In 1881,
King David Kalākaua selected Wilcox and two other part-Hawaiian young men to study at the
Royal Military Academy at
Turin in the
Kingdom of Italy as a part of the
Education of Hawaiian Youths Abroad program. By the time he completed his training in 1885, he achieved the rank of sublieutenant of
artillery. Impressed with his military skills, Italian officials sent Wilcox to the Royal Application School for Engineer and Artillery Officers.
Planned rebellion of 1888 In 1888, the Reform Party (which later became the
Hawaii Republican Party) took power in the
Hawaiian Kingdom. Through what was called the
Bayonet Constitution, they removed most political authority from the monarch, and placed income and property requirements on voters limiting the electorate to only wealthy native Hawaiians, Americans, and Europeans. The Reform Party ended costly programs such as Wilcox's training in Italy. On August 29, 1887, Wilcox received his orders to return home. Returning to Hawaii in October with his wife
Gina Sobrero, a baroness closely related to Italy's
Colonna family, he began a short-lived career as a surveyor. He had now lost confidence that Kalākaua was strong enough to protect the interests of the Hawaiian people. Wilcox along with Charles Wilson and Sam Nowlein, planned a
coup d'état to replace Kalākaua with his sister
Liliuokalani, but the plot was never executed. On February 11, 1888, Wilcox left Hawaii intending to return to Italy with his wife.
Rebellion of 1889 Instead of returning to
Italy, Wilcox took up residence in
San Francisco, California, and worked as a surveyor while his wife Gina earned extra money teaching
French and
Italian. When he decided to return to Hawaii in the spring of 1889, Gina refused to go with him, and took their daughter back to Italy. Wilcox planned and this time executed another attempt to force King Kalākaua to sign a new constitution to replace the
1887 Document on July 30, 1889. Kalākaua, apparently aware of the plot, avoided the palace, afraid that the rebellion would replace him with his sister Liliuokalani. Thus stymied, Wilcox was finally confronted by the
Honolulu Rifles militia unit. After a pitched battle, Wilcox surrendered. In October 1889, he was tried for treason before judge
Albert Francis Judd but acquitted by the jury. Being one of the few leaders to stand up to the conservative royalist Reform Party earned him respect among the people. The American minister
John L. Stevens, who called Wilcox a "half breed", wrote: "The trial is tending plainly to show that the Hawaiians are numerously in sympathy with Wilcox." He helped form a new political party called the "National Reform Party" which advocated restoring power to the monarch. Wilcox was again elected to the royal legislature where he served from 1890 to 1893 representing the island of
Oahu. However, the conservatives in the original Reform Party, backed by the economic resources of the
"Big Five" industrial corporations remained in power. On November 1, 1892, Queen Liliuokalani appointed a new cabinet, and two hours later the Legislature (including Wilcox) voted to remove them from office. On November 8, 1892, a new government acceptable to the Legislature was formed. Wilcox no longer directly attacked the Queen, but advocated modernization, and was quoted in the
"San Francisco Examiner" that "...we should take some steps to secure commercial and political protection from some foreign country." By the end of 1892,
"The Liberal" expressed support for the Queen. On January 12 another vote of no confidence allowed the Queen to appoint another cabinet of monarchists. On January 14 Liliuokalani suspended the Legislature and told the cabinet to sign a new proposed constitution that would restore political power back to her. The cabinet advised against it, and delayed any action. On January 17, 1893, the
Committee of Safety, backed by the Honolulu Rifles militia unit took over the palace by force. During this time Wilcox, who was then a politician, was requested by Liliuokalani for his previous training in
artillery to be put in command of the field pieces of the Royal Guard as they prepared themselves to defend the Queen. Before any shots were fired, Queen Liliuokalani surrendered to avoid bloodshed.
Rebellion of 1895 Following the overthrow,
The Liberal resumed publication January 25, 1893. The English language editor Clarence Ashford supported the
Provisional Government of Hawaii, and expressed the view that the Queen had brought about her own downfall. On January 28 the paper argued for becoming a state of the United States, but protested the lack of any native Hawaiians as leaders of the new government. Neither the monarchy nor the provisional government was a representative democracy. Editorials in February proposed becoming part of the state of
California, which would enable popular elections. However, the "Big Five" who dominated the economy wanted to avoid statehood, since as a territory they would not be subject to the American labor laws. They depended on cheap labor for their
sugarcane plantations in Hawaii for example. By March 1893 American President
Grover Cleveland decided against annexation anyway.
The Liberal attacked the efforts of
Princess Kaiulani when she travelled to America to argue for supporting re-instating the monarchy. Wilcox applied for a position in the new government but was denied. The newspaper shut down on April 15, 1893. Rumors circulated that Wilcox was preparing to proclaim a liberal republic. The leaders of the overthrow proclaimed their own
Republic of Hawaii on July 4, 1894. By the end of the year, royalists were planning a counter-revolution to restore Liliuokalani. The key conspirators were
Sam Nowlein, head of the Queen's guard,
Charles T. Gulick, advisor to both Kalākaua and Liliuokalani, and
William H. Rickard, a sugar planter of British parentage. They needed a military leader, and approached Wilcox. At first he hesitated, but since he was frustrated with lack of progress on annexation as well as spurned by the republic, he agreed to lead the forces into battle. Royalist and republican forces clashed at the base of
Diamond Head on January 6 and 7, 1895, and in Mōiliili on January 7.
Mānoa was the scene of battle on January 9. Casualties were minor, and only
C. L. Carter, a member of a prominent island family, was killed. The royalists were quickly routed and Wilcox spent several days in hiding before being captured. All royalist leaders had been arrested by January 16, when Liliuokalani was taken into custody at
Washington Place and imprisoned in
Iolani Palace. Wilcox was arrested and tried for treason. This time he was convicted on February 23, 1895, and was sentenced to death with five other leaders. Some were freed due to giving testimony against the others, and his sentence was commuted to 35 years in prison. On January 1, 1898, he was pardoned by
Sanford B. Dole, President of the Republic, who had previously pressured Liliʻuokalani to
abdicate in exchange for his life and freedom, as well as for the lives of the others who had been sentenced to death. ==Congress==