Timeline

1848 The great Mahele, Division of Land, clears the way for foreigners to acquire and own land in Hawaii
1850 Masters and Servants Act paves the way for the enforcement of the contract-labor system in the courts and allows for importation of other countries
1852 200 Chinese laborers arrive from Hong Kong

Between 1852 - 1884, 25,256 Chinese laborers are imported to work on the sugar plantation.  As Chinese workers complete terms of their contracts, they leave the plantation workforce to establish their own farms and businesses

1861 Start of the American Civil War.  Northern markers are cut off from sugar supplies from the South; demand of Hawaiian sugar increases
1868 First small group of Japanese arrive

148 Japanese contract laborers, known as gannenmono, arrive.  Due to poor treatment, this effort is largely unsuccessful.  When an agreement is struck in 1870 for the return of these people to Japan, only 40 return, while the rest choose to remain in Hawaii

1876 Reciprocity Treaty goes into operation, granting Hawaii the right to export unrefined sugar to the U.S. duty free.  American businessmen begin mass cultivation of sugar and pineapple 
1878 First Portuguese arrive from Madeira
1881 A group of German Caucasians arrive
1884-1884 Five shiploads of Portuguese arrive  

Between 1878-1884, 9,471 Portuguese workers arrive.  Numbers remain small as travel costs to import Portuguese from halfway around the world proved too costly

1885 Main Japanese immigration begins

Mass government-contracted labor (kanyaku imin) from Japan begin arriving in large numbers.  Between 1882 and 1902 the number of Japanese plantation workers increased from 15 to 31,029.  The percentage of Japanese on the plantations rises from 14 percent in 1886 to 69 percent in 1893

1887 "Bayonet Constitution" In Hawaii is proclaimed by the "Reform Government," led largely by planter interests; King Kalakaua is stripped of his powers at gunpoint; Hawaiian citizenship is denied to all Asians; most Hawaiians are not allowed to vote
1893 Aided by U.S. Marines, the Hawaiian monarchy is ovethrown by American revolutionaries on January 17, Japanese warship Naniwa is dispatched to the Islands to protect the interests of 25,000 Japanese laborers
1894 Private companies are allowed to take over the of recruiting Japanese laborers.  Between 1894 and 1900, 57,000 Japanese arrive in Hawaii
1898 Annexation of Hawaii by the U.S.; Spanish-American War; Philippines, Puerto Rico and Guam are ceded to the U.S.
1900 Okinawan immigration begins

First group of Puerto Ricans arrive, following annexation of Puerto Rico to the U.S. in 1898

Organic Act is signed by President McKinley, incorporating Hawaii as a Territory of the U.S.; contract labor is prohibited with laws of U.S. applying to Hawaii; many Japanese migrate to the mainland where wages are double

1901 The Hawaii Sugar Planters' Association (HSPA) suggests in Washington that Filipino workers may be recruited for Hawaii's plantation.
1906 The first group of Filipinos, numbering fifteen men, arrives in Hawaii to work in the plantatinos.  One hundred fifty more arrive the following year.
1903 Korean immigration begins

Korean immigrants arrive aboard the S.S. Gaelic.  Some 7,843 Koreans arrive until the Korean government stops emigration in 1905, due to reports of mistreatment of Koreans in Mexico

1906 Filipino immigration begins

By 1916,  18144 Filipinos arrive

1907 Executive order stops migration of Japanese laborers from Hawaii, Mexico and Canada on March 14

A shipload of 2,250 Spaniards arrive from Malaga to work on the plantations

1908 Gentlemen's Agreement restricts Japanese immigratrion to the U.S.
1909 Japanese went on strike, but lost
1906 The group of filipinos, numbering fifteen men, arrives in Hawaii to work in the plantations. one hundred fifty more arrived the following year.
1915 The HSPA works out a system of individual agreements with the Filipino workers under which the terms of their employment are specified in advance. 
1917 When the United States entered into war, many Filipino workers offered themselves and became soldiers to lend service to the cause, entering the Navy
1919 Pablo Manlapit orginizes the Filipino labor Union and begins a canpain to organize Filipinos workersin the plantations of Hawaii.
1920-1930 Sharp rise in Caucasian immigration - members of the US armed forces
1920 Strike for higher wages (Japanese & Filipino)

Japanese and Filipinos banded together to make a strike for higher wages.  Again, they lost but they learned about the value of overlooking ethnic differences

Manlapit joins Japanese labor leaders in forming the Higher Wave Movement.

1923 The higher Wage Movement demands a two dollar per day minimum wage and a forty hour  work week. The HSPA rejects those demands. 
1924 2nd strike (Japanese & Filipino)

U.S. Congress prohibits further immigration from Japan.  Between 1885 and 1924, a total of approximated 200,000 Japanese Immigrate to Hawaii, most of them to work on Hawaii's sugar plantations

Manlapit calls a Filipino workers out on the strike. Sixteen workers and four  policmen are killed on September 9 in a one sided gun battle between police and the workers in Kauai.

1921-1925 Korean brides arrive
1924 English Standard school established
1924-1936 Continued Japanese immigration (about 100 per year)
1925 Manlapit, several other leaders, and other sixty workers are convicted of "conspiracy" and are sentenced to two years in prison. Manlapit chooses deportation to the Philippines. 
1932 Manlapit
1934 Tyding-McDuffie Act restricts annual immigration of Filipinos to quota of 50
1935 Onomea Camps were segregated into Japanese, Filipino and Portuguese camps
1941-1945 World War II  
1945 Governor reopens immigrations, citing labor shortage

Samoan immigration begins

Second wave of Filipino immigration-workers, wives, and children

1946 Postwar immigration of Okinawans

Fourth wave of Filipino workers arrive. Recruitment opened doors for 6,000 workers.  These recruits were to pay their passage, but their wives and children travelled free.  In order to qualify for free return transportation, a laborer was required to work at least 250 days for three consecutive years


Unionization of plantation workers

1953 Workers offered opportunity to purchase plantation homes
1965 President Lyndon Johnson signs new immigration bill, increasing quota to 20,000 (not including spouses and children of U.S. citizens)

Third wave of Filipino immigration

1969 War brides arrive (wives of American servicemen in Korea)

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