There are discussions and proposed legislation on ‘Iliahi in the
legislature this year. Here is a summary
of some of the reasons on how we got to where we are with Sandalwood.
Sandalwood (ʻiliahi) has been highly prized and in great demand through
the ages; its use for incense is part of the ritual of Buddhism. Chinese used the fragrant heart wood for
incense, medicinal purposes, for architectural details and carved objects.
Sandalwood was first recognized as a commercial product in Hawai‘i in
1791 by Captain Kendrick of the Lady Washington, when he instructed sailors to
collect cargo of sandalwood. From that
point on, it became a source of wealth in the islands, until it’s supply was
ultimately exhausted.
Trade in Hawaiian sandalwood began as early as the 1790s; by 1805 it
had become an important export item.
Sandalwood trade was a turning point in Hawai‘i, especially related to
its economic structure. It moved Hawai‘i
from a self-sufficient economy to a commercial economy. This started a series of other economic and
export activities across the islands.
In 1811, an agreement between Boston ship captains and Kamehameha I
established a monopoly on sandalwood exports, with Kamehameha receiving 25% of
the profits. As trade and shipping
brought Hawaiʻi into contact with a wider world, it also enabled the
acquisition of Western goods, including arms and ammunition.
Kamehameha used Western cannons and guns to great advantage in his
unification of the Islands and also acquired Western-style ships, buying the
brig Columbia for a price of two ship loads of sandalwood in 1817.
Between about 1810 and 1820, the major item of Hawaiian trade was
sandalwood. Kamehameha I rigidly maintained
control of the trade until his death in 1819, at which time his son, Liholiho,
took over control.
When Kamehameha I died, although Liholiho (his son and successor)
should have inherited all of Kamehameha's lands, the chiefs also wanted the
revenue from the sandalwood.
Chiefs persuaded the king to give them an in on the royal sandalwood
monopoly; trade continued at an accelerated rate, following Kamehameha’s
death.
In America, the Panic of 1819 (the first financial crisis in the United
States) made it difficult for traders to obtain sandalwood for the China trade.
However, because the Hawaiian chiefs had become enamored of items of
foreign manufacture, the islands provided an open market for goods like rum,
clothing, cloth, furnishings and a host of other things. Foreign traders shipped these goods to the
islands, exchanging them for sandalwood, which continued to be in demand in
China.
It was Hawaii’s first source of revenue and major debt. Credit secured by payment in sandalwood
saddled the Hawaiian Chiefs and the Islands’ struggling economy.
In 1826, the kingdom of Hawaiʻi enacted its first written law - a
sandalwood tax. Every man was ordered to
deliver to the government 66 pounds of sandalwood, or pay four Spanish dollars,
by September 1, 1827. Every woman older
than 13 was obligated to make a 12-by-6-foot kapa cloth. The taxes were collected to reduce the
staggering debt.
The common people were displaced from their agricultural and fishing
duties and all labor was diverted to harvesting sandalwood. This period saw two major famines as ʻiliahi
was over-harvested to the point of commercial extinction in Hawaiʻi
forests.
Unfortunately, the harvesting of the trees was not sustainably managed
(they cut whatever they could, they didn’t replant) and over-harvesting of
‘iliahi took place.
By 1830, the trade in sandalwood had completely collapsed. Hawaiian forests were exhausted and
sandalwood from India and other areas in the Pacific drove down the price in
China and made the Hawaiian trade unprofitable.
Once reported as growing on landscape scales, today, there are only
remnant patches of ‘iliahi. Two places
where it can still be relatively easily seen are on ‘Aiea Loop Trail in O‘ahu
and an exclosure adjacent to the Kula State Forest access road on the way to
Polipoli State Park.
It would be great if areas in Hawai‘i could be restored in sandalwood
forests, to return this important legacy.
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