From the first Europeans visiting the islands in 1778 and the establishment of the Kingdom of Hawaii in 1795 to Hawaii’s admittance to the United States of America in 1959, the Hawaiian Islands are steeped in history, and there's no better way to discover said history than with vintage photographs like these. Do you ever wonder what Hawaii looked like 100 years ago — long before tourism was the islands' larget industry and even before Hawaii became an American State? Back when sugar and pineapple were king? Well, you’re in luck, because these ten photographs taken in the early 1900s show us what Hawaii used to look like.
1. Fort Ruger, as photographed in 1914, served as the first military reservation in the Territory of Hawaii. The reservation is now on the National Register of Historic Places, though portions of the site are still used for training by the Hawaii National Guard.
2. Jack and Charmian London enjoy a day at Waikiki Beach, 1915.
3. The USS Arizona, approximately two decades before it reached its final resting place on the ocean floor after the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor.
4. The view of Honolulu from Punchbowl sure has changed quite a bit in the last 100 years.
5. A rare photo of Duke Kahanamoku surfing in the waves off Waikiki in 1910. If there's one thing that hasn't changed about Hawaii, it's our love of surfing and the vast Pacific Ocean!
6. Mokuhinia Fishpond in 1910 before it was drained and converted into a baseball field.
7. This photograph of Honolulu Harbor was taken in 1900 and shows us just how much ocean travel has changed.
8. This building was home to the Library of Hawaii until 1910, when it was turned into a YMCA.
9. Asian plantation workers fill bags of sugar in the 1910s.
10. This photograph was taken in 1907, when the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce made a visit to Hawaii and posed next to this pineapple field.
What do you think of these photographs that showcase what Hawaii looked like 100 years ago? Tell us, would you travel back in time to this era if you could? If not, which decade of Hawaiian history would you like to be present to experience? The 1950s, perhaps?
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