- Kingdom. She was also
known as
Lydia Haʻaheo Kaniu.
Haʻaheo Kaniu was born in the late 18th-century.
Sources on
Haʻaheo Kaniu's
genealogy are conflicting...
-
Haaheo Seamount is a
seamount near the
Midway Atoll,
Sovereign Seamount,
Euphemia Seamount, Don
Quixote Seamount, and the
Northampton Seamounts. "Google...
- Noah
Gregory Kekoa Haaheo Pang-Potjes (born June 5, 1991) is an
American professional wrestler. He is best
known for his time in WWE,
where he performed...
- of the Pacific,
Sheltered Bay, HNL, The Big Pineapple,
Paradise Motto:
Haʻaheo No ʻO
Honolulu (The
Pride of Honolulu)
Urban Honolulu and East Honolulu...
- Mary
Haʻaheo Atcherley (born Mary Ha'aheo Kinimaka,
April 24, 1874 –
March 8, 1933) was a
Hawaiian activist. She was one of the
first native Hawaiian...
-
pounds of sandalwood.
Liholiho used it as his
private yacht,
renaming it
Haʻaheo o Hawaiʻi ("Pride of Hawaii") in 1822
after a rebuild.
Under an all-Hawaiian...
-
parents were
Keaweamahi Kinimaka and his
first wife High
Chiefess Haʻaheo Kaniu.
After Haʻaheo Kaniu died,
Keaweamahi Kinimaka married Pai, a
descendant of...
- Kekauonohi, who died in 1847; (3.) Kaikookalani, a son,
whose wife was
Haaheo, a
niece of
Keawemauhili by his
sister Akahi, and who
afterwards became...
-
Keouawahine and Kaniuʻopiohaʻaheo or
Haʻaheo. With Keouawahine, he had one son Keoua, who died in infancy, and with
Haʻaheo, he had one
daughter Mele Kaʻauʻamoku...
-
shipped in from the
Pacific Northwest for repairs, and then
renamed his ship
Haʻaheo o Hawaiʻi ("Pride of Hawaii").
After re-launching May 10, 1823 it was wrecked...