Charles de Varigny explained

Charles de Varigny
Office:French Consul to Kingdom of Hawaii
Term Start:1862
Term End:1863
Predecessor:Louis Emile Perrin
Successor:Germain Marie Maxime Desnoyers
Office1:Minister of Finance
Term Start1:December 24, 1863
Term End1:December 21, 1865
Predecessor1:Charles Gordon Hopkins
Successor1:Charles Coffin Harris
Office2:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Term Start2:December 21, 1865
Term End2:November 1869
Successor2:Charles Coffin Harris
Birth Date:25 November 1829
Birth Place:Versailles, France
Death Place:Montmorency, Val-d'Oise
Nationality:Kingdom of Hawaii
French Second Empire
Spouse:Louise Constantin
Children:3
Occupation:Author, Diplomat, Politician
Signature:Charles de Varigny signature.svg

Charles Victor Crosnier de Varigny (November 25, 1829 – November 9, 1899) was a French adventurer, diplomat, translator and writer.

He was born November 25, 1829, in Versailles.He was educated at Lycée Bourbon. He came with his father to the California Gold Rush. He married Louise Constantin (1827–1894) August 14, 1852, in San Francisco, and worked for a French language newspaper, L'echo du Pacifique founded by Étienne Derbec.[1]

He and his family arrived on the Restless from San Francisco February 18, 1855, in Honolulu. He accepted a position as translator to Louis Emile Perrin the Consul (diplomatic rank below that of ambassador) from France to the Kingdom of Hawaii.he became friends with Scot Robert Crichton Wyllie who spoke several languages due to his travel throughout South America and the Pacific. At that time France and Great Britain were allies in the Crimean War.In 1857 he traveled to the island of Hawaiʻi with German Hermann von Holt. They toured Kīlauea volcano, and visited the rancher John Palmer Parker. They hired the guide "Jack" Purdy who told the story of earlier adventurer Julius Brenchley. Purdy then led them in an ascent of Mauna Kea, the highest mountain in the Pacific.[1]

When Perrin died in 1862 he became acting Consul from France.In July 1863 he visited the island of Kauaʻi, including a visit of the Princeville sugarcane plantation owned by Wyllie.[2]

On December 7, 1863, he was appointed to the Privy Council for King Kamehameha V and on 14 to become the Minister of Finance. Immediately the new king caused a political crisis by refusing to take an oath to the constitution. After a constitutional convention did not agree with his proposal, Kamehameha V proclaimed his own 1864 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii. Varigny generally supported the new constitution, which gave both the king and cabinet ministers more power, and limited voters with property requirements.[3]

From 1864 through 1868 he served in the House of Nobles of the legislature.On January 21, 1865, he was appointed to the Bureau of Immigration and Bureau of Public Instruction.[4]

After the death of Wyllie Varigny became Minister of Foreign Affairs on December 21, 1865.[4] One of his first acts was to call off the efforts of John Bowring for negotiating a three-way treaty between France, Great Britain, and the United States. Varigny instead favored an individual reciprocity treaty with each country.[3] Charles Coffin Harris had negotiated a tentative treaty with American Commissioner Edward Moody McCook. However, in the meantime the under Captain William Reynolds had arrived February 9, 1867, and refused to leave in response to rumors that France was going to take over the islands. Harris lodged a protest to Secretary of State William Henry Seward. Seward had just completed the Alaska Purchase. Rumors circulated that the U.S. was ready to invade, and some Americans on the islands indicated they would support such a move. On August 28, 1867, Reynolds claimed possession of Midway Atoll. The Captain's clerk leaked letters to the Hawaiian government alleging a conspiracy for starting a rebellion. Varigny forwarded the letters to the U.S. State Department, who then requested to have the clerk arrested.[5]

In March 1868 an increase in volcanic activity resulted in the 1868 Hawaii earthquake and resulting tsunami that caused damage throughout the islands. Varigny helped organize bringing aid to the victims. On May 6, 1868, the Lackawanna sailed back to San Francisco and the clerk was court-martialed. He was found guilty, but quietly had his sentence suspended, probably to avoid any embarrassing publicity.[5]

Later in 1868 he returned to France. He tried to negotiate treaties between Hawaii and European powers, but the conflicts leading up to the Franco-Prussian War prevented much progress. A short treaty with Russia was signed June 19, 1869.[6] He also negotiated treaties with the North German Confederation and Denmark, but these were rejected by the Hawaiian government because they did not allow for any other reciprocity agreements. His leave of absence expired in November 1869. He asked to continue as envoy, but by the fall of 1870 as relieved of any connection with Hawaii. Harris took over the ministry of foreign affairs, while John Mott-Smith replaced Harris as minister of finance.[3] He published a series of articles about his voyages starting in 1873. He then expanded these stories into a book about his 14 years in the islands, followed by others about his experiences in California and other parts of the Pacific.[2]

He died November 9, 1899, in Montmorency, Val-d'Oise near Paris.His son Henry Crosnier de Varigny was born 1855 and became a biologist.[7] Henry's writings included a biography of Charles Darwin[8] and other works discussing evolution. Henry died in 1934.[9] He also had two daughters.

Works

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: 10524/140 . Charles de Varigny's Tall Tale of Jack Purdy and the Wild Bull . Hawaiian Journal of History . Hawaii Historical Society . 1 . Alfons L. Korn . 1967 . 43–52 .
  2. Book: David W. Forbes . Hawaiian National Bibliography, 1780–1900: 1851–1880 . 22 March 2010 . 2001 . University of Hawaii Press . 978-0-8248-2503-4 . 589–590 .
  3. Book: Hawaiian Kingdom 1854–1874, twenty critical years . Ralph Simpson Kuykendall . Ralph Simpson Kuykendall . 2 . University of Hawaii Press . 1953 . 978-0-87022-432-4 .
  4. Web site: de Varingy, Charles office record . state archives digital collections . state of Hawaii . 2010-03-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120306203240/http://archives1.dags.hawaii.gov/gsdl/collect/governme/index/assoc/HASH016b/d9b41fc6.dir/De%20Varigny%2C%20Charles.jpg . 2012-03-06 . dead .
  5. News: 10524/356 . The Conspiracy That Never Existed: How Hawai'i Evaded Annexation in 1868 . Hawaiian Journal of History . Hawaii Historical Society . 37 . David Zmijewski . 2003 . 119–138 .
  6. Web site: Treaty with Russia . June 19, 1869 . 2010-03-22 .
  7. Book: Henry de Varigny . Smithsonian Institution. Hodgkins Fund . Air and life . 1 . 1896 . Translation by the author of L'Air et la Vie
  8. Book: Henry de Varigny . Charles Darwin . 1899 . (French)
  9. News: Accueil et diffusion du Darwinisme en France : Henry de Varigny (1855–1934), médecin, chercheur et journaliste, un Darwinien convaincu . Yves Carton . Médecin Sciences . April 2009 . 25 . 4 . (French) Title in English: Reception and distribution of the Darwinism in France : Henry de Varigny (1855–1934), doctor, researcher and journalist, a convinced Darwinian