After the
overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom in January 1893, the
Provisional Government of Hawaii set out to effect Hawaii's speedy annexation by the United States. A commission, led by
Lorrin A. Thurston, was sent to
Washington, D.C. to negotiate an annexation treaty with US President
Benjamin Harrison. A delegation led by Princess
Victoria Kaiulani also went to Washington to protest the overthrow and to
lobby against annexation. Harrison and the commission signed a treaty of annexation, which was sent to the
US Senate for ratification. However, the Senate did not act before March 4, 1893, when Harrison's term ended and
Grover Cleveland took office. The new president was an
anti-imperialist and strongly opposed to annexation. He withdrew the treaty from consideration, and ordered a
congressional investigation into the events surrounding the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy. After receiving
the committee's first report, Cleveland recommended the restoration of Queen
Liliuokalani. This did not go over well even with his own party. Eventually a bipartisan congressional vote called for a "hands off" policy in regards to internal events in Hawaii. Further investigation by Congress led to the
Morgan Report, which established that US troops in Hawaii had been completely neutral during the overthrow, and exonerated the US military from any accusations of complicity. {{multiple image The Provisional Government convened a constitutional convention to establish the
Republic of Hawaii. Thurston was urged to become the nation's first president but he was worried his brazen personality would damage the cause of annexation. The more conservative
Sanford B. Dole, former Supreme Court Justice and friend of Queen Liliuokalani, was elected as the first and only president of the new government. During the
Spanish–American War, Hawaii's strategic location relative to the
Philippines made it especially important to American interests, as argued by naval strategist
Alfred Thayer Mahan. This and fears that the
Empire of Japan would seize control of the islands provided momentum for the proponents of annexation. On July 4, 1898, the US Congress passed a
joint resolution to provide for annexing of Hawaii to the United States. The resolution, commonly known as the
Newlands Resolution (named after US Representative
Francis G. Newlands), was signed into law three days later by President McKinley. The Newlands Resolution states: The resolution took effect on August 12, 1898, and a formal ceremony marking the transfer of Hawaiian
state sovereignty to the United States was held that day on the steps of the
ʻIolani Palace in
Honolulu. The
Hawaiian flag was lowered and the
American flag was raised in its place. depicting the United States, its territories, and US-controlled regions as a classroom with belligerent Philippines, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Cuba The Resolution also provided for the establishment of a five-member commission to study what new laws were needed regarding the management and disposition of public lands in Hawaii, and to develop a frame of government for the islands. Its members were Sanford B. Dole (who, under the terms of the Resolution, retained the powers he previously exercised as President of Hawaii), Walter F. Frear (who likewise remained Judge of the Supreme Court of Hawaii), US Senators
Shelby M. Cullom (R-Illinois) and
John T. Morgan (D-Alabama), and US Representative
Robert R. Hitt (R-Illinois). The commission's final report was submitted to Congress for a debate which lasted over a year. Many
Southern Representatives and Senators raised objections to establishing an elected territorial government in Hawaii, as doing so would open a pathway for the
admission of a state with a "non-white" majority population at a time when strict "
Jim Crow laws" enforced white political control throughout the American South. == Organic Act ==