MacCaughey: Race Mixture in Hawaii 



93 



Table I 



Nationality of mate 



Hawaiian 



Men 



Women 



Chinese-Haw'n 



Men Women 



Caucas-Haw'n. 



Men Women 



Total marriages 



Hawaiian 



Chinese-Hawaiian . . 



Japanese-Hawaiian . 



Korean-Hawaiian . . 



Filipino-Hawaiian . . 



Caucasian-Hawaiian 



African-Hawaiian . . 



Hawaiian- Alaskan . . 

 South Sea Islander . . . 



Chinese 



Chinese-Portuguese . 



Japanese 



Korean 



Filipino 



Spanish 



Portuguese 



Porto Rican 



American 



British 



British-Spanish . . . . 

 French 



Italian 



Swiss 



German 



German- Portugitese 



Austrian 



Belgian 



Dane 



Norwegian 



Swede 



Russian 



Other nationalities . . . 



1,256 



1,007 

 72 

 

 

 

 124 

 1 

 

 2 



4 

 1 

 2 

 

 1 







30 







6 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 1 

 

 1 



1,694 



1,007 

 82 

 3 

 

 

 144 

 

 2 

 1 



140 

 



27 

 52 

 65 



4 



40 



3 



78 

 17 

 

 

 

 1 

 16 

 

 1 

 

 1 

 4 

 4 

 



173 



82 

 27 

 

 

 

 47 

 

 

 



7 

 

 

 

 



625 



124 



47 



3 







1 



197 

 

 

 



27 

 1 

 4 

 2 

 4 



1 



34 

 



136 

 18 

 1 

 2 

 

 

 19 

 1 

 

 1 

 

 2 

 4 

 



European stocks and the Hawaiian and 

 part-Hawaiian, giving rise to an unique 

 European-Polynesian-Asiatic blend. 



5. Two hundred and fifty-five Amer- 

 icans married Hawaiian or part-Ha- 

 waiian mates ; of these 26 were Ameri- 

 can women. 



6. In view of the fact that Japanese 



comprise over 50% (over 100,000) of 

 the total population of Hawaii, the al- 

 most negligible degree of intermarrying 

 with the Hawaiian stock is extraordi- 

 nary. Only 4 Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian 

 men married Japanese women, and only 

 32 Japanese men married Hawaiians 

 or part-Hawaiians.^ 



' A valuable sociologic and eugenic analysis of the Hawaiian-Caucasian-Chinese blend 

 has been made by Ernest J. Deece (Amcr. Jour. Sociology, 20: 104-116. July. 1914). The 

 reader is referred to this very interesting and suggestive paper, with the conclusions of which 

 the present writer fully agrees. 



Those readers who are interested in the decline of the Hawaiian people are referred 

 to W. F. Blackman's "The Making of Hawiii." for much instructive sociological data. 



