County: Honolulu
Site_Name: ?
Island: Oahu
Traditional_District: Koolaupoko
District: Koolaupoko
Ahupuaa: Heeia, Mokapu
Site_Function: Heiau A-Walled enclosure
Complex: No
Tax_Map_Key: 4-6-
State_Site_Number: 50-80-11-365
BM_site_number: 50-Oa-G04-032
Project_Number:
Entered_By:
Entry_Date:
Updated_By:
Updated_Date:
National_State_Park_Site_Number:
Misc_Site_Number:
Map_ID_Number:
Photo_ID_Number:
Slide_ID_Number:
Surveyor: McAllister
Survey_Type: Recon. survey
Survey_Date: 1930
Excavation:
Form_of_Ownership:
Owner: ?
Owner_Address: ?
Field_Notes:
Bag_Notes:
Dating:
History:
Status:
SiteType: Heiau, Mokapu, destroyed. On the elevation overlooking Kaneohe Bay. Large heiau which became the site of a Catholic church. Ruins within the enclosure are those of the church, but surrounding walls have appearance of greater age, and may have been walls of the heiau. Walls average 3.5 feet high and wide, and approximate a rectangle 115 x 300 feet. Thrum, "A large heiau of husbandry class...Hina and Ku its deities. (No walls seen in 1952. C.C.S) Heiau site obliterated by Navy about 1941.
Bibliography: J.G. McAllister, 1933, Arch. of Oahu, Site 365, p. 184 Sterling/Summers, 1962, Sites of Oahu, pp. 202, 203 Bull. 104, p. 184. See p. 172 location on map, fig. 59. (KPE) MacCaughey, V., A Footpath Journey, Mid-Pacific Magazine, Vol. 14, Aug. 1917.
Site_Name: ?
Island: Oahu
Traditional_District: Koolaupoko
District: Koolaupoko
Ahupuaa: Heeia, Mokapu
Site_Function: Heiau A-Walled enclosure
Complex: No
Tax_Map_Key: 4-6-
State_Site_Number: 50-80-11-365
BM_site_number: 50-Oa-G04-032
Project_Number:
Entered_By:
Entry_Date:
Updated_By:
Updated_Date:
National_State_Park_Site_Number:
Misc_Site_Number:
Map_ID_Number:
Photo_ID_Number:
Slide_ID_Number:
Surveyor: McAllister
Survey_Type: Recon. survey
Survey_Date: 1930
Excavation:
Form_of_Ownership:
Owner: ?
Owner_Address: ?
Field_Notes:
Bag_Notes:
Dating:
History:
Status:
SiteType: Heiau, Mokapu, destroyed. On the elevation overlooking Kaneohe Bay. Large heiau which became the site of a Catholic church. Ruins within the enclosure are those of the church, but surrounding walls have appearance of greater age, and may have been walls of the heiau. Walls average 3.5 feet high and wide, and approximate a rectangle 115 x 300 feet. Thrum, "A large heiau of husbandry class...Hina and Ku its deities. (No walls seen in 1952. C.C.S) Heiau site obliterated by Navy about 1941.
Bibliography: J.G. McAllister, 1933, Arch. of Oahu, Site 365, p. 184 Sterling/Summers, 1962, Sites of Oahu, pp. 202, 203 Bull. 104, p. 184. See p. 172 location on map, fig. 59. (KPE) MacCaughey, V., A Footpath Journey, Mid-Pacific Magazine, Vol. 14, Aug. 1917.
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