Someone asked, “Do you live on ‘Ālewa Heights? And how do you get down in time for business every day?”
The reply, “It takes me just eighteen minutes to come from my front door to my office, and twelve minutes of that time is spent, on the Rapid Transit cars.”
“It was on July 29, 1907, that the ‘Ālewa lands were opened to purchasers. At that time there was no road into the tract. Prospective purchasers were forced to climb up the face of the precipitous bluff which bounds Nu‘uanu Valley on the western side and scramble through a wilderness of lantana and guava to find the lots which the Territory was offering to home builders.”
“It was a dry, treeless hillside, blessed with a beautiful view, to be sure, but with little else to attract the man who wanted a home near enough the city so that he might go daily to business. It was only a stone’s throw from Honolulu, almost, but without a road the prospect looked not inviting.”
“As a consequence it is not surprising that when the sale of the newly opened lots took place they went for a song. Acre lots, within a mile of the post-office were sold tor prices ranging from $150 to $300. You could not buy those same lots now for less than ten times the figures paid three years ago.” (Advertiser, October 16, 1910)
“The first problem to be solved by the lot purchasers was a road. An improvement club was organized within a few-days, and although it took some-time to unravel the necessary official red tape, within six months a fine macadamized road had been built into the heart of the tract.”
“This road was built, out of the money paid by the ‘Ālewa people for their lots, with day labor furnished by the county.”
‘Water was the next necessity. The Territory had no money for water pipes, and the legislature would not meet for another two years. This did not daunt the ‘Ālewaites.”
“’If we buy the pipe, will you install it and give us water, and then credit what we paid for the pipe on our water rates?’ they asked the government.”
“’Delighted,’ was the reply, in the words of a well-known African hunter. So ‘Ālewa got its water supply. It was not much, it is true. A two-inch pipe connected with the ‘Ālewa quarry, but it sufficed temporarily.”
“With a fine road and a fairly good water supply the ordinary homesteaders would have been content. But they were not enough for the ‘Ālewa people. They wanted electric lights, and telephones and gas. So they proceeded to get them.”
“They also planned and partly carried out through the work of the club, a complete system of shaded roadways, laid out artistically with poinciana regias for one stretch of the road, golden showers for another, yellow poincianas for a third.”
“The purchasers of ‘Ālewa lots in 1907 quickly saw that is they were to obtain any assistance from the government it would be necessary to get together and work together for the common good.”
“The last year (1909) has seen continued improvement in our district. All of the lots in what is currently known as the residence district have been built upon (31 residences) and the owners have begun to fulfill the clause in their contracts which requires them to live at least one year upon their land.”
“Considering that a little over three years ago this district was a barren mountain side, shut off from the city by an almost unscalable pali, and producing nothing but kolu, guavas and lantana, (the homeowners were) proud of the progress in the district.”
“And when you look around at the pretty homes and the green lawns of the ‘Ālewa dwellers and feel the fresh cool air from the hills, and then look back at that wonderful view, you will wonder why in time you did not buy a lot on ‘Ālewa Heights.”
This summary comes from a community update on Ālewa Heights, published in the Advertiser, October 1, 1910. Today, the USGS Geographic Names Information System notes ‘Ālewa Heights is a “Populated Place.”
In 1910, there were “thirty-one families, with an estimated total population of ninety souls” (Advertiser, October 16, 1910;) today, Realtor-com notes the population is nearly 4,400.
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As one who was brought up and lived on the hill, it was good to see this piece of history of this area. I loved my time on the hill, and will treasure the pictures of Honolulu growing up.
Aloha, I heard the owner of the Piggly Wiggly stores lived on Alewa, don’t know his name are any of these homes the one he built?