Hawaiiana

Printing on the Hawaiian islands was never easy. Though a printing press came with the first group of U.S. and Hawaiian Protestant missionaries in 1820, it was not put to use until 1822. Shortages of type (especially accented letters and 'k's and 'a's necessary for printing in the Hawaiian language), expensive paper, and lack of training in binding or copper engraving all increased the difficulty of the endeavor. Despite the challenges, the people of Hawai'i expressed such an intense desire for palapala (reading and writing) that according to the Protestant missionaries' estimates an astounding 30 million pages were printed in both English and Hawaiian in a little more than a decade.

While many of the works were religious, many others had more practical purposes.

 

Displaying 1 - 17 of 17
Title Date Format
Ka Aha Elele / The Convention 1864 Newspapers
Ka Elele 1845 Newspapers
Ka Elele Hawaii 1848 Newspapers
Ka Hae Hawaii 1856 Newspapers
Ka Hoku Loa 1860 Newspapers
Ka Lau Oliva 1871 Newspapers
Ka Nonanona 1843 Newspapers
Ka Nuhou Hawaii 1873 Newspapers
Ka Nupepa Kuokoa 1862 Newspapers
Ke Alaula 1866 Newspapers
Ke Au Okoa 1866 Newspapers
Ke Kumu Hawaii 1834 Newspapers
Ke Kumu Kamalii 1837 Newspapers
Nuhou: The Hawaiian News 1873 Newspapers
The Pacific commercial advertiser 1856 Newspapers
The Polynesian 1844 Newspapers
The Weekly Argus 1852 Newspapers
In-house only
Yes