Kalama
Kalama Hakaleleponi Kapakuhaili (c. 1817 – September 20, 1870) was Queen consort of the Kingdom of Hawaii from 1837 until the death of her husband, King Kamehameha III, in 1854.[1][2] Born in Kaelehuluhulu near Kailua-Kona on Hawaii Island to high-ranking ali'i parents Naihekukui and Iahu'ula, she descended from the Moana family that had long served Hawaiian chiefs.[3][4] On February 14, 1837, she wed Kamehameha III (Kauikeaouli) in a Christian ceremony, becoming his sole recognized wife amid the kingdom's transition from kapu traditions to Western-influenced governance and Christianity.[1][5] The couple had two sons, both named Keaweaweʻulaokalani, who died in infancy, prompting them to adopt Alexander Liholiho as heir apparent; he later reigned as Kamehameha IV.[6][5][7] As dowager queen after her husband's death, Kalama managed substantial land grants from the Great Māhele of 1848, including properties in Kailua, Kāneʻohe, and Hakipuʻu, establishing herself as a capable landowner and business figure in Honolulu and on Maui until her death at age 53.[8][9] Her role supported Kamehameha III's reforms, such as the 1840 Constitution that formalized monarchy with a privy council, amid pressures from foreign powers and missionaries reshaping Hawaiian society.[1][10]Early Life
Birth and Ancestry
Kalama Hakaleleponi Kapakuhaili was born on March 17, 1817, at Kailua on the island of Oʻahu in the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi.[1][11] She was the sole child of High Chief Naihe Kukui Kapihe (also known as Naihekukui or Captain Jack Naihekukui) and High Chiefess Iʻahuʻula.[1][5] Her parents belonged to the aliʻi class of Hawaiian nobility, with her father serving as a high-ranking chief and naval figure under earlier monarchs.[12] Iʻahuʻula, her mother, was a chiefess connected to prominent aliʻi families; she was the sister of Charles Kanaina (a key advisor and father of King Lunalilo) and Naea, linking Kalama to broader chiefly networks on Oʻahu and beyond.[13] Some accounts describe Iʻahuʻula as the younger daughter of High Chief Keliʻimaikaʻi, a half-brother of King Kamehameha I, which would place Kalama in indirect descent from the founding conqueror's lineage, though her immediate family held regional rather than paramount chiefly status.[1] Kalama's ancestry thus reflected the stratified aliʻi hierarchy of early 19th-century Hawaiʻi, emphasizing noble heritage without direct claims to the throne prior to her marriage.[11]Adoption and Upbringing
Kalama Hakaleleponi was hānai, the traditional Hawaiian practice of informal adoption common among the aliʻi (chiefly class), by her maternal uncle, High Chief Charles Kanaʻina, and his wife, Chiefess Miriam Kekāuluohi, both of whom held significant roles in the Hawaiian monarchy.[14][5] Kanaʻina, a privy councilor and later governor of Oʻahu, and Kekāuluohi, who served as Kuhina Nui (premier) from 1839 to 1845, raised her in their household, which included their son, William Charles Lunalilo, Hawaii's first elected king.[1] This adoption elevated her status within the interconnected network of high chiefs aligned with the Kamehameha dynasty. Her upbringing took place amid rapid sociocultural changes following the 1819 abolition of the kapu system and the 1820 arrival of American Protestant missionaries, who introduced literacy and Christianity to the aliʻi.[1] As the sole child of her biological parents and a member of an influential foster family, Kalama was positioned within court circles from an early age, fostering connections that later facilitated her marriage to Kamehameha III in 1837. Specific records of her daily life or formal education remain limited, reflecting the oral traditions and transitional documentation of the era.[5]Rise to Queenship
Courtship with Kamehameha III
Kamehameha III, reigning as Kauikeaouli since 1825, developed a romantic interest in Kalama Hakaleleponi Kapakuhaili, the daughter of the lesser chief Naihekukui, who had served as commander of the native Hawaiian fleet at Honolulu.[15][16] Born around 1817 near Kailua on the island of Hawaiʻi, Kalama came from a background of modest chiefly rank compared to the high aliʻi expected for a royal consort.[2][17] The king's pursuit of Kalama followed the death of his previously intended bride, Kamanele, in 1834, shifting his affections toward this union despite its lack of strategic political advantage.[18] This choice provoked opposition from key figures, including his regent sister Kīnaʻu and other high chiefs, who viewed Kalama's lower status as unsuitable for preserving dynastic prestige and alliances among the elite.[18] The courtship, characterized as a personal love match rather than an arranged alliance, underscored Kamehameha III's preference for individual inclination over traditional chiefly expectations, though specific details of their interactions during this period remain sparsely documented in historical records.[9] By late 1836, following the death of his full sister Nāhiʻenaʻena—who had been part of earlier controversial marital considerations—the king proceeded with plans for the marriage, culminating in a Christian ceremony the following year.[1] The missionaries, including Hiram Bingham, facilitated the event but had previously navigated royal unions amid concerns over Hawaiian customs conflicting with Christian norms.[19]Marriage and Initial Opposition
Kamehameha III first encountered Kalama Hakaleleponi Kapakuhaili around 1832, developing an affection for her that persisted despite her origins as the daughter of High Chief Naihekukui, a military commander under Kamehameha I, and Chiefess ʻĪʻahuʻula, whom some accounts describe as of relatively modest chiefly status compared to royal expectations.[19][1] This choice provoked immediate resistance from key figures in the Hawaiian court, including the king's sister Kīnaʻu, who served as kuhina nui (premier and regent), and various high aliʻi (chiefs), who viewed Kalama's rank as inadequate for elevation to queen consort, potentially undermining traditional chiefly alliances and lineage purity.[20][18] Prior to pursuing Kalama, Kamehameha III had considered other matches, including Chiefess Kamānele, who died in 1834 before any union could occur, and a controversial proposed marriage to his half-sister Nāhiʻenaʻena, which ended with her death in December 1836 amid health decline and political pressures.[19] The persistent opposition to Kalama reflected broader tensions between the king's personal inclinations and the aliʻi's preference for a consort who could strengthen political ties through higher pedigree, yet Kamehameha III prioritized the relationship following these setbacks.[18] On February 14, 1837, Kamehameha III married Kalama in Honolulu in the first Christian wedding ceremony for a Hawaiian monarch, officiated by American missionary Hiram Bingham Sr., signaling a shift toward Western-influenced customs amid ongoing missionary influence in the islands.[21][6] Despite lingering disapproval from segments of the chiefly class, the marriage proceeded without further documented interference, establishing Kalama as queen consort and integrating her into the royal household.[1]Queenship and Public Role
Duties as Consort
Kalama Hakaleleponi Kapakuhaili served as queen consort from her marriage to Kamehameha III on February 14, 1837, until his death on December 15, 1854.[1] The union, conducted in a Christian ceremony, marked the first such royal marriage in Hawaii and symbolized the monarchy's alignment with Protestant missionary values amid the shift from traditional kapu system to constitutional governance.[9] Her primary responsibilities included bearing heirs to secure the succession; the couple had two sons, Keaweaweʻulaokalani I (born and died 1839) and Keaweaweʻulaokalani II (died young), both of whom predeceased their father.[1] In response, Kalama and Kamehameha III jointly adopted the king's nephew, Alexander Liholiho, as heir apparent in the early 1840s, who ascended as Kamehameha IV in 1855.[22] Unlike influential predecessors such as Kaʻahumanu, who wielded executive power as kuhina nui, Kalama held no formal governmental offices and exerted limited documented political influence during the reign.[23] Historical accounts suggest her role emphasized domestic stability and ceremonial support for the king, particularly as he navigated reforms like the 1840 Constitution and the 1848 Great Māhele, though specific public engagements or ceremonies involving her are sparsely recorded. Following Kamehameha III's death, she withdrew from public life, focusing on personal estates.[10]Involvement in Land and Economic Affairs
During her queenship from 1837 to 1854, Queen Kalama received multiple land awards through the Great Māhele of 1848 and subsequent patents, including tracts in windward Oʻahu such as Kailua, Kāneʻohe, and Hakipuʻu.[5] These grants, formalized by Land Commission awards like claim No. 4452 dated May 20, 1854 (issued April 13, 1855), encompassed ʻapana in Koolaupoko district and other ʻili such as Waikahalulu between 1854 and 1855.[24][25] As consort to Kamehameha III, her allocations reflected the division of crown and government lands, prioritizing aliʻi holdings amid the shift to fee-simple tenure, though she later faced legal disputes over dower rights post-1854.[26] Kalama actively engaged in economic ventures on these properties, partnering with Judge Charles Coffin Harris in the mid-1800s to develop a sugarcane plantation across much of the Kailua and Kāneʻohe areas, capitalizing on Hawaii's growing export-oriented agriculture.[27][28] This operation marked an early adoption of commercial sugar production on windward Oʻahu, though Harris eventually assumed control of portions. Her business acumen extended to managing these estates, which by her later years expanded to over 22,000 acres, demonstrating proactive land utilization amid the kingdom's economic transition from subsistence to market-based systems.[9][2]Family
Children and Losses
Kalama and Kamehameha III had two biological sons, both posthumously named Keaweaweʻulaokalani in honor of ancestral figures. The first son, Keaweaweʻulaokalani I, was born in July 1837, shortly after the royal couple's marriage, and died approximately 31 days later.[1][29] The second son, Keaweaweʻulaokalani II, was born in 1839 and died in infancy in 1842.[1][6] These early deaths left the king without direct heirs, prompting the couple to pursue hānai adoptions—a traditional Hawaiian practice akin to fostering or informal adoption—to secure the line of succession and provide family continuity.[5] In response to these losses, Kalama and Kamehameha III hānai adopted several children, including the king's nephew Alexander Liholiho (later Kamehameha IV), who became heir apparent after the biological sons' deaths and ascended the throne in 1855.[5][2] They also raised Albert Kūnuiākea (1851–1903), the king's illegitimate son by high chiefess Jane Lahilahi, whom Kalama treated as her own and who survived into adulthood, outliving both parents.[9][1] Another adopted daughter, Kaʻiminaʻauao (c. 1845–1848), died at age three during the devastating 1848 measles epidemic that claimed thousands of Hawaiian lives, representing a further profound loss for the royal family.[9][30] These tragedies underscored the high infant and child mortality rates in 19th-century Hawaiʻi, exacerbated by introduced diseases and limited medical resources, which repeatedly disrupted dynastic stability.[30]Marital Dynamics
![Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama with Albert Kūnuiākea, about 1853][float-right]The marriage of Kamehameha III to Kalama Hakaleleponi Kapakuhaili on February 14, 1837, represented a personal union driven by the king's affection rather than political expediency, defying expectations from high-ranking advisors and his regent sister, Nāhiʻenaʻena's mother Kīnaʻu, who favored a match elevating chiefly alliances. Kalama's origins in a lesser chiefly family—her father Naihekukui serving as a counselor but lacking premier status—fueled objections, yet the couple's commitment persisted through a Christian ceremony officiated amid missionary influence.[1][9][2] Over 17 years, their partnership endured profound losses, including the deaths of their two sons: Keaweaweʻulaokalani I shortly after birth in 1838 and Keaweaweʻulaokalani II in infancy around 1845, events that underscored the fragility of dynastic continuity and led to the adoption of nephew Alexander Liholiho (later Kamehameha IV) as heir in 1850. No surviving correspondence or primary accounts detail intimate tensions, but Kamehameha III's well-documented battles with alcoholism—exacerbated by grief over family deaths and national pressures—likely imposed strains, as missionaries noted his periodic excesses contrasting Kalama's more reserved demeanor aligned with emerging Protestant values.[6][1] Kalama's role evolved from contested bride to supportive consort, managing household affairs and occasionally mediating in courtly matters, reflecting a dynamic where her influence grew amid the king's vulnerabilities; historical evaluations portray her as loyal, outliving him by 16 years while preserving estates granted during the marriage, suggesting resilience over discord. Claims of the king's post-marital liaisons appear in anecdotal queer histories but lack substantiation in primary missionary journals or chiefly records, which emphasize governance over personal scandals after 1837.[2][8]