Honolulu Sailor's Home

The Honolulu Sailor's Home is a non-profit lodge for international merchant seamen. The home was incorporated in May 1855 with a lot obtained by a grant from the Kingdom of Hawaii. Originally located on Bethel Street adjacent to the Port of Honolulu, it is now located one block away at 707 Alakea Street

Sketch of original 1855 building

History

The original grant included a clause "that no intoxicating liquors shall be drank on the premises", and "no women of lewd character admitted".[1] Hawaiian King Kamehameha IV laid the cornerstone for the home with "appropriate ceremonies" on Restoration Day, July 31, 1855.[2] In October of that year, the Reading Room was opened for public use. On September 11, 1856, the home was officially opened as lodging for merchant seaman.[3] The chairman of the Executive Committee was Rev. Samuel C. Damon, who published a newspaper called the Friend in the building.[4]

Sailors who died on the island without family were buried in the Oahu Cemetery, in a plot purchased for that purpose.

gollark: * no dedicated support needed
gollark: What I'd really like is the ability to just go around defining operators arbitrarily like in Haskell, making the operator overloading basically just a consequence of traits with no dedicated support.
gollark: Well, they are generally Rust's standard method for overloading things/implementing shared behavior, so it's more sensible than magically named methods.
gollark: Operator overloading: traits are more verbose, but make *a lot more sense* and are more consistent.
gollark: Ternary statements: I agree with that.

References

  1. The Sailor's magazine, and naval journal. 27. American Seamen's Friend Society. March 1855.
  2. The [Honolulu Hawaii] Friend, 4 Aug 1955, XII(13)50
  3. The Polynesian, 13 Sep 1856, XII(19)75
  4. Damon memorial: or, Notices of three Damon families who came from old England to New England in the XVIIth century. 1882. p. 141.


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