Mokuʻula

Mokuʻula was a tiny island that has been buried beneath a baseball field in Maluʻulu o Lele Park, Lahaina, Hawaiʻi, United States. It was the private residence of King Kamehameha III from 1837 to 1845 and the burial site of several Hawaiian royals. The 1-acre (4,000 m2) island is considered sacred to many Hawaiians as a piko, or symbolic center of energy and power. It was added to the Hawaiʻi State Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1994, and to the National Register of Historic Places on May 9, 1997, as King Kamehameha III's Royal Residential Complex.

King Kamehameha III's Royal Residential Complex
Hawaiʻi Register of Historic Places
Archeological site at Mokuʻula, September 2012.
LocationFront and Shaw Streets, Maluʻulu o Lele and Kamehameha Iki Parks, Lahaina, Hawaii
Coordinates20°52′10″N 156°40′29″W
Area12.3 acres (5.0 ha)
Built1837
NRHP reference No.97000408
HRHP No.50-50-03-02967
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 9, 1997
Designated HRHPMay 9, 1997

According to author P. Christiaan Klieger, "the moated palace of Mokuʻula...was a place of the "Sacred Red Mists," an oasis of rest and calm during the raucous, rollicking days of Pacific whaling." When the capital of Hawaiʻi moved from Lahaina to Honolulu, Mokuʻula fell into disrepair. By 1919, the county turned the land into a park.

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