IKiLE
DOLE
Bristol, England, to Old Newbury, Mass., in 1639.
His father at the time of his death was editor of
the Duysprimj and other publications of the Ameri-
can bojird of commissioners for foreign missions.
The son was i>rep;ired for college at Phillips Exeter
and Andover academies and was graduated from
Harvard in l!S74. He then taught classics at De
Veaux college and Worcester high school, and was
a i)receptor of Derby academy. Hingham. Mass.
He was literary editor of the Philadelphia Pre**-.
1881-8."); musical editor, 1881-87; musical editor of
the Philadelphia Eveninn Ptilletiii, 1886-87. He
was elected a member of the Press club and the
Nineteenth century
club of Philadeli)hia;
of the Harvard musi-
cal association ; of the
Twentieth century
club, Boston; and of
L"Alliance Fran^aise,
of which last he was
made vice-president
in 1897 and re-elected
in 1898. He was mar-
ried in 1882 to Helen
James Bennett. His
translations include :
, . Dupuy"s Great Jlaster
'^^^' of Iiiissian Literature
(1886); eight volumes by Tolstoi (1889 et seq.);
three by Valdes (1888. et seq.); Schultze-Smidfs
A M<nJonna of the Alps (1895) ; Von Sheffel's Ekke-
hard (1896) ; Von Kocirs CamiUa (1S96) : Dumas"s
Tltree Musketerrs (1896); Cavalhria HusUccna
(1896) ; and many others, including several hun-
dred songs for music; and his original works in-
clude: Youiiff People's History of Bussia (1882);
A Score of Famous Composers (1891); Xot Angels
Quite (1893) ; Uawly Lexicon of Music ; a burlesque
(1894) ; On the Point : a Summer Idyl (1895) ; The
Hairthorne Tree, and Other Poems (1896); Life of
Francis William Bird {1897) ; Poems for Educational
Music Course (1897); Joseph Jefferson at Home
(1898); Omar the Tent-Maker: a Bomance of Old
Persia (1898) ; and The Mistakes We Make (1898);
He also editetl a Multivariorum edition of Puhai-
yit of Omar Khayyam C[S9G-dl), the breviary bi-
lingual Latin and Engli.sh edition of the same
(1898), and the five version standard edition; and
also editions of Burns, Longfellow, 'Whittier,
Brj-ant, Byron, Keats, Scott, Moore, and others,
with biographies (1893-97). He was engaged
on the "SVarner Lihrary of the WorhVs Best Litera-
ture, and was editor-in-chief of Tfie International
Lihrary of Famous Literature (1898). He also
edited a new twenty-volume edition of Count
L. N. Tolstoi's collected works. He lectured ex-
tensively on Ru.s.sian, Italian and English litera-
ture before clubs and Ivceums.
DOLE, Sanford Ballard, president of the
republic of Hawaii, was burn in tb.e Hawaiian
Islands 'April 23, 18-14; son of Daniel and Emily
(Ballard) Dole; and grand.son of Wigglesworth
and Elizabeth (Haskell) Dole. His father's boy-
hood home was in Skowhegan, Maine, and his
mother's home before her marriage was Bath,
Maine. He was educated by his father at Kauai,
at Oahu college, Oahu, Hawaii, and at Williams
college, Massachusetts. He was admitted to the
bar in Boston and returned to Hawaii, where he
practised law. He was married to Anna Gate of
Castine, Maine. He was a member of the legis-
latures of 1884 and
1886 and was active
in promoting the re-
form movement that
led to changes in gov-
ernment in 1887. He
was a judge of the
supreme court of the
kingdom in 1887, and
head of the provi-
sional government of
1893, which arrogated
the powers and duties
theretofore belonging
to the sovereign. On
June 30, 1894, a consti-
tution was adofjted
in which he was
named as president
to hold office till 1901. This constitution was
promulgated July 4, 1894. The provisional gov-
ernment sent commissioners to the United States
in 1893, who negotiated a treaty of annexation,
but President Cleveland withdrew the treaty from
the senate and announced his intention of restor-
ing the monarchy, and on Dec. 23, 1893, President
Dole, when requested to relinquish to Queen Lil-
iuokalani her constitutional authority, denied the
rigiit of the President of the United States to in-
terfere with Hawaiian affairs, and the matter was
not pressed by the President. He continued to
advocate annexation and in Januarj-, 1898, he
visited the United States with his wife and was
made a guest of the nation. In Jul}-, 1898. the
U.S. congress passed the act annexing the Hawa-
iian Islands and the act was signed by the Presi-
dent of the United States, July 7, 1898. The
formal transfer of sovereignty took place at Hono-
lulu, Aug. 12, at which time the in.structions of
President McKinley were announced, substan-
tially continuing the existing form of government
until legislation by congress on the subject
should determine the future policy of the govern -
ment and the existing officials were retained.
On June 14, 1900, he was inaugurated the first
governor of Hawaii Territory.