Stories by Hank Soboleski

ISLAND HISTORY: Bing Crosby and Toyo Shirai at Wailua Golf Course

While vacationing on Kaua‘i with his wife, Kathryn, and children Harry, Mary and Nathaniel Crosby during July 1962, popular singer, actor and golf enthusiast Bing Crosby said that the Wailua Golf Course was the best in the state of Hawai‘i and “one of the best in the world.”

ISLAND HISTORY: A history of Kauai’s Kipu Sugar Plantation

In 1866, William Hyde Rice (1846-1924), the son of American Protestant missionaries to Hawaii William Harrison Rice and Mary Sophia Hyde Rice, began leasing land at Kipu from Princess Ruth Keelikolani on which he raised horses and cattle.

ISLAND HISTORY: Visiting historic places on Kauai with Holbrook “Hobey” Goodale

Holbrook “Hobey” Goodale (1923-2014) of Kauai was a descendant of American Protestant missionaries to Hawaii William Harrison Rice and Mary Sophia Hyde Rice; his great-grandfather, William Hyde Rice, had been Kauai’s governor under Queen Liliuokalani; Charles Rice, his grandfather, owned Kipu Sugar Plantation and Kipu Ranch, and his mother, Juliet Rice Wichman, founded the Kauai Museum.

ISLAND HISTORY: Historic photographs by John Wehrheim of Kauai

Photographer, filmmaker and author John Wehrheim (b. 1947) arrived on Kauai in 1969 to write and photograph “Paradise Lost,” a three-part series for the Sierra Club, which focused on the rapid and unprecedented extinction of Hawaii’s unique flora and fauna, as well as Hawaii’s increasing water pollution, traffic congestion, and urban-resort sprawl.

ISLAND HISTORY: Kaua‘i harbor master ‘Captain Jack’ Bertrand

Born in Colorado, Kauai harbor master John “Captain Jack” Bertrand (1891-1971) ran away from home in Nova Scotia at the age of 12 or 14 to follow the sea as a deckhand and mess boy aboard fishing schooners and cargo vessels plying the Newfoundland banks off Nova Scotia.

ISLAND HISTORY: Master koa canoe builder Tetsuo Sato of Kauai

Born at Kilauea, Kauai, Tetsuo Sato (1909-1979) was a cabinetmaker, finish carpenter and master Hawaiian koa canoe builder noted for the restoration of the prize koa canoes “Kaulupeelani’” and “Princess,” and the building of the “Niumalu” for the Kauai Canoe and Racing Association (KCARA) during the 1950s.

ISLAND HISTORY: The suicide of Kauai sugar planter Henry Harrison Wilcox

The eighth of eight sons of American Protestant missionaries Abner and Lucy Wilcox of Waioli, Kauai, Henry Harrison Wilcox was born at Hanalei in 1858, educated at Punahou, and was for a number of years actively engaged in the management of Hanamaulu Sugar Plantation with his brother, Albert Spencer Wilcox.

ISLAND HISTORY: A brief history of Makee Sugar Co.

In 1876, Capt. James Makee (1813-1879) and his son-in-law, Col. Zephaniah S. Spalding (1837-1927), founded Makee Sugar Co. on several thousand acres of land at Kealia they’d purchased from the estate of rancher and dairy farmer Ernest Krull for $30,000, and on substantial acreage acquired at Kapaa.

ISLAND HISTORY: Tribute to Pacific magazine and editor Bud Bendix

It was Bud Bendix (1931-2016), the managing editor at Honolulu based Pacific Magazine, who in 1996 gave me my first break as a writer, when he accepted my historical nonfiction article “Surviving Among the Cannibals” for publication in the September-October issue of the magazine.