Kalihi: Place of Transition
Interviewee | Collection Sort descending | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
John Vegas | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
John Vegas, Puerto Rican, the sixth of fifteen children, was born on November 30, 1912, in North Kohala, Hawaii. His parents immigrated to North Kohala from Puerto Rico in 1901. Antone Vegas, John's father,worked as a laborer at Kohala's Union Mill Plantation. In 1924, the family moved to Honolulu where Antone Vegas worked as a track layer for Honolulu Rapid Transit (HRT). They rented their first home in Honolulu near Middle and Rose Streets in Kalihi. From there, the family moved to different homes in the Kalihi area. John attended Likelike School where he completed the fifth grade. |
Warren Nishimoto | Honolulu, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Augustina Villa | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
Agustina (Abaya) Villa, Ilocano, was born in Dingras, !locos Norte, Philippines on August 28, 1893 . The fifth of six children, Agustina helped support the family by taking in laundry from the people of her barrio. She also sewed clothing. Agustina married Antonio Villa in 1913 . In 1924, Antonio left for Hawaii to find work in the sugarcane fields. He was assigned to Lahaina, Maui. Agustina remained in the Philippines and continued sewing and laundering until 1931, when she and two of her children joined Antonio in Lahaina . |
Fernando Zialcita | Honolulu, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
David T. Souza | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
David Souza, Portuguese, was born February 7, 1906, in Honolulu. His father, a former storekeeper, died when David was three years old. The family then moved to Kalihi Valley, where David has lived ever since. He attended schools in Kalihi Valley and Kalihi Waena and graduated from St. Louis in 1926. During this time, David participated in community- and school-sponsored sports. After graduating from St. Louis, David worked as a wharf clerk for the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company. He remained there until 1952. He then became a wharf clerk for Thea H. Davies and Co., Ltd. |
Warren Nishimoto | Honolulu, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Peter Martin | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
Peter Martin, Portuguese-Hawaiian, was born in Kalihi on June 29, 1905. His family owned a taro patch in the area behind the present Kalihi Union Church. As a youth, Peter was active in neighborhood sports and was a member of the Kalihi Thundering Herd barefoot football team in the 1920s. He attended K~lfhi-Waena School and completed the tenth grade at McKinley High School. Peter then began working as a sailor on an inter-island lighthouse boat, transporting gas tanks to different lighthouses. In 1932, Peter secured a job as a streetcar and trolley conductor for Honolulu Rapid Transit. |
Warren Nishimoto | Waipahu, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Joe A. Joseph | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
Joe A. Joseph, Portuguese-Hawaiian, was born in Kalihi on March 10, 1913. His father, Antone Joseph ( 11Antone Joe 11 ) owned a dairy located near the present site of Kalihi Shopping Center. As a youth, Joe helped his father at the dairy. Joe attended Kalihi-Waena Elementary School and completed the ninth grade at Kalakaua Intermediate. In 1932, he began work as a surveyor at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard. Just prior to World War II, Joe moonlighted as a nightclub bouncer. Until 1945, Joe, along with his brothers, helped at the family-run dairy. Joe retired from Pearl Harbor in 1968. |
Warren Nishimoto | Kailua, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Sabas T. Jamito | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
Sabas T. Jamito, Tagalog, was born in Camarines Norte, Philippines on January 12, 1912. At the age of five months, he and his family immigrated to the Big Island of Hawaii. Until 1922, when the family moved to Hilo, Sabas lived on various sugar plantations: Papaaloa, Paauilo, Ookala, and Olaa. While in Hilo, Sabas helped his father in the sugarcane fields and earned money as a shoe shine boy. He attended Kapiolani School, Hila Union School, Hilo Intermediate, and Hila High. In 1929, Sabas began his boxing career in Hilo, making five dollars a fight. |
Warren Nishimoto | Honolulu, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Yen Cheung Au | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
Yen Cheung Au, Chinese, the sixth of sixteen children, was born in Waiahole, Oahu on March 7, 1894. His father was a rice farmer in Waiahole. Yen Cheung helped his father in the fields by scaring away the birds which threatened the rice crops. He also helped the family by catching fish and shrimp. He attended Waiahole School until the fourth grade, then the family moved to Kahaluu. In 1915, the family moved to Honolulu and bought a house near Liliha and Judd Streets. |
Warren Nishimoto | Kalihi, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Albert O. Adams | Kalihi: Place of Transition |
Albert Oliveira Adams, Portuguese, was born May 21, 1909, in Nuuanu, Oahu. |
Warren Nishimoto | Kalihi, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History |