Boundary Commission

1873 023 Jones, George W.C.
Certification: 023
Ahupua`a Punahoa (portion)
District: Hilo
Island Hawaii
Ownership: Jones, George W.C.
Misc:
Year: 1873
Statistics: 21122 characters 3575 words
Punahoa 1 Ahupuaa (Jones), District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Volume A, No. 1; pps 104-109

A portion of the Ahupuaa of Punahoa 1, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit (No.21)

On this the second day of June A.D. 1873, the Commission of Boundaries for the Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit, met at the Office of the Boundary Commissioner at Hilo, Hawaii, after notice of the hearing of the application of G.W.C. Jones for the settlement of the boundaries of a portion of the Ahupuaa of Punahoa 1, situated in the District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit, having been given by advertisement in the Hawaiian Gazette of May 7, 1873, and notice personally served on the owners of adjoining lands.

Present: G.W. Akao Hapai on the part of the applicant, and W.P. Ragsdale for the Crown Commissioners.

Petition read as follows:

Copy
To the Honorable Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries for the Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit
Sir:
I beg to make application to you for the settlement of the boundaries of a portion of the Ahupuaa of Punahoa1st, Hilo, Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit.

The lands adjoining Punahoa 1st on the Puna side is Ponahawai, owned by Thomas Spencer, and the mauka portion by the Crown Land Commissioners.

The land on the Hilo side is Punahoa 2d, portions of which have been Patented to D.B. Logman and Charles H. Witmore, notes of survey of Spencer's land filed.

Wherefore your petitioner prays that a time and place may be fixed for the hearing of his petition, and for the taking of testimony in relation to the boundaries of the said land, and for a final settlement of the boundaries of said land according to law.
Signed, G.W.C. Jones
Kahuku, Kau, Hawaii
September 30th 1872

Testimony
Puaa, kane, sworn says, I was born at the time of Keouamua, at Wailau, Kau, Hawaii. Left Kau few years after Kuiwaimaka Lae, and lived at Keaau in Puna for two years; then moved to Waiakea in Hilo, and was living there at time of Kaua o Kekualani (or the battle of Kuamoo) fought four days before the arrival of the first Missionaries at Kailua. I moved to the land of Ponahawai in 1835 and have lived there most of the time since then. I know the land of Punahoe 1st. Waikane, an uncle of mine now dead, pointed out the boundaries of Punahoe and Ponohawai tome. It was at the time when the people were having their kuleana surveyed, and the people on Punahoa were taking part of Ponohawai. He showed me all the boundaries between these two lands from the shore to the woods, and told where the boundaries are in the woods, but I did not go into the woods with him.

Know place called Kukuiula, it is a grove of kukui trees near a clump of bamboos, and is at the mauka corner of land on Ponohawai, formerly owned by R. Pitman, and now owned by Spencer and the makai North corner of the portion of Ponohawai held by the Crown Commissioners, and adjoining Punahoa 1st. From this point the boundarybetween Punahoa 1 [page 105] and Ponohawai runs mauka to an Ahua or small mound called Kilohana on the Hilo side of a spring of water called Punehe. There are banana trees growing around the spring. Thence the boundary runs mauka to a grove of ohia trees at Puumanu; thence mauka a short distance to the kahawai called Alena, at a point where the kahawai turns to the Southeast, and runs onto Ponohawai. Thence the boundary follows up the gulch to Kukuikomo at the edge of the woods; The woods on Ponohawai or the left hand side of the gulch as you go towards the woods, extend some way makai of this point. Kukuikomo is on Punahoa where houses used to stand. This is as far as I know the boundaries from having them showed to me.

Waikane told me that the boundary runs from this point into the woods to a place mauka of Laumaia, where Piihonua and Ponahawai cut both the lands of Punahoa off.
Cross-examined
Waikane was a kamaaina of all these lands.

Kekai, kane, sworn says, I was born at Napoopoo, Kona, Hawaii at the time of the Peleleau, and moved to Hilo at the ti ....

[End of Top Preview]

This document has been trimmed for your preview.

To view and download this record, add to your document tray by clicking on the button.

Add to Document Tray

[End of Preview]

....
South 42° 11' East (True) or South 51° 21' East (Magnetic) 142 feet to P cut on edge of Kawa;
North 70° 23' East (True) or South 61° 57' East (Magnetic) 205 feet;
North 70° 03' East (True) or South 60° 37' East (Magnetic) 164 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 76° 25' East (True) or South 83° 55' East (Magnetic) 234 feet;
North 56° 32' East (True) or North 59° 02' East (Magnetic) 286 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 23° 28' East (True) or North 15° 28' East (Magnetic) 168 feet to P marked in bed of stream; [page 109]
North 77° 25' East (True) or North 40° 60[?] East (Magnetic) 365 feet to point 30 feet North of place marked P;
South 44° 20' East (True) or South 52° 20' West (Magnetic) 178 feet;
North 73° 27' East (True) or North 15° 27' East (Magnetic) 165 feet to pile of stones on the edge of stream;
North 59° 40' East (True) or North 50° 40' East (Magnetic) 144 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 84° 41' East (True) or North 77° 40' East (Magnetic) 132 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 33° 04' East (True) or North 25° 04' East (Magnetic) 179 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 86° 50' East (True) or North 76° 50' East (Magnetic) 143 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
South 39° 25' East (True) or North 49° 25' East (Magnetic) 158 feet;
North 42° 48' East (True) or North 33° 48' East (Magnetic) 130 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
South 66° 00' East (True) or South 74° 98' East (Magnetic) 270 feet to P marked in rock below Kana;
North 73° 04' East (True) or North 65° 56' East (Magnetic) 430 feet to kukui tree marked P South side of stream;
North 16° 48' East (True) or North 7° 13' East (Magnetic) 355 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 57° 38' East (True) or North 48° 30' East (Magnetic) 200 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 31° 48' East (True) or North 23° 48' East (Magnetic) 236 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 75° 32' East (True) or North 66° 07' East (Magnetic) 158 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 25° 52' East (True) or North 17° 53' East (Magnetic) 211 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
North 32° 22' East (True) or North 25° 40' East (Magnetic) 253 feet to P marked in bed of stream;
South 88° 57' East (True) or North 85° 00' East (Magnetic) 171 feet;
North 21° 50' East (True) or North 30° 50' East (Magnetic) 195 feet to pile of stones in gulch, edge of woods;
North 31° 45' East (True) or North 22° 15' East (Magnetic) 560 feet to a pile of stones;
North 79° 05' East(West?) (True) or North (South) 70° 05' East (Magnetic) 2892 feet to a pile of stones on Ahua and bamboos;
North 80° 37' East (True) or North 70° 37' East (Magnetic) 2044 feet to a pile of stones on Ahua and bamboos;
North 64° 05' East (True) or North 55° 35' East (Magnetic) 3978 feet to Kukuiula Station, marked by a red wood post in the ground with a bottle set on the top of it. Bamboos and Gingers are also planted here. Thence
North 57° 55' East (True) or North 48° 25' East (Magnetic) 4185[?] feet to a pile of stones buried bottles and gingers on the southwest brow of Puuhonu hill; thence
North 59° 35' East (True) or North 50° 00' East (Magnetic) 1715 feet across the top of Puuhonu and the south slope of the Middle hill to ditch on slope of Halai hill; thence
North 43° 20' West (True) or North 53° 20' West (Magnetic) 280 feet along ditch to place of commencement; and containing an area of 846 acres.
F.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3d Judicial Circuit

Note: Surveyed by J.M. Lydgate
Costs in full paid by applicant. Book of Costs lost in wreck of Schooner Caroline Mills at Honokaia, Hamakua, Hawaii, May 1878

[No. 23, Punahoa 1 Ahupuaa, portion, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, 846 acres, 1873]