It is generally believed Hawaii's first permanent inhabitants sailed in voyaging canoes from the southern hemisphere islands of the Marquesas, between 300 and 800 A.D. Later waves of settlers arrived by the 12th century, this time from Tahiti.
Following is a timeline of events dating from the arrival in the Islands of the first European explorers:
Spanish sailors sight
Hawaii, describing volcanic eruption in ship's log.
(1627)
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Kawaiahao Church (Honolulu)
|
Capt. James Cook of the British Royal Navy
arrives on Kauai, renaming the island chain the “Sandwich Islands”
in honor of his patron, the Earl of Sandwich. He is subsequently
killed by Hawaiians on the Big Island in 1779.
(1778)
Hawaii is placed under the protectorate
of Great Britain.
(1794)
Christian missionaries arrive from New England to convert
the “heathen” and build churches, schools and houses.
Missions are established in Kona (Big Island), Honolulu (Oahu) and Kauai.
(1820)
Honolulu's first Christian
church is established at the site of the present Kawaiahao Church.
(1821)
Queen Mother Keopuolani is the first Hawaiian to receive a Christian baptism.
(1823)
Kamehameha III assumes throne, ruling under the influence
of the missionaries and granting them much power and freedom.
(1823)
First sugar and coffee plantations begin operation in Manoa
Valley on Oahu.
(1825)
First Catholic missionaries arrive in the Islands.
(1827)
Mexican and California cowboys arrive on the Big Island to teach
ranchers about the cattle business.
(1830)
First commercial production of sugar cane begins, anticipated to be the
economic alternative to a declining whaling industry.
(1835)
Ground is broken for the building of Kawaiahao Church (Honolulu).
(1838)
Kamehameha III proclaims the first constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii.
(1840)
First Hawaii House of Representatives is called to order; U.S.
recognizes the Kingdom of Hawaii.
(1842)
Lord George Paulet
seizes Hawaii in the name of England but, later that year, the Islands
are officially granted independence from Great Britain by
British Admiral Richard Thomas (the namesake of Honolulu's Thomas Square).
(1843)
Construction of Washington Place (now the governor's residence)
is completed.
(1846)
Epidemic of measles, whooping cough and influenza claims
10,000 lives, most native Hawaiians.
(1848)
French Admiral Legoarant de Tromelin fails in attempted invasion.
(1849)
First permanent Mormon missionaries arrive.
(1850)
Legislature approves the import of contract labor to work Hawaii
plantations.
(1850)
First Chinese contract laborers arrive.
(1852)
Smallpox epidemic takes the lives of more
than 5,000 Hawaiians.
(1853)

'Iolani Palace (Honolulu)
|
Cornerstone for The Queen's Hospital is laid.
(1860)
Another dreaded disease, leprosy, enters Islands; first lepers
taken to Makanalua Peninsula (Kalaupapa) on Molokai in 1866.
(1860)
First Japanese contract laborers arrive in the Islands.
(1868)
Reciprocity agreement ratified by U.S. Senate, allowing Hawaii
products to be shipped without tariff, leading to boom in economy.
(1876)
King Kalakaua dedicates Queen Kapiolani Park (named for his wife).
(1877)
Portuguese contract laborers arrive.
(1878)
King Kalakaua and Queen Kapiolani move into Iolani
Palace.
(1882)
 King Kamehameha Statue (Honolulu) |
Kamehameha I Statue is unveiled — honoring the great Hawaiian leader who united the Hawaiian Islands under one rule for the first time.
(1883)
Electricity arrives as five arc lamps
are strung around Iolani Palace. (King Kalakaua was fascinated with electricity after meeting Thomas Edison; electricity was installed in Iolani Palace five years before installation at the U.S. White House.)
(1886)
Kamehameha Schools are founded in memory of Bernice Pauahi
Bishop by husband Charles Reed Bishop.
(1887)
Queen Liliuokalani writes her famous song, "Aloha
Oe."
(1889)
Bishop Museum's original structure is
completed.
(1889)
Queen Liliuokalani is deposed in an overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy by a group of American businessmen, led by Sanford B. Dole.
(1893)
Republic of Hawaii established with Sanford
B. Dole as president.
(1894)
Hawaii becomes a territory of the United States.
(1900)
Chinatown fire, set to “purify” areas infected
with bubonic plague, rages out of control, destroying 38 acres of
homes and businesses.
(1900)
Moana Hotel — the “First Lady of Waikiki” and
now the Sheraton Moana Surfrider — opens its doors.
(1901)
James "Jim" Drummond Dole plants first pineapple crop
in Wahiawa's countryside (central Oahu).
(1901)
Fort Shafter becomes the first permanent U.S. military installation.
(1907)
University of Hawaii opens as the College
of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts.
(1907)
Swimmer and "Father of Modern Surfing" Duke Kahanamoku wins gold medal at the Olympics in Stockholm.
(1912)
Honolulu Museum of Art is chartered.
(1922)
Work begins on the structural foundation of Aloha Tower.
(1924)
Inauguration of Lei Day.
(1927)
The Royal Hawaiian Hotel (the "Pink Palace of the Pacific") opens for business.
(1927)
Pan American Airways Clipper makes first 2,270-mile trans-Pacific
flight from San Francisco to Hawaii in 21.5 hours.
(1935)
Japanese naval air forces attack Pearl Harbor; more than
2,500 lives lost; territory governor declares martial law.
(1941)
Great tsunami hits Hilo, killing more than 159 people and
causing $25 million in damage.
(1946)
Hawaii admitted as the 50th state of the United States. William F.
Quinn becomes the first elected governor of the new state, and Hiram
Fong and Oren E. Long are both elected to the U.S. Senate.
(1959)
A Boeing 707 lands in Hawaii, trumpeting the beginning of a massive increase
in Island tourism.
(1959)

Lava from Kilauea (Big Island) makes new land as it hits the ocean |
Tsunami waves again hit the Big Island; 61 lives are lost, mostly in Hilo.
(1960)
The fiftieth star is added to the U.S. flag on July 4.
(1960)
George Ariyoshi is elected governor, the
country’s first of Japanese ancestry.
(1974)
The Big Island's Kilauea erupts (and has continued eruption since).
(1983)
John Waihee, the state’s first governor of Hawaiian ancestry,
is elected.
(1986)
Hurricane Iniki strikes, causing devastating damage on Kauai.
(1992)
Pres. Bill Clinton signs a resolution acknowledging the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy in 1893, and the U.S. Senate issues a formal apology to Hawaiians.
(1993)