
This week’s Sunday Stills challenge theme is ‘Flags.’ See more responses here.
In Hawaii, there are usually two flags flown. The top one here is the well-known national flag. The other is Hawaii’s state flag, the only state flag to contain the flag of another country. But how did the Union Jack get there?
This comes down to interactions, in the early days of western contact with Hawaii, between the British Royal Navy and King Kamehameha, who at that time ruled only the Island of Hawaii, not the whole island chain. Kamehameha already had already taken into his inner circle, and thought highly of, a pair of British sailors who acted as military advisors. Then, in 1794, Captain George Vancouver signed a pact with Kamehameha, which he thought ceded the island to Great Britain. That wasn’t how the Hawaiians interpreted it. They thought it established the island as a protectorate. However, one aspect of this exchange was that a British flag was given to the king and was used as a symbol for the kingdom after Kamehameha went on to unite all the Hawaiian islands.
There’s a story that, when the American war of independence with Britain broke out in 1812, Kamehameha did not want to offend either side and so he designed a flag that incorporated elements of both nations’ flags. However the new design came into being, it became the flag of the Hawaiian nation, though the number of stripes, the colors, and the size of the Union Jack often varied.
It wasn’t until 1845 that the current version became official, with the eight stripes representing the eight main islands of Hawaii.

Great picture and fascinating story of history.
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Thanks. The Hawaiian flag has a lot of history associated with it.
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A good bit of history, Graham. That Union Jack certainly traveled!
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It did travel, but then you know all about that.
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That is an interesting history. A most unusual flag too
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It is. I’m a bit surprised it’s been retained all these years.
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True. Maybe it’s the history fuddy duddies who are keeping things in check
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It’s more the establishment versus the much smaller Hawaiian independence groups.
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The status quo always rules until the revolution
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Thanks for the history lesson! I didn’t know any of that and appreciate the education. Plus, the Hawaiian flag looks cool. 🙂
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I like the flag too and it’s interesting how it came to be that way.
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This was fascinating to read, Graham. I never knew what the state of Hawaii’s flag actually looked like. Great shot!
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The flag is an interesting oddity in Hawaii’s history. Your comment posted three times so I removed two of them. Probably a WordPress oddity!
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Three times? How weird–I had to log in to comment then it told me I had a duplicate comment, but not three! Oddities happen ;/
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They do indeed!
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