As the missionaries turned to aggression the political situation became increasingly unfavorable to the Greeks. On June 30, 1887, the missionary group called the
Hawaiian League forced the bayonet constitution on King Kalākaua. In 1891 King Kalākaua died and his sister, Queen Liliʻuokalani, ascended the throne. On January 17, 1893, Queen Liliʻuokalani was overthrown by businessmen and the missionary elite. George Lycurgus was arrested and fined for
disturbing the peace and distributing alcohol without a
liquor license. He believed the ulterior motive for his arrest was for his support of the monarchy. His brother, John, had difficulties obtaining licenses for various industries. Under the new government
hula was banned and public concerts of
Hawaiian music were outlawed. But private performances of Hawaiian music were legal and George Lycurgus hired the National Band to play at his hotel,
Sans Souci, to the annoyance of pro-government supporters. The Greeks took part in opposing the Provisional Government and Republic. A number joined the counter-revolutionaries plotting to restore the monarchy. Hawaii's
Schuetzen Club was taken over by German, Austrian, Greek, and British royalists and transformed into a
front organization to train counter-revolutionaries. The uprising was put down swiftly and royalists were captured and arrested, including some Greeks, of which two were exiled. ==Killing of Peter Camarinos==