40 



B RICH AM ON HAWAIIAN FEATHER WORK. 



dore's visit to Honolulu, in 1S43 on a diplomatic errand from tlie United States Govern- 

 ment. It was afterwards an inheritance to tlie Commodore's son, and is now in the Ameri- 

 can Museum in New York. The feathers are much damaged although the red have 

 suffered less than the 00, and the net is visible in places especially on the lower part of the 



FIG. 35. THE CHAPMAN CLOAK. 



ahuula. No. 57 in the list of ahuula. Kauikeaouli must have valued the services of the 

 distinguished officer very highly if we judge by this gift which at the time of presentation 

 some seventy-five years before this photograph was taken must have been in prime order. 



THE CUNNINGHAM CLOAK. 



Cloak of iiwi red with basal border, eight crescents and six triangles of 00 yellow. 

 It was brought to the United States by Captain William Cunningham of Cambridge, 

 Mass. He died in the early part of the nineteenth century from exposure following 



