Kona Historical Society Board Member Alfreida Fujita views photos from “The Kona Coffee Story: Along a Hawai‘i Belt Road” during a exhibit’s opening accepting in early 2017. Photo pleasantness of Kona Historical Society.
Kona Historical Societyʻs (KHS) award-winning exhibit, “The Kona Coffee Story: Along a Hawai‘i Belt Road,” will be open and on arrangement for a open during a H.N. Greenwell Store Museum in Kealakekua each initial Saturday of a month between 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The subsequent open date is Jun 3.
Due to KHSʻs preservation-project planning, a vaunt will be sealed progressing in a week. The vaunt will also open during a unchanging hours of operation on Monday, Tuesday or Thursday, Jun 5, 6 and 8, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The Kona Coffee Story vaunt has been featured during a Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles, and in museums via a world. It preserves and relates a story of tough operative coffee farmers and village leaders during a highs and lows of a rising attention in Kona from 1828. Personal accounts, chronological photos and artifacts relate a constrained story of vital a life of a coffee farmer, including singular family portraits and scenes from a land during a early 20t century. KHS has incorporated never-before-seen photos and artifacts into a Kona exhibition.
General acknowledgment is $5. Students, troops and KHS members get in free. To turn a member of KHS, revisit store.konahistorical.org.
For some-more information, call Kona Historical Society during (808) 323-3222 or revisit www.konahistorical.org.