes, who were pictured by the
later Hawaiians as hardworking elves.
Captain James Cook, the great Pacific explorer, happened
upon the islands during his third voyage in 1778. Hawaii's
long isolation ended at that moment. Soon, King Kamehameha
the Great embarked on his successful campaign to unite the
islands into one kingdom. At about the same time, Hawaii
assumed importance in the east-west fur trade and later as
the center for the Pacific whaling industry. In 1820, the
brig Thaddeus from Boston arrived with the first
missionary families.
Change came at a rapid pace as both education and commerce
assumed growing importance. The old Hawaiian culture
disappeared rapidly under the onslaught of new ways, new
peoples, and new diseases, to which the previously
isolated Hawaiians were all too susceptible. Whaling and
the provisioning of the whaling fleet brought new money to
the island economy. At times, as many as 500 whaling ships
wintered in Hawaiian ports, principally Lahaina and
Honolulu.
In 1835, the first commercial production of sugar cane
began and this crop took on ever-increasing economic
importance, especially after the decline of the great
whaling fleets. Native Hawaiians did not take kindly to
the tedious labor of a plantation worker and, in any case,
the native population had been seriously depleted by
disease. Thus, there began the importation of labor from
Asia and the Philippines and other areas of the world. It
is this varied population that gave rise to the immense
variety of Hawaii's present inhabitants.
Threatened constantly by European nations eager to add
Hawaii to their empires, sugar planters and American
businessmen began to seek annexation by the United State.
This, too, would give them the advantages of a sugar
market free of tariff duties. Finally, a treaty of
reciprocity was negotiated in 1875 and this brought new
prosperity to Hawaii. American wealth poured into the
islands seeking investment.
Political control by Hawaiian royalty and the growing
influence of Americans began to cause conflict. In 1889,
there was an uprising of the native islanders against the
constitution which had been forced on King Kalakaua two
years earlier. The rebellion was suppressed.
In 1893, with
Queen Liliuokalani on the throne, the Americans formed a
Committee of Safety and declared the monarchy ended. In
1894, the Republic of Hawaii was established. On August
12, 1898, the government of the Republic transferred
sovereignty to the United States. Hawaii became a
territory of the United States in 1900.
The pattern of growth then began to accelerate even more
rapidly. The U.S. Navy set up its giant Pacific
headquarters at Pearl Harbor and the Army built a huge
garrison at Schofield Barracks. Pineapple, other crops,
cattle ranching, and tourism slowly began to take on
greater importance in the island economy.
The attack on Pearl Harbor marked America's entry into
World War II and Hawaii and its citizens played a major
role in the conflict.
The postwar period saw many rapid changes with the
descendants of plantation laborers rising to the highest
prominent in business, labor, and government.
Hawaii proved eager to take on the full responsibilities
of statehood. Under the leadership of Hawaii's last
delegate to Congress, John A. Burns, the 86th Congress
approved statehood and the bill was signed into law by
President Dwight D. Eisenhower on March 18, 1959. Hawaii
was admitted as the 50th state of the union on August 21,
1959. |