Lahaina Historic District
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
There are nine historic buildings that contribute significantly to the Lahaina Historic District, per the 1966 designation:[1]
No | Name | Year | Notes | Thumbnail |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Baldwin House | 1835 | A two-story home used by early missionaries, including Rev. Dwight Baldwin | |
2 | Old Spring House | 1823 | Built by Rev. William Richards to enclose a spring and used for fresh water by the community. | |
3 | Court House | 1859 | Replaced the Hale Piula, a former palace used for government offices damaged during an 1858 windstorm. Rebuilt in 1925 with significantly altered appearance. | |
4 | Old Prison (Hale Paʻahao) |
1852 | Main cell block (plank structure) completed in 1852, and enclosing coral-block wall completed in 1854. Original cell block burned in 1958; reconstructed in 1959 along with the wooden gate house. | |
5 | Waineʻe (now Waiola) Church | 1953 | Construction started in 1828 and completed in 1832. Destroyed by winds twice and again by fire in 1894. Present structure was completed in 1953, when the name was changed to Waiola. Hawaiian nobility are interred in the cemetery, which dates to 1823. | |
6 | Hale Aloha | 1858 | Meeting house completed in 1858, replacing an earlier stone church dating to 1823. School house and church, restored in the 1980s | |
7 | United States Marine Hospital | 1842 | Herman Melville noted one of his shipmates died at this hospital in 1843. Sold in 1865 and served as a school for girls, then a vicarage for the Episcopal Church. | |
8 | Maria Lanakila Catholic Church | 1858 | This church, erected in 1858, replaced an earlier church at the same site built in 1846. The present building was erected in 1928 on the same foundation, but is said to be an exact replica of the 1858 structure. | |
9 | Pioneer Hotel | 1901 | Lahaina's first hotel. |
References
[edit]- ↑ Lahaina Historic District, NRIS 66000302. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved on 2008-06-20.