
Molokaʻi's story begins more than a thousand years ago in Hālawa Valley, on the island's far east end — one of the oldest known Hawaiian settlements, a green amphitheater of taro terraces and twin waterfalls where Native Hawaiians first put down roots. Along the gentler south shore they built something extraordinary: a chain of some sixty fishponds, loko iʻa, walled off from the sea with stone so that fish could be raised and harvested year-round. Seven and eight centuries old, they remain among the most sophisticated aquaculture ever devised in the Pacific. Taro in the valleys, fish in the ponds, the reef and the upland forest — Molokaʻi fed itself well, and the knowledge of how to do it has never entirely left the island.
The island carried its Hawaiian character straight through the upheavals of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In the 1860s King Kamehameha V kept a retreat near Kaunakakai and planted the royal Kapuaiwa Coconut Grove — a thousand palms, one for each warrior of his guard — that still shades the south shore. Cattle ranching and, later, pineapple plantations reshaped the plains, but Molokaʻi never urbanized. And in 1922 it became the birthplace of something else: Hawaiʻi's very first Hawaiian Home Lands homestead, at Kalamaʻula, where Native Hawaiian families returned to the soil under Prince Kūhiō's homesteading act. To this day Molokaʻi has one of the largest Hawaiian homestead communities in the islands.
Why People Visit Molokaʻi
Molokaʻi offers the rarest thing in Hawaiʻi: an island that is still genuinely itself. It pairs deep living culture — hula's birthplace, the fishponds, the homestead lands — with dramatic, near-empty coast and a pace the rest of the islands lost long ago. Quiet, rural, and proud, it is made for travelers who want the real Hawaiʻi and are willing to meet it on its own terms.