Hale Aloha - Lahaina, Maui Island, HI
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member denben
N 20° 52.350 W 156° 40.527
4Q E 741842 N 2309785
Hale Aloha is a distinctly New England style building with a belfry located off Luakini Street at the end of a shady lane in Lahaina, Maui
Waymark Code: WMRARP
Location: Hawaii, United States
Date Posted: 06/01/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 2

In 1854, Church members voted to replace the ruins of a school house and meeting hall with a stone and timber building to be called Hale Aloha (House of Love) in commemoration of Reverend Dr. Dwight Baldwin’s vaccination efforts that resulted in Maui escaping the smallpox epidemic, which decimated O'ahu in 1853. Construction began in 1855 and the new building was finished in 1858.

From 1873 to 1892, Hale Aloha was leased to the government to be used for the Lahaina Union School. When the school outgrew the space and moved, the building fell into disrepair. In 1908, it was thoroughly repaired to be used as a parish hall for Wainee Church. It soon became known as the "finest hall in the famous sea-port town of Lahaina."

In 1951, strong Kauaula winds blew the roof off the belfry and the bell came down. By 1973, the building was roofless and floorless. Purchasing the land and earmarking funds from state and county coffers, the Maui County Planning Department and Historic Commission obtained a preservation grant from the Housing and Urban Development Department to restore the structure to its 1850s style. Plans and specifications were prepared by an architectural firm, and over the years leading up to 1985, Hale Aloha was restored structurally.

However, forty percent of the detailed restoration was incomplete. An agreement was reached between Maui County and Lahaina Restoration Foundation to complete Hale Aloha at the foundation’s own expense. An out-building with restrooms was finished in 1989 and restoration of Hale Aloha’s exterior stonework was completed in 1992.

The bell tower, funded in part by gifts from two directors of the foundation, was reconstructed in 1996 as an exact replica of the tower built in 1910. But the tower lacked a bell … its original bell had a permanent home on the front lawn of Waiola Church. So a search by Lahaina Restoration Foundation led to the discovery of a bell made by the same manufacturer during the same year and with the same design as the original. The sister bell was finally installed in the belfry in 2008.

Hale Aloha is a contributing property of the Lahaina Historic District, designated a National Historic Landmark District on December 1962.

Lahaina Restoration Foundation leases Hale Aloha to a local business.

Sources: (visit link) and (visit link)
Address of Tower:
600 Laukini Street,
Lahaina, HI, US


Still Operational: yes

Number of bells in tower?: 1

Relevant website?: [Web Link]

Rate tower:

Tours or visits allowed in tower?: No

Visit Instructions:
Please post an original picture of the tower taken while you were there. Please also record how you came to be at this tower and any other interesting information you learned about it while there.
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