
What's with Diamond Head? Rising at the edge of the south shore is a worn volcanic crater the whole world recognizes — Diamond Head. Hawaiians named it Lēʻahi, often read as "brow of the tuna" for the ridgeline's shape, but nineteenth-century British sailors thought the calcite crystals glinting on its slopes were diamonds, and the English name stuck. No diamonds, of course — but climb the old military trail to the rim and the payoff is real: the city, the reef, and the long curve of the shoreline laid out far below. It is the most familiar profile in all of Hawaiʻi, and the unmistakable backdrop to Honolulu.
Honolulu begins with its harbor. The name itself means roughly "sheltered bay" or "calm port," and that protected water is the reason a city grew here at all. Native Hawaiians settled the harbor and the green valleys behind it for centuries, building walled fishponds along the shore, farming kalo in the wet lowlands, and reading the trade winds that funnel down from the Koʻolau mountains. The land ran in ahupuaʻa — wedge-shaped divisions reaching from the mountains down to the reef — so a single community held everything from upland forest to fishing grounds. Long before any foreign sail appeared, this was a gathering place, a sheltered shore at the center of a well-settled island.
Why People Visit Honolulu
Honolulu offers the full range of Hawaiʻi in one place — royal and wartime history, world-class museums, and a famous shoreline, all in a walkable, welcoming capital city. Visitors come for Diamond Head, the beaches, and the heritage downtown, and stay for the food, the culture, and the easy access to the rest of Oʻahu. From the palace to the crater to the harbor, it rewards both a quick visit and a long stay. It is historic, cosmopolitan, and unmistakably Hawaiian.