Sneha Girap (Editor)

Walter M Gibson

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Monarch
  
Kalakaua

Monarch
  
Kalakaua

Preceded by
  
William L. Green

Party
  
Hawaiian National Party


Monarch
  
Kalakaua

Name
  
Walter Gibson

Preceded by
  
Celso Caesar Moreno

Preceded by
  
Charles T. Gulick

Resting place
  
Hawaii

Walter M. Gibson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
January 21, 1888, San Francisco, California, United States

Succeeded by
  
Robert James Creighton

Walter Murray Gibson (March 6, 1822 – January 21, 1888) was an American adventurer and a government minister in the Kingdom of Hawaii prior to the kingdom's 1887 constitution.

Walter M. Gibson FileWalter M Gibsonjpg Wikimedia Commons

Life

Gibson was generally thought to be born March 6, 1822, in the southern United States, though he sometimes claimed to have been born in England. He was the captain of a ship and became involved in gunrunning in the Caribbean. Later, he was jailed in the East Indies by the Dutch on charges of fomenting rebellion, but managed to escape from his prison in Java. In 1859, he went to Utah Territory and joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), persuading church president Brigham Young to allow him to establish a Mormon colony in the Pacific.

Gibson arrived in the Hawaiian Islands in 1861, and founded a colony among Mormons already in the islands. He purchased land on the island of Lanai with funds from the colony in his own name, but was excommunicated after an LDS Church investigation regarding accusations of preaching false doctrine, maladministration of the colony, and embezzlement of church funds. Upon excommunication, he expelled those who did not support him from his colony and church and began angling for secular political office and power.

In 1873, Gibson started his own newspaper to extol his virtues in English and Hawaiian called the Nuhou. He successfully ran for the House of Representatives in 1878 as a candidate of the King's Party, allying himself with King Kalakaua and portraying himself as the "voice of Hawaiians". In 1880 he bought the Pacific Commercial Advertiser (now the Honolulu Advertiser). In 1882, he was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs, and then on June 30, 1886, prime minister of the Kingdom of Hawaii by King Kalākaua. He also served on various boards, as Attorney General, Minister of Interior, and Secretary of War.

Gibson was widely credited with encouraging Kalākaua to make rash political moves, which eventually led to the imposition of the 1887 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii. One of his bolder plans included an attempt to build a Pacific Empire, which drew the ire of both the international and local Hawaiian communities.

Gibson's fortunes fell dramatically after being taken out of power in 1887. He fled the islands for fear of losing his life and died penniless in San Francisco on January 21, 1888. His body was returned to Hawaii for a funeral and burial.

References

Walter M. Gibson Wikipedia