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Hilo Hattie and her Hawaiian Revue played the Peabody Auditorium [1] in Daytona Beach, Florida in January 1959. Hilo Hattie began doing two shows a night, six nights a week, at the Kaiser's Hawaiian Village, later renamed Hilton Hawaiian Village Tapa Room [6] in 1960. It was an arrangement that continued for more than a decade.
The Royal Hawaiian Girls Glee Club was founded as the YWCA Hawaiian Girls Glee Club c.1917 by Louise Akeo Silva (1893–1980). Known by her maiden name of Akeo until 1951, Silva followed in the footsteps of her athletic older sisters May Akeo Kamaka (1887–1936) and Amelia Akeo Guerrero (1885–1977), by joining the YWCA in 1912.
J. R. "Jack" Wilson owned Volcano Stables, a horse rental business at the current site of the historic Volcano Block Building in Hilo. In 1899 after an iron bridge was completed, Wilson bought a 8-acre (3.2 ha) lot with a view on Reed's island and built a large house in the Victorian architecture style. [2]
The Hilo Farmers Market was started on this block in 1988, held every Wednesday and Saturday at the end of Mamo Street. [12] The building was listed as state historic site 10-35-7420 on January 14, 1989 [ 13 ] and added to the National Register of Historic Places listings on the island of Hawaii on August 27, 1991 as site 91001087. [ 1 ]
Hilo Hattie was a featured performer with The Royal Hawaiian Hotel Orchestra. Beginning in 1935, Owens and his orchestra were featured on the popular Saturday night radio show, Hawaii Calls . Bing Crosby and Sweet Leilani
Volcano Block Building: Volcano Block Building: January 7, 1993 : 27-37 Waianuenue Ave. Hilo: Commercial building built in 1914 with notable tenants 88: Waiakea Mission Station-Hilo Station: Waiakea Mission Station-Hilo Station: April 23, 2002
They may live thousands of miles apart but Sheryl Lee Ralph and husband Vincent Hughes have been on the same page for decades.. The Abbott Elementary star, 69, opens up to PEOPLE in this week's ...
The Hilo Masonic Hall was another of the few fireproof buildings built just a few years earlier and a block away, in 1910. The only earlier commercial building that survives in Hilo is the S. Hata Building, built in 1912 by the brother of a board member of the Peoples Bank. The Hilo Federal Building was also