Land Hawaii say goodbye to their last princess: Abigail Kinoiki Kekaulike Kawananakoathe last descendant of the family that once ruled the islands, is died at 96 years old. Abigail’s disappearance, which he did not use royal titles but which historians considered a symbol of the Hawaiian monarchy, was announced by Honululu’s Iolani Palace, the only royal residence in the United States that has been turned into a museum for years. Born in 1926, Abigail Kawananakoa was the eldest granddaughter of Prince David Kawananakoawho at the beginning of the twentieth century would have been the heir to the throne if the monarchy had not been overthrown a decade earlier, at the end of the nineteenth century.
Abigail was very rich: thanks to her great-grandfather James Campbell, an Irishman who arrived in Hawaii aboard a whaler who had made his fortune thanks to the cultivation of sugar cane, the princess had a fortune of around 230 million dollars. Nevertheless he had not been able to dispose of his fortune for years because she was engaged in a violent legal battle with her former attorney James Wright. The lawyer had now claimed since 2017 that the princess was unable to understand and wantespecially after the slight stroke that had struck her in 2015. And so he was unable to manage his estate. Abigail passed away but the process is still ongoing.
Not only. The princess, who had never hidden hers homosexuality, in 2007 he had married in Honolulubefore former Hawaiian Supreme Court justice, longtime partner Veronica Gail, now sixty-nine years old. According to Wright, the princess was allegedly the victim of physical abuse and exploitation by Victoria: Photos of bruises on his arm were presented as evidence in court.
The couple had responded to Wright’s allegations by saying the lawyer was building the case for their own personal benefit, in an attempt to embezzle some of the money. In addition Abigail, in a handwritten letter to a local newspaper, had told of having lawyer fired for dishonesty and had made it clear that he was perfectly capable of handling his inheritance. Nonetheless a judge had instructed the First Hawaiian Bankthe oldest and largest financial institution in Hawaii, to oversee Abigail’s finances. Since then the princess lived on the money that the bank managed for her. Now that Abigail is dead, her wife, who was by her side at the time of her disappearance, will have to continue fighting in court to claim her immense inheritance.
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Source: Vanity Fair

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