Click the image below to be taken to the actual page. Then click on “SUBMIT YOUR COMMENTS ON MAUNA KEA” Whatever your opinion may be, here is an opportunity to make it known.
Make your voice heard, 1902 / 2019.
BE UNITED O LAHUI.
Through unity will there be strength.
You can easily break a stick that is the thickness of your finger, but if a bunch of those sticks are bound fast together, they definitely cannot be broken. Continue reading
Restoration Day, 1893.
KA LA HOIHOI EA.
This is Restoration Day, and it is 50 years from the stealing by Admiral Lord George [Paulet], and this is the Jubilee of Restoration Day.
Restoration Anthem, 1843.
Mele Hoi Hou Ana
The following hymn was sung by various circles on the day of the Restoration; as well as after the Temperance Picnic, given by His Majesty, to Foreign Residents and Naval Officers, (English and American,) at his Country Residence in Nuuanu Valley, August 3d.
RESTORATION ANTHEM.
Tune, ‘God Save the King.’
Hail! to our rightful King!
We joyful honors bring
This day to thee!
Long live your Majesty!
Long reign this dynasty!
And for posterity
The sceptre be!
Hail! to the worthy name!
Worthy his Country’s Fame
Thomas, the brave!
Long shall they virtues be,
Shrined in our memory
Who came to set us free,
Quick oe’r the wave!
Hail! to our Heavenly King!
To Thee our Thanks we bring,
Worthy of all;
Loud we thine honors raise!
Loud is our song of praise!
Smile on our future days,
Sovereign of all!
July 31, 1843. Edwin O. Hall.
[This post may…
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Song for the Restoration of the Kingdom, 1843.
In just a few days it will be 176 years since the restoration of the kingdom.
MELE HOI HOU ANA.
(Leo, ‘E Ola ke Alii i ke Akua.’)
1. E ko makou alii!
Mahalo ‘ka moi,
I keia la!
E mau kou ola nei!
E mau kou aupuni!
No na hanauna hoi,
I oni paa.
2. Nani! ka inoa maikai!
Me kona aina nae!
Toma ke koa!
Mahalo ‘kou maikai,
Kou wikiwiki mai!
Maluna o ke kai,
E kuu ‘na pau!
3. Hiilani i ke Lii!
Iehova ka Moi,
E hapai no;
Nui ke kupinai!
Nui ke mele nae!
I mau ka pomaikai
Ia oe no.
Honolulu, Oahu, Iulai 31, 1843.
(Nonanona, 9/5/1843, p. 44)
Death of Dr. Beratz / Dr. Beraz, 1872.
Melancholy Death of Dr. Beraz.—By the arrival yesterday of the Nettie Merrill from Lahaina, intelligence was received of the finding on Tuesday morning last, of the dead body of Dr. H. Beraz, a much esteemed German physician residing on East Maui, under circumstances that indicate that he was either drowned in crossing the gulch of Kapia, orthat he had met with foul play. A letter from an intelligent native, Mr. Aholo, relates the following circumstances: Continue reading
German naturalist Dr. Beratz sees Maunakea, 1870.
[Found under: “A European Traveler’s Account of a Trip over Hawaii.”]
[“]On our ascent to the top of Mauna Kea, we visited the little lake called Waiau, situated at an elevation of circa 12,000 feet, in a depression formed between the numerous snow covered peaks of the mountain. The lake was covered over with a crust of ice, two to three inches thick, but not strong enough to skate upon. To find ice in the tropics strikes the traveler with surprise, and here we feel inclined to play with it like children. Continue reading
Lake Waiau, 1906.
SKATING ON MAUNA KEA
Lake Waiau Is Frozen Solid and Ice Very Slippery.
Eben Low, the manager of the Humuula sheep ranch on Hawaii, is in town and has much of interest to tell of a recent trip up the snow-covered slopes of Mauna Kea. Continue reading
Moanawai o Waiau, 1906.
AKAHI NO A HOLOHAUIA KA MOANAWAI WAIAU.
Ma ka hoea ana mai o Mr. Eben Low o Waimea, Hawaii, i ke kulanakauhale nei, i loheia ae ai kekahi mau anoai meahou o Maunakea. Wahi ana, no ka ikaika loa o ka paa ana o ka hau i uhi ae maluna o ka moanawai o Waiau ua hiki ke heleia maluna ona. Continue reading
Ka Haku o Hawaii, 1865.
The 20th of May.—This past Saturday, we commemorated a holiday of years past of the Hawaiian people. It is the day that an angel of the highest heavens appeared and stayed for but a short time in this dull world, then he was snatched from us and disappeared. Continue reading

