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In 1832, missionaries David and Sarah Lyman traveled by ship from New
England to the Sandwich Islands (as they called Hawai`i then). They
had been married for all of 24 days before leaving on the six-month
voyage. In the late 1830's they built
the Lyman House as a family home and a school for young Hawaiian men
nearby, the Hilo Boarding School. Over the years, the House became a
place to raise their seven children and
host guests including many of the Hawaiian ali`i (royalty) and other
notables such as Mark Twain. The Lyman's never returned to their
native New England, choosing to live out their lives in Hilo.
The Lyman Mission House is the oldest wooden structure on the Island
of Hawai`i and one of the oldest in the State. It features furniture, tools, household items and artifacts used by
the Lymans and other early missionary families.
During your tour of the Mission House, you can experience what it meant
to live 5000 miles and 6-months journey away from your home and family in
a house without electricity or running water and in a culture with a
decidedly different language and culture from your own, while being
driven a sense
of duty to bring Christianity and western-style education to the Hawaiian
people.
The Mission House is open to the public for guided tours Monday
through Saturday, by appointment or at the scheduled times of 10:00 and
11:00am; and 1:00, 2:00 and 3:00pm. |