
That kingdom did not survive the century. In 1893 the Hawaiian Kingdom was overthrown by a group of businessmen backed by U.S. forces; the monarchy was ended, and in 1898 the islands were annexed by the United States, becoming a territory in 1900. It is a hard and contested history, and Honolulu does not hide it — ʻIolani Palace stands restored at the center of downtown precisely as a place to remember the kingdom that was. The Hawaiian identity the monarchy embodied did not disappear; it remains, to this day, the deep current beneath the modern city.
The harbor made Honolulu a Pacific crossroads. After Western contact in the 1790s, ships crowded the anchorage — traders, then whalers, then missionaries — and the little port grew into the busiest in the islands. As the Hawaiian Kingdom consolidated, Honolulu became its capital, and by the later nineteenth century the monarchy was seated downtown at ʻIolani Palace, the only royal palace on American soil. For a few decades the city was the working capital of an independent Pacific kingdom, with a king or queen in residence and the world's ships at its docks.
Why People Visit Honolulu
Honolulu offers the full range of Hawaiʻi in one place — royal and wartime history, world-class museums, and a famous shoreline, all in a walkable, welcoming capital city. Visitors come for Diamond Head, the beaches, and the heritage downtown, and stay for the food, the culture, and the easy access to the rest of Oʻahu. From the palace to the crater to the harbor, it rewards both a quick visit and a long stay. It is historic, cosmopolitan, and unmistakably Hawaiian.