Bailey House Museum
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This former girls’ school was established in 1832 on the site of the royal compound of Kahekili, the last ruling chief of Maui. Christian missionary teachers Edward and Caroline Bailey came here to teach their language, customs, and religion to young Hawaiian women. The building is now a museum with exhibits showcasing both traditional Hawaiian and missionary life.
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1. Bailey’s Original Oil Paintings
Bailey’s paintings may not have sold well enough to help him financially, but they have provided an accurate and fascinating record of Maui in the 19th century. He did not have formal training, but visiting artists encouraged him to take up oils. The landscapes of Wailuku were exhibited in San Francisco, Philadelphia, and Paris in the 1870s.
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2. Bailey’s Sugar Mill
In the 1860s, Bailey attempted to support his family by growing and milling sugar cane on this site, an endeavor that proved too small to be profitable. The Bailey and Sons Plantation later became part of Wailuku Sugar Company.
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3. Bailey’s Aqueduct
The stone waterworks still visible on the property adjoining the house were built by Bailey to bring water from ’Īao Stream to run his sugar mill.
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4. Precontact Artifacts
The museum houses an outstanding collection of more than 1,000 ancient Hawaiian artifacts dating from the time before Western contact was made. There are pieces made of bone, stone and feathers, as well as practical items such as bowls and fish hooks.
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5. Missionary Artifacts
The exhibits offer a glimpse of missionary life through furniture, clothing, quilts, and cooking utensils. The fine koa table was to be a gift for U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant in 1869, but Congress forbade the president from accepting gifts from foreign nations.
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6. Historic Archives
A fascinating trawl of photographs, books, newspapers, and maps of Maui dating back to the 1880s. Documents include a letter from Samuel Clemens – aka 19th-century author Mark Twain – and detailed charts of the island’s archaeological sites.
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7. Outrigger Canoe
7. Outrigger CanoeHōnaunau is a 200-year-old fishing canoe built from a single koa log. During Hawai’i’s “Beach Boy Era” of the 1930s and ’40s, the canoe was used by the Outrigger Canoe Club in Waikīkī. It is proudly displayed in a separate hale , or house, outside the main building.
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8. Kapa Display
Kapa is a traditional cloth made from the bark of the paper mulberry tree, and its production was the preserve of women in old Hawai’i. The clothing, blankets, and capes on display are imprinted with the signatures of the women, who created their own designs with plant dyes.
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9. Uncle Sol Kawaihoa
A regular performer at Bailey House, Uncle Sol is a Hawaiian master who embodies the true spirit of slack key (see Slack-Key Guitar) through the aloha of his voice and guitar music.
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10. Gardens
10. GardensMany of the plants in the gardens had medicinal uses in old Hawai’i. ’Uki’uki, used to dye kapa, grew in ’Īao Valley before settlers changed Hawai’i’s natural vegetation.
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