A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery

Native Hawaiians made use of beached whales for sustenance and for fashioning the lei niho palaoa (whale-tooth necklace), a symbol of chiefly rank. They assisted, and feasted, on the first sperm whale catch taken by American whalers off Hawai‘i in 1819. Two Native Hawaiian men joined the American sh...

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Main Author: Lebo, Susan A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Array 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805
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spelling ftscholexchange:oai:ojs.scholarlyexchange.org:article/5805 2023-05-15T18:26:44+02:00 A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery Lebo, Susan A. 2010-04-19 application/pdf https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805 eng eng Array https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805/4017 https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805 Coriolis: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies; Vol 1 No 1 (2010): Coriolis: an Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies 2163-8381 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-Reviewed Article 2010 ftscholexchange 2023-01-04T07:16:27Z Native Hawaiians made use of beached whales for sustenance and for fashioning the lei niho palaoa (whale-tooth necklace), a symbol of chiefly rank. They assisted, and feasted, on the first sperm whale catch taken by American whalers off Hawai‘i in 1819. Two Native Hawaiian men joined the American ship Balaena while it was anchored off Maui. Hundreds more native sailors left each year through the late 1870s. Hawaii's government began passing laws regulating the shipping of native seamen and the fisheries, including fishing rights, in the late 1830s. Government licenses of the first shore-whaling enterprises date to 1847. This paper explores these nineteenth century Hawaiian whale traditions and regulatory efforts to provide a foundation for future synthetic studies of the kingdom's whaling economy and its fisheries from an integrative local perspective. This exploratory review examines primary Hawaiian and English source materials authored in the islands, including newspapers, government documents, and personal diaries, letters, and other papers. Article in Journal/Newspaper Sperm whale Scholarly Exchange: E-Journals
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collection Scholarly Exchange: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftscholexchange
language English
description Native Hawaiians made use of beached whales for sustenance and for fashioning the lei niho palaoa (whale-tooth necklace), a symbol of chiefly rank. They assisted, and feasted, on the first sperm whale catch taken by American whalers off Hawai‘i in 1819. Two Native Hawaiian men joined the American ship Balaena while it was anchored off Maui. Hundreds more native sailors left each year through the late 1870s. Hawaii's government began passing laws regulating the shipping of native seamen and the fisheries, including fishing rights, in the late 1830s. Government licenses of the first shore-whaling enterprises date to 1847. This paper explores these nineteenth century Hawaiian whale traditions and regulatory efforts to provide a foundation for future synthetic studies of the kingdom's whaling economy and its fisheries from an integrative local perspective. This exploratory review examines primary Hawaiian and English source materials authored in the islands, including newspapers, government documents, and personal diaries, letters, and other papers.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lebo, Susan A.
spellingShingle Lebo, Susan A.
A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery
author_facet Lebo, Susan A.
author_sort Lebo, Susan A.
title A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery
title_short A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery
title_full A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery
title_fullStr A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery
title_full_unstemmed A Local Perspective of Hawaii's Whaling Economy: Whale Traditions and Government Regulation of the Kingdom's Native Seamen and Whale Fishery
title_sort local perspective of hawaii's whaling economy: whale traditions and government regulation of the kingdom's native seamen and whale fishery
publisher Array
publishDate 2010
url https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805
genre Sperm whale
genre_facet Sperm whale
op_source Coriolis: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies; Vol 1 No 1 (2010): Coriolis: an Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies
2163-8381
op_relation https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805/4017
https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/5805
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