Best Places to Work 2021: Online Reveal -Hawaii

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the best places to work in Hawaii, with participants sharing personal experiences and opinions about various islands in relation to work, retirement, and education. The conversation also touches on historical aspects of specific locations, such as Allerton Garden.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants express a personal connection to Hawaii, sharing anecdotes about their upbringing and experiences living there.
  • Questions are raised regarding which island is best suited for work, retirement, and education, indicating a search for comparative insights.
  • One participant humorously suggests that Nevada could be considered the best Hawaiian island due to its appeal to residents seeking a dry climate and job opportunities.
  • A detailed historical account of Allerton Garden is provided, highlighting its significance and the changes it underwent over time, including its connection to notable figures in Hawaiian history.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on which island is best for work, retirement, or education, and multiple competing views remain regarding the appeal of different locations.

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes various personal anecdotes and historical details that may depend on individual perspectives and interpretations of the significance of places in Hawaii.

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What island is the best for work ? For retirement ? For education ?
 
Mary Conrads Sanburn said:
I have many Polynesian neighbors here including Hawaiians, Samoans and Guamanians as I did in San Francisco.

I once joked to my veteran friend from Lanai that Islanders come to Nevada for the dry climate, for relief from the humidity. He laughed and gave me a Polynesian 'you must be crazy' look.

"They come to gamble, kane." (cousin, primo, guy, dude) "Then stay for the jobs."
 
Last edited:
Ahh so Nevada is the best Hawaiian island.
 
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I worked at the Allerton Garden:

Allerton Garden extends along the banks of the Lawa’i Stream where the valley narrows before opening onto the Pacific Ocean. The earliest history of Allerton Garden was intermingled with the upper part of the Lawa’i Valley that is now the McBryde Garden. Both were integral to the ahupua’a (land division) of Lawa’i. It was not until well after the arrival of the first Europeans in the late 1700s and the subsequent changes to the traditional Hawaiian way of life that the history of the lower Lawa’i Valley began to diverge from that of the upper valley.

Lawa’i Valley was granted to James Young Kanehoa in 1848. He was the son of John Young, an advisor to Hawaii’s King Kamehameha I. Kanehoa willed a third of the land to his niece, Queen Emma, when he died and she received the rest of it in 1885 from Kanehoa’s widow, Hikoni. She first visited Lawa’i on a tour of the kingdom with her husband Liholiho, King Kamehameha IV. After the death of her husband and young son, the Queen retreated to Lawa’i. She planted rose apples, Alexandrian laurel, mangoes, bamboo, pandanus, ferns, and bougainvillea on the valley cliffs. Some of these plants still grace the Allerton Garden today.

The McBryde family, which owned a significant amount of agricultural land on the southwest side of the island, leased the Lawa’i Valley from Queen Emma, who reserved for herself the cottage and surrounding land. They purchased the property outright from her estate in 1886. The upper valley was intensively cultivated in sugar cane, while taro and rice were grown in the lower portion by tenant farmers. In 1899 the lower valley was conveyed to Alexander McBryde. He lowered one of Queen Emma’s cottages to the valley floor and lived in it for many years. Alexander planted palms, gingers, plumerias, and ferns in gardens along the beach. By 1930 most of the small-scale agriculture in the lower valley had decreased and the tenant farmer population had declined.

In 1938 McBryde sold the property to Robert Allerton. Allerton was the only son of a Mayflower descendant who had made his fortune in Chicago in livestock, banking, and real estate. After spending five years studying art in Europe, Allerton concluded that he would never be successful as an artist and he returned to Chicago. He became an avid art collector and patron. He also became fascinated by landscape architecture and set about planning a series of formal gardens and settings for statues at “The Farms” in Monticello, Illinois.

Allerton met John Gregg, a young architectural student at the University of Illinois, whom he eventually adopted. The two men traveled the world on collecting trips, purchasing works of art and getting new inspiration for the gardens. On their way home to Illinois from a collecting trip in the Pacific in 1937, the Allertons visited Kaua’i and were captivated with the lower portion of the Lawa’i Valley. They purchased the property. In 1938 they moved into their new home, which was designed by John Gregg. They called the property “Lawa’i-kai” (kai is the Hawaiian word for “near the sea.”)

[ . . . ]

###
https://ntbg.org/gardens/allerton/allerton-garden-history/
 
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