Tag Archives: Kahala

Seventy years in the same house

Old KahalaMy mother lived in this 916 square foot house along Kealaolu Avenue in old Kahala for 70 years. Today it’s pretty much as it was when they bought it in 1942. The house is much as it was, but the yard, and the neighborhood, have changed dramatically.

Yesterday my sister and I surveyed the situation in the house and tried to make a general plan for attacking all the “stuff.” My mother was a pack rat and a genealogist. The house is like a poorly organized genealogical library put together over time by someone who was going to get around to that organizing stuff “any time now.” There are the folders tracking individuals or families we are (or might be) related to across the U.S., England, and beyond. Then there are random notes, or a few sheets of research, that turn up in odd places, in the middle of a stack of bank account records, or in old newspaper clippings, or tucked inside a book. They’re everywhere!

My sister, Bonnie, gave me a key to the house yesterday while we were working, and I realized that it’s the first time I have ever had a key. When I was growing up, a key was unnecessary because the house was never locked. Later, it was unnecessary because there was a spare key in a hidden spot where I could always find it.

It’s a new day.

In any case, click on the photo to see a few more pictures of their Kahala home, then and now.

The missing video from this morning’s post

It took me a while yesterday, between other appointments, to wrestle this little bit of iPhone video into proper shape. It finally fell into place late in the afternoon, and I uploaded the video to YouTube on Wednesday night.

You may want to review the earlier entry again for more details on the photos.

Oh–the video was taken with my iPhone. It was a spur of the moment move. I had asked about the photos, and then quickly realized that it would be worth capturing her descriptions. I wasn’t quick enough, and there are some technical glitches, but overall it’s great video from the phone.

Some WWII era photos from my mother’s collection (and more to come)

I stopped by to see my mother yesterday morning. She had been sorting through her own boxes of old photos, and had set aside several for me.

John LindFirst, a photo of my dad in his full regalia as a member of the Businessmen’s Training Corps. In Kahala, and in other neighborhoods, civilians joined the BTC and were assigned positions to defend the area. My mom says he was assigned to a pill box at the corner of Kealaolu Avenue and Farmers Road, just on the edge of the Waialae Golf Course.

She laughs, and says she doubts he ever had any training in how to fire the rifle.

Then there was the bomb shelter.

Everyone had to dig a bomb shelter if they had space for it.

This was the one my parents dug in their back yard. At the time, they were in another house along Kealaolu Avenue, just above Kahala Avenue. That’s a block mauka of the house they’ve been in for just short of 70 years.

[text]Two things to note. First, this is looking from Kealaolu Avenue into the interior of Kahala, towards the back slopes of Diamond Head.

At the time, there was nothing there but fields and some farms. My mother recalls that the interior section wasn’t subdivided until after WWII.

The second thing is that the bomb shelter turned out to be useless. She laughs as she recalls that soon after it was built, it quickly became home to scorpions, centipedes, and other crawly creatures, making it unusable for its intended purposes.

No telling whether, in the event of any actual bombing, there might have been any way to share the safety of that hole in the ground.

[text]

[text]At the left, my grandfather, Duke Yonge, in a 1942 photo, dressed for work with helmet, and gas mask in his bag.

In the next photo, my grandparents, Duke and Lani Yonge, are joined by my dad, on the far right, in posing as armed defenders of the homeland, complete with required gas masks.

“Just fooling around,” my mother reports.

She noted that you were required by the military authorities to carry your gas mask whenever you went out. You’ll recall that Hawaii was under martial law at the time, with a military government that set and enforced the policy.

Ah, then there’s this final photo, which has nothing to do with the war, other than timing.

It was taken at Makapuu in the Spring of 1940. The mobile Swanky Franky cart was the beginning of the food service careers of two brothers from New York, Cliff and Spencer Weaver.

[text]A chain of these little carts dotted public spots around Honolulu. The brothers later formed Spencecliff, the restaurant chain that had at least two dozen popular restaurants in Honolulu in its heyday.

That’s my mother, Helen Lind, posing for the camera.

A short video of my mother describing the photos follows in a separate entry.