Hawai'i Digital Newspaper Project

Hawai'i Digital Newspaper Project http://hdnp.hawaii.edu The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Hamilton Library has been participating in National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP) since 2008.

It has digitized and made available online 15 of Hawaiʻi's newspapers, with new content added quarterly.

03/04/2022

On this day, March 3, 1906, a new roller-skating rink opened in Honolulu on Queen Street between Fort and Alakea streets, providing entertainment for skaters and spectators alike!

Find more fun articles from Hawaiʻi's past with Chronicling America’s free full-text, public domain newspaper archive online at https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
Need internet access? We've got you covered at the library!

03/29/2020

Today —28 March—in Hawaiian History [1893]: The English-language "Hawaiian Star" newspaper is launched as the official voice of the Provisional Government of Hawaiʻi by the American businessman, Joseph B. Atherton.

Atherton, called in 1903 by the N. Y. Times "the Richest and Most Influential Sugar Operator In the Islands," arrived in Honolulu from Boston in 1858, working for Castle and Cooke. He was one of the Committee of 13 that led the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy on 17 January 1893.

The Star's first editor, Dr. John Strayer McGrew, was known as the "father of annexation" for his early and constant push for the taking of Hawai'i. He arrived in the Islands from Ohio in 1866. He served as President of the Annexation Club of Hawaiʻi.

A 29 March 1893 letter of the Honolulu pastor Rev. Charles Hyde, Principal at Ke Kula Kahunapule o ka Pakipika Akau (The North Pacific Missionary Institute) to Judson Smith in Boston reports:

“A new annexation paper has been started ʻThe Hawaiian Starʻ to offset the old evening paper “The Bulletin” which is in opposition to the present regime. Some of the students have been acting as carriers for the Hawaiian (annexation) daily paper: but the natives don’t like it, wont take it, wont give their names if offered to them gratuitously.”

In 1912, the paper merged with Wallace Farrington’s "Evening Bulletin" to become Star- Bulletin.

a link to the complete first issue can be found here: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82015415/

Happy new year!
01/01/2020

Happy new year!

Mele Kalikimaka and Merry Christmas!
12/25/2019

Mele Kalikimaka and Merry Christmas!

12/20/2019
11/28/2019
06/26/2019

ICYMI: The Hawai‘i Digital Newspaper Project ( on Twitter) has more or less wound down, but still occasionally tweets and posts items originally published a century or two ago in the Islands' newspapers. Explore and find your own favorites at https://hdnpblog.wordpress.com/

"Words in Motion: Sharing Writing and Cultural Perspectives E Ho`olauna Kākou"Tuesday, January 22, 11:30am - 12:30pmBuil...
01/15/2019

"Words in Motion: Sharing Writing and Cultural Perspectives E Ho`olauna Kākou"
Tuesday, January 22, 11:30am - 12:30pm
Building 7, Room 521, Honolulu Campus, 874 Dillingham Blvd. Honolulu, HI 96817

Come learn about the rich cultural heritage of Hawaii’s only Japanese-language weekday newspaper, the Hawaii Hochi. Share in the discovery of publishing trends through the years. And, meet the staff responsible for this newspaper’s success.

Brenda Coston, (808) 847-9803, [email protected]
Event Sponsor: Language Arts, Honolulu Community College

"The four-to-eight page Polynesian was published weekly in Honolulu in English and some Hawaiian from June 6, 1840 to De...
12/29/2018

"The four-to-eight page Polynesian was published weekly in Honolulu in English and some Hawaiian from June 6, 1840 to December 11, 1841 (first series), and again from May 18, 1844 to February 6, 1864 (second series). James Jackson Jarves ran the first series with a combination of mission support, advertising, and subscriptions. However, the paper was not profitable, and he shut it down after only two and a half years. Jarves reestablished the paper under the same title in May 1844. Two months later, the Polynesian became the "Official Journal of the Hawaiian Government" and remained so until 1861, with Charles E. Hitchcock, Edwin O. Hall, Charles G. Hopkins, and Abraham Fornander as subsequent editors. The Polynesian was the leading paper on O'ahu in the mid-1800s.

A commercial enterprise aimed at Honolulu's foreign (mostly American) residents, the Polynesian's first series held "Pro bono publico" (for the public good) as its first principle and claimed to be open to all opinions--as long as they were of "an elevated character, avoiding scurrility . . . or any thing [sic] tending to excite without improving the community." The paper was among the first in the islands to feature puff pieces, which were essentially free advertisements posing as articles and promoting products or industries featured in adjoining paid advertisements.

In 1844, Jarves revived the Polynesian with the hope of building it into a financially viable enterprise. In the first issue of this second series, he presented the Polynesian as an independent, impartial paper aimed at foreign residents. Soon after, however, King Kamehameha III commissioned the Polynesian as the official voice of the kingdom, keeping Jarves on as printer and editor. Thereafter it served as the principal vehicle for publishing all enacted laws and criminal codes as well as the policies of Kamehameha III and his successor, King Kamehameha IV. The paper continued to feature local and international news, business and shipping news, police reports, editorials, and fiction. Its size depended on the amount of newsprint available at the time.

Although government sponsored, the Polynesian was ideologically an American haven. Jarves's ethnocentrism ran through his journalism, and he was not afraid to use editorials to influence public opinion. Jarves upheld Western culture as superior and discounted the Hawaiian language as not worth preserving. He promoted Christianity, agriculture, and commerce; endorsed English as the language of instruction in schools; advocated for the institution of private land ownership--the event known as the Great Mahele--as the key to "preserving" the native Hawaiian population; and encouraged the creation of an American-style constitution for Hawai'i. Between government sponsorship and Jarves's editorializing, the Polynesian exemplified the many conflicts, contradictions, and tensions that characterized Hawai'i during this period.

In 1848 Jarves left Hawai'i, leaving printer Charles E. Hitchcock to become the editor of the paper. Abraham Fornander, editor of the Weekly Argus from 1852 to1853, and the New Era & Weekly Argus from 1853 to1855, later edited the Polynesian, then purchased it in 1861 and continued to publish it till its demise in 1864"

https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82015413/

12/08/2018

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