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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 #364-365

On the makai side of the mill were two houses shown on the 1947 hand-drawn map produced by the Hakalau Plantation.
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Hand-drawn map created for the Hakalau Plantation in 1947.
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Photo courtesy of the Lyman Museum.
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Wailea Mill Camp #364. In the early 1960s, the house was occupied by Joseph Arrojo.
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Wailea Mill Camp #365, a house that also serves as the Wailea [train] station house between 1920 and 1946 when the railroad ended. In the early 1960s, the house was occupied by John Souz.
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Wailea Mill Camp #365 prior to the 1946 demise of the railroad and probably before Hakalau Plantation acquired the Wailea Milling Company in 1944 and subsequently dismantled the mill completely by 1947. Photo courtesy of the Lyman Museum.
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Wailea Mill Camp #365 taken in 1974 and included in an article published in the Hawaii Tribune Herald, September 22, 1974, accessed via Newspapers.com
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!