Plan Your Visit

Thank you for your interest in Honouliuli National Historic Site.

Honouliuli National Historic Site is now open for guided, public tours. There is still no direct public access to the park because there are no public roads that lead into the site, so all visitors must be on a guided tour with trained volunteers or park staff to enter. Reservations will be taken on a first come first serve basis and tours will be held once a month. Number of tours per month are based on staff and volunteer docent capacity.

For more detailed information on guided tours and how to make a reservation, please click the link below.
 

 
Stamp cancellations will be provided to visitors on a tour to the park. For those who could not go on a tour, the park also has the stamp available at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial visitor center information desk.

 

Other Ways to Visit Honouliuli National Historic Site

While the park itself is still currently unavailable for public access aside from guided tours, there are other ways to experience Honouliuli through not only our partners, but places directly associated with incarcerated civilians at Honouliuli.

Below contains a compiled list of places to visit and learn more about our park:

 
Several nametags hanging on a wall
Nametags similar to what prisoners would have to wear at Honouliuli Internment Camp. Taken at Hawaii's Plantation Village

NPS photo

A replica guard tower with a tent next to it.
A guard tower behind a barbed-wire fence at the Honouliuli exhibit at Hawaii's Plantation Village.

NPS photo

Small white buildings in a topographic map of a valley
Topographic display of Honouliuli Internment Camp at Hawaii's Plantation Village.

NPS photo

A sign that reads No Trespassing Government Property
A sign similar to what was used at Honouliuli Internment Camp. Taken at Hawaii's Plantation Village.

NPS photo

 

Several incarcerated civilians at Honouliuli were employees of many institutions we find in Hawaii today. You will find many that are part of our daily lives and can be visited if open to the public. For example:

  • Alf Hurum and his wife were held at Honouliuli. He was the conductor of the then 25 member Honolulu Symphony Orchestra (now the Hawai‘i Symphony Orchestra). Alf reorganized and enlarged the orchestra so that it became a full-fledged symphony orchestra of 70 members. The 1924-25 season consisted of 7 concerts, and Hurum conducted all of them. The HSO is also a partner in the park’s 10th anniversary.
  • Rintaro Taguma worked for the Honolulu Academy of Arts (now the Honolulu Museum of Art) for decades helping with installations. HOMA is a partner in the park’s 10th anniversary.
  • Uichi Morimoto was an employee of the Halekulani hotel.
  • Inazo Noda was a janitor at the Bishop Museum. The Bishop Museum is a partner in the park’s 10th anniversary.
  • Head chef of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel
  • Frederick Berg, German American, worked at Sears
  • Ichitaro Ozaki, a WWI veteran, was a chauffeur and Yasumasa Murata was a clerk for the Japanese Consulate General of Japan
  • Tetsuo Oi was with the Japanese Chamber of Commerce
  • Edward Tsubaki worked at Hawaiian Dredging Co.
  • Shinfuku Gima was the President of the Hawaii United Okinawa Association
  • Yasue Takahashi worked at KZOO/KAIM radio
  • People who were incarcerated or family members impacted by those incarcerated attended schools that still exist today such as Aliiolani Elementary School, Sacred Hearts Academy, Mid-Pacific Institute, Punahou, and others
  • Though not incarcerated himself, Hilo Bank of Hawaii branch manager Andrew Anderson helped to get an incarcerated individual, James Omizo, released from Honouliuli.

The following Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines that still exist today had their leaders incarcerated at Honouliuli:

To read more about the history of Honouliuli and learn about upcoming park events, please click the links below:

 
A black background with blue silhouettes of tents and barracks with the park's name and NPS logo
Commemorate 80 Years of Closure in 2026

2026 marks 80 years since Honouliuli Internment Camp closed. Commemorate this anniversary with us through events from June through September

Two prisoners of war standing in a garden
A Historical Overview of Honouliuli

Get a broad scope of the history behind the story of Hawaii's largest and longest-run incarceration site.

Last updated: June 4, 2026

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Contact Info

Mailing Address:

National Park Service
Honouliuli National Historic Site
1 Arizona Memorial Place

Honolulu, HI 96818

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