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March 11, 2025 by Peter T Young Leave a Comment

Plantation Store System

“Stores have played an important role in Hawaii’s plantation communities. Prior to 1945, they provided plantation residents with their basic needs, served as social gathering places, catered to various ethnic preferences …”

“… in food, clothing, and medicine, and provided special services such as extended credit and free delivery, which eased the inconveniences of scant, once-a-month paydays and car-less plantation living.”

“[A]s one travels east along Hana Highway from the city of Kahului, two sugar mills can be seen among the cane fields which characterize central Maui. The first to come to view is Puunene Mill. Located two miles from Kahului, it is part of the Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company (HC&S). “

“Surrounding the mill area are the battered remains of a plantation camp that once housed many of the company’s employees. Next to be seen along the highway, if one looks hard enough among the cane fields, are traces of what was once the town of Spreckelsville, the site of three of HC&S’s twenty-six camps. In 1935, 7,600 employees and their families lived in the twenty-six camps that dotted the area.”

“Among the plantation camps stood four public schools, three Japanese-language schools, ten churches, one large hospital, twelve day nurseries, three theaters, and a gymnasium.  One of the world’s largest plantations at the time, Puunene Plantation consisted of 33,000 acres, 16,000 of which were cane land in 1935.”

“Two miles further along Hana Highway, on a hill, appears Paia Mill. … [P]rior to 1948 when the two companies merged, Paia Plantation was part of the Maui Agricultural Company (MA Company).”

“Less sprawling than neighboring Puunene Plantation, Paia Plantation consisted of six main camps housing approximately 6,000 people. Besides the main Paia Camp which consisted of smaller ‘subcamps’ near the mill, the other camps were at Kaheka, Hamakua Poke, Keahua, Pulehu, and Kailua.”

“Lower Paia, situated on non-plantation-owned lands, with stores, restaurants, bars, and barbershops, still exists today on Hana Highway one-half mile below Paia Mill. It had a population of a little over 1,000 in the 1930s and housed many of the stores and businesses upon which Paia Plantation residents depended.”

“The MA Company plantation store system, serving Paia Plantation, included Paia Store, one of the island’s largest stores, and six branch stores located in outlying camps. While these branch stores were small and provided a smaller volume and variety of goods, Paia Store sold a large variety of goods ranging from Japanese foods to women’s lingerie.”

“Paia Store was so large that it was divided into departments: grocery, men’s furnishings, drugs, dry goods, Japanese foods and dry goods, etc.”

“Paia Store was frequented by those living in the surrounding camps. The branch stores, located in the more remote areas, were ‘convenience’ stores serving only residents of those areas.”  “Prices at the plantation stores were generally lower than that of the independent stores.”

“Purchase by credit was generally the rule in the plantation stores prior to 1945. Customers were able to charge their purchases by their plantation identification numbers called bangō. Payment was not due until the monthly payday – the first of each month.”

“[W]hen customers had large families, they were not required to pay off their entire bill at one time. They would be able to maintain a credit balance and make smaller payments each payday. If a customer’s balance got too high, or payments to the store were lagging, the store would obtain the customer’s pay envelope from the plantation office.”

“The customer therefore had to get his pay from the store. After subtracting part of the balance owed the store, the customer would receive his pay. This system of ‘payroll deduction’ enabled the plantation store to avoid large, unpaid accounts. It was an advantage the plantation stores had over the independent stores.”

“The busiest time of the month for the stores was ‘new month’ time. Generally starting between the twentieth and twenty-sixth

of each month (exact dates varied with each store), a customer was allowed to charge goods from that date and was not required to pay for his purchase until the payday after next.

“Family-run Camp Stores … were operated by couples, mostly Japanese, and carried ‘last minute’ and ‘on the spot’ items – canned goods needed that day, soda, ice cream, and candy. … Since these stores were situated on plantation land, permission was needed from the plantation to open a store.”

“The children usually helped out in the store. The husband often would do the pickups and deliveries, leaving his wife and children to watch the store.” “Transactions were usually made in cash. Credit was occasionally given, but to only those the storekeeper knew well.”

Lower Paia Stores were “[l]ocated onlv one-half mile down the road from the Paia Mill and Paia Store, these stores, not located on plantation lands, provided Paia Plantation residents with alternatives to the plantation stores.”

“Many of the stores in Lower Paia were specialized. One store in Lower Paia, Paia Mercantile, rivaled the plantation store in size and variety of goods, but most of the others sold groceries, clothing, drugs, or fish.”

“Most of these stores depended heavily upon plantation residents for their business and some provided services similar to that of the plantation store, including order taking and delivery, credit, and new month. Because they were not as large as the plantation store, the extent of these services was limited.”

“The roads of Paia and Puunene camps were often busy with men in trucks who sold fresh fish, meat, vegetables, and canned goods.”

“Often equipped with a horn or a bell, these independent peddlers would follow a set schedule and route, so that plantation residents would know when to expect them. Because the plantation stores and the Kahului Japanese stores did not sell many fresh items, these peddlers served a valuable function.”

“Stores in Paia and Puunene underwent major changes because of war. Stores profited when thousands of military personnel were stationed around the area.”

However, “Some stores were adversely affected by the war. Two of the five stores comprising the Kahului ‘big 5’ – Kobayashi Shokai and Japanese Mercantile Company – closed down due to the enactment of the Alien Properties Custody Act. This law prohibited the continued operation of businesses under alien ownership.”

“Perhaps the major development which most affected the stores was the closing down of the plantation camps and the migration of the residents to Dream City.”

“This development, beginning in the early 1950s, led to a) the demolition of camp stores; b) the decrease in population of Lower Paia, causing many merchants to sell their businesses to young haole merchants; c) the decline and eventual closing of the plantation-run stores; and d) the rise of Kahului as a major population center with modern supermarkets and shopping centers.”

“The HC&S plantation stores were structured in a slightly different way. As the main retail outlets for the areas’ residents, the branch stores at Camp 5 (Puunene) and Camp 1 (Spreckelsville} were fairly large and carried a variety of goods.”

“The main HC&S store in Kahului was almost exclusively a wholesaler, supplying independent, non-plantation stores as well as the HC&S plantation store system .”

“In 1948, HC&S and MA Company merged, placing the plantation store system under the jurisdiction of a single company: A&B Commercial Company.” (Stores and Storekeepers of Paia & Puunene, Maui, UH Manoa, Ethnic Studies Program)

In 1980, the UH Manoa Ethnic Studies program conducted a number of oral histories from people who grew up and worked in the Paia-Pu‘unene area of Maui.  Those histories and the information concluded from them provide insight into the plantation store system.  All here is from that project report.

© 2025 Ho‘okuleana LLC

Filed Under: Buildings, Economy Tagged With: Paia, Puunene, Plantation, Plantation Store, Hawaii

August 29, 2023 by Peter T Young Leave a Comment

Kū‘au

Oral histories and ethnohistoric accounts indicate that while primary activities occurred within the Wailuku area, coastal areas like Pā‘ia and Kū‘au supported smaller-scale agricultural endeavors such as sweet potato cultivation, and were a primary source of a variety of readily available marine resources. (Hart)

The ahupua‘a lands of Hali‘imaile, Pā‘ia, Kū‘au (‘handle’) and Hula‘ia (also spelled Hule‘ia) were made a part of the larger Hāmākua Poko Ahupua’a sometime prior to the land division known as the Great Mahele, in 1848.

In traditional times, Hāmākua Poko Ahupua’a formed a natural and political land division between the six major “Kula” land divisions which extended from the leeward shoreline to the upper reaches of Haleakala to the south, and the traditional region known as Hāmākua Loa, a collection of thirty narrow windward land divisions that include five perennial streams.

(‘Kula’ lands were the farmlands above the shoreline, on the plains or sloping lands; those to seaward being termed ko kula kai and those toward the mountains ko kula uka (uka, inland or upland.) An act of 1884 distinguished dry or kula land from wet or taro land.)

Hāmākua Poko measures four miles in width along the shoreline, and is roughly pie shaped, with both north-south boundaries joining at Pu‘u O Kaka‘e, some 4,800 ft. above mean sea level.  (Cultural Surveys)

The growth of the sugar industry was augmented by imported labor from foreign lands. The various ethnic groups that provided needed labor to fuel a large plantation economy is reflected in the names of the various labor camps surrounding the Pā‘ia area: Hawaiian Camp, Russian Camp, Spanish Camp, Portuguese Camp, Chinese Camp, and Japanese Camp.

A total of thirteen camp communities were formed and situated throughout the sugar lands and towns appeared at Pu‘unēnē and Spreckelsville.

Railroads constructed by the sugar companies facilitated communication between the camps and provided transportation for hauling sugar cane. Remnants of the railroad bed are still evident at the western end of Puna Road in Pā‘ia.

Labor camps were consolidated and relocated over time, with some having developed into modem urban centers such as Kahului and Wailuku.  (Hart)

Remnants of these former camps remain in the form of small, scattered cemeteries that occur along the coastline near Pā‘ia and Kū‘au. Historic period artifacts, including ceramics, bottle glass, metal objects, square nails, marbles, and other objects relating to daily activities in the sugar camps. have been documented in nearby sugar cane fields. (Hart)

On May 31, 1858, H Holdsworth, Richard Armstrong, Amos Cooke, G Robertson, MB Beckwith and FS Lyman (shareholders in Castle & Cooke) met to consider the initiation of a sugar plantation at Haiku on Maui.

Shortly after (November 20, 1858,) the Privy Council authorized the Minister of the Interior to grant a charter of incorporation to them for the Haiku Sugar Company.

At the time, there were only ten sugar companies in the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi. Five of these sugar companies were on the island of Maui, but only two were in operation. The five were: East Maui Plantation at Kaluanui, Brewer Plantation at Haliimaile, LL Torbert and Captain James Makee’s plantation at ʻUlupalakua, Hāna and Haiku Plantation.

The mill, on the east bank of Maliko Gulch, was completed in 1861; 600-acres of cane the company had under cultivation yielded 260 tons of sugar and 32,015 gallons of molasses. Over the years the company procured new equipment for the mill.

Using the leading edge technology of the time, the Haiku Sugar Mill was, reportedly, the first sugarcane mill in Hawaiʻi that used a steam engine to grind the cane.

Their cane was completely at the mercy of the weather and rainfall; yield fluctuated considerably. For example it went from 970-tons in 1876 to 171-tons in 1877.

(In 1853, the government of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i had set aside much of the ahupua‘a of Hāmākuapoko to the Board of Education. The Board of Education deeded the Hāmākuapoko acreage which was unencumbered by native claims to the Trustees of Oʻahu College (Punahou) in 1860, who then sold the land to the Haiku Sugar Company (Cultural Surveys))

In 1871 Samuel T Alexander became manager of the mill. Alexander and later his partner, Henry Perrine Baldwin, saw the need for a reliable source of water, and started construction of the Hāmākua ditch in 1876.

With the completion of the ditch, the majority of Haiku Plantation’s crops were grown on the west side of Maliko gulch. As a result in 1879 Haiku mill was abandoned and its operations were transferred to Hāmākuapoko where a new factory was erected, which had more convenient access to the new sugar fields.

Other ditches were later added to the system, with five ditches at different levels used to convey the water to the cane fields on the isthmus of Maui. In order of elevation they are Haiku, Lowrie, Old Hāmākua, New Hāmākua, and Kaluanui ditches.

The “Old” Hāmākua Ditch was the forerunner to the East Maui Irrigation System.   This privately financed, constructed and managed irrigation system was one of the largest in the United States. It eventually included 50 miles of tunnels; 24 miles of open ditches, inverted siphons and flumes; and approximately 400 intakes and 8 reservoirs.

Although two missionaries (Richard Armstrong and Amos Cooke) established the Haiku Sugar Company in 1858, its commercial success was due to a second-generation missionary descendant, Henry Perrine Baldwin. In 1877, Baldwin constructed a sugar mill on the west side of Maliko Gulch, named the Hāmākuapoko Mill.

By 1880, the Haiku Sugar Company was milling and bagging raw sugar at Hāmākuapoko for shipment out of Kū‘au Landing. The Kū‘au Landing was abandoned in favor of the newly-completed Kahului Railroad line in 1881, with all regional sugar sent then by rail to the port of Kahului.

Today, Kū‘au is in the vicinity, and mauka of the Kū‘au Store and Mama’s Fish House.

© 2023 Ho‘okuleana LLC

Filed Under: Place Names Tagged With: Maui, Paia, Kuau

April 8, 2016 by Peter T Young 2 Comments

‘Pāʻia High School’

“Because of the fact that there is no site available for the proposed high school at Paia, Maui, the building of which was authorized by the last legislature, it was decided at the meeting of the school commissioners yesterday afternoon that the school will have to be located elsewhere on the Valley Isle, although no definite site was named.”

“When built, however, the school will bear the name of the Pāʻia high school in keeping with the order of the legislature.” (Star Bulletin, June 27, 1913)

“It was at first thought that the school would be located at Pāʻia, but there was difficulty in securing a good site there. The Hāmākuapoko location is an ideal one and the people of Maui are lucky in getting such a fine site for their High School.”

“The county will build the school and the structure will be an up-to-date one. The Department of Public Instructions provides three teachers, and it will be up to the people of Maui to pay the salary of a fourth instructor.” (Maui News, July 5, 1913)

“There will be no tuition charged for admission, although this was the first plan. It is expected that the school will open with some thirty-five pupils in September in the upper department and many more in the school as a whole.” (Star-Bulletin, July 14, 1913)

Maui’s first co-educational high school opened in 1913 in a small frame building at Hāmākuapoko, close to bustling Pāʻia town and near the large plantation camps of East Maui. (OMHS) (It was known as Pāʻia High School, Maui High & Grammar School and, more commonly, Maui High School – now, Old Maui High School.)

When Maui High School was founded, the island was a rural community of some 32,000, mostly immigrants working in cane fields and sugar mills. Education was available only through grammar school, though boys could continue into their teen years at Lahainaluna, then a vocational-trade school.

The upper classes hired tutors, or sent their children to Punahou on O‘ahu or to the Mainland for secondary education. But a growing Caucasian middle class wanted their children educated at home. (Engledow)

“The school is answering a long-felt need on Maui. The basis for admission is a good knowledge of English. Heretofore it was impossible for pupils that spoke English at home to get the full attention they needed at various Maui schools, where the students were held back more or less by those who did not know English.”

“This was the condition everywhere in spite of the most earnest efforts of principals and assistants to have the condition otherwise.” (Star-Bulletin, October 6, 1913)

“The special train that the Kahului Railroad Company put on for carrying the pupils to that school is a very great convenience, for now the boys and girls can leave Wailuku as late as 8:30 and still arrive in time for the school work at the usual hour. This train is patronized by the pupils along the line of the railroad. The children near by come by other conveyance.” (Star-Bulletin, October 6, 1913)

Over the years, the campus expanded to 17,000 square feet along with the enrollment. (EPA) Noted Hawaiʻi architect Charles W. Dickey was chosen to design a large and inspiring school building, taking advantage of the site’s climate, landscape and views. In 1921 the concrete, mission-style administration and classroom building was opened.

Many more classrooms were added to the 24-acre campus, as well as teachers’ cottages, a gymnasium, an agricultural complex, athletic fields and a cafeteria. Students came from surrounding communities, central Maui and Upcountry, often by horseback, via Kahului Railroad trains or buses, or over the well-worn footpaths from neighboring plantation camps. (OMHS)

At its peak, just before World War II, as many as 1,000-students attended Maui High, coming in from throughout central Maui, some even by train. (Napier)

But island demographics changed. Central-Maui landowner, Alexander & Baldwin, formed Kahului Development Co, Ltd (KDCo) (the predecessor of A&B Properties, Inc) to serve as a development arm of the agricultural-based entity.

This timing coincided with the sugar company’s plan to close down some plantation camps. To provide for housing for its sugar workers, as well as meet post-WWII housing demand, KDCo announced a new residential development in Central Maui, in the area we now refer to as Kahului.

“Dream City,” a planned residential community was launched and over the next couple decades 3,500+ fee simple homes were offered for sale in 14-increments of the new development.

Under this 25-year plan, Kahului quickly became one of the first and most successful planned towns west of the Rockies – and the first in Hawai‘i.

As the development proceeded, the plantation camps were closed down, one by one, according to a schedule that gave the workers and the workers unions ten years’ advance notice.

It was announced that the plantation planned to be out of the housing business within ten years of the start of the project, and February 1, 1963, was the date it was all supposed to shut down. It took a little longer than that, but the schedule was implemented pretty much as planned.

Enrollment at Maui High began to steadily decline, as plantation camps closed and families moved to modern subdivisions in central Maui.

In 1972, the present Maui High School campus opened in the Dream City of Kahului. The school is now comprised of twelve major buildings, 36 portable classrooms and several athletic facilities on 75 acres.

At the time, over 60% of the school’s student body traveled from the northeast sector, a predominantly agricultural and rural community. Central Maui students were added to the school’s population at that time. (Maui High)

A notable alum of the Old Maui High was Patsy Takemoto, a Hāmākuapoko Camp student in the class of 1944; we knew her as Patsy Mink.

She became the first Japanese-American woman to be elected to the Territorial House of Representatives, the first Asian-American woman to be elected to the US Congress, a 1972 candidate for US president (running on an anti-war platform) and the author of Title IX legislation, aka The Patsy T Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act. (Wood)

Today, the Friends of Old Maui High School are working with government and private groups to develop a preservation plan, obtain funding and eventually rehabilitate the Dickey-designed building (to become the Patsy Takemoto Mink Center.)

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Filed Under: Schools Tagged With: Maui High School, Paia, Paia High School, Hawaii, Maui, Kahului, Dream City

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