The Certificate of Hawaiian Birth application was a very basic form which was little more than a personal affidavit and might have little if any verifiable info of the birth. For example, Sun Yat-sen, Chinese revolutionary and political leader often referred to as the Father of Modern China, was able to file a Certificate of Hawaiian Birth application and immigrate to the US in 1904 using the form.
Once processed, Sun Yat-sens application became a true "Certificate of Hawaiian Birth":
As the decades passed, the Certificate of Hawaiian Birth Application and Certification process became more formalized. For example, this is the 1946 Certificate of Hawaiian Birth application from Masayoshi Mitose, credited for having brought Kenpo martial arts to the US in the 1930s:
As is evident on Mitoses supplemental data seems to indicate, the more detailed the support documentation, the greater likelihood the certificate would be accepted by the Secretary of Hawaii, and later, the Department of Health.
When Hawaii became a state in 1959, there were many people residing there who may not have had a filed birth certificate, but did possess a Certificate of Hawaiian Birth. Any person to whom a Certificate of Hawaiian Birth had been issued could request to amendment, including a legal change of name, via a Late Birth Certificate.
By applying for a Late Birth Certificate issued in lieu of a Certificate of Hawaiian Birth, changes could be made to the official records of that person that were filed using the previously-submitted form. The Late Birth Certificate would be treated more like the more-legitimate CertificATE of Live Birth, even though several years may have passed, memories faded and accounts changed regarding the events surrounding the birth.
To make changes to the birth certificate on file, an applicant would be required to submit documentary evidence of the birth facts, often in the form of a questionnaire and affidavits, to support the registration of the Late Certificate of Birth. On a small island, in a time devoid of computers and databases, verification was a little harder to come by than today. Also almost like a small town, people knew each other and were probably not highly suspicious of forgery or incomplete birth records.
Once approved, the Late Birth Certificate would be registered in the official birth records in place of the Certificate of Hawaiian Birth. Under existing policy, the Certificate of Hawaiian Birth and supplementary data would then be surrendered to the Department of Health, assumedly to be archived.
The Certificate of Hawaiian Birth Program was terminated in 1972 when, among other reasons, the law required the U.S. Social Security Administration to issue Social Security numbers and to obtain more stringent evidence of age and citizenship or alien status and identity. It is not publicly known how many citizens possess the Certificate of Hawaiian Birth, or how many people used Hawaiian law to modify their birth records to reflect a Certificate of Delayed Birth on file in place of the previous form.
American citizenship has always been seen as being highly sought after for political freedom and economic opportunity. Laws similar the Certificate of Hawaiian Birth existed for Guam and other American territories.
By todays standards, compared to the Certificate of Hawaiian Birth era of non-computerized record keeping of 1972 and before, it would seem relatively difficult to slip in using Hawaiian law to prove US Citizenship, especially if the child had not be born on Hawaii.
However, even todays Hawaiian state law provides for the issuance of birth certificates if the child is born out of state, and potentially out of the US, as long as the legal parents can show Hawaii as their legal residence:
[§338-17.8] Certificates for children born out of State.
(a) Upon application of an adult or the legal parents of a minor child, the director of health shall issue a birth certificate for such adult or minor, provided that proof has been submitted to the director of health that the legal parents of such individual while living without the Territory or State of Hawaii had declared the Territory or State of Hawaii as their legal residence for at least one year immediately preceding the birth or adoption of such child. (emphasis added)
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