Hawaiian Islands | A Film by Thomas A. Edison Shot in 1906

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
  • Sport

Komentáře • 507

  • @jeffyoung60
    @jeffyoung60 Před 2 lety +26

    Such bittersweet memories harkening back to a time when Hawaii was a completely different place, land in time. The twentieth century is still in its infancy. Everyone old enough remembers their life and lives in the 19th century, a time of cowboys, horse-drawn carriages, and oil-lit lamps. Everyone eagerly anticipates the changes that advancements in technology will bring.
    Hawaii has been a U.S. possession for barely ten years yet has rapidly been absorbed into the rest of America.
    The local people, still a large number of remaining native Hawaiians, are bemused by the increasing numbers of haole (Caucasian) tourists, wearing their heavy, head-to-toes clothing in the tropical Hawaiian climate which would have been torrid if not for the year-round trade winds that help cool the islands. It's not like 2022 where the tourists happily stroll the streets and beaches in shorts, t-shirts, tank tops, and flip-flips, scanty clothing that would have scandalized their haole forebearers.
    It's not all rosy memories of course. The middle class is small in the Hawaiian islands. Most locals live at a simple level of existence, just making ends meet yet accustomed to their way of life. No one in 1906 can even begin to imagine the vast social, economic, political, and technological changes coming their way in mere decades. Even thirty years from then, Hawaii will be much different. Another thirty years will see an unrecognizable Hawaii and then into the 21st century, everything before is a dim, distant memory.

  • @reneemoreno8030
    @reneemoreno8030 Před 3 lety +65

    The Hawaiians at this time had the first railroad west of the Mississippi and the electric lights in the Governor's Mansion and the people were very fluent in 2 or 3 languages,
    Hawaiian, English, either Chinese or Japanese or Portugues...it was far more civilized than most know.
    They have so many more accomplishments
    Mahalo nui loa
    Aloha

    • @jimkinimaka8599
      @jimkinimaka8599 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes a very astute and informative revelation that has more than likely and notably unknown to

    • @foresttemple1380
      @foresttemple1380 Před 3 lety +5

      But I do believe that the railroad came to Deadwood SD by the 1880s...

    • @aprilfogel4317
      @aprilfogel4317 Před 3 lety +7

      Wasn't the governors mansion. It was the queens palace that had electricity first.

    • @lynnchotoocho9713
      @lynnchotoocho9713 Před 3 lety +7

      @@aprilfogel4317 Iolani Palace had electric lights before the White House did .

    • @lynnchotoocho9713
      @lynnchotoocho9713 Před 3 lety +3

      They composed and played music on instruments that were very new to them , and did it so beautifully .

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratch Před 11 měsíci +10

    Absolutely incredible film - thank you for presenting it. Only 13 years after 'the event'. Earliest known surfing footage - so much makes this a priceless historical document.

  • @dougcapehart
    @dougcapehart Před 3 lety +19

    It's awesome to see actual footage of the harbor before the Aloha Tower, and Waikiki before the Ala Wai.

  • @jaddy540
    @jaddy540 Před 3 lety +11

    I arrived in Hawaii in 1944 (Navy).There were fancy stores on King St., but the second floors were Cat Houses ( $2, I think.) The shore patrol was stationed there, to keep the long lines of Sailors from blocking the store entrances,

    • @Lw2201
      @Lw2201 Před 3 lety +3

      It's still that way today it's just kept on the down low. Every single club, bar, spa and massage parlor is a brothel, trafficked women are pimped out for sex in the back rooms. And nobody seems to care. Hell century tower is a 40 story brothel! The cops raid one or two a year to make it look like they and the city council members aren't regular customers. Human trafficking is Hawaii's 2nd industry behind tourism, which kind of feed each other.

    • @poidawg8085
      @poidawg8085 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Lw2201 Corruption goes all the way to the top when it comes to trafficking. Out of country syndicates and ties to DC, Wall Street, and Military Industrial Conplex, anyone whose grown up here can tell you. If not for the syndicates that do exist, we would have cartels and mainland street gangs. I would take our current situation over cartels and organized mainland street gangs any day. Too much military and white collar heavy hitters here for trashy street gangs and cartels

    • @jefff1438
      @jefff1438 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@Lw2201⁰

  • @Oprah30
    @Oprah30 Před 3 lety +70

    I am hawaiian born and raised.. and this for some odd reason is really cool to watch and sad at the same time. A more simple time... can still fish, live off the land, the beaches i am sure the reefs were more healthy. Better waves back then..

    • @benjaminmarcus17
      @benjaminmarcus17 Před 3 lety +6

      I was in Waikiki for three years a few years ago.
      Lived on a boat in the Ala Wai and in Kewalo Basin before Wailana Cafe and Chart House were pau (RIP)
      Had a moped and rode it from Waikiki to the North Shore and back. I think Israel's song Hawaii '78 sums up modern Hawaii perfectly - beautiful and sad.
      The most Hawaiian thing I saw was a rodeo at Kualoa Ranch. Hawaiians are 100% comfortable on horses and Ill bet they freaked out when the first horses came to Hawaii.
      And i'll bet they had the cowboy thing dialed in no time.
      I have watched all these films at the Bishop and modern Waikiki makes me sad because I know what was there when it was feral and wild and still Hawaiian.
      Imagine if they turned Hanalei Valley into Waikiki? That's how sad it is,.
      We need that megatsunami to sweep over from the Big Island and take it all back to palm groves and swamps.

  • @Tradewindsvintagehi
    @Tradewindsvintagehi Před 2 lety +54

    I love seeing this old film. But as Native Hawaiian, I feel bittersweet that the names of the participants are not recorded anywhere.

    • @GulfIslandRock
      @GulfIslandRock Před 2 lety +2

      😢

    • @145FREE
      @145FREE Před rokem

      I don't believe anyone was identified.

    • @gregcarter8656
      @gregcarter8656 Před rokem +5

      Participants????? I doubt there were any contracts for participation. But if you're interested to know more, a publication called "The Atlantic" claims that The Honolulu Advertiser of 1906 AUG 12 encouraged surfers to come and be filmed surfing at Waikiki that afternoon, and that The Daily Pacific Commercial Advertiser had an item about it the next day. You can find and read those 1906 newspapers on microfilm at UHM, and maybe at the HSL main branch.

    • @MISTERASMODEUS
      @MISTERASMODEUS Před 5 měsíci +1

      It really is sad. Its a loss. and selfishly unaware.

    • @AR-mu4zq
      @AR-mu4zq Před 17 dny

      Why would they be?

  • @seanohaimheirgin1047
    @seanohaimheirgin1047 Před 3 lety +34

    So tragic what's been lost. This was paradise back then!

    • @tedrintel3269
      @tedrintel3269 Před 3 lety +6

      So was California

    • @RVTraveler
      @RVTraveler Před 3 lety +4

      So were the Florida Keys

    • @Sporkmaker5150
      @Sporkmaker5150 Před 3 lety +6

      Just the difference I've seen from the 80s until now is sad.

    • @ifitsfreeitsforme1852
      @ifitsfreeitsforme1852 Před 3 lety

      @@RVTraveler Sanibel Island was another place spoiled by development. I used to vacation there back in the 60's when we could rent private cottages by the week .
      Most of the time you had plenty of room on the beaches and could find nice sea shells.
      Went back 25 years later and it was a bunch of high rise hotels where the cottages were ...and people lying on the beach lined up like so many walruses . It was really sad. Have no desire to go back.

    • @reya346
      @reya346 Před rokem

      sean-except for the mistreatment of animals I would agree.

  • @reiyen4761
    @reiyen4761 Před 3 lety +11

    This was a gem to watch, I saw a structure in Chinatown from the video still standing today. Damn

  • @mariusjns
    @mariusjns Před 3 lety +9

    Wow. Back in the day when there were still people who remembered when Hawaii was free.

    • @jazzlover10000
      @jazzlover10000 Před 2 lety

      china will come... if you let her. Then after, there would be nothing left.

  • @gpotwin
    @gpotwin Před 3 lety +12

    Wow that's back when my grandfather was born there. I was born there in the 60's and is still way different than today. I end up tears every time I go to Waikiki and see how it has become.

    • @orion7873
      @orion7873 Před 3 lety +5

      Yep, all you see is Japanese people and Gucci stores.

    • @cuomogrp
      @cuomogrp Před 3 lety

      And fat white tourists

    • @orion7873
      @orion7873 Před 2 lety +3

      @@rayman17578 Saying a Japanese person is Japanese... is now "racist" ? You sound like someone who is too easily offended.

    • @orion7873
      @orion7873 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rayman17578 Being that you incorrectly wrote "your" instead of "you're" ... you're probably an idiot.

    • @Chorizo727
      @Chorizo727 Před rokem

      @@orion7873and that’s a great thing for Hawaii

  • @kingboagart899
    @kingboagart899 Před rokem +3

    As recently as the mid-60s there was a group of native Hawaiians that lived up by Paki School that would go out in their catamarans early each morning and land, loaded with fish, midmorning on Waikiki by the 12 coconuts. It was fun being a kid in those days.

  • @hotsand4u
    @hotsand4u Před 3 lety +30

    Amazing, never have seen this, I've lived on the big Island, Hilo side for 45 years, and what changes I have seen just in that amount of time, we really have paved paradise and put up a parking lot, with a pink hotel and boutique and a swinging hot spot!! p.s. my husbands Grandfather was a conductor on the trains on Hawaii Island, and he used to see a sweet Hawaiian girl take the train into Hilo from the Hamakua side of the Island every week, well the rest is history, he is in our local train museum...

    • @languay1
      @languay1 Před 3 lety

      Cool! My father grew up in the house that is now the Laupahoehoe Train Museum. His father, Clyde Stanley, was a maintenance superintendent for Hawaiian Consolidated Railway, Ltd. Is this the museum you're talking about?

    • @hotsand4u
      @hotsand4u Před 3 lety +1

      @@languay1 yes that's the place, was your families house amazing

    • @languay1
      @languay1 Před 3 lety

      @@hotsand4u I live on Oahu, but we always visit the "family homestead" when we go to the Big Island. It feels like coming home. My dad and his sisters have all passed on now, but we feel the connection to them and our grandparents when we visit. My older sister remembers visiting our grandparents when they still lived there. When my grandfather died in 1965, my grandmother moved away to live near her daughter. The first time I saw the house was in the mid 1970s. It was abandoned and a stack of newspapers from 1965 was still on the porch. I'm glad it's a museum now and no longer abandoned.

    • @hotsand4u
      @hotsand4u Před 3 lety +1

      @@languay1 that's awesome, what a rich history, my Husbands Grandpa Daniel Johnson was a ticket collector (conductor) on the hamakua to Hilo route, he used to see this pretty young Hawaiian girl Lena, the rest is history
      How beautiful every thing must have been
      I came to big Island in 73 never looked back.
      It's still very special here , but drugs have messed up a lot of our young people, as every where else
      Blessings to you🌋🌸🏝

  • @hnttakata713
    @hnttakata713 Před 7 měsíci +1

    To be Hana’s has given me a chance to understand the values taught by my father, he was a fisherman and we always supplemented our simple lifestyle with food grown on our land. 1960’s in Hau’ula, Hawaii.

  • @jeffglanstein4489
    @jeffglanstein4489 Před 2 lety +2

    I must have posted before on my wife's email. My mom still lives in Kailua, Kaimake Loop, which used to be a horse racing track back in the day. Way back. But about the time of this film for sure.

  • @Cmoredebris
    @Cmoredebris Před 2 lety +5

    George R Carter was territorial governor at this time and was married to the daughter of Eastman Kodak's co founder, Henry Strong, also a good friend of Edison's. Eastman Kodak provided Edison with the company's new 35mm celluloid film around 1890. This connection may have been the reason Edison traveled to Hawaii.

    • @gregcarter8656
      @gregcarter8656 Před rokem +4

      Apparently Edison sent a cameraman, Robert Bonine, and did not visit Hawaii himself.

    • @rainscratch
      @rainscratch Před 11 měsíci +2

      That is a very amazing piece of information, and would agree probably the reason the Edison Company filmed these stunning scenes.

  • @kuriyamatidusflossy
    @kuriyamatidusflossy Před rokem +3

    24:05 that's Moana Surfriders resort...it's still there, of course renovated....I stayed there...Beautiful Hawaii you are the diamond of the earth first chance I get I'll visit you again

  • @patriciaarria2504
    @patriciaarria2504 Před 3 lety +7

    I was just there in November of 2020, still feels great to have been in that exact location!!!

  • @greentubes1
    @greentubes1 Před 3 lety +10

    "The Float" at 27:42 looked like the stage at a Minor Threat show in the early '80's. Great video, mahalo for posting.

    • @CLee-oy1li
      @CLee-oy1li Před 3 lety +4

      Hahaha it realise does the first slam dancers for sure should add some threat tunes to it
      Such a good call 🤙

  • @edwinrumbaoa4507
    @edwinrumbaoa4507 Před 2 lety +3

    Born and raised in Maui! Thank you for sharing!

    • @IngefromGraz
      @IngefromGraz Před 11 měsíci +1

      So sorry and sad about the devastation in Lahaina!
      My thoughts and prayers to the families who lost their loved ones and homes!

  • @xisotopex
    @xisotopex Před 3 lety +7

    wow @29:12 you can see a guy pumping to try to stay in the wave as it flattens out

  • @ikaikamaleko8370
    @ikaikamaleko8370 Před 3 lety +14

    Feels weird watching this. Crazy to see all these young ppl and to know most of them have passed away by now, trippy.

    • @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641
      @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641 Před 3 lety +2

      All those young people saying ok boomer comes to mind. We all get old , if we are lucky.

    • @ikaikamaleko8370
      @ikaikamaleko8370 Před 3 lety +9

      @@crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641 Yes thats true, Im 57 born and raised on Oahu since I was born. My mom passed away last year, two of my brothers and my sis have all passed away. I long for the times when we were young playing on the beach at Sandys or the North Shore. Let me tell you, it goes by so so fast. My mom sis and bro are buried in Punchbowl and one bros ashes was spread off of Waimea Bay, so thats brings me a sense of peace atleast.

    • @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641
      @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ikaikamaleko8370 peace my friend. I am 1963 also.
      All the best from Australia 🌏

    • @ikaikamaleko8370
      @ikaikamaleko8370 Před 3 lety +2

      @@crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641 🤙🌴🌅

    • @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641
      @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ikaikamaleko8370 you have some wonderful memories of your childhood and family. Sorry for your loss, my Father passed 2004. I think more about him and our good time's more now than when he was here. I just look at the breeze in the tree tops and he is right here , reminding me of his good advise. 🤙🌴🌅

  • @raindogred
    @raindogred Před 3 lety +39

    the cast netting scene probably done for the camera man, no cast netter would deliberately throw nets on rocks

    • @house_greyjoy
      @house_greyjoy Před 3 lety

      Coulda thrown it in the water would make no difference for the camera man. To be fair the net was thrown in the water, what difference did the reef make?

  • @projectblue1751
    @projectblue1751 Před 3 lety +11

    Certainly won't see that time again, WOW that was cool

  • @aliinuijake5191
    @aliinuijake5191 Před 3 lety +7

    It kinda gave me goosebumps at 16:12 & 21:17..... Passing through Halawa/Aiea Pearl Harbor and King Street Downtown Honolulu

  • @roberthayes7737
    @roberthayes7737 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Amazing how well-preserved this is

  • @sweetness1586
    @sweetness1586 Před 3 lety +27

    they paved paradise and put in a parking lot !!!

    • @coldlava101
      @coldlava101 Před 3 lety +7

      Don’t it always seem to go, that you don’t know what you’ve got til it’s gone?
      🌴😎🌈Aloha

  • @RVTraveler
    @RVTraveler Před 3 lety +8

    Now the natives live in tents on the beaches. And we live in condominiums looking down on them. I’m sad.

  • @olivedarb03
    @olivedarb03 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this FASCINATING film !!

  • @Godckr1
    @Godckr1 Před 3 lety +7

    footage was pretty good for 1906. Cool to see bits of the sugar and cattle industry.

  • @hamakuadan
    @hamakuadan Před 3 lety +9

    thanks so much for posting. A great recording of history.

  • @robbieevans6536
    @robbieevans6536 Před 3 lety +3

    Saw a dude doing the Huntington hop. Over a hundred years ago...Yeww!

  • @chanaglanstein4689
    @chanaglanstein4689 Před 3 lety +13

    Wow, did that take me back home. I wish there was some films from Kailua, also. But back then it was just a mule trail to get to Kailua. Terrific, THank you for posting this video.

    • @hoksipgau
      @hoksipgau Před 3 lety +1

      Serious? You lived back in 1906?

    • @MyCheriAnolani
      @MyCheriAnolani Před 3 lety

      Big Island or Oahu? My Dad is from Kailua, Oahu

    • @MyCheriAnolani
      @MyCheriAnolani Před 3 lety

      @@The.Hawaiian.Kingdom totally(I'm from Cali)lol

    • @MyCheriAnolani
      @MyCheriAnolani Před 3 lety

      @@The.Hawaiian.Kingdom my dad passed in 2017 he was born in 1939 graduated in 1957 ❤️ Paul Reyes

    • @MyCheriAnolani
      @MyCheriAnolani Před 3 lety

      @@The.Hawaiian.Kingdom 😂thingy. Possibly, that is if she went to Kailua HS? If she did, I have his Year Book and I can find her picture ⚡

  • @russdemello8029
    @russdemello8029 Před 3 lety +50

    As a Hawaiian dis makes me sad to watch to see what our Aina has became today😔💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💯

  • @brycejohnsonjohnson6009
    @brycejohnsonjohnson6009 Před 2 lety +3

    I love this film of the old days of Hawaii amazing and inspiring

  • @mikestonez4928
    @mikestonez4928 Před 2 lety +2

    it's crazy thats 120 years ago

  • @axelprouteau9330
    @axelprouteau9330 Před 4 lety +5

    super video, j'adore thomas edison!!!!!!!!!

  • @roberte.andrews4621
    @roberte.andrews4621 Před 3 lety +18

    Filmmaker had the camera on a tripod with pan head and didn't wave it about the way cell phone shooters seem to like to do. The rule is to move at about 1/10th the speed you were thinking of. Moving camera makes viewers ill at ease. Let the action do the moving. Your device is not a fire hose. Tom Edison told me that. (Is my nose getting really long?)

    • @JamieSmith-fz2mz
      @JamieSmith-fz2mz Před 3 lety +3

      I was taught never to drop names. In fact, it was Bob Hope who told me that.

  • @mikeshuler8568
    @mikeshuler8568 Před 3 lety +2

    It makes me glad I grew up in Hawai’i. It was a great childhood, and young adulthood. But also glad I moved to CA in 1972.

  • @Machami
    @Machami Před 3 lety +10

    I currently live in Waikiki, but I was surprised that the nature of the beach and the city view of King ST are completely different.

  • @petersdotter1
    @petersdotter1 Před 3 lety +1

    Fishing in Hilo: Ow, Ow, Auwe! Rocks are sharp!!

  • @sunnyincincinnati3847
    @sunnyincincinnati3847 Před 3 lety +14

    This is so freaking cool! Love this! And now I’m researching more and learning even more. I would love to visit and learn more history than the touristy stuff! These amazing scenes are priceless.

  • @itskitty808
    @itskitty808 Před 4 lety +25

    Back before Hawaii wasn't flooded with tourists 😔 such a beautiful people Hawaii nei was back then. It's still beautiful, but not as much now as it was back then.

    • @sunnysied713
      @sunnysied713 Před 3 lety +2

      It was even more beautiful before humans showed up to colonize the hawaiian archipelago.

    • @hoksipgau
      @hoksipgau Před 3 lety +1

      @@sunnysied713 , Serious? When you say humans, do you mean Hawaiians?

    • @biketech60
      @biketech60 Před 3 lety

      Statehood was granted in 1959 .

    • @joeblow1942
      @joeblow1942 Před 3 lety

      @@hoksipgau. Hawaiians are humans.

    • @outsidechambaz
      @outsidechambaz Před 3 lety +3

      Tourists aren't the worst issue for us hawaiians, they bring income. But the foreigners that came to hawaii and stayed are the problem

  • @fitz4922
    @fitz4922 Před 3 lety +4

    Amazing footage

  • @JackofAllTrades1
    @JackofAllTrades1 Před 3 lety +14

    Wow, never saw diamond head so unobstructed before.

    • @benjaminmarcus17
      @benjaminmarcus17 Před 3 lety +3

      Actually Diamond Head remains one of the most untoched Hawaiian monuments on Oahu. Doesnt look much different then to now, which is good.

    • @JackofAllTrades1
      @JackofAllTrades1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@benjaminmarcus17 im talking about there being nothing around it. I lived on Oahu for several years and you had to be right up on it to see it unobstructed but in this video they are pretty far away.

    • @house_greyjoy
      @house_greyjoy Před 3 lety +1

      @@JackofAllTrades1 That pier was a bit obstructed. But the typical picturistique view we always had of diamond head is still the same today, unobstructed.

    • @JackofAllTrades1
      @JackofAllTrades1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@house_greyjoy I would be willing to bet back then you could stand in what is now the Ala Moana area and see Diamondhead easily. You couldn't do that today, too many tall hotels and apartments.

  • @sawe9991
    @sawe9991 Před 3 lety +4

    Beauty in the raw ❤️

  • @_oroku_3054
    @_oroku_3054 Před 3 lety +7

    Ok the video is definitely historical. Looking back on to what hawaii once was before the heavy influence of America. But the fact that Thomas Edison was behnd the camera makes it even more interesting

    • @monkeke9595
      @monkeke9595 Před 3 lety +3

      Apparently it wasn’t him but instead someone who worked for him

  • @samjones2439
    @samjones2439 Před rokem +2

    Love to know more history of the islands!

  • @C.Hawkshaw
    @C.Hawkshaw Před 3 lety +5

    All those surfboards and small boats were made of wood. All the clothing was cotton, linen, wool or leather.

  • @jaysoper3974
    @jaysoper3974 Před 3 lety +6

    Edison himself shot this? fine quality for its day, even without soundtrack

    • @benjaminmarcus17
      @benjaminmarcus17 Před 3 lety +3

      Robert Bonine. He went to Alaska to shoot the 1896 Klondike Gold Rush. I've been up there and have some idea of what he went through the drag all his gear up there. Came back to find his camera was out of register and he got bupkiss. Edison was pissed and fired him, but apparently they kissed and made up and he shot this 10 years later.

  • @HisAssholiness
    @HisAssholiness Před 3 lety +1

    that was rad , thanks

  • @georgeleigh3552
    @georgeleigh3552 Před 2 lety +2

    Just unbelievable video you have hear will save for sure
    Aloha

  • @albertstien8138
    @albertstien8138 Před 3 lety +7

    A few years before my time but I still remember a lot of it - a time when life was good, we trusted people - those days are gone - that’s what is called “PROGRESS”!!!

  • @markfisher2121
    @markfisher2121 Před 3 lety +5

    What an amazing movie of old Hawai'i 🏝️ I thank You very much for sharing 🌺 mahalo nui 💐 and I love Your YT-channel focusing surving the waves 🌊
    Mark

  • @HonoluluBoy
    @HonoluluBoy Před 3 lety +3

    32:03 lol all the Silva's and Tiexeira's riding horses.

  • @Ravenzpeak
    @Ravenzpeak Před 3 lety +18

    The world population in those days was around 2 billion. Now it is 7.7 billion. Hawaii will never be the way it used to be. No place will.

    • @freerepublicusa2064
      @freerepublicusa2064 Před 3 lety

      Yes it will be better in a few years. After all the wars that are coming, there will be peace for millennia. Man has created weapons to destroy himself.

    • @tommypetraglia4688
      @tommypetraglia4688 Před 3 lety

      @@freerepublicusa2064
      Weapons?
      COVID-19: Here, hold my Corona. And I don't mean beer

    • @house_greyjoy
      @house_greyjoy Před 3 lety

      @@tommypetraglia4688 Covid is a weapon... All biochemical are weapons created to destroy humanity. Yay scientists slaves for the military.

  • @Fixingtodraw
    @Fixingtodraw Před 3 lety +12

    it's amazing back then everyone is slender before the food corporations starting pouring sugar into all the food to make it addictive.

    • @cherg3622
      @cherg3622 Před 3 lety

      No more computer back then

    • @africandefender5174
      @africandefender5174 Před 2 lety

      Yes then came sick man with sick food plan

    • @georgecampbell9638
      @georgecampbell9638 Před 2 lety +2

      Look at Europe. You’ve still got a lot of slender people because they live how the human body is designed: you’re constant moving and you can eat what you please… as long as it’s healthy.

    • @MadPutz
      @MadPutz Před rokem +1

      It’s both diet and exercise. Everyone had to walk a lot to get anywhere. Work was very physical. And no AC to keep you from sweating.

  • @Beachcheeka
    @Beachcheeka Před 3 lety +2

    The men walking around in suits baffles me? Just sayin...
    PS love the railroads...wish they would bring back!

  • @jpanokealii4502
    @jpanokealii4502 Před 3 lety +2

    I can eat butter watching this all day 👍

  • @conanthedestroyer7123
    @conanthedestroyer7123 Před 3 lety +5

    1:29 they cast the nets for the camera. Never would one cast a net over rocks like that as it damages the net... only over sand or mud.

  • @bruceleehace20anos17
    @bruceleehace20anos17 Před 3 lety +8

    I think that in 1906 this was the longgest film at time

  • @jaydubya3698
    @jaydubya3698 Před 3 lety +6

    Thanks for this footage. Impressions:
    1. Everyone is wearing full dress suits with ties. Wow. When it's mid-summer, no wind, no cold drinks available around every corner...you'd fricking die.
    2. Everything seems so much drier: haole koa and keawe trees everywhere. You see this in the old pictures as well. Now instead of fields of pili grass to make your shacks you just have houses.
    3. Working for the sugar plantations was no joke. Hot, cruelling, mind-numbing work, day after day.
    4. Interesting how the vestiages of this time can still be seen...the bridge going into Haleiwa Town, the corner of Kalakaua Ave and Monserrat at Kapiolani Park, Queen's Surf....all recognizable, but different.
    5. I don't know why the filmmakers thought all the images of industry were so interesting. Has to be the arrogance of US haoles back then who were saying: "Look at how industrious everything is!!! Progress!!! Hard work!!! We're making so much money here!!" Ugh.

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Před 3 lety +1

      5. No. These films were shown in New York City in Edison's store for 5-cents a viewing. Lots of businessmen around Wall Street were the customers (because they had the spare cash), so there was always interest in industry and how things were made, processed, transported.

    • @jaydubya3698
      @jaydubya3698 Před 3 lety +3

      @@davidb2206 Hmmm...that's interesting. Thanks for the info. I didn't realize that the making of these films had that type of an angle, especially when the "industry" clips presented here were grouped with footage of waves crashing on rocks, people goofing around in the water, surfing, Pa-u riders, and so on. Edison was always looking for ways to make money. But you think about it, charging 5 cents to view clips of industrial processes with people (whom Wall Street types at that time certainly viewed as inferior) working shitty jobs in some far off place kind of has the same connotation, doesn't it? IDK...just my take on it.

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jaydubya3698 No. Huge fascination of the Wall Street and business guys with foreign peoples and simpler ways at this time. This is what led to the huge capital investment in the Panama Canal and the full-on investment in the Philippines for DECADES before WWII gave them independence. You will find there were even hit songs (on Broadway, in NYC of course) in that 1906-1920 era that claimed to be "island music" or "Hawaiian songs" or "Pacific melodies."

    • @gregcarter8656
      @gregcarter8656 Před rokem

      jaydubya3698's words -----> "Has to be the arrogance of US haoles"
      are very obviously RACIST.

  • @davidswaney2553
    @davidswaney2553 Před 3 lety +4

    The old timers of 1906 probably decried the development pictured here. And the old timers before them probably did the same. Maybe not.

  • @marksilvasilva
    @marksilvasilva Před 3 lety +10

    the precursor to JOB Vlogs

    • @willybabbit
      @willybabbit Před 3 lety +3

      I was expecting him to suddenly pop out of nowhere and yell "start the music!"

    • @marksilvasilva
      @marksilvasilva Před 3 lety +1

      @@willybabbit totally! :)

  • @monkeke9595
    @monkeke9595 Před 3 lety +2

    This really makes me wish I never moved away

  • @olivedarb03
    @olivedarb03 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks!

    • @surfertoday
      @surfertoday  Před 3 měsíci

      Thank you very much for your generosity and support. It’s much appreciated. 🙏🏼

  • @chaz-mi1ch
    @chaz-mi1ch Před 3 lety +2

    Da days of pidgin in progress!

  • @davidangelamelcher9591
    @davidangelamelcher9591 Před 3 lety +8

    Even Hawaii today looks nothing at all like it did in 1969 when I first visited there.

    • @4seeableTV
      @4seeableTV Před 3 lety +4

      Tahiti and Bora Bora sort of seem like Hawaii of old. Only because it's more expensive to get there, so it hasn't been as built up and crowded with tourists.

    • @GulfIslandRock
      @GulfIslandRock Před 2 lety

      1986 was first time for me when I got married there

  • @noakea
    @noakea Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hawai'i was overthrown only 13 years prior to this video.. these people lived it.. makes me sad.

  • @InnisArden
    @InnisArden Před 3 lety +5

    Just imagine what it was like before man.

  • @bradwilson6601
    @bradwilson6601 Před 3 lety +5

    The Moana Surfrider at 24:13

  • @mikestang679
    @mikestang679 Před 3 lety +4

    I saw somebody on a cell phone....must be a time traveler.......

  • @arnoldstollar5375
    @arnoldstollar5375 Před 3 lety +1

    Great

  • @johnrobinson3852
    @johnrobinson3852 Před 2 lety +1

    Talk about some tough feet to not get sliced up on that lava rock

  • @mya77
    @mya77 Před 2 lety +2

    It would be cool to upscale and colorize the footage.

  • @lmo7724
    @lmo7724 Před 3 lety +2

    Scenes 3 and 4 correct spelling: Laupāhoehoe. On Big Island, there was a port there at the time.

  • @panoptos4163
    @panoptos4163 Před 9 dny

    You see that traffic jam leaving the luau? It’s like the H1 but more lanes.

  • @mamacitadelosperros533
    @mamacitadelosperros533 Před 3 lety +3

    The paniolo are really tough!

  • @merrywalsh2809
    @merrywalsh2809 Před 3 lety +4

    Wow, horse and carriages and a trolly on King Street, and that new invention, electricity.

    • @bernieweber4663
      @bernieweber4663 Před 3 lety +3

      I think Honolulu was he second city on the world to have electricity as after Paris. Maybe third after Rome. Can't remember.

    • @merrywalsh2809
      @merrywalsh2809 Před 3 lety +2

      @@bernieweber4663 How interesting! Fun fact: My great uncle through marriage was the chief electrical engineer who put electricity on Maui. I was told the year was 1912. Later he headed the company (MECO)

    • @bernieweber4663
      @bernieweber4663 Před 3 lety +3

      @@merrywalsh2809 that's great that you have that history. It would be neat for Honolulu to have electric trolleys again. And on King Street some light rail with lines running down to the beach. Same in Maui too.

  • @anugrace3521
    @anugrace3521 Před 2 lety +2

    Very interesting video and I especially loved the beach scenes and seeing people have fun in the water but seeing how the sheep were treated made me feel really sick. And "shipping cattle"? I did not see a ship for the cattle.. Why all the unnecessary violence. That violent nature has not evolved in the past 100+ years. Maybe in the next 100...? Aloha

    • @rainscratch
      @rainscratch Před 11 měsíci

      Poor 'service animals' always suffer. Those bullocks and horses pulling heavy weights, and what about the cows being led to the shore boat - we didn't see what happened then - were they towed somewhere?

  • @JohnS-mq2mu
    @JohnS-mq2mu Před rokem +2

    Ten minutes in and I have seen maybe one overweight person - and he was one of two passengers on a rowboat.

  • @antpoo
    @antpoo Před 3 lety +8

    Jack London was probably on the Waikiki beach somewhere around this time.

    • @albertstien8138
      @albertstien8138 Před 3 lety

      Jack Lord, maybe??? NO WAY!!!

    • @lynnchotoocho9713
      @lynnchotoocho9713 Před 3 lety

      or with Princess Ka'iulani , he was friends with her father, Gov.Archibald Cleghorn , also from Scotland. R.L.S. wrote a poem for her before she was shipped off to Europe.

    • @lynnchotoocho9713
      @lynnchotoocho9713 Před 3 lety

      I meant Robert L.Stevenson , not Jack London, sorry .

  • @frederickanthony8416
    @frederickanthony8416 Před 3 lety +2

    Wow, Older than my uncle's pictures which were taken way before the Pearl Harbor attack...

  • @robkunkel8833
    @robkunkel8833 Před 3 lety +3

    What would you do if you were born in 1886 and saw these films at the ago of 20? I would escape from my hum drum 1906 life and go to sea. I would have wanderlust. The call of the sea is relentless. Yet, the number of people who actually do anything for the love of wanderlust is probably 1 in 1,000.

  • @marcphillips4593
    @marcphillips4593 Před 3 lety +3

    So the difference between Hawaii then and Hawaii now is the same as the world then and the world now. Too many people !!

  • @robertmarmaduke9721
    @robertmarmaduke9721 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm old enough to remember having pork lau lau and poi at the old Kona store. Went back in 2017, a whole lotta haolis and chi chi. Sad, not for what was lost, that's gone, but for all the haolis who sit there with no idea what was lost or what it was like then.

  • @proverbs3131
    @proverbs3131 Před 3 lety +1

    Whoever owned that property, I hope leased it rather than sale.

  • @Talkwithtina808
    @Talkwithtina808 Před 3 lety +4

    Mahalo

  • @BigBirdy100
    @BigBirdy100 Před 3 lety +2

    Shipping cattle?? WTF! Probably drowned them.

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Před 5 měsíci +1

    38:46 What to say? I cringe at how roughly they seem to be handling the sheep, but I'm sure they are under pressure to move them through and, to be honest, the sheep probably have easier lives than the shearers do. If the sheep are bothered by it, they don't show it much. But, despite industrialization having been well underway in some places, it's a glimpse of what life was like before electricity, before the internal combustion and steam engines, and before all the things we take for granted, for better or worse, today. There were almost no fat people; these guys were a lot stronger and fitter than most people their age are today, but the line between employment and slavery was even more blurred then than it is today.

  • @richardjohnson4696
    @richardjohnson4696 Před 3 lety +3

    Someone should really get on fixing the audio. Said every Millennial and Gen Z'er who watches this.

  • @davidb2206
    @davidb2206 Před 3 lety +6

    It took a lot of horses to get anything done.

    • @lynnchotoocho9713
      @lynnchotoocho9713 Před 3 lety +4

      and nearly every kanaka had one. The women were stunning as the galloped along dressed in pa'u and wearing flowers on their way to luau .

  • @ronz7562
    @ronz7562 Před 3 lety +3

    bodyboarder at 29:18!

    • @rainscratch
      @rainscratch Před 11 měsíci

      Apparently the first time surfers filmed and maybe first time bodyboarder too. Little would they know of how the surfing culture would be in 117 years, or that they would be seen in 117 years!!

  • @HonoluluBoy
    @HonoluluBoy Před 3 lety +2

    nice view of Pearl Harbor before the USN took over!

  • @narcovice
    @narcovice Před 2 lety +1

    the first one is waikiki

  • @aussierules3436
    @aussierules3436 Před 3 lety +2

    The guy who threw his net on the rock lol

  • @bobbyqiu
    @bobbyqiu Před 3 lety +2

    im hawaiian from china

  • @chrissonnenschein6634
    @chrissonnenschein6634 Před 3 lety +4

    The long lost time before Hawaiians were introduced to Spam ( the tinned “food”)....

    • @kanakahawaii6860
      @kanakahawaii6860 Před 3 lety +6

      What you meant to say was..."13 years after America overthrew our Queen."
      Thus causing us to eat cheap, easy to make, shitty food, because we now have a minimum amount of land to work, for it to provide for us. Then introducing drugs to our native people so they run a continuous loop of poverty while forgetting the language and culture. P.S Spam is great .

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 Před 3 lety +3

      @@kanakahawaii6860 This has happened to many tribes, not just Kanaka / Hawaiian... leading to obesity and diabetes. And more diseases due to continual over consumption of non traditional / unhealthy foods. :: Can't stand the stuff. Too much like the crappy food forced onto American servicemen known as "rations".. Other countries servicemen get real food.

    • @kanakahawaii6860
      @kanakahawaii6860 Před 3 lety +4

      12:50 Great point. You see this what they're pounding here. Thats the stuff my ancestors used to cultivate daily. Now they have machines to do it 🙄 The good part is we can still teach the children of today these ways . But you're right , it's some crap shit given to our native people. Mahalo for your knowledge 🤙🤙

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kanakahawaii6860 Teach the children and the adults will follow.

    • @kanakahawaii6860
      @kanakahawaii6860 Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrissonnenschein6634
      Thats my goal braddah!

  • @chrissonnenschein6634
    @chrissonnenschein6634 Před 3 lety +5

    Note however many of these workers were not native Hawaiians.. The Kanaks refere to peoples blackbirded from further west Pacific (Fiji, Samoa, etc.). Many Kanaka people were even used as far afield as Alaska in the canneries..

    • @keansalzer8364
      @keansalzer8364 Před 3 lety +1

      Imagine how bleak their future looked that they would sign up to leave their families and harvest sugarcane all day, every day? Once they arrived they quickly saw opportunities and pooled their money (which later became ethnic owned banks still profitable today) and within a decade or two helped each worker out of the fields and into jobs and businesses. Thus, the need for a new ethnic source of labor. They all came from the East, were brown skinned, and were easy to assimilate. Ironically, the Polynesian ethnic groups from Samoa, and especially Tonga, have had the hardest time merging into this “local” tribe. Caucasians are rarely accepted fully into local community. Friendships are made, but locals act differently when they are exclusively gathered.

    • @gregcarter8656
      @gregcarter8656 Před rokem +1

      @@keansalzer8364 You (mis-)use the word "locals" as if no white people are born and/or raised in Hawaii.

    • @keansalzer8364
      @keansalzer8364 Před rokem

      @@gregcarter8656 Do you know the term "local haole"?

    • @gregcarter8656
      @gregcarter8656 Před rokem

      @@keansalzer8364 Re-read the final 2 sentences of your comment:
      "Caucasians are rarely accepted fully into local community. Friendships are made, but locals act differently when they are exclusively gathered." Your word "locals" EXCLUDES your word "Caucasians".
      Anyway, I disagree with some (not all) of your statements. Some folks use "local" to mean "non-white".

  • @lmoral222
    @lmoral222 Před 3 lety +3

    SHOW ME THE TREATY!!!
    Jk. Cool vid.

    • @lmoral222
      @lmoral222 Před 3 lety

      @Dino Tavares Everything you own you must have receipts! Show us the treaty!!!