HAKALAU OUR HOME
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      • Cemetery Stewardship
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      • Senior Luncheons
      • Mochi Pounding
  • Tomorrow
    • Arsenic Remediation
    • Cliff Failures
    • Hāmākua CDP & the CDP Action Committee
  • 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
    • Churches & Cemeteries >
      • Churches >
        • Hakalau Jodo Mission
        • Honohina Hongwanji
      • Cemeteries >
        • Honohina Cemetery
    • The Voice of Hakalau
    • Sugar Production >
      • Hakalau Mill & Other Buildings
      • Wailea Milling Company
    • Infrastructure and Transportation >
      • 19th Century Hamakua Roads
      • Bridges
      • The Railroad
  • Today
    • Hakalau Farmers Market
    • Hakalau Jodo Mission Today >
      • Newsletters
      • Obon Festival
      • Memorial Day
      • Celebrations at Hakalau Jodo Mission
    • Honohina Hongwanji Today
    • Hakalau Reunions
    • Wailea Village Historic Preservation Community >
      • Cemetery Stewardship
      • Reviving Hakalau School
      • Senior Luncheons
      • Mochi Pounding
  • Tomorrow
    • Arsenic Remediation
    • Cliff Failures
    • Hāmākua CDP & the CDP Action Committee

The Houses and Their Occupants

The house pictures are from the early 1950s and the information regarding occupants of those houses is from the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #301, Built 1906. Occupied by Shugi Nishihira in the 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #302, built 1906. Occupied by Suki Nishihira in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #303, built 1906. Vacant in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #304, built 1906. Vacant in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #305, built 1906. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #306, built in 1906. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #307, built 1907. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #308, built 1906. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #309, built 1906. Occupied by Matias Peralta in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #310, built 1906. Vacant in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #311, built 1906. Vacant in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #312, built 1906. Occupied by Aquilino Cabatbat in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #313, built 1906. Occupied by Kama Oshio in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #314, built 1906. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #315, built 1906. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #316, built 1906. TO BE SOLD in the early 1960s. Note the flume in the foreground.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #317, built 1906. Occupied by Juan Abara in the early 1960s. Note the flume in the foreground, left side.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #318, built 1906. Occupied by Noburu Motonaga in the early 1960s. Note the flume in the foreground, right side.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #319, built 1906. Occupied by Marcelino Toliau in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #320, built 1906. Occupied by Seizan Nakamura in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #321, built 1906. Occupied by Morimitsu Nakamura in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #322, built in 1906. Occupied by Gil Tomas in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #323, built 1906. Occupied by Domingo Santiago in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #324, built 1906. Vacant in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #325, built 1906. Occupied by Jose Barcena in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #326, built 1906. Occupied by Tomosu Yoshizumi in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #327 and former Japanese School, built 1930. Occupied by Masao Murai in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp #328 and former dressmaking shop, built 1922. Vacant in the early 1960s.
Picture
Wailea Spanish Camp Social Hall, built 1906.
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!