[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

"Pete Hegseth Is Right for the DOD"

"Why Our Constitution Secures Liberty, Not Democracy"

Woodworking and Construction Hacks

"CNN: Reporters Were Crying and Hugging in the Hallways After Learning of Matt Gaetz's AG Nomination"

"NEW: Democrat Officials Move to Steal the Senate Race in Pennsylvania, Admit to Breaking the Law"

"Pete Hegseth Is a Disruptive Choice for Secretary of Defense. That’s a Good Thing"

Katie Britt will vote with the McConnell machine

Battle for Senate leader heats up — Hit pieces coming from Thune and Cornyn.

After Trump’s Victory, There Can Be No Unity Without A Reckoning

Vivek Ramaswamy, Dark-horse Secretary of State Candidate

Megyn Kelly has a message for Democrats. Wait for the ending.

Trump to choose Tom Homan as his “Border Czar”

"Trump Shows Demography Isn’t Destiny"

"Democrats Get a Wake-Up Call about How Unpopular Their Agenda Really Is"

Live Election Map with ticker shows every winner.

Megyn Kelly Joins Trump at His Final PA Rally of 2024 and Explains Why She's Supporting Him

South Carolina Lawmaker at Trump Rally Highlights Story of 3-Year-Old Maddie Hines, Killed by Illegal Alien

GOP Demands Biden, Harris Launch Probe into Twice-Deported Illegal Alien Accused of Killing Grayson Davis

Previously-Deported Illegal Charged With Killing Arkansas Children’s Hospital Nurse in Horror DUI Crash

New Data on Migrant Crime Rates Raises Eyebrows, Alarms

Thousands of 'potentially fraudulent voter registration applications' Uncovered, Stopped in Pennsylvania

Michigan Will Count Ballot of Chinese National Charged with Voting Illegally

"It Did Occur" - Kentucky County Clerk Confirms Voting Booth 'Glitch'' Shifted Trump Votes To Kamala

Legendary Astronaut Buzz Aldrin 'wholeheartedly' Endorses Donald Trump

Liberal Icon Naomi Wolf Endorses Trump: 'He's Being More Inclusive'

(Washed Up Has Been) Singer Joni Mitchell Screams 'F*** Trump' at Hollywood Bowl

"Analysis: The Final State of the Presidential Race"

He’ll, You Pieces of Garbage

The Future of Warfare -- No more martyrdom!

"Kamala’s Inane Talking Points"

"The Harris Campaign Is Testament to the Toxicity of Woke Politics"

Easy Drywall Patch

Israel Preparing NEW Iran Strike? Iran Vows “Unimaginable” Response | Watchman Newscast

In Logansport, Indiana, Kids are Being Pushed Out of Schools After Migrants Swelled County’s Population by 30%: "Everybody else is falling behind"

Exclusive — Bernie Moreno: We Spend $110,000 Per Illegal Migrant Per Year, More than Twice What ‘the Average American Makes’

Florida County: 41 of 45 People Arrested for Looting after Hurricanes Helene and Milton are Noncitizens

Presidential race: Is a Split Ticket the only Answer?

hurricanes and heat waves are Worse

'Backbone of Iran's missile industry' destroyed by IAF strikes on Islamic Republic

Joe Rogan Experience #2219 - Donald Trump

IDF raids Hezbollah Radwan Forces underground bases, discovers massive cache of weapons

Gallant: ‘After we strike in Iran,’ the world will understand all of our training

The Atlantic Hit Piece On Trump Is A Psy-Op To Justify Post-Election Violence If Harris Loses

Six Al Jazeera journalists are Hamas, PIJ terrorists

Judge Aileen Cannon, who tossed Trump's classified docs case, on list of proposed candidates for attorney general

Iran's Assassination Program in Europe: Europe Goes Back to Sleep

Susan Olsen says Brady Bunch revival was cancelled because she’s MAGA.

Foreign Invaders crisis cost $150B in 2023, forcing some areas to cut police and fire services: report

Israel kills head of Hezbollah Intelligence.

Tenn. AG reveals ICE released thousands of ‘murderers and rapists’ from detention centers into US streets


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Historical
See other Historical Articles

Title: Russia’s Pacific Paradise (The period Czarist Russia ruled Hawaii)
Source: thediplomat.com
URL Source: http://thediplomat.com/2015/10/russias-pacific-paradise/
Published: Oct 15, 2015
Author: Casey Michel
Post Date: 2015-10-15 12:03:32 by Pericles
Keywords: Russia, Hawaii
Views: 332

Russia’s Pacific Paradise

In 1815, a German, on behalf of the Russian-American Company, tried to conquer Hawaii in the name of the Tsar.

By Casey Michel

October 15, 2015

In mid-October 1815, two hundred years ago this month, a German doctor set sail from one of Russia’s fledgling American outposts. Georg Anton Schäffer, an employee of the Russian-American Company (RAC) boarded the Isabella with the ostensible purpose of earning the favor of the Hawaii’s King Kamehameha. But when he landed on Hawaii, Schäffer set the wheels in motion for a chapter of failed Pacific conquest since smothered in archives, forgotten by all but a handful of scholars.

The tale of Russia’s abortive attempt to claim the Hawaiian archipelago – then called the Sandwich Islands, sighted by Europeans for the first time only 37 years prior – includes as much autocratic realpolitik as it does imperial fumbling. It may not even be correct to call the affair a wholesale “Russian” attempt to conquer the islands; there’s no evidence that either the emperor or the foreign minister ever supported a formal annexation of the archipelago and eventually they “categorically rejected” the opportunity, as historian N. Bolkhovitinov wrote.

Rather, it was the RAC, Russia’s foremost vehicle for North American expansion, which set its gaze on the Pacific islands. The islands’ sandalwood and tobacco was too good to pass up. The strategic placement in the Pacific would link Russia into prime shipping lanes, and the opportunities for grain and other harvests could help prop the empire’s impoverished Pacific Rim outposts in Okhotsk, Kamchatka, and Sitka. It seemed a lucrative target for expansion.

Russians had maintained trading ties with the islands for over a decade, though their engagement was not nearly as deep as that of the expanding U.S. government. In early 1815, a company ship laden with furs ran aground on the island of Kauai – its goods reportedly seized by the local king, Kaumualii. Schäffer was dispatched to the islands to help engineer the return of the company’s goods, preferably by winning the favor of King Kamehameha on the big island of Hawaii. Schäffer, however, seemed an odd choice to lead the mission.

“There is just not a lot known about Schäffer,” Patricia Polansky, a Russian bibliographer at the University of Hawaii, told The Diplomat. “Certainly nothing I know about here in our local Hawaii archives, which I have worked in many times.”

A surgeon by trade, Schäffer was perhaps best known for his attempts at supporting the tsar against the Napoleonic invasion. As biographer Lee Croft wrote, Schäffer’s efforts to back Moscow came in the form of trying to construct a “shark-shaped, hydrogen-filled, rotor-wing-powered balloon from which to drop timed-fuse explosives” on invading forces. As to why the RAC selected Schäffer from their roster to head the mission to Hawaii, history doesn’t have a clear answer.

Nonetheless, Schäffer led the campaign, and landed on the archipelago in November 1815. The physician arrived to find a set of islands churning with local politics, the intricacies of which Schäffer was almost certainly unaware. The big island of Hawaii remained under the nominal reign of Kamehameha, “the Napoleon or Peter the Great of Polynesia,” according to Bolkhovitinov. By the time of Schäffer’s arrival, Kamehameha had earned the position of sovereign over the entire archipelago – save for the northernmost islands of Kauai and Niihau. Ruled by Kaumualii, these two islands stood autonomous – with de facto independence, according to historian Peter Mills – from the remainder of the archipelago, sending an annual tithe to the sovereign but avoiding Kamehameha’s wholesale rule.

At the time, the entire archipelago retained a form of internationalized independence; while the English had presented the Sandwich Islands as a gift to King George III in 1794, going so far as to raise the crown’s flag over the islands, London opted to forgo outright annexation in order to focus on outposts in Australia and the surrounding environs.

Still, it didn’t take long for suspicions to latch themselves onto Schäffer. The surgeon “found tact and diplomacy of little help,” according to historian Richard Pierce. British and American traders on the islands – including Kamehameha’s chief adviser – quickly voiced their suspicions about his intentions, resulting, as Schäffer wrote, in a wealth of “abuse and slander” against him. According to Pierce, “some of the King’s advisors even urged that [Schäffer] be killed.” Fortunately for the physician, he managed to swing his medical prowess and cull the King’s favor. He soon convinced Kamehameha to grant him land for a factory on the island of Oahu.

However, conditions at the factory rapidly deteriorated. Supplies remained sporadic. American and British advisers kept up their pressures, resulting in “attempts on [Schäffer’s] life,” writes Bolkhovitinov. As such, Schäffer sought and gained an audience with Kaumualii, who quickly unspooled a tale of political woe on the physician. According to Kaumualii, Kamehameha had swiped Kaumualii’s rightful place on the Hawaiian throne and this since-forgotten king, with two islands to his name, was ready “to assent to anything which would gain him an ally.”

Schäffer responded swiftly. On May 21, 1816, firmly in his guise as representative of the RAC – and, by extent, tsarist reign – Schäffer watched Kaumualii pledge himself and his crown to Emperor Alexander I, and agree to exclusive trading rights with Russia and the RAC. The RAC backed Schäffer’s moves. As Aleksandr Baranov, who’d originally assigned Schäffer his task, wrote, should peaceful means fail, “the whole island of Kauai should be taken in the name of our Sovereign Emperor of all the Russias and become a part of his possessions.” But Kaumualii gave his islands and his stewardship freely to Moscow, parading in a Russian naval officer’s uniform, in honor of Kauai’s new sovereign.

And that wasn’t all. A few weeks later – “[l]osing all touch with reality,” wrote Bolkhovitinov – Schäffer signed a “secret treaty” by which he would receive some 500 of Kaumualii’s men to lead a military charge against the remaining islands. Once occupied, the islands would not only cut all trade with the United States, but Russia would receive “carte blanche for this expedition and all assistance in constructing fortresses on all islands.” Schäffer pledged ships and ammunition for the assault. Meanwhile, as he continued construction on a pair of new forts and raised the Russian flag over Kauai, the surgeon awaited the RAC’s approval. Schäffer’s line of logic was straightforward:

Through these holdings Russia will soon obtain able and experienced seamen. The Chinese will have to allow the Russian flag to wave in Canton. The English and Americans will have their trade cut off. … The Sandwich Islands must be made a Russian West India and a second Gibraltar. Russia must have these islands at any cost! … No power in the world has more right to these islands than Russia!

But Schäffer’s hopes for a tsarist Pacific paradise fell on wary ears. Where the RAC stood willing to seal trading rights on several islands, concerns about a full-fledged assault on the British- and American-dominated islands stalled Schäffer’s designs. As the RAC forwarded the request to Moscow, American forces uprooted Schäffer from his Oahu outpost, even leading a failed attempt to drag the Russian flag from its Hawaiian perch. RAC employees soon received further threats from their American counterparts – along with Kaumualii, whom the Americans threatened to kill if he didn’t abandon Schäffer.

“There was no way we could oppose our enemies; our forces were weak,” Schäffer wrote. Failing even to hang on to the holdings he’d maintained, a disgraced Schäffer left Hawaii for good on July 7, 1817.

His departure, in the end, was likely for the best. When Moscow received Kaumualii’s offers of annexation and learned of Schäffer’s plot to conquer the remainder of the Hawaiian islands for Russia, Moscow blanched. Between the unreliability of Kaumualii and the simple matter of distance – to say nothing of risking the ire of the “adventurous” Americans – both the emperor and his foreign minister nixed the idea. Not only had the RAC lost the toehold Schäffer earlier gained, but the surgeon botched the wholesale annexation attempt, leaving Hawaii’s status as independent up to the Americans flooding the archipelago with traders and missionaries.

The Hawaiian Schäffer affair remains one of the first territorial flashpoints between Russia and a budding United States, but would soon be overshadowed by higher profile dealings in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest. (To say nothing of what would come in time: alliances and enmity, World Wars, revolutions, a Cold War, detente, and now Crimea and Syria.) Nonetheless, while Schäffer remained chagrined by the entire debacle, he found a mote of historical justice. As the surgeon warned, should Russia pass on Hawaii, it would lose its “possessions on the northwest shore of America, and the Americans of the United States would take possession of them in short course.”

Click for Full Text!

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com