In 1959, Hawaii officially became an American state and, as a result, the 1960s were a significant decade in Hawaiian history. From monumental volcanic eruptions and destructive tsunamis to political change and environmental activism, it is important to look to the past, to reflect on where we have been and where we would like to go. Take a look at these photos of Hawaii in the 1960s to imagine what life in Hawaii was like back then.
1. Waikiki Beach and the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, as photographed in December 1969.
2. A tsunami generated by the Chilean earthquake on May 22, 1960 destroyed Hilo, where 61 people died and $24 million in damages occurred.
3. A Boeing 707 sits at Honolulu International Airport in 1969.
4. President Lyndon B. Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk at the Honolulu Conference in 1966.
5. The USS Coral Sea photographed behind the USS Arizona Memorial in April 1963.
6. Massive lava fountain spewing into the air above a group of papaya trees; by late Jaunary 1960, most of Kapoho was destroyed.
7. A young child hangs out on a Hawaiian patio in 1960.
8. View of Nihoa Island, a small Hawaiian islet, in 1969.
9. View of the United States Navy Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, circa 1963, more than twenty years after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
10. Betty Ford with three unidentified women aboard a naval launch at Pearl Harbor.
11. The remains of a prehistoric home-site, on Nihoa.
12. A Kapoho school was destroyed by lava in Jaunary 1960.
13. Tires being set in place in order to determine their effectiveness as a habitat for fish. This photograph was taken in Pokai Bay on Oahu's leeward coast in July 1969.
Aren’t these vintage photos of Hawaii in the 1960s absolutely captivating? Which of these images inspires you most? For a glimpse of what it was like living in Hawaii even further back in time, take a look at these pictures of what Hawaii looked like 100 years ago.
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