Duke Paoa Kahanamoku
Sponsored by: City and County of Honolulu
GPS Coordinates: 21.2755°N, -157.8253°W
Olympic swimmer champion Duke Kahanamoku (1890-1968) spent much of his youth here in Kālia With his mother’s family, the Paoa family. The Paoa family owned most of the 20 acres which the Hilton Hawaiian Village now occupies. It is said that it was here in Kālia that a husband waited patiently for the return of his wife who had been wooed away by a rival chief on Maui; hence the name Kālia or waited for. Duke’s grandfather, Ho‘olae Paoa. A descendant of royal chiefs, was deeded the land by King Kamehameha III in the Great Mahele of 1848. (The Great Mahele was a dividing of the lands among the King, the chiefs, and the commoners. It also allowed foreigners to own land and in the Hawaiian Kingdom for the first time.)
The Paoa were a large ‘ohana (family). More than 100 were living in the area at the time. The home in which Duke lived was located about where the former Hilton Dome stood for so many years. The families had their gardens and grew enough taro and sweet potatoes to meet their needs. Being excellent Fishermen, they never were short of the ocean’s bounties; seaweed, squid, shrimp, crab, lobster, and varieties of fish. Duke learned to swim in these waters the old fashioned way; by being thrown into the water to sink or swim! He learned so well that in 1910 he broke the world’s record for the 50-yard sprint. In 1912 he was named for the U.S. Olympic team and won the gold medal in the 100-meter freestyle. This area is also where he learned to become a champion surf rider and Hawaiian outrigger canoe paddle. Some say you can still feel the “mana” (energy of spirit) of Duke and the Paoa family here on their former lands.