. This was the site of the 1847 grand luau attended by ten thousand guests. Following the restoration of sovereignty at Thomas Square, King Kamehameha III held an afternoon thanksgiving service at
Kawaiahaʻo Church where he uttered the phrase:
Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻĀina i ka Pono ("The life of the land is preserved in the righteousness of the people"). This phrase was adopted in 1959 as the motto of the state of Hawaii. The king declared a ten-day holiday and the entire community including foreigners and
native Hawaiians rejoiced in festivities with a lavish
luau of suckling
pig, fish and
poi. The event was later made into an annual holiday and was observed by his successor King
Kamehameha IV (1855–1864). During the fourth anniversary of the restoration in 1847, King Kamehameha III and his wife
Queen Kalama hosted a grand luau at their summer palace,
Kaniakapupu, attended by an estimated ten thousand guests. During the latter part of the reign of King
Kamehameha V (1864–1872) the celebration was deemed inappropriate by the king and his ministers since it brought back unpleasant memories of the British occupation by Paulet, and the official holiday was discontinued. The holiday was still being officially sanctioned in 1865 and 1866. No public celebration was held in 1867, and it ceased to be officially observed. There are also later assertions that the holiday was dropped "to suit the delicate feelings of a few Englishmen who did not like the memory of these events revived". However, the anniversary was still remembered by people in private. In 1872, the king replaced the holiday with
Kamehameha Day (on June 11) to honor his grandfather
Kamehameha I who had conquered and united the Hawaiian Islands in 1810. This is the only holiday from the time of the Hawaiian monarchy that remains an official holiday of the state of Hawaii. The 1890 session of the Hawaiian legislature briefly restored the date as a national holiday effective July 31, 1891, during the reign of Queen
Liliuokalani. In 1893, the Hawaiian monarchy was
overthrown and the queen yielded her authority to the United States government under protest. The
Provisional Government of Hawaii, which was established as an interim regime while a treaty of annexation was being pushed through the United States Congress, abolished the holiday. Private observance of the fiftieth anniversary on July 31, 1893, was watched by the
oligarchical government with an air of suspicion, while royalists and supporters of the deposed queen hoped in vain for another restoration to occur. After 1893, the holiday continued to be observed privately by loyalists of the monarchy as a form of
opposition and resistance. By the time the
Territory of Hawaii was organized in 1898 the holiday had become a historical footnote. == Modern-day observation ==