Hike in Arches National ParkeXploreApark - logoSunset in Olympic National Park

Navigation

eXploreApark home
Hawaii Volcanoe NP
Activities
Sights to See
History
Landscape
Plants & Animals
Lodging & Camping
Maps & Directions
Safe Visitor Tips
Search
tell a friend

eXploreApark Guides

Acadia National Park
Arches National Park
Badlands National Park
Bryce Canyon Ntl Park
Canyonlands National Park
Carlsbad Caverns Ntl Park
Channel Islands Ntl Park
Crater Lake National Park
Death Valley National Park
Everglades National Park
Glacier National Park
Glacier Bay National Park
Glen Canyon Ntl Rec Area
Grand Canyon Ntl Park
Grand Teton National Park
Great Smoky Mountains NP
Hawaii Volcanoes Ntl Park
Joshua Tree National Park
Lassen Volcanic Ntl Park
Mojave Ntl Preserve
Olympic National Park
Point Reyes Ntl Seashore
Redwood National Park
Rocky Mountain Ntl Park
Santa Monica Mountains NRA
Shenandoah National Park
Yellowstone National Park
Yosemite National Park
Zion National Park


For Information about
Hawaii Volcanoes N P visit: www.nps.gov/havo
or contact the park:

Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park

History

Radiocarbon dating suggests that ancient Hawaiians settled this area of Puna and Ka`u some time between A.D. 1200 and 1450. The coastal area was likely settled first. Evidence of living areas can be found in the remnants of house platforms and habitation caves still scattered throughout the lowland and upland areas. Trail systems later connected the villages along the coast to house sites in the upper regions as well as provided access to the upland resources.

Major historic events also took place in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park including the death of a large portion of a warrior party by an explosive volcanic eruption of Kilauea in 1790. Evidence of their last march can be found in footprints preserved in the hardened ash. The Ka`u Desert has also revealed evidence of intensive use of temporary shelter sites along a major trail system connecting the lower Ka`u District and Kilauea. Living on an active lava landscape can be found literally everywhere in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. Over 14,000 prehistoric archeological features have been recorded.

The first European to travel through here was the Reverend William Ellis in 1823. Numerous eruptions and lava flows drew adventurers and scientists to the crater rim. Remants of these early visits can be found in the trails and historic roads that cross the park. The historic 1877 Volcano House, which overlooks the Kilauea Caldera, was one of the early guesthouses in the park. Today, it is used by the Kilauea Art Center. The 1941 Volcano House, perched on the caldera rim, continues to provide lodging for park visitors. The USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO), founded in 1912, preceded the establishment of the park by four years. The Whitney Seismograph Vault, part of the 1912 HVO facility, still remains. Remnants of a former pulu factory remain hidden in the forest. World War II impacted the park as well. Several areas of the park were used for bombing practice and the historic Kilauea Military Camp which preceded the park establishment by only a few months, was developed as a rest and relaxation camp for military personnel and this use continues today. During World War II, it served various roles including housing of POW's.

The park was established in 1916. Work was initiated to provide basic infrastructure for the fledgling park in the 1920s, with more infrastructure development occurring in the 1930s as part of the Emergency Conservation Work program and later the Civilian Conservation Corps.