Day 0
Whew! After 23 hours in transit, we had mechanical problems with our plane that lead to significant delays and rearranging of flights, we finally arrived in Oahu at about 10pm. That means it was about 4am in DC time. Unfortunately, Renee’s luggage didn’t make it.
We’re staying at the Wyland Waikiki Hotel. It looks pretty neat, but with the low ceilings and poor air circulation on account of being surrounded by other buildings, it is a bit warm. Although, let me just say, they have one of the MOST comfortable pull-out beds I have ever slept on.
Day 1
Today we visited the Iolani Palace. The short and sweet description (summarized mostly from Wikipedia – because it is too late and I am too tired to write up my own detailed description) is:
Iolani Palace is the only royal palace used as an official residence by a reigning monarch in the United States. The Iolani Palace structure that exists today is actually the second Iolani Palace to sit on thepalace grounds. King David Kalakaua dreamed of a royal palace befitting of the sovereignty of a modern state such as Hawaii. He commissioned the construction of a ”new” Iolani Palace to become the official palace of the Hawaiian monarchy. The building was completed in 1882 and cost over $360,000. It had electricity and telephones at a time that such a thing was so rare and that many had never even heard of it. And served as the official residence of the Hawaiian monarch until the kingdom was overthrown in 1893.
I have to admit, the inside looked very beautiful with a lot of decorative woods and carvings. And the building has an amazing history. Just as a neat note – On April 30th of this year, the palace was “overtaken” by a group of native Hawaiians called the Hawaiian Kingdom Government to protest what they view as illegitimate rule by the United States. Cool, eh?
This is us indulging in a limo to ride over to the palace. Actually, the limo was the same price as a taxi. Brenda was our driver and she absolutely rocked. The other photo is of the state seal in the ceiling of the entrance to the Iolani Palace.
3 Responses
Day Al-Mohamed
September 19th, 2008 at 11:35 am
1Aaargh! I can’t get the text to wrap cleanly around the photographs. Oh well, it’s something to sort out later.
kepalo
September 19th, 2008 at 2:40 pm
2Happy to see you had a good visit to Hawaii. For more history about Hawaii’s legal history see http://hawaiiankingdom.org cheers
Day
September 19th, 2008 at 4:25 pm
3Mahalo! I’ll definitely check it out!
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply
Deadlines
Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting:
in 18 days
100 Books a Year
About
Recent Posts
Meta
Tags
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).