Leaving Paradise: Indigenous Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest, 1787-1898

Leaving Paradise: Indigenous Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest, 1787-1898

Leaving Paradise: Indigenous Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest, 1787-1898

Leaving Paradise: Indigenous Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest, 1787-1898

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Overview

Native Hawaiians arrived in the Pacific Northwest as early as 1787. Some went out of curiosity; many others were recruited as seamen or as workers in the fur trade. By the end of the nineteenth century more than a thousand men and women had journeyed across the Pacific, but the stories of these extraordinary individuals have gone largely unrecorded in Hawaiian or Western sources. Through painstaking archival work in British Columbia, Oregon, California, and Hawaii, Jean Barman and Bruce Watson pieced together what is known about these sailors, laborers, and settlers from 1787 to 1898, the year the Hawaiian Islands were annexed to the United States. In addition, the authors include descriptive biographical entries on some eight hundred Native Hawaiians, a remarkable and invaluable complement to their narrative history.

"Kanakas" (as indigenous Hawaiians were called) formed the backbone of the fur trade along with French Canadians and Scots. As the trade waned and most of their countrymen returned home, several hundred men with indigenous wives raised families and formed settlements throughout the Pacific Northwest. Today their descendants remain proud of their distinctive heritage. The resourcefulness of these pioneers in the face of harsh physical conditions and racism challenges the early Western perception that Native Hawaiians were indolent and easily exploited.

Scholars and others interested in a number of fields—Hawaiian history, Pacific Islander studies, Western U.S. and Western Canadian history, diaspora studies—will find Leaving Paradise an indispensable work.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780824892784
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press, The
Publication date: 12/31/2021
Pages: 528
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Jean Barman (Author)
Jean Barman writes about British Columbia history. A fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, she is the author of, among other books, The West beyond the West: A History of British Columbia (University of Toronto Press).

Bruce McIntyre Watson (Author)
Bruce McIntyre Watson is a Vancouver, BC-based historian whose 3-volume biographical dictionary of the fur trade in the Pacific Northwest published in 2010. In 2000 he and coauthor Jean Barman received the Charles Gates Memorial Award for best article published in Pacific Northwest Quarterly from the Washington State Historical Society.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

1 Leaving Paradise 1

2 Maritime Sojourners 27

3 The Astoria Adventure 34

4 In the Service of the Hudson's Bay Company 57

5 Making a Life in the Fur Trade 84

6 Hawaiians in the Missionary Advance 110

7 Boundary Making 133

8 North of the 49th Parallel 162

9 Moving across the Generations 191

Hawaiians and Other Polynesians in the Pacific Northwest 219

Glossary 435

Notes 441

Sources 467

General Index 491

Index of Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest 497

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