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Collections

Menzies Dickson
Kamehameha III1854

Not on view
Sepia-toned carte-de-visite portrait photograph, oval vignette of a man with brown skin in a dark suit jacket, patterned waistcoat, bow tie, and pendant
Verso of a carte-de-visite with ornate printed studio imprint reading 'M. Dickson, 61 Fort Street, Honolulu, H.I.' in decorative scroll cartouches; handwritten inscription at top reads 'Kamehameha III'
Artist or Maker
Menzies Dickson
American, 1840 - 1891
Title
Kamehameha III
Culture
Hawaiian
Place Made
Kingdom of Hawai'i, O'ahu, Honolulu
Date Made
1854
Medium
Albumen silver print
Dimensions
Secondary support: 4 3/16 × 2 1/2 in. (10.64 × 6.35 cm)
Credit Line
Partial gift of Mark and Carolyn Blackburn and purchased with funds from LACMA's 50th Anniversary Gala and FIJI Water
Accession Number
M.2015.33.1355
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Art of the Pacific
Curatorial Notes

Similar photo found on Hawai'i State Archives digital collection, call number PP-97-7-002, dated 1854, no photographer credited.

Kauikeaouli succeeded as King Kamehameha III upon the death of his brother, Kamehameha II. During his rule, the Hawaiian kingdom’s first Constitution was granted in 1840, the laws codified and the government reorganized into Executive, Judicial and Legislative branches. It was also at this time that the system of fee simple land ownership was established in Hawai‘i. Kamehameha III and his wife, Queen Kalama, adopted his nephew Alexander Liholiho as his successor.

On January 16, 1893 the Hawaiian Kingdom was invaded by United States marines which led to the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian government the following day.