Both Colonized by the United States: Why Hawaii Became a State While the Philippines Went Independent

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090406-N-5476H-002 HONOLULU, Hawaii (April 6, 2009) Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars attend a memorial ceremony April 6 at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. The ceremony commemorated the 67th Philippine national holiday ÒAraw ng KagitinganÓ or ÒDay of Valor,Ó and honored Filipino-American service members during World War II. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Michael Hight/Released)

As a late-rising colonial power, the United States acquired relatively few large overseas colonies compared with the European empires. Among them, the Philippines was the most substantial, while Hawaii and Cuba were also significant additions at the turn of the 20th century. 

In 1898, amid the Spanish-American War, Washington seized the Philippines from Spain and, in the same year, formally annexed Hawaii. Though separated by thousands of miles of ocean, the two archipelagos, whose Indigenous peoples share Austronesian linguistic roots, fell under American control at nearly the same moment.

Half a century later, however, they chose sharply different paths. In 1946, the Philippines became an independent republic. In 1959, Hawaii voted in a plebiscite to join the United States as its 50th state. Today, their economic fortunes diverge dramatically: in 2024, the Philippines’ per-capita GDP stood at roughly $4,000, while Hawaii’s reached about $60,000, ranking among the higher-income U.S. states. Why did one break away while the other entered the Union? The answer lies in geography, demography, war, and the shifting logic of American power.

At first glance, the Philippines and Hawaii appear distant cousins in both culture and circumstance. Both are island chains whose Indigenous populations belong to the Austronesian family. Yet their scale and strategic positions differ profoundly. The Philippines spans roughly 300,000 square kilometers in Southeast Asia, wedged between Taiwan to the north and Borneo to the south, and historically hosted organized polities such as the Kingdom of Tondo and the Sultanate of Sulu before falling to Spanish rule in the 16th century. Hawaii, by contrast, covers about 16,000 square kilometers in the middle of the North Pacific. Isolated for centuries, it unified under King Kamehameha I in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, forming the Kingdom of Hawaii only decades after Western contact.

By the time American expansionism turned decisively toward the Pacific, both archipelagos were vulnerable in different ways. American missionaries and traders arrived in Hawaii in the early 19th century, drawn by sandalwood and later by sugar. Western firearms helped consolidate Kamehameha’s rule, but Western diseases devastated the Native Hawaiian population, which fell from several hundred thousand to fewer than 50,000 within decades. American planters and businessmen gained growing influence, importing large numbers of Chinese and Japanese laborers to work the sugar plantations. By the late 19th century, Native Hawaiians had become a demographic minority in their own land.

In 1887, under armed pressure from American residents, the Hawaiian monarchy accepted the so-called Bayonet Constitution, stripping the king of much of his authority and empowering foreign property holders. In 1893, a group of American settlers, backed by U.S. Marines, overthrew Queen Liliʻuokalani. Five years later, Congress passed the Newlands Resolution annexing Hawaii, cementing its role as a strategic outpost—especially at Pearl Harbor—as the United States projected power across the Pacific.

The Philippines entered the American orbit through war with Spain. After more than three centuries of Spanish colonial rule, Filipino revolutionaries led by figures such as José Rizal and Andrés Bonifacio had already ignited an independence movement. Emilio Aguinaldo declared independence in June 1898, but the U.S., having defeated Spain, refused to recognize the fledgling republic. The Philippine-American War erupted in 1899 and dragged on until 1902, with sporadic resistance continuing for years. The conflict was brutal and costly, revealing the difficulty of subduing an archipelago of 7.6 million people at a time when the United States itself had a population of only about 76 million.

Demography proved decisive. Unlike Hawaii, the Philippines could not be easily transformed by immigration or demographic dilution. Its population was large, regionally diverse, and culturally complex, shaped by centuries of contact with Asia and Europe. American racial attitudes at the time also complicated the prospect of incorporation; granting citizenship to millions of non-white Filipinos was politically contentious. Governing the territory required sustained military and administrative effort, and external powers, including Japan, loomed nearby.

By contrast, Hawaii’s smaller population and geographic isolation made it easier to secure and integrate. Its strategic value as a naval hub grew during World War II. The attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 underscored its military centrality, yet U.S. forces retained control. The Philippines, on the other hand, fell to Japanese forces shortly after the war began. Although the U.S. eventually returned, wartime experience reinforced the view in Washington that holding a distant, populous Asian colony against regional powers would be costly and precarious.

Even before the war, Congress had set the Philippines on a path toward self-government through the Jones Act of 1916 and the Tydings-McDuffie Act of 1934, promising eventual independence. In 1946, amid a global wave of decolonization and with the United States positioning itself as a champion of freedom, the Philippines formally became independent.

Yet independence did not sever ties. Manila signed agreements preserving close economic and military links with Washington. Trade legislation granted preferential access to American goods, while U.S. companies retained significant privileges. American military bases remained on Philippine soil for decades, anchoring U.S. strategy in the Western Pacific. During the Korean and Vietnam wars, U.S. spending stimulated segments of the Philippine economy, but structural weaknesses—limited industrialization, elite dominance, and dependence on external demand—persisted. Over time, economic disparities widened, and large numbers of Filipinos sought work abroad.

Hawaii’s trajectory was different. After annexation, it developed around sugar, the military, and, by the mid-20th century, tourism. By the time of the 1959 statehood vote, the islands’ population consisted largely of American settlers and their descendants, alongside Japanese, Filipino, and other immigrant communities. Native Hawaiians, who had once been the overwhelming majority, comprised a minority. Statehood promised full political representation and federal benefits, and it passed with broad support among voters. In subsequent decades, Hawaii’s economy expanded, and its per-capita income rose well above the U.S. average.

The divergent outcomes reflect more than ideology. Geography made Hawaii easier to defend and incorporate, while the Philippines’ size and proximity to Asian powers made permanent annexation impractical. Demography limited the feasibility of demographic transformation in the Philippines, while disease, migration, and intermarriage had already reshaped Hawaii. International politics after World War II also favored formal decolonization, even as new forms of economic and military influence persisted.

Today, the legacies of American rule remain visible in both places. English is widely spoken in the Philippines, and the country maintains close security ties with Washington. In Hawaii, debates over sovereignty, land rights, and historical injustice continue, even as the state enjoys relative prosperity. One archipelago became a sovereign nation navigating the complexities of post-colonial development; the other became a U.S. state embedded within the federal system. Their shared Austronesian roots did not dictate a common destiny. Instead, the interplay of power, population, and global strategy set them on different courses—paths whose consequences are still unfolding.

Source: goHawaii, national geographic, history state gov, matiere volution, US berkeley research