The 1970s were a time of monumental change throughout the country, and Hawaii was no exception. Just more than a decade since Hawaii became a state, the tourism industry was booming. With more than 1.7 million visitors a year, infrastructure had to be adjusted for this influx in travelers. From major highways and cities that have since experienced exponential growth to natural wonders where it seems as though hardly a day has passed, these 16 photographs of Hawaii in the 1970s are sure to entrance you.
1. President Richard M. Nixon meets with Apollo 13 astronauts in Hawaii.
2. A U.S. Navy McDonnel Douglas F-4J Phantom II aircraft and a North American RA-5C Vigilante fly over Oahu in 1971 leading up to a combat deployment to Vietnam.
3. It’s crazy to think about how much Waikiki has changed since 1973, when this photograph was taken.
4. Mrs. Nixon was given the “key to the city” of Hilo, Hawaii in 1972.
5. Women all dressed up for the Aloha Day Parade in October, 1973.
6. Airliners on Maui in 1973: “Jet travel between the islands is a cause of rapid development. Sea travel has not been utilized in the tourist trade.”
7. The Hawaiian State Capitol, as photographed in the 1970s.
8. Even the traffic on H-1 in 1973 looks pretty terrible.
9. The breathtaking Akaka Falls has changed very little in the last several decades.
10. Honolulu, as photographed from the top of Diamond Head in the '70s.
11. Cat Stevens performing in Waikiki, circa 1974.
12. A cinder cone on the southeast flank of Mauna Kea volcano photographed in 1975.
13. The USS Kitty Hawk at Pearl Harbor in April 1975, before being deployed in the West Pacific from May to December of that year.
14. A surfer leans against his car in the late 1970s.
15. The R. W. Meyer Sugar Mill located off State Route 47 in Kualapuu, Molokai.
16. Hickam Air Force Base, as photographed in 1977.
Do you have any photographs or memories from Hawaii in the 1970s? Share them with us on the Only In Hawaii Facebook page!
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