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July 18, 2026 by Peter T Young Leave a Comment

German Town

The growing sugar production in the Islands needed workers. Starting in the 1850s, when the Hawaiian Legislature passed “An Act for the Governance of Masters and Servants,” labor shortages were eased by bringing in contract workers from Asia, Europe and North America.

There were three big waves of workforce immigration: Chinese (1850,) Japanese (1885) and Filipinos (1905.) Several smaller, but substantial, migrations also occurred: Portuguese (1877,) Norwegians (1880,) Germans (1881,) Puerto Ricans (1900,) Koreans (1902) and Spanish (1907.)

In 1849, Henry A Peirce & Co, a partnership between Charles Reed Bishop, Judge William L Lee, and Henry A Pierce established the Lihue Plantation Company (on the site Kaikioʻewa chose for it on the Nawiliwili stream (water power was used to drive the mill rollers.)) (HSPA)

On September 26, 1849, sea captain Heinrich (Henry) Hackfeld arrived in Honolulu with his wife, Marie, her 16-year-old brother Johann Carl Pflueger and a nephew BF Ehlers.

Having purchased an assorted cargo at Hamburg, Germany, Hackfeld opened a general merchandise business (dry goods, crockery, hardware and stationery,) wholesale, as well as retail store on Queen Street.

In 1850 he moved to a larger location on Fort Street. This store was so popular, it became known as “Hale Kilika” – the House of Silk (because it sold the finest goods available.) As business grew, the nephew took over management of the store while Hackfeld traveled the world for merchandise. The company took BF Ehlers’ name in 1862.

Hackfeld developed a business of importing machinery and supplies for the spreading sugar plantations and exported raw sugar. H Hackfeld & Co became a prominent factor – business agent and shipper – for the plantations.

The German bark, “Cedar” arrived in Hawaii on July 18, 1881, primarily with Germans hired to work in the plantations of Hawaii, although there were ten Norwegians and four Swedes on the ship as well. One child was also born during the voyage.

“The impetus for the importation of German laborers was Hawaii’s Reciprocity Treaty with the United States (1876). Isenberg, then in Bremen, acted as an agent for the Hawaii Board of Immigration, and often signed as an immigrant’s employer.”

“Isenberg (‘EE-zen-berg’ – most in Hawai‘i pronounce it incorrectly) is a distinguished old name, not only in the San Francisco Bay Area but in Western United States, including Hawaii. The family founder was Paul Isenberg, born in Dransfeld, Germany in 1837, to a Lutheran clergyman father.” (Wagner-Seavey)

“Paul was well-educated, but had to work hard on a local estate where he learned farming and bookkeeping. About 1860 he was sent by one Herr Hoffschlaeger of Hanover, possibly a family friend, to Kauai, Hawaii, to work a farm property. He moved on to manage an unprofitable sugar plantation in Lihue which he made profitable.”

Paul Isenberg found his way to Līhu‘e, Kauai (and, later, worked with Hackfeld).   “Before the plantation’s owner Mr. Rice died, Paul had married his oldest daughter Hannah Maria. They had two children, but Hannah died in 1867. Paul returned to Germany, remarried a Miss Beta Glade, and returned with her to Lihue in 1869.” (Los Altos Hills Historical Society)

Of the German immigrants, “Applicants were screened to determine their agricultural experience, and most came from the area around Hamburg-Bremen with which the Hackfeld firm was most familiar. The first group of German immigrants arrived on July 18, 1881, aboard the Cedar; the last group arrived in 1884.” (Wagner-Seavey)

“About 560 German men came to work on the plantations, many bringing their families (286 women; 491 children). The approximate distribution of the new laborers was as follows: Kauai, 922; Oahu, 50; Maui, 102; Big Island, 139.”

“The majority of married Germans were assigned to either Lihue Plantation, Grove Farm, or Koloa Sugar Mill, all on Kauai.  These plantations had close ties with the Isenbergs, who developed a paternalistic attitude toward their countrymen which, in turn, led to the establishment of a strong German community on Kauai.”  (Wagner-Seavey)

“The focal point for the German community on Kauai was the church and school at Lihue. As the immigrants began recreating their homeland, they wanted their children to be taught in the German language.” (Wagner-Seavey)

The long experience on board ship was reflected in the architecture of the church, as they carried out the symbolism of a ship as descriptive of the church. The floor slants like the deck of a ship; the balcony is the captain’s bridge; the ceiling is like the hull; the lights are ship lanterns; and the pulpit the forecastle. Paul Isenberg, called the father of Lutheranism in Hawaii. (Lihue Lutheran Church)

The German families formed a strong community. Fredrich Richter, a theology student who came on the first boatload, was not only the teacher but also the minister for the Lutheran congregation. The German language was spoken and taught for many years in both the school and the church. (Next1000)

Paul arranged for his younger brother, Hans, who was an ordained Lutheran pastor, to serve this congregation from 1887 until his death in 1918. At his death his wife, Dora Rice Isenberg, took much of the responsibility of the ministry as well as serving the island. (Lihue Lutheran Church)

Molokoa, the home of Rev. Hans Isenberg and his wife, was located in Lihue above the Lutheran Church on German Hill, approximately 400 yards north of the end of today’s hardtop road. (Soboleski)

“In speaking of the Germans on Kauai, Dr. [Bernhard L] Hormann states that Hawaii became ‘a real home to them’ as much as possible ‘like the one they had left in the fatherland,’ but one in which they improved their economic position.”

“Hormann determined that it was the active encouragement of their employers which built this insulated community on Kauai and noted that it brought tangible benefits to both the workers and their patrons. Not only was Kauai relatively untroubled by strikes, but Lihue Plantation was able to keep two to three generations of workers on the plantation.” (Wagner-Seavey)

“The western half of Lihue is covered with dense vegetation and wooded sections surrounding landscaped residential neighborhoods. German hill borders the western part of Lihue and used to be a residential neighborhood for skilled workers, primarily of German ancestry coming to Lihue Plantation to work.” (Kauanoe o Koloa)

The Isenberg’s German heritage is best remembered at Lihue’s German Hill, just west of the sugar mill. This area recalls a time when Līhu‘e was known as ‘German Town’. (Cook) The present Lutheran church is a faithful replica of the original edifice built in 1885 and destroyed by Hurricane “Iwa” in 1982. (LihueLutheranChruch)

© 2026 Ho‘okuleana LLC

Filed Under: Economy, Missionaries / Churches / Religious Buildings, Place Names, Schools, Sailing, Shipping & Shipwrecks Tagged With: German Hill, German Town, Hawaii, Sugar, Lihue, Isenberg, Germans

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