Maui Non-Residential

Haiku Mill

Address 250 Haiku Road, Haiku, Maui 96709 TMK (2) 2-7-003:006 SHPD Historic Site Number 50-06-1622 National Register of Historic Places #86000189 Abstract The Haiku Plantation Mill stands in ruins on a 1.9 acre parcel on the east bank of the Maliko gulch. The mill is overgrown with jungle. The mill operated for eighteen years, from 1861 to 1879, and was then abandoned. Seventy-five to eighty percent of the walls remain intact, although no roof, or traces of it remain. The walls are made of basalt stone, with door and window openings frames in cut basalt brick and block.The Haiku Plantation Mill ruins are significant for their associations with the early years of the sugar industry on Maui. At the time of the Haiku Sugar Company's charter in 1858, there were only ten sugar companies in Hawaii. Haiku Plantation eventually merged with Paia Plantation to form Maui Agricultural Company. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:49-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

Hana District Police Station and Courthouse

Address Uakea Road, Hana, Maui 96713 TMK (2) 1-4-013:036 SHPD Historic Site Number 50-13-1626 National Register of Historic Places #91001086 Abstract The Hana District Police Station and Courthouse is a modest, one-story, single-wall frame building with a front-facing corrugated metal gable roof and a pent-roofed front porch. It sits on a knoll overlooking the harbor at Hana. Originally, the interior if the building contained two rooms: the court room and the "gaoler's" room. The Hana District Police Station and Courthouse is significant for its associations with the judiciary system in the Hana district and architecturally as an early example of single-wall construction in Hawaii. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:49-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

Hana Hongwanji

Address Hana Highway, Hana, Maui 96713 TMK (2) 1-4-003:053 SHPD Historic Site Number 50-13-1629 Abstract The Hana Hongwanji is a one-story, frame building with a low-pitched flared irimoya roof and a karahafu roofed portico. It sits on a raised lot with a green lawn around it. A stone wall retains the lawn and separates the temple from the street. The Hana Hongwanji is significant for its associations with the Japanese community who once lived in Hana. The Japanese were brought to Hana to work on the plantations. In 1907 the Reverend Ryogen Teramasa organized the Honpa Hongwanji mission in Hana. The Hana Hongwanji is also architecturally significant as a good example of western and eastern building forms in Hawaii. The temple is essentially a western frame building on which a Japanese portico and roof have been constructed. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:49-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

Hana Store

Address Hana Highway and Keawa Place, Hana, Maui 96713 TMK (2) 1-4-013:001 SHPD Historic Site Number 50-13-1628 Abstract The Hana Store is a simple, rectangular, single-story, whitewashed stone building. It has a corrugated metal gable roof with a false front at the front and rear. The building is entered and exited through a centered double doorway. The doors are of recent vintage as are their slightly outset concrete frame. The Hana Store is significant for being one of the oldest extant buildings in Hana, and in turn for its associations with the development of Hana and the contribution made to the community via its mercantile activities. Hana was a small community, which in 1878 was reported to have a church, school, courthouse, thirty native houses and two general stores, of which this building was one. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:50-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

Wananalua Congregational Church

Address Hana Highway and Hauoli Rd., Hana, Maui 96713 TMK (2) 1-4-004:019 SHPD Historic Site Number 50-13-1521 National Register of Historic Places #88002533 Abstract Wananalua Church is a large stone building, the walls of which have been plastered over. It is dominated by an outset bell tower which serves as the entry. The church has a front-facing, shake-shingled, gable roof and sits conspicuously on a large lot surrounded by a nicely manicured lawn with informal plantings. The Wananalua Congregational Church is significant for its associations with western settlement in the Hana area. Daniel Conde and his family were the first missionaries to permanently settle in Hana. The church has remained in continuous operation to the present and is one of the better maintained nineteenth-century stone churches on Maui. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:50-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

Kalaupapa Leprosy Settlement

Address Kalaupapa Peninsula, Kalawao, Molokai 96742 TMK (3) 6-1-001:001 SHPD Historic Site Number 60-03-1024 National Historic Landmark District National Register of Historic Places #76002145 Abstract Updated documentation was approved in September, 2020. The update to the original 1976 NHL nomination was completed on behalf of Kalaupapa National Historical Park. It provides an expanded and up-to-date inventory of contributing and non-contributing resources, and a revised significance statement and discussion that reflects current historical interpretations and NHL guidelines. The period of significance is also revised to meet current NHL guidelines. To try to stem an epidemic of leprosy, which was a major factor in the depopulation of native Hawaiians, the Kingdom of Hawaii instituted in 1886 a century-long program of segregation and isolation of lepers. Lepers were banished to the isolated peninsula of Kalaupapa, a natural prison, on the island of Molokai. Except for a handful of private homes built by patients, the prevailing dates of construction appear to be well before World War II. Kalaupapa Peninsula is significant as a historic district at which events occurred that have made a significant contribution to Hawaii's history. It is associated with the life of Father Damien, a person of national and international significance. It is associated with the public health and humanitarian measures of more than a century's duration in an effort by the political ancestor of one of the States and by a U.S. Territory to save an ethnic group from extinction. Lastly, Kaluapapa Peninsula contains structures that embody the distinguishing characteristics of "institutional Hawaiian" architecture of the 1930s and earlier, which are exceptionally valuable for a study of style and methods of construction. [...]

2021-02-03T14:40:10-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

U.S. Coast Guard Light Station Lahaina

Address Papelekane Street at Wharf Street, Lahaina, Maui 96761 TMK Not provided SHPD Historic Site Number Not provided Abstract The Lahaina Light Station is a forty-four-foot concrete tower, used as an aid to navigation in Lahaina Harbor. The station was built in 1905. Lahaina was the first major port in the Hawaiian chain and was a familiar name to mariners during the height of the whaling days. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:50-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

Molokai Light Station

Address Kalaupapa Peninsula, Kalawao, Molokai 96742 TMK (3) 6-1-001:003 SHPD Historic Site Number 60-03-1036 National Register of Historic Places #82001724 Abstract The Molokai Light Station, which includes an impressive 138-foot-tall lighthouse tower and lantern, two keepers' houses, additional ancillary structures, and other features, is located on approximately 22.8 acres on the northern point of the Makanalua Peninsula on the north cost of the island of Molokai. The light station was one of the first and most ambitious navigational aids built in Hawaii after the U.S. lighthouse services assumed responsibility for construction and maintenance of lighthouses, buoys, and other markers in 1903. The Molokai Light Station is significant as a representative of lighthouse and light station design in America during the early and mid-twentieth century. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:50-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

Maalaea General Store

Address 232 Maalaea Harbor Road, Wailuku, Maui 96753 TMK (2) 3-6-008:002 SHPD Historic Site Number 50-09-9109 National Register of Historic Places #13000795 Abstract The Maalaea General Store is a one-story plantation vernacular building with multiple additions and buildings. The building and additions were closed up in 2005 and all windows were boarded up with marine plywood. The store was built in 1910 in order to provide merchandise for plantation workers who resided at the nearby Wailuku Sugar Company camp and residents of the Japanese fishing community of Maalaea Village. The Maalaea General Store is a rare example of an early twentieth-century Japanese store on Maui. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:50-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

Maui Public Schools

Address Island of Maui TMK (2) Various SHPD Historic Site Number Various National Register of Historic Places #00000662 (Kaupo) #00000663 (Puunene) #00000664 (Paia) #00000665 (Keanae) #00000666 (Wailuku) Abstract The population of the island of Maui grew rapidly in the early years of the twentieth century. This growth in population necessitated an increase in the number of schools. The Maui Public Schools provide a valuable example of the development of education practices during this time period. The Maui Public Schools are significant for their varied architectural styles and for their role in the history of education on Maui. Each of the schools within this nomination are represented by their own individual page. The schools represented are Keanae, Wailuku, Puunene, Baldwin High, and Paia. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T01:01:50-10:00March 3rd, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |
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