
That crop was pineapple. In 1922 James Dole, the Hawaiian Pineapple Company man already known as the Pineapple King, bought most of Lānaʻi for about $1.1 million — a price many thought a fool's bargain for a dry, rocky island. He was right and they were wrong: Dole planted some twenty thousand acres of the red uplands in pineapple and turned Lānaʻi into the largest pineapple plantation on Earth, a single island that by the 1930s grew roughly three-quarters of the world's supply. For seventy years this was the Pineapple Isle, and the spiky fruit made "Hawaiʻi" and "pineapple" mean nearly the same thing.
Above the south-shore beach of Hulopoʻe rises Puʻupehe, the sea-cut lava tower that visitors call Sweetheart Rock, wrapped in its own old island legend. In 1854 a party of Mormon settlers laid out a short-lived colony in the upland Palawai Basin, and through the later 1800s the dry plains drew cattle ranchers; for a couple of years around 1900 a small sugar venture tried its luck at Keomoku on the east shore. But Lānaʻi stayed quiet and lightly peopled — a big, dry island just across the water from Maui, waiting on the crop that would remake it.
Why People Visit Lānaʻi
Lānaʻi offers the rarest thing in Hawaiʻi: an island that still feels empty. It pairs a deep heritage — ancient fishing villages, a storied red-rock landscape, and the golden plantation past — with near-solitary beaches, pine-shaded uplands, and a single small town. It is quiet, scenic, and unhurried, made for travelers who want an island to themselves.