sp-274 hawaiian gazette (11/14/1905) public and promotion matters “an excellent horseback trail,...
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SP-274
Hawaiian Gazette (11/14/1905)
PUBLIC AND PROMOTION MATTERS
“An excellent horseback trail, with resting stations and guide posts, has been opened to the summit of Haleakala, the great extinct crater on Maui.”
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Hawaiian Gazette (1/5/1906) “Olinda is the site of the halfway house bearing that name on the route to the ‘House of the Sun,” or the sublime crater of Haleakala.” “Lately the trail has been put in good order and must become increasingly popular with tourists . . .”
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The Hawaiian Star (8/27/1908)
“Secretary Wood’s report to the Promotion Committee this week is as follows: . . . The Maui folder, in addition to the map of the twin islands, will also carry a good map of Haleakala, giving elevations, trails, etc. . . .”
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The Hawaiian Forester and Agriculturist (1908)
Page 232
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The Mid-Pacific Magazine (Jan. 1911)
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Maui News (10/26/1912)
“Haleakala was attacked last week by a party of tourist and Promotion people. The visit to the extinct Crater was made with the object of obtaining moving pictures of the great crater, cloud effects and the trails to the summit.
WILL BOOST MAUI.
. . . The head of the Promotion Bureau declares that Maui is to be featured all over the world in future.
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Honolulu Star-Bulletin (10/12/1914)
“The Trail and Mountain Club will soon undertake to send its members and others from Honolulu to the summit of Haleakala and return for perhaps as low a sum as $25. . . .
“We must recognize the fact . . . That our great nearby available attraction for mountain climbers and trampers is the island of Maui . . . . There is no such succession of scenic wonders so grouped together anywhere else in the world as the summit of Haleakala . . . .
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Promotion Committee Map (1915)
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Hawaiian Gazette (10/30/1917)
ALL MAUI ROADS ARE FROM WAILUKU
. . . Maui boasts nearly one hundred and fifty miles of main highways of solid construction
. . .
To Olinda and Trail
Continuing ahead from Makawao the road leads to Olinda, twenty three and one-half miles from Wailuku. The trail to the Rest House on Haleakala extends about nine miles from Olinda. . . .
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From Job to Job Around the World (1917)
“We made an early start. The trail wasplainly marked with guide posts, each tenth of a mile. Idlewilde is eight miles by trail from the summit and the ascent from this point is over five thousand feet-seven hundred to the mile. The first three or four miles were comparatively easy, for we were fresh and the footing was good.” (Pages 21-22)
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The Maui News (6/3/1921)With Maui’s Girl Scouts
“A company of three girls . . . Found their way to the Haleakala crater safe and sound without a guide. Learning that there are white posts which mark the trail to the summit, they assured themselves of finding their destination. . . .”
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Hawaiian Almanac and Annual (Thrum’s) (1924)
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Hawai‘i Tourist Bureau (1925)
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Honolulu Star-Bulletin (9/23/1931) “E.J. Walsh . . . Has purchased the Haleakala horse transportation business and equipment from Worth O. Aiken, and has leased the Idlewilde property for a number of years.
Mr. Aiken . . . Has handled trips to the summit and crater of Haleakala for the last 30 years . . . .
Management of the Haleakala trips will be carried on much the same as under Mr. Aiken’s administration. Arazumi, official guide on the crater trips for more than 20 years, and who recently resigned, has agreed to return to the service and will be in charge of all mountain trips under the new management.”
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The Maui News (1935)
Outside the broadcast shack, Aikichi Arisumi, “veteran guide who has made the ascent of the mountain more than 1,500 times, stood with tear-filled eyes as he listened to his old friend, Mr. Aiken, speak to the world over radio. His mind went back over the march of years to the days when there was no rest house at the summit, when he had led parties of the great and near great over tortuous trails and stood with them in awe-filled silence at the brink of the crater which is one of nature’s marvels.”
Aiken told the crowd, “This is my one hundred and first trip to the summit of Haleakala and after the ride up today I can truly say that the first hundred were the hardest, though they may have been more replete with adventure and romance.”
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“Native Planters in Old Hawaii” (1972)
“There is a horse trail today which passes from Makawao up over the western side of Haleakala (where there is now an automobile road), down into the crater, through it, and on down through the Kaupo gap to Kaupo.” (Page 491)
1906 1906 1910 1914 1918 1922 1926 1930 1934 1938 1942 1942
On USGS map1942
On USGS map1930
On tourist map1925
On USGS map1922
“Main highway” in Maui
1917
On tourist map1915
Hiking club promotes1911
PUBLIC USE AND PROMOTION
1972:“Trail exists
today”
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TRAVEL THROUGH CRATER AS EARLY AS 1000 A.D.
SP-345 (p.2)
1786 1793 1800 1807 1814 1821 1828 1835 1842
Mahele of 1848
1848
Travel from Makawao to Summit (Andrews)1845
Ascent gradual and easy1842
Trail very narrow, only good for one horse (Andrews)1838Way was
long, but the ascent very easy (Andrews)1829
La Perouse1786
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1850 1850 1854 1858 1862 1866 1870 1874 1878 1882 1886 1888
Map > "Haleakala Trail"
1885
Map > Trail Olinda to
Summit
1878
Established route of 13 miles1878
Map > "Road to Haleakala"
1872
“Wagon can be driven two-thirds up”1869
Map >“Road to Makawao"
1869
Road “not bad"1864
Ascent quite practicable1854
Trip “never before undertaken by white men"1850
"ROAD FROM MAKAWAO TO SUMMIT"
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1888 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1892
Highways Act of 18921892
Tourist Guide: "improved road plainly outlined”1890
Government improvements completeOct 1889
Contract to improve trail
Aug 1889
HRC incorporates
Nov 1888
$2,000 appropriation for "public benefit”Aug 1888
1906 1906 1910 1914 1918 1922 1926 1930 1934 1938 1942 1942
On USGS map1942
On USGS map1930
On tourist map1925
On USGS map1922
“Main highway” in Maui
1917
On tourist map1915
Hiking club promotes1911
PUBLIC USE AND PROMOTION
1972:“Trail exists
today”
SP-479