Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Tuesday, July 16, 2024 85° Today's Paper


Photo Galleries

Back in the Day: Photos from Hawaii’s Past

1/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / JANUARY 11, 1973

Honolulu’s fireboat sprays streams of water high into the air as tugs nudge American President Lines’ President Wilson cruise ship into Honolulu Harbor for the last time.
2/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / JANUARY 1, 1959

The internationally acclaimed quintet the Platters arrives in Honolulu along with Thurston Harris, top center, to headline the Civic Auditorium’s “Show of Stars.”
3/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / MAy 23, 1970

A sign promoting the Queen Emma Museum adorns a quaint tin-roof shack on the Makaha beachfront property of Robert H. Rotz, a sign maker who made this museum marker as well as a new one for the museum about 10 years ago. Officials with the museum, located in Nuuanu Valley, were going to throw away the old sign, so Rotz kept it as a prank for his beach shack.
4/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / FEBRUARY 28, 1959

A beanie, a hoop stick and a pair of stilts are the end products of the Junior Achievement high school program, as presented by Eleanora Owyang of Roosevelt, left, Monica Teves of Maryknoll, and Rockne Kim and Thomas Apo of Saint Louis.
5/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / MAY 11, 1971

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, national director of Operation Breadbasket, speaks to a crowd of about 1,000 at the University of Hawaii’s Andrews Outdoor Theater about political power being the key to changing American society.
6/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / AUGUST 20, 1958

The hilltop house known as Puuhonua, situated on cliffs above the entrance to Lanikai, blends its owners’ love of rocks, sea and ships. The home of Anne Taft Powlison will be open to tourgoers for one day.
7/7
Swipe or click to see more

STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE / OCTOBER 10, 1963

Architect Charles Sutton studies a breakaway model of the state Capitol for possible adjustments, which are made almost daily. Sutton represents John Carl Warneke and Associates of San Francisco, which is designing the six-level building with local architects Belt, Lemmon and Lo.