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  • Home
    • Upcoming Events
    • About hakalauhome
    • Contact Us!
  • Yesterday
    • Timeline
    • Camps
    • People >
      • The Ross Families of Hakalau
      • Satoru Kurisu
      • Toraichi Morikawa
      • Waichi Ouye
      • Aigoro Uyeno
    • Schools >
      • Hakalau School
      • John M. Ross School
      • Hakalau Japanese Language School
    • Churches & Cemeteries >
      • Churches >
        • Hakalau Jodo Mission
        • Honohina Hongwanji
      • Cemeteries >
        • Honohina Cemetery
    • The Voice of Hakalau
    • Sugar Production >
      • Hakalau Mill & Other Buildings
      • Wailea Milling Company
    • Transportation >
      • Ships
      • 19th Century Hamakua Roads
      • Bridges >
        • Highway Bridges, 1950-1953
      • The Railroad
  • Today
    • Hakalau Farmers Market
    • Hakalau Jodo Mission Today >
      • Community Commitments >
        • Obon Festival
        • Memorial Day
        • Presentations >
          • American Gatha
          • Building World Peace, Local Style
          • Stronger Than a Tsunami
          • The End of Sugar
          • Ready, Set, Obon!
        • Newsletters
    • Honohina Hongwanji Today
    • Wailea/Hakalau Kumiai
    • Hakalau Reunions
    • Wailea Village Historic Preservation Community >
      • Cemetery Stewardship
      • Reviving Hakalau School
      • Senior Luncheons
  • Then and Now
    • UP & DOWN CAMPS: THEN AND NOW
    • Memorial Day: Then and Now
  • Tomorrow
    • Arsenic Remediation
    • Cliff Failures
    • Hāmākua CDP & the CDP Action Committee

Wailea Mill Camp Houses #348-353

All of these homes were built in 1937 (although may have been finished in 1938)
Picture
Picture
Hawaii Tribune Herald, July 2, 1937, accessed via Newspapers.com
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Wailea Mill Camp #348, built 1937-1938, occupied by Filipino workers, Elmer Sumibcay, Ildefonso Sumibcay.
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Wailea Mill Camp #349, built 1937-1938, occupied the Susumu Kurisu family. Susumu Kurisu and his family and/or his son Yasushi and his family lived in this house. Yasushi "Scotch" Kurisu was the author of Sugar Town: Hawaii Plantation Days Remembered.
Picture
Picture
Wailea Mill Camp #350, built 1937-1938, occupied by Sensuke Soken and family, then by his son Yoshio Soken and his family.
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Wailea Mill Camp # 351, built 1937-1938, occupied by Rivera, then Uratani, then Ramon Abong (early 1960s).
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Wailea Mill Camp #352, built 1937-1938, occupied by Ichigaku Samura
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Wailea Mill Camp #353, built 1937-1938, occupied by Inosuke Tomiyama.
Wailea Mill Camp Houses #354-362
For the Hakalau Kuleana, our responsibility is to care for the land, the people, and the culture. We are guided by cultural values of YESTERDAY: Engage in collective effort. Look out for each other. Honor hard work. Show respect for those who came before us. Aloha and Mālama `Aina. In 2021, Akiko Masuda added two more values to the list: Consistently show up. Whatever has to be done, jump in and do it!