Charles Montague Cooke Jr. House and Kūkaʻōʻō Heiau

Charles Montague Cooke Jr. House and Kūka‘ō‘ō Heiau
Kualii, view from the main gate
Location 2859 Manoa Rd., Honolulu, Hawaii
Coordinates 21°18′29″N 157°49′0″W / 21.30806°N 157.81667°W / 21.30806; -157.81667Coordinates: 21°18′29″N 157°49′0″W / 21.30806°N 157.81667°W / 21.30806; -157.81667
Built 1912
Architect Emory & Webb
Architectural style Tudor Revival
NRHP reference # 85003402 and 00000267[1]
Added to NRHP October 31, 1985 (original) and August 30, 2000 (increase)

Charles Montague Cooke Jr. House and Kūkaʻōʻō Heiau is a property in Honolulu, Hawaii. The house, also known as Kualii (also spelled Kualiʻi), was built in 19111912 for Charles Montague Cooke Jr., and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.[1] The listing's boundaries were increased in 2000 to include the Kūkaʻōʻō Heiau (Tax Map Keys 2-9-19:35 and 2-9-19:43, respectively).[1]

Building history

In 1902, wealthy businessman Charles Montague Cooke (of Castle & Cooke) gave his son Monty (as Charles Montague Cooke Jr. was called) a large tract of land on a high ridge in Mānoa Valley that contained an ancient Hawaiian heiau. That was the year Monty married Lila Lefferts. In 1911, Monty hired two prominent architects, Walter Emory and Marshall Webb, to build a large stone mansion in Tudor style on the hillside above the heiau. The house cost $40,000 and was named for an ancient Hawaiian chief.[2]

The basement and ground floor, built of basalt lava rock quarried on site, support two upper floors of half-timber and stucco. At each end of the house is a heavy stone chimney, one rising from the kitchen, the other from the living room. The central entry bay is covered by a porte-cochere with stone columns and a half gabled second floor above it, and flanked by gabled entry bays at each end of the house.[2]

Heiau

The name of the heiau (temple of ancient Hawaii), Kūkaʻōʻō, is composed of 'stand' + ka 'the' + ʻōʻō 'digging stick', and has several possible translations. According to one source, it means 'Kū of the digging stick'.[2] According to another, it means 'standing digging stick', in apparent reference to an old legend about a chief named Kawelo who was said to have thrown a digging stick from the highest mountain at the back of the valley down onto the hill where the heiau stands, known as Puʻu Pueo 'owl hill'.[3]

The square-shaped heiau measures about 12 meters across and stands about 6 meters above the flat, rocky clearing on which it stands.[2] The late Bernice P. Bishop Museum anthropologist Kenneth Emory estimated the heiau to be 1,000 years old. Its gardens used to help sustain the population of the ahupuaʻa of Waikiki.[3]

The land was inherited by Cooke's daughter, who sold it to a developer in 1992.[4] In 1992, the current owners, Samuel Alexander Cooke (born 1937, grandson of Charles Montague Cooke Jr.[5]) and Mary Cooke, purchased the land and commissioned preservationist Nathan Napoka to reconstruct the walls of the old heiau, which had been badly overgrown. Stonemason Billy Fields relied on survey drawings from the 1930s to rebuild the walls, using only rocks found on-site.[3] In 1996 the Mānoa Heritage Center was established to manage the site and offer educational tours.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 National Park Service (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Ferraro, Joseph J. (2003). "Kualiʻi". In David Cheever, Scott Cheever. Pōhaku: The Art & Architecture of Stonework in Hawaiʻi. Honolulu: Editions Limited. pp. 151–153. ISBN 0915013231.
  3. 1 2 3 Priscilla Pérez Billig (April–May 2008). "A Heiau in the City". Hana Hou! The Magazine of Hawaiian Airlines.
  4. Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi (December 21, 2008). "Lush & Legendary: The Manoa Heritage Center preserve includes the famous Kukaoo heiau". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
  5. Sam Cooke (September 1984). "Charles Montague Cooke Jr. residence nomination form". National Register of Historic Places. U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
  6. "About the Mānoa Heritage Center". official web site. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
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