37 results
    1

    North Shore Surf And Cultural Museum - Waialua, Hi

    66 Kamehameha Hwy, Haleiwa, HI    

    5 out of 5 based on 2 ratings

    From (visit link) :Famous surfers, young and old, attended a gala event, which opened the doors to the Museum, on the 100th anniversary of the town of Haleiwa, on August 8, 1999. Today the museum is open most afternoons. ... waymarking.com

    2

    Laupahoehoe

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    The post office in the early years was located at the Abel Harris plantation. It was later located at William Lyngate's office at the plantation. Early postmasters: A. Harris (1859-60), W Lydgate (1879 - 1884). In 1887 vo... ghosttowns.com

    3

    Waialee

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Waialee was more than a community in 1906 but a town surrounding the Boy's Industrial School. This school was a reform school for 106 mainly Hawaiian boys convicted of such things from Disobediance of Parents to Assault a... ghosttowns.com

    4

    Hale Paahao Prison - Lahaina, Hi

    Lunaville, HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    HALE PAAHAO This prison was built in 1852 during the reign of King Kamehameha III to lock up rowdy sailors who failed to return to their ships at sundown, as well as unruly natives. The surrounding coral wall was built in... waymarking.com

    5

    Kalaupapa

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Kalaupapa was a colony for those who had leprosy. It was founded in 1866 and was largely run by a Belgian priest Father Damien. He died of the disease in 1889. In 1969, the quarantine restrictions were removed from the co... ghosttowns.com

    6

    Sugar Mill Ruins

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    This is one of many small ruins of sugar mills spread across the islands of Kaua'i, O'ahu and Mau'i. These mills were operating in full force during the agricultural heyday of the Hawaiian islands begining in the mid-1800... ghosttowns.com

    7

    Iwilei

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Iwilei, a red light district compound, had it's beginning as far back as Captain Cook's sailors where sailors paid for a Hawaiian woman with one iron nail. The 1800's a half hour was 1.50. With the Hawaiian ladies desimat... ghosttowns.com

    8

    Waiakea

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Entire town was taken out by a tsunami around 1950 (specific date submittable at a later time). Currently the area has numerous hotels, a golf course, and a recreational park (swimming pool, auditorium, baseball and footb... ghosttowns.com

    9

    Honuapo

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    The Honuapo wharf was a thriving 1883 port town with industrial warehouses, a mill, and a railroad connection. The port was used to transport taro and sugarcane grown in the town area. When the railroad was built the whar... ghosttowns.com

    10

    "The Mowry Memorial Labyrinth" -- Big Island Of...

    Captain Cook, HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Thanks to Jane Mowry, who made it all possible as a memorial garden and labyrinth in memory of her late husband Glenn. And thanks to Terry Angeleo, who supervised a team of friends and relatives to actually lay out the wa... waymarking.com

    11

    Keomuku

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Keomuku Village was the leading center of Lanai in the late 1890's, but now lies abandoned. In ancient times, farmers and fishermen inhabited portions of the fertile north coast and the valley of Maunalei. In 1898 the Mau... ghosttowns.com

    12

    Halstead Sugar Mill Ruins

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Warren & Levi Jr. , Chamberlain began a sugar mill operation in 1864. They supplied sugar for the Northern States during the Civil War. The South had cut off all sugar production in the states to the North forcing them to... ghosttowns.com

    13

    Kekaha Sugar Company -- Kauai

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    The land was already planted for sugar when Valdemer Knudsen accquired it in 1856 and began the Kekaha plantation. It went through a multitude of owners until 1885. By 1898 it became known as Kekaha Sugar Co. Ltd. The pla... ghosttowns.com

    14

    Kawailoa

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Kawailoa was a mill camp for the Waialua Sugar Company. Workers traveling through Hale'iwa to and from work created the historic town of Hale'iwa. In 1935 the sugar industry, trying to do what they could about conditions,... ghosttowns.com

    15

    Apua

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Julie Judd Swazy (1860 - 1941) was owner of the Kuoloa Ranch on the windward side of Oahu. Across the road from the ranch she developed a private picnic and recreation area called 'Apua. In the 1920's the State tried to c... ghosttowns.com

    16

    Waialua Sugar Mill

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    William Hooper of Boston established many sugar mills on Kaui and Oahu starting in 1835. When gold was discovered in California in 1848, sugar mills on Maui branched out into Irish potato cultivation. The Ka'anapali, Maui... ghosttowns.com

    17

    Haunted Lagoon

    55-370 Kamehameha Hwy, Laie, HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    Unlike a classic haunted house, the Polynesian Cultural Centers Haunted Lagoon takes guests on a spooky canoe ride that twists through the PCC lagoon under dark bridges and past ominous shadows where terrifying creature... hauntedhouse.com

    18

    Old Koloa Sugar Mill -- Kauai

    HI    

    0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings

    On Sept. 12, 1835 William Hooper cleared 12 acres, near this site, and planted the first sugar cane ever in the Hawaiian islands. This mill started with the large stone, Chinese-style, sugar grinders in the mill. Plantati... ghosttowns.com