|
Because Hawaiian women married all
nationalities, it is important to learn about special records that
pertain only to certain races. The effort should be made to
visit one of the community LDS (Mormon) Family History
Centers. If possible, the one to use would be the Family
History Center on Beckley Street in Kalihi, Honolulu. This
library specializes in collecting records that will aid Native
Hawaiians, and the staff is very helpful in guiding searchers to
the records they need. One does not need to be Mormon to use
these Family History Centers, and there will be people to help you
translate Hawaiian documents.
The following are some suggestions for various races:
1. Chinese - Contact the Chinese Historical
Society. It is a very active organization and can help with
translations. Read Jean Ohai's pamphlet, "Chinese
Genealogy and Family Guide Book," available at the Hawaii
State Archives, the Hawaii and Pacific Section of the main
Library, or may be for sale from the Chinese Historical
Society. The Hawaii State Archives has many excellent
records on Chinese immigrants such as Labor Permits, Permits for
wife and children of an immigrant laborer, Permits for Hawaii born
Chinese who wanted to visit China and then return. More
Chinese Genealogy Research Help
2. Japanese - The key to Japanese research is finding
the family Koseki which is the family registry that Japanese
immigrants brought with them from their villages. The
Japanese Consulate has an index to passenger lists from 1885 to
1910. The passenger lists are also at the Bishop Museum and
the Hawaii State Archives. The Hawaii State Library has a
microfilm copy of the card index of passenger lists found at the
Hawaii State Archives. Researchers can call the Japanese
Consulate with the family name, date of arrival and the name of
the ship the ancestors came in and find out which part of Japan
they came from. Also refer to the LDS (Mormon) research
paper on dates records are available for Japanese research.
3. Filipino - The Hawaii Sugar Planters Association
kept records on Filipino contract laborers between 1906 and
1941. These include the date of arrival, plantation
assignments, family members and date of deportation. The LDS
(Mormon) Family History Center in Kaneohe has an excellent three
volume set on how to do research in the Philippines. This
set is also found in the Hawaii and Pacific section at the Hawaii
State Library.
4. Portuguese - Contact the Portuguese Historical
Society, it has Portuguese records to search. The Portuguese
Historical Society provides Portuguese translators and holds
workshops throughout the community. The office of the Consul
for Portugal has passenger lists of Portuguese immigration from
1879 to 1913.
5. Tahitian, Maori, Samoan, Tongan - The best place
to go for information on these races is the LDS (Mormon) Family
History Center on campus at Brigham Young University, Laie.
Because the college has students of these Polynesian races, there
will be translators available, and people with knowledge of record
searching in their countries. The LDS (Mormon) Family
History Centers have research papers for these areas.
6. Caucasian - Most Caucasian immigrants to Hawaii
were whalers, ship captains, merchants, and missionaries.
Missionary records are found at the Hawaiian Mission Children's
Library. Merchants and other early arrivals are mentioned in
early historical accounts found in the Hawaii State Archives and
various libraries. For those interested in tracing these
lines to the mainland or Europe, use the LDS (Mormon) Family
History Center, use the DAR Library and the Genealogy Section of
the Hawaii State Library. Many of the Caucasians who settled
in the Hawaiian Islands had roots in the mainland eastern seashore
states. The Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR)
Library has a good collection of Colonial States records.
For whalers, ship captains and other seafaring men, try the usual
sources as well as the Hawaii Maritime Library or the Lahaina
Restoration Society. The Lahaina Restoration Society has the
Pacific Manuscript Bureau Microfilm Collection which is 450 reels
of film of ships' Captains' logs and journals. This
collection is also found in the Hawaiian and Pacific Collection at
the Hamilton Library, University of Hawaii. Hamilton Library
has the index to this collection called, "Where the Whalers
Went."
1.
Germans in Hawaii
2.
French in Hawaii
|