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Grove Farm, G. N. Wilcox House, Nawiliwili Road (State Route 58), Lihue, Kauai County, HI

description

Summary

Significance: Grove Farm, founded by George N. Wilcox in 1864, was one of 86 sugar plantations known to have operated in the Hawaiian Islands. Wilcox cultivated and harvested sugarcane and raised beef cattle, gradually expanding his sugar crop from 80 acres to more than 1,000 acres with a growing workforce of several hundred Hawaiians, Chinese, Koreans, Germans, Japanese, Portuguese, and Filipino laborers. As the plantation expanded he built and furnished the group of structures which faced a large yard enclosed by stone walls: the plantation office, sleeping quarters, a guest cottage, a more spacious addition to the main house, and a camp for plantation workers. The homestead was the heart of day-to-day plantation operations until the early 1930s. The one-story portion of the G.N. Wilcox family home was constructed in the 1850s for one of the founders of the adjacent Lihue Plantation. Its hipped roof, building materials, and lanais express an architectural marriage of traditional Hawaiian house forms and western building tradition. The two-story Colonial Revival portion added by Wilcox in 1915 was designed by noted Honolulu architect Clinton B. Ripley.

Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: FN-26

Survey number: HABS HI-56

Building/structure dates: after. 1850- before. 1859 Initial Construction

Building/structure dates: 1915 Subsequent Work

National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 74000722

label_outline

Tags

lihue hawaii farm grove farm wilcox house wilcox house nawiliwili nawiliwili road state route lihue kauai kauai county hawaii domestic life sugar plantations sugar industry houses colonial revival architectural elements lanais marjorie e baer marian dombroski michael drasnin david franzen grove farm homestead hawaii department of land and natural resources historic american buildings survey clinton b ripley barnes riznik steven wiesenthal george n wilcox photo ultra high resolution high resolution architecture library of congress national register of historic places
date_range

Date

1950 - 1970
person

Contributors

Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
place

Location

Lihue (Hawaii) ,  21.98111, -159.37111
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html

label_outline Explore Nawiliwili Road, Michael Drasnin, Grove Farm Homestead

Kauai District, Territory of Hawaii. Registrants of Local Board Two, Lihue, Kauai, arriving at the hospital to take the physical examination before induction into the United States Army

U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Fleet Radio Unit Pacific Additional Office Building, Makalapa Administrative Area, between Makalapa Drive & Luapele Road, Pearl City, Honolulu County, HI

Wilcox County Courthouse, Broad, Claiborne, Court & Water Streets, Camden, Wilcox County, AL

Ewa Plantation Company Industrial Center, Sugar Warehouse, Honouliuli Plain, near intersection of Renton Road & Park Row, Ewa, Honolulu County, HI

U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Naval Housing Area Hospital Point, Civilian Employees' Quarters, 1 First Street, Pearl City, Honolulu County, HI

General R. C. Jones House, Broad Street, Camden, Wilcox County, AL

Washington Place, 320 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, Honolulu County, HI

U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Naval Housing Area Pearl City Peninsula, Defense Housing Project Type 47, 310 & 318 Laniwai Avenues, Pearl City, Honolulu County, HI

Mr. and Mrs. T. Ferdinand Wilcox, residence on Smith Ridge Rd., New Canaan, Connecticut. Guest room, desk and chaise

Ramsey-Jones-Bonner House, State Route 10, Oak Hill, Wilcox County, AL

Japanese-American volunteers. Colonel James J. Doyle, second from right, commanding officer of Kauai, Hawaii Service Command looks on as the oath of induction is administered to the four young AJA [Americans of Japanese ancestry] volunteers of Kauai who went through the solemn pledge of allegiance immediately after Mitsuru Doi took his oath Thursday as the first man in the territory to be inducted. The oath is being administered by Major Charles V. McManus (extreme right), adjutant of the Service Command. The inductees are, from left to right: Goro Sadaoka, eighteen, of Lihue, who has two brothers on Oahu, both volunteers; Lenneth T. Tada, twenty-five, alumnus of the University of Hawaii, salesman for the Kauai Sales Company; Shigeo Suemori, twenty-one, of Lihue, whose brother Tadao was rejected after his physical examination, and Noboru Okamoto, eighteen, Lihue Plantation employee, who was born in Lihue and made a name for himself as pitcher for the Lihue baseball team

Grove Farm, G. N. Wilcox House, Nawiliwili Road (State Route 58), Lihue, Kauai County, HI

Topics

lihue hawaii farm grove farm wilcox house wilcox house nawiliwili nawiliwili road state route lihue kauai kauai county hawaii domestic life sugar plantations sugar industry houses colonial revival architectural elements lanais marjorie e baer marian dombroski michael drasnin david franzen grove farm homestead hawaii department of land and natural resources historic american buildings survey clinton b ripley barnes riznik steven wiesenthal george n wilcox photo ultra high resolution high resolution architecture library of congress national register of historic places