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LOVE by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
TOWER
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The Fence by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
To keep out dogs, feral cats, rats, mice...
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KEEP OUT by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
Shearwater Nesting Area
Albatross Nesting Area0 comments
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Brian Trask by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
Phone Home
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Scott Sidhu by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
HPN Producer
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Brian Trask by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
HPN Producer
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Andrew Worthen by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Ka‘ena Point, O‘ahu by Hawaii Pacific News
HPN Producer
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Umeke by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (Gallery) by Hawaii Pacific News
Bowl
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Where We Live: by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (Gallery) by Hawaii Pacific News
Places of Hawai'i
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Post Modern Artist by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (Gallery) by Hawaii Pacific News
Masami Teraoka
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Door to by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
the corner sitting room, a favorite place of Queen Liliuokalani
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Queen's by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Portrait
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Red Chair by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
and bowl
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Bottles by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
and Wooden Box
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Ivory Tusks by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Perfect Elephant
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Hymn by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Kamehameha I
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David Lawrence by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
HPN Producer
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King and Queen by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Thrones
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Golden Ball by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
on Wooden Staff
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Gold Gilt by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Crosses
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Empty Frame by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Boys holding Hawaiian Flag
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Crissy Gofigan by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Snap.
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Volleyball by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Waikiki from Eaton Square by Hawaii Pacific News
Khakis
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Alien by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Waikiki from Eaton Square by Hawaii Pacific News
Graffitti
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Britney by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (courtyard) by Hawaii Pacific News
No sweeping.
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Blue by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Round Top Drive over Waikiki and Honolulu by Hawaii Pacific News
Graffitti
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Sunset Fishing by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Waikiki from Eaton Square by Hawaii Pacific News
at Magic Island
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Crown by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Throne Room by Hawaii Pacific News
Royal crown
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Matching Ivory Tusks by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
December 2010. The two tusks and their koa table/stand were re-configured to their 19th century appearance by Furniture Conservator Mark Harpainter.
- Courtesy iolanipalaceinsider.blogspot.com
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Music Room Center Sofa by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan 'Iolani Palace Interiors - Gold Music Room by Hawaii Pacific News
This sofa is a period substitute. It was purchased with funds from Ms. Olivia De Jane. Although there are no known photographs of the Music Room or evidence that the original exists, researcher Deborah Kraak was able to get an idea of what it might have looked like.
- Courtesy iolanipalaceinsider.blogspot.com
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The Statue of the Lady Columbia by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Punchbowl National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific by Hawaii Pacific News
A close up of the details of the beautiful architectural mural.
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A quote by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Punchbowl National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific by Hawaii Pacific News
"The solemn pride, that must be yours, to have laid, so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom"
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HPU Gigapan Team members Taylor, Alyssa, & Britney (L to R) by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (courtyard) by Hawaii Pacific News
HPU students in the Mult 2460a graphic design class taking part in a digital imaging project.
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Clay mission 'U 'shaped roof tiles by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (courtyard) by Hawaii Pacific News
Clay roof tiles are one of the oldest types of roofing materials, dating back hundreds of years.
One of the most well-known types of clay roof tile is the Spanish or Mission style. This tile has a "U" or "S" shape that creates a distinctive interlocking design.
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St. Andrews Cathedral Hawaii by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu, Ohau, Hawai'i (courtyard) by Hawaii Pacific News
Queen Emma Square, Honolulu, Hawaii 96813
The Anglican Church has the distinct honor of having been invited to Hawaii by King Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma. This invitation culminated in the consecration of Thomas Nettleship Staley at Lambeth Palace on December 15, 1861 as Bishop of the Missionary Diocese of Honolulu. The new Anglican Church in Hawaii was called the Hawaiian Reformed Catholic Church, indicative of the evolution of the Church of England of the time. The name would change in 1870 to the Anglican Church in Hawaii.
The first services of the church were held on October 12, 1862, amidst a time of mourning for the young Prince of Hawaii, the only son of the King and Queen who died shortly before the arrival of the Bishop. The arrival of the Bishop had been long anticipated and prepared for by the King, who had translated much of the Book of Common Prayer into the Hawaiian language and had written a Preface explaining this new Anglican Christianity to his people.
The King and Queen gave land, part of their royal garden, on which the Cathedral was to be built. While planning and fund-raising began a small Pro-Cathedral was constructed of wood; this would remain in use for more than twenty years, the time it would take for the first phase of the cathedral to reach completion.
The untimely death of King Kamehameha IV on St. Andrew’s Day, November 30, 1863, led his brother, King Kamehameha V to dedicate the cathedral to St. Andrew as a fitting memorial to a King.
The Queen proceeded alone to lead the project. She traveled to England to raise money, to commission architects, and to purchase stone from Caen in Normandy, which was shipped to Hawaii as ballast in sailing ships. The first twenty years were a struggle with and for money, men, and materials, but with the aide of staunch supporters, the first phase of the cathedral was completed in time for Christmas, 1886, due in great part to the support for the Queen’s vision of the Cathedral as a memorial to her husband. Queen Emma did not live to worship in the Cathedral. She had died the previous year on St. Mark’s Day 1885.
Subsequent phases were completed in 1888, 1908, and 1958, the later under the impetus of Harry Sherburne Kennedy, 5th Bishop of Honolulu, who consecrated the cathedral on September 21, 1958.
The King and Queen dedicated their marriage to serving the health, educational, and spiritual needs of their people. To these ends they founded The Queen’s Hospital (now The Queen’s Medical Center), several schools, including The Priory School and St. Albans (now Iolani School), and were instrumental in bringing the Anglican church to the islands to provide access to a form of Christian spirituality which the King felt was eminently suited to the character and temperament of his people. In recognition and commemoration of these deeds the Episcopal Church of the United States honors the King Kamemahameha IV and Queen Emma throughout the church on November 28th, the anniversary of their Confirmation in 1862.
While St. Andrew’s Cathedral was begun in what has been called the Golden Age of the Hawaiian monarchy, it persevered through the upheaval of the overthrow of the monarchy, garnering in those troubled times the allegiance of both Queen Liliuokalani, Hawaii’s last monarch, and Sanford Dole, President of the Republic of Hawaii. Queen Liliuokalani acquired the mantel of Queen Emma as a visible and energetic leader in the work of the church, rising above the shattered past and moving into the twentieth century.
In 1902, Hawaii having become a Territory of the United States, the Church of England deemed it appropriate to transfer its responsibility for the church in Hawaii to the Episcopal Church of the United States.The Cathedral owes much to its royal founders and patrons and actively honors the memory of their work in celebrations throughout the church year. In 2002 the Royal Patrons Chapel was created, the Wahi Kapu, or Sacred Space, dedicated to the memory of King Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma, a place of reflection on their spiritual generosity and magnanimous accomplishments.
Over the decades the community of Honolulu has been drawn to the Cathedral Church of St. Andrew as, perhaps, the most prominent downtown place of worship, a place of solace in time of pain and a venue for celebration in times of joy. In response to this role in civic life, the Cathedral hosts a permanent Chapel for Peace, created in response to the on-set of the First Gulf War in 1994, open to receive the prayers and petitions of all people.
Several histories have been prepared about St. Andrew’s; the most comprehensive of which is From Royal Garden to Gothic Splendor, written by Rianna M. Williams, published in 1996.
Courtesy of www.saintandrewscathedral.net
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Easyriders by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Pacific Aviation Museum, Hangar 79, Ford Island, Pearl Harbor (interior) by Hawaii Pacific News
Shark Killah
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Rescue by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Pacific Aviation Museum, Hangar 79, Ford Island, Pearl Harbor (interior) by Hawaii Pacific News
Me
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Bullet holes from World War II by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Pacific Aviation Museum, Hangar 79, Ford Island, Pearl Harbor (interior) by Hawaii Pacific News
Hanger 79 till this day displays the original bullet holes on its glass windows from World War II attacks by Japanese fighter planes.
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Civilians Defend Hawaii, World War II by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan Pacific Aviation Museum, Hangar 37, Pearl Harbor (interior) by Hawaii Pacific News
Information board at the Pacific Aviation Museum, Ford Island, Pearl Harbor.
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Mike Ang by Hawaii Pacific News from the GigaPan The Hawaii Theatre - View from center stage (interior). by Hawaii Pacific News
Lead the HPU GigaPan team that shot The Hawaii Theatre photos.
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