Follow up on previous post about Peter K. Morse, 1926.

KAINANA HIRAM PASSES ON TO OTHER WORLD

At eleven o’clock in the night of last Tuesday, Mrs. Hiram, who was a kamaaina to the people of this town, Mrs. Elizabeth Kainana Puahi Hiram, grew weary of this life at her home on Makee Road¹ in Waikiki.

She was born on the 22nd of June, 1853, therefore, at her passing, she was 73 years old.

On the evening of this past Sunday, her funeral was held at the mortuary of M. E. Silva.

¹Although spelled Makee, this is pronounced Makī, just as how Ena of Ena Road is pronounced Ina.

(Kuokoa, 8/5/1926, p. 6)

HALA O KAINANA HIRAM MA KELA AO

Ka Nupepa Kuokoa, Buke LXV, Helu 31, Aoao 6. Augate 5, 1926.

Newspapers and history and yesterday and tomorrow, 2014.

Whenever i talk to people about doing research in the Hawaiian-Language Newspapers or in any historical material for that matter, i try to prepare them saying that you never know what you will find in its pages. History, after all, is not only made up of heroes and patriots, but it also inevitably includes thieves and charlatans as well.

Let us be brave and search out connections great and small. Granted, you may very well find that one of your ohana embezzled money from one of the king’s trusts or another actually signed the Provisional Government’s annexation petition. On the other hand, what if you found that one of your ohana saved another person’s life, or another was sent to jail for participating in the rebellion of 1895.

Regardless of what we may find, the past cannot be changed, but what we can do by better understanding history is to learn from its mistakes and to emulate its successes, and to use this knowledge to work towards making a better Hawaii, and a better world for the new generations to come.

More blogs from the Bishop Museum: Anthropology, 2014.

This blog has been up for a little longer than the nupepa-hawaii.com blog has been up. If you are into anthropology of Hawaii and the Pacific, this is probably a blog you will enjoy. It is a little difficult to maneuver without any tags or many categories, but if you have the time to click back and forth, check them out.

ANTHROPOLOGY

Department of the Bishop Museum

Further information on articles, 2014 and beyond.

I was just thinking that if anyone has any supplementary information on any of the posts appearing here that they might be holding on to and that they might want to share, that it might be helpful if they respond to that particular post with what they know, or even with questions they have (who knows, someone might have the answer). Or if perhaps one of the posts from the past sparks some recollection or conversation just amongst yourselves, that too i believe is worthwhile.