Ho‘okuleana – it’s an action word; it means, “to take responsibility.” We view it as our individual and collective responsibility to: Participate … rather than ignore; Prevent … rather than react and Preserve … rather than degrade. This is not really a program, it is an attitude we want people to share. The world is changing; let’s work together to change it for the better. (All Posts Copyright Peter T Young, © 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 Hoʻokuleana LLC)
Showing posts with label Army Coast Artillery Corps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Army Coast Artillery Corps. Show all posts
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Cannon Club
Fort Ruger Military Reservation was established at Diamond Head (Lēʻahi) in 1906. Also at Fort Ruger was the Cannon Club, a social club with a restaurant built in 1945 for the officers and their families. The conclusion of World War II made the coastal batteries obsolete; in December 1955 the majority of the Fort Ruger land was turned over to the State of Hawai‘i – the Army kept the club.
The club, however, could not keep up with the times; the Army had to close the Cannon Club in 1997 as a result. For a few years, there was hope that the restaurant could reopen under private contractors, but the funding for the project fell through; the state acquired the property. It is destined to be KCC's Culinary Institute of the Pacific at Diamond Head.”
Click HERE for the full post and more images.
Friday, January 9, 2015
Fire Power … to Fired Power
Camp Malakole (originally called Honouliuli Military reservation) was an anti-aircraft and anti-tank artillery training facility … later, Kalaeloa’s Chevron fuel refinery took over the site; just down the road is HECO’s oil-burning 651-Megawatt Kahe Power Plant.
Let’s look back.
On March 22, 1939, the North Shore's Kawailoa military firing point was relocated to Honouliuli Military Reservation, on over 1,700-acres situated between Barbers Point and Nanakuli, Oʻahu; it then served as a Hawaiian Separate Coast Artillery Brigade.
Firing positions were prepared for six batteries along the shoreline and plans were prepared to add an additional three positions, allowing three battalions to conduct firing practice at the same time.
The location provided adequate space to exercise the searchlight and sound locator units to work with the guns in tracking targets that were towed off-shore by towing aircraft consisting mostly old bi-planes. (Bennett)
The installation initially consisted of a tent camp on the southern half of the tract; officers were quartered on the east side with their mess, showers, and latrines. The post kitchen and bakery tents were located across the roadway from the officer's encampment.
Closer to the beach were the ammunition storage tents. The camp's primary observation station was located to the rear of the firing line atop a steel-frame tower.
The 251st Coast Artillery (AA,) California National Guard, was sent to Hawaiʻi in November 1940 and stationed at Honouliuli Military Reservation. (army-mil) The facility's peacetime strength was 1,200-men and the wartime strength was 1,800-men.
"(A)fter we'd been there for about a week or so, we had a tremendous rainstorm and the water got to be about two foot high and just washed us all out. And we had to move everything up on the higher ground because our foot lockers and our shoes, and everything else was pouring right down to the sea". (Anthony Iantorno)
As a result of the flooding, a large sand berm was built between the firing line and the beach that ran parallel to the beach.
With the 251st arrival came the plan to build more permanent facilities. The regiment lived under canvas pending completion of their new quarters, which they were tasked to build under the supervision of engineers from Schofield Barracks.
The regiment spent every morning on the firing line, with the evenings reserved for clearing away the kiawe and building the camp improvements. (Sebby)
Upon completion in early 1941, the camp consisted of temporary theater of operations-type structures. There were 48 barracks structures (90 feet by 24 feet,) 12 mess halls, 9 magazines and storehouses, 5 officers quarters, 7 showers (equipped with only cold water) and latrines.
Other improvements included a dispensary, officers' mess, headquarters building, post office, regimental day room, movie theater, laundry, motor repair shop, gasoline station, fire house, guard house, photo laboratory, quartermaster and engineers' buildings. The majority of the buildings were built on piers with the footings buried in the coral ground.
With the improvements, on January 9, 1941, the facility's name was changed to Camp Malakole. (Bennett) It was part of the growing presence in the Islands.
Back in 1941, the Hawaiian Department was the Army's largest overseas department. For more than three decades the War Department had constructed elaborate coastal defenses on Oahu. The Hawaiian Department's two main tasks were to protect the Pacific Fleet from sabotage and defeat any invasion.
The previous 18 months had seen the arrival of the Pacific Fleet, war scares, the start of selective service, numerous training exercises, the mobilization of the National Guard, and the doubling of the department's strength to 43,000 soldiers (including Air Corps.) (army-mil)
Besides carrying out extensive training (firing exercises, field maneuvers and gas attack drills,) several members of Camp Malakole participated in sports activities and entered the Hawaiian Department track meet on May 29, 1941, winning several first places and some second and third places.
Then, like other military installations in the Islands, things changed with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
Sgt Henry C Blackwell, Cpl Clyde C Brown and Sgt Warren D Rasmussen were the first American casualties of the Pearl Harbor attack; they were stationed at Camp Malakole, F Battery. (Kelley)
Licensed pilots, that morning, they had gone on pass to Rodgers Airport (now Honolulu International Airport) and rented a couple of piper cubs to practice flying over the water. The Cubs took off to the northeast, then flew parallel to Waikīkī Beach toward Diamond Head before reversing direction and heading west. (Harding)
They were about two miles offshore at an altitude of between 500 and 800 feet, headed toward Camp Malakole. (Harding) They were out over the water just as the Japanese attacked. They were shot down. (Kelley) Guards at Camp Malakole shot down a strafing Japanese plane at about 8:05 am with small arms fire.
Newly arrived coast artillery units on Oahu in 1942 were quartered at the camp during the early months of the war. Later in the war, the Hawaiian Antiaircraft Artillery Command (HAAC) took over operation of the camp, which was used completely as the principal facility for training antiaircraft units on Oʻahu during the war.
Camp Malakole served as a base camp for anti-aircraft and anti-tank weapons training, and staging and temporary lodging for troops preparing for deployment to the Pacific during the height of World War II. During its years of service, 43,350 troops were billeted to Camp Malakole for staging and training purposes. (Dye)
Today, the Chevron fuel refining facility sites on the former Camp Malakole grounds. A reminder of the prior use is a steel turreted machine gun pillbox; it's still there (in the lawn area on Malakole Street at the entrance to the Chevron facility.)
The image shows 3-inch guns at Camp Malakole. (Bennett) In addition, I have added other images to a folder of like name in the Photos section on my Facebook and Google+ pages.
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Monday, July 8, 2013
Battery Cooper
Coast Artillery existed as a distinct branch within the Army since 1901 and as a combatant "line" arm after 1920. Its stated mission was to protect fleet bases, defeat naval and air attacks against cities and harbors, undertake beach defense while acting as army or theater reserve artillery, and provide a mine-planter service.
Prior to the war, Oʻahu defenses were divided between Pearl Harbor and Honolulu Harbor; however, with more military facilities being constructed on the island, the coastal defense program also expanded.
In 1940, the Navy decided to acquire all of Mōkapu Peninsula to expand Naval Air Station Kāneʻohe, a sea plane base it had started building in September 1939 and would commission on February 15, 1941.
Between 1939 and 1943, large sections of Kāneʻohe Bay were dredged for the dual purposes of deepening the channel for a sea plane runway and extending the western coastline of the peninsula with 280-acres of coral fill.
With the development of Kāneʻohe Bay into a major naval air base, there was a need for additional coastal defense in that area.
Eventually, Kāneʻohe Bay was protected by three battery installations. Two were built on the installation and the third was built at Lae-o-Ka-Oio, in the vicinity of what we now call Kualoa Ranch.
In about 1944, construction project ‘302’ was started for Kaneohe’s 3rd battery. It had two 6-inch guns, built at the northern reaches of Kāneʻohe Bay. Local engineers modified the conventional plans to fit local geographic conditions.
The battery was not named until after the end of the war (it was later named, Battery Cooper (after Avery J Cooper)) and it served for about 5-years as part of the World War II-era coastal defense program.
The site was fit for tunneling – it had soft volcanic rock and with the rugged terrain, it was decided to tunnel, rather than cut and cover the gun emplacement.
The tunneling provided a better-protected and lower-cost alternative compared to the cut and cover traditional construction.
The battery was built into the face of the cliff and had concrete-lined tunnels leading to the gun positions. The tunnels led back 150-feet into the cliff and had rooms off of the 45-degree tunnels for magazine and support facilities.
The battery commander’s station and radar room were 75-feet above the gun level. This was connected internally by stairs in a narrow shaft.
It wasn’t the only military facility in the vicinity. On the level land below the cliff and extending to what we now refer to a Kualoa Beach Park was the Air Force’s Kualoa Airfield.
The Kualoa Airfield was operational from about 1942 to as late as 1947. It had a single 6,500' (north-south) runway formed of pierced steel planking. A row of revetments for protected aircraft parking was along the west side of the runway near the cliff.
At the end of the war, the military facilities were turned over to the private land owner (Kualoa Ranch.)
Although no longer used for military defenses, Battery Cooper is being used as a movie museum about films that have shot scenes in Kaʻaʻawa Valley.
Some of the many productions that have utilized Kualoa locations include: Karate Kid, 1984; Revealing Evidence, 1990; Jurassic Park, 1993; The Phantom, 1996; George of the Jungle, 1997; Mighty Joe Young, 1998; Krippendorf Tribe, 1998; Godzilla, 2000; Pearl Harbor, 2001; Windtalkers, 2002; Tears of the Sun, 2003; The Rundown, 2003; Along Came Polly, 2003; Fifty First Dates, 2004; You, Me & Dupree, 2006; Byrds of Paradise (TV), 1994; Fantasy Island (TV), 1999; Magnum PI (TV); Lost (TV) and Hawaii 5-0 (TV, old & new versions.)
Tours are offered that take guests to the Battery to see the “movie museum,” then guests are taken on a guided tour into the valley, where most of the movies were filmed. (Visit Kualoa.com for more information.) Lots of information here from Williford, ‘Defenses of Pearl Harbor and Oahu 1907-1950’)
The image shows the gun emplacement area and entrance into Battery Cooper. In addition, I have added other related images in a folder of like name in the Photos section on my Facebook and Google+ pages.
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Thursday, March 7, 2013
Fort Armstrong
Fort Armstrong was located at Honolulu and was built on fill over Kaʻākaukukui reef in 1907 to protect Honolulu Harbor. It had one named Battery, and was spread over an area of 64.34 acres (6 acres being upland and the balance submerged lands.)
Kaʻākaukukui (the right (or north) light – and also called ‘Ākaukukui) was an original name for Kakaʻako.
Marshland, reef, salt pans and traditional fish ponds existed in this area. The entire shoreline was a coral wasteland bordered by mudflats. According to an 1885 survey map, the ‘ili of Kaʻākaukukui was awarded by land court to Victoria Kamāmalu; Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop inherited the land and it later became part of the Kamehameha Schools.
In 1898, the property was transferred to the United States by the Republic of Hawaiʻi under the joint resolution of annexation and, to protect the mouth of Honolulu Harbor, the US Army filled a submerged coral reef on the ‘Ewa side of Ka’ākaukukui for a gun emplacement.
In January 1905, President Teddy Roosevelt instructed Secretary of War William H Taft to convene the National Coast Defense Board (Taft Board) “to consider and report upon the coast defenses of the United States and the insular possessions (including Hawai‘i.)”
In 1906 the Taft Board recommended a system of Coast Artillery batteries to protect Pearl Harbor and Honolulu. Between 1909-1921, the Hawaiian Coast Artillery Command had its headquarters at Fort Ruger and defenses included artillery regiments stationed at Fort Armstrong, Fort Barrette, Fort DeRussy, Diamond Head, Fort Kamehameha, Kuwa‘aohe Military Reservation (Fort Hase – later known as Marine Corps Base Hawaiʻi) and Fort Weaver.
The District was renamed Headquarters Coast Defenses of Oʻahu sometime between 1911 and 1913. Following World War I and until the end of World War II, additional coastal batteries were constructed throughout the Island.
Fort Armstrong, built in 1907, was named for Brigadier General Samuel C Armstrong. His father, Reverend Richard Armstrong (1805-1860,) had arrived in Hawaiʻi in 1832 and later replaced Hiram Bingham as pastor at Kawaiahaʻo Church (1840-1843.) In 1848, Armstrong (the father) left the mission and became Hawaiʻi’s minister of public education.
Armstrong (the son – namesake of the Fort) was born January 30, 1839 in Maui, Hawaii, the sixth of ten children. He attended Punahou School and later volunteered to serve in the Union Army during the American Civil War.
At the end of the war, Armstrong established the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute - now known as Hampton University - in Hampton, Virginia in 1868. Perhaps the best student of Armstrong’s Hampton-style education was Booker T Washington. Samuel Chapman Armstrong died at the Hampton Institute on May 11, 1893, and is buried in the Hampton University Cemetery.
The original garrison at Fort Armstrong was the 1st Coast Artillery Company, followed by the 104th Mine Co. operating the harbor mines. Also stationed there was the 185th Coast Artillery Company.
They lived in tents for quite a long time; then temporary barracks were built - wooden structures that were continually occupied since January, 1914. Buildings are constructed of 1 x 12 rough boards, with tar-paper roofs.
The facility later had a barracks, 4 officers' quarters, 3 noncommissioned officers' quarters, administration building and post exchange, guardhouse, fire apparatus house, quartermaster storehouse, gymnasium and related infrastructure; the standard strength was 109 men.
Battery Tiernon at Fort Armstrong was armed with two pedestal mounted 3-inch Guns from 1911 to 1943.
The first service practice ever held at Battery Tiernon, using the 3-inch guns, was August 30, 1913. “Two 10-by-24 foot material targets were towed from right to left, facing the field of fire from a position at the B.C. station. … only one target was fired upon, viz: Four shots by the first manning detail and then four shots by the second manning detail. This was due to the fact that when the left target had almost reached the inner allowable limit of range at which practice may be held (1,500-yards) the right target was just beginning to be obscured by a dredge working in the outer channel.”
The Army mission in Hawaiʻi was defined in 1920 as “the defense of Pearl Harbor Naval Base against damage from naval or aerial bombardment or by enemy sympathizers and attack by enemy expeditionary force or forces, supported or unsupported by an enemy fleet or fleets.”
Fort Armstrong continued under the Coast Artillery program until September 15, 1922.
It was reserved for military purposes by a series of Executive Orders in 1930 and was described as the Fort Armstrong Military Reservation.
The present seawall was constructed 500-feet out from the original shoreline in 1948, and the area was backfilled. The Army Corps of Engineers took over the post in 1949. Kakaʻako Park was created over the landfill area.
On December 13, 1951, because the site was no longer needed by the military and was needed by the Territory of Hawaiʻi for harbor improvements, President Truman transferred the land to the Territory of Hawaiʻi.
Today, the site includes Piers 1 and 2 and has container and general cargo berths, warehouses, sheds, open paved storage areas for container back up and marshaling and Foreign Trade Zone No. 9. The area also contains the US Immigration Station, the Department of Health Building, and the Ala Moana Pumping Station (all historic buildings.)
The image shows tents and other facilities at Fort Armstrong (1911-1920) (Hammatt – HSA.) In addition, I have included other images/maps in a folder of like name in the Photos section on my Facebook and Google+ pages.
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Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Fort DeRussy
The Artillery District of Honolulu was established in 1909 and consisted of Forts Ruger, DeRussy, Kamehameha and Armstrong. The District was renamed Headquarters Coast Defenses of Oahu sometime between 1911 - 1913.
Battery Randolph within Fort DeRussy was built between 1909 and 1911 and gained international, national, state and local significance at a time when British, French, Russian, German and even the Japanese had ships in the Pacific, and were expressing interest in Hawai‘i.
The Army mission in Hawai‘i was defined as "the defense of Pearl Harbor Naval Base against damage from naval or aerial bombardment or by enemy sympathizers and attack by enemy expeditionary force or forces, supported or unsupported by an enemy fleet or fleets."
The Army fortified O‘ahu's harbors with a system of gun emplacements employing mortars and long-range rifled guns. Although its guns are gone, the old batteries are still there.
Batteries at Fort DeRussy, including Battery Randolph and Battery Dudley, were responsible for the defense of Honolulu Harbor.
In 1906, the US War Department acquired more than 70-acres in the Kālia portion of Waikīkī for the establishment of a military reservation to be called Fort DeRussy.
Back then, nearly 85% of present Waikīkī (most of the land west of the present Lewers Street or mauka of Kalākaua) were in wetland agriculture or aquaculture.
Fort DeRussy has evolved immensely when it was sold as a 72-acre parcel of “undesirable” land, to the building of Battery Randolph at the east end of Fort DeRussy in 1911, to the significant roles that Fort DeRussy played during WWII.
The Army started filling in the fishponds which covered most of the Fort - pumping fill from the ocean continuously for nearly a year in order to build up an area on which permanent structures could be built. Thus, the Army began the transformation of Waikīkī from wetlands to solid ground.
Battery Randolph at Fort DeRussy demonstrates the shift in emphasis from fortification structures to the weapons contained therein. In contrast to the stark, vertical walls of older forts, the new works of reinforced concrete were designed to blend, so far as possible, into the surrounding landscape.
The low profile, massive emplacements all possess concrete frontal walls as much as twenty feet thick behind 30 or more additional feet of earth. The batteries were (and still are) all but invisible and invulnerable from the seaward direction. The permanency of construction is also evident by their present condition.
In its heyday, Battery Randolph had two 14-inch guns and Battery Dudley had two six-inch guns mounted on disappearing carriages. When they were installed, they were the largest guns in the entire Pacific from California to the Philippines.
The disappearing carriages allowed the guns to remain hidden from sight of approaching battleships by solid concrete walls called parapets, capable of withstanding a direct hit from a 2,000-pound artillery shell.
To get the gun into the firing position, the artillery crew tripped a lever attached to a 50-ton weight. As the weight fell, it lifted the gun tube into battery (the firing position), and the gun was then ready to fire again.
A crew of roughly 14 artillerymen would load a shell in the breech, and then load 340-pounds of gun powder behind it.
After lobbing the 1,556-pound shells up to 14 miles out to sea, the recoil automatically pushed the gun carriage back down behind its concrete parapet; the gun was then reloaded.
A well-trained crew could fire a round downrange every 30-seconds. As one round was impacting its mark, the second round was already half way in flight to hit the target again.
Protecting Soldiers inside the battery, the overhead concrete was up to 12-feet thick. On the ocean side of the battery, concrete was the equivalent of 30-feet thick.
These 1890s-era weapons were very accurate. Observation points on top of Diamond Head and Tantalus were used to triangulate the distance, direction and speed of potential adversaries via telephone to the plotting room at Battery Randolph.
The guns were capable of hitting a 20-foot target from six miles away - the equivalent of hitting a bus in Kāneʻohe (or a fly on a wall 60-feet away with a bullet the size of a pinhead, all without the aid of a computer.)
With the end of World War II came the realization that the fort was no longer capable of meeting the needs of the US military in Hawaiʻi. The giant guns were cut up and sold for scrap, having never fired a shot in anger or defense.
Battery Dudley was razed to the ground; Battery Randolph was eventually abandoned and briefly became a warehouse storage facility. In 1976, the Army designated Battery Randolph home of the US Army Museum of Hawaiʻi.
Today, Fort DeRussy Armed Forces Recreation Center is the home of the Hale Koa Hotel (House of the Warrior,) an 817-room, world–class resort hotel and continued favorite R&R destination for our country’s military personnel and the US Army Museum of Hawaiʻi.
The museum houses a gift store that sells military memorabilia, books, clothing, military unit insignia and World War era music.
The museum is funded by the Department of Defense and admission is free of charge and open to the public, Tuesday through Saturday, 9 am-5 pm, and closed on some federal holidays, but open on military holidays.
The image shows one of the 14-inch guns at Battery Randolph, Fort DeRussy in 1931 (from army-mil;) in addition, I have included other images of the Fort in a folder of like name in the Photos section on my Facebook page.
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Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Fort Kamehameha
Established
in 1909, Fort Kamehameha played an important role
within a system of coastal defenses of the Army Coast Artillery Corps that served as a key component of the national defense of
the United States in the early 20th century.
In a public address on June 11, 1911, Brig. Gen. M. M. Macomb
(Commander, District of Hawai‘i) stated that Oʻahu would be encircled with a
ring of steel, with mortar batteries at Diamond Head, big guns at Waikīkī and
Pearl Harbor, and a series of emplacements from Koko Head around the island to
Waianae.
Between 1911 and 1914 the Army Corps of Engineers built four
batteries at Fort Kamehameha (Selfridge, Hasbrouck, Hawkins, and Jackson),
adding a fifth one (Battery Closson) in 1920.
These batteries were key sections of Oahu's "ring of
steel," which included Forts Armstrong, DeRussy and Ruger, along with Ford
Island Military Reservation.
The Army fortified O‘ahu's harbors with a system of gun
emplacements employing mortars and long-range rifled guns. Although its guns are gone, the old batteries are still there.
Battery Selfridge
was 500' x 90', the largest of the batteries. With an earth berm concealing the
makai side, the massive two-story concrete structure was built to support eight
12-inch mortars (four to a pit). The 12-inch guns
could send a 1,046-lb. projectile approximately 17,000 yards.
Battery
Hasbrouck was a one-story concrete structure with a total area of 470' x
100'. Battery Hasbrouck supported eight
12-inch mortars placed in quads of four per pit; each could send a projectile
approximately 15,200 yards.
Battery
Hawkins was located along the water at the south-eastern edge of the Fort
Kamehameha. It supported two 3-inch
rapid-fire rifled cannon-mounted pedestals. Each gun had a range of 11,100 yards when
firing a 15-pound projectile. These guns were meant to cover the entrance to
Pearl Harbor, where submarine mines would be activated in time of war.
Battery
Jackson is the smallest of these coastal batteries. This single-story concrete
structure includes three magazine sections, with a total area of 73' x
86'. It supported two 6-inch rifles
mounted on disappearing carriages. These breech-loaded cannon could send a
106-lb. projectile a maximum of 14,600 yards.
Battery
Closson supported two 12-inch rifles mounted on barbette carriages with a
360-degree field of fire. These guns could cover all but the northern-most Oahu
beaches. These guns could be fired at elevation angles up to 35 degrees, and
the range of the 12-inch guns was increased to 30,100 yards (17.1 miles) firing
a 975-lb. projectile.
OK,
that’s the armament part of the story, but there’s more to this than
early-1900s military defenses.
The
land, once the site of Queen Emma's home, contained three shallow fishponds,
groves of trees and a marsh when the Army purchased it in 1907 and built the
first gun battery.
Today, the
area has been recognized as an historic area.
In addition to the armaments, Fort Kamehameha
historic area encompasses a flagpole, chapel and 33 homes built in 1916.
The
bungalow style homes are in two styles, four in a large H-shaped plan and 29 in
a smaller U-shaped footprint.
Whenever
you land at Honolulu International Airport, you fly over Fort Kamehameha and
these homes. They are an intact
residential complex with a neighborhood feel of mature trees, large expanses of
grass and open space, access to the waterfront, and a children’s playground.
A burial
vault houses iwi of kūpuna who were disinterred during the construction of the
nearby Pearl Harbor wastewater treatment plant.
The vault is maintained and visited by Native Hawaiian organizations
with cultural and lineal ties to the area.
The Air
Force has issued a notice that it intends to dispose of the Fort Kamehameha
Historic District through adaptive use, relocation and demolition.
The
proposal to dispose of Fort Kamehameha is the result of an Air Force regulation
that limits the uses that can occur along the flight path of runways at nearby
Honolulu International Airport, which shares the runways with the Air Force and
Hawai‘i Air National Guard.
While at
DLNR, I had the opportunity to visit Fort Kamehameha, both the military
armament sections, as well as the residential area. (At the time, I was serving as the State
Historic Preservation Officer.)
I
believed then, as I believe now, that this assemblage of homes needs to be
preserved – they tell an important story about Hawai‘i. I think relocation and assemblage in a
different area is probably the most practical.
(Destruction is not.)
In 2008,
Historic Hawai‘i Foundation put Fort Kamehameha on its Most Endangered Historic
Sites in Hawai‘i list. I concur with
their assessment.
We need
to remember, the homes were built in 1916; Luke Field on Ford Island started in
1919; Honolulu International Airport (HNL) opened in March 1927 as John Rodgers
Airport and Hickam Field started in 1934.
The
homes were there first, before any airfield in the area.
The
image shows the layout of Fort Kamehameha.
I think the layout will remind you of the quaint neighborhood of homes
that you fly over coming into HNL. In
addition, I have included some images (military and residential) of the uses at
Fort Kamehameha in a folder of like name in the Photos section on my Facebook
page.
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