- H. P. Faye
Hans Peter (H.P.) Faye (
October 20 ,1859 , inDrammen ,Norway –August 28 ,1928 , inBerkeley, California ) was a pioneer who developed sugar cane plantations on westKauai .Faye arrived on
Kauai in theKingdom of Hawaii in 1880.He leased land from at Mana,
Kauai from his uncle,Valdemar Knudsen , and settled there. After clearing the rocky plain at Mana of giantlava rocks, Faye obtained seed cane and planted his firstsugar cane crop. In 1884, he founded the H.P. Faye & Co. plantation.In 1886, when Faye's first crop was ready for
harvesting , he rented Chinese laborers from Leong Pah On,Kauai 's "Rice King," to harvest the cane. The cut cane was sent by bullock teams intoKekaha , several miles away, where it was processed at the sugar mill at Kekaha Plantation.Faye married Margaret Bonnar Lindsay on
December 21 ,1893 , at Moloaa,Kauai and they had eight children. Faye served aspostmaster forKekaha , Waimea District from 1899-1900. In 1905, he bought the Waimea Dairy from the Rowell family.At the turn of the 20th century, the now-defunct Waimea Sugar Mill Company was a publicly owned and traded company, and Faye began to purchase shares in it. By 1905, he was the largest stockholder. By 1915 or 1916, Faye owned the entire operation.
In addition to operating his own businesses, in 1898 he helped merge three existing plantations into the Kekaha Sugar Company, and he became its first manager, a position he held for thirty years, until his death in 1928.
Faye drew up much of the Kekaha Plantation's design, and it was initially seen as a shaky investment -- with a need for great amounts of capital to build an infrastructure of
canals , pumps, water systems and other facilities needed to overcome its inherent physical disadvantages. These pioneering years were rough ones for thesugar cane growers who lacked an abundant water supply. As thesugar cane area increased, natural springs and intermittent streams proved inadequate, so wells were drilled. Most wells had been drilled too deep and at locations far too seaward. As a result, most wells became salty over time and were abandoned, buried and lost.As part of Kekaha Sugar's expansion program, three surface water diversions were constructed to address the failure of the well supply. In 1903, the
Waimea Ditch was dug to divert water from the Waimea River to nearby fields. The success of this venture prompted the construction of the Kekaha Ditch in 1905, which carries water from an altitude of about 500 feet on the Waimea River to Kekaha. The ditch was completed in 1907 and the well water quality began to improve. In 1926, theKokee Ditch was completed diverting water from Mohihi Stream and the headwater of the Waimea River in the Alaka'i Swamp at an altitude of about 3400 feet. About one-fourth of theKokee Ditch supply has irrigated the highland cane fields below Pu'u Opae reservoir on Niu Ridge, and the balance has irrigated the highland fields east of Koke'e Road.With the draining of the Nohili and Kawaiele Marshes in 1922 and the continued expansion of
sugar cane area, another period of well development took place in the 1920s and 1930s. Initially, this consisted of batteries of closely spaced drilled wells, but Maui-type shafts (tunnels that skim fresh water off the top of the basalaquifer ) located along the foot of the bluffs subsequently replaced these.It was Faye's vision that created the Kekaha Ditch and
Kokee Ditch systems and the intricate drainagecanals that drained the largeswamps of Mana.In 1950, Waimea Sugar Mill Company was reorganized into the Kikiaola Land Company, a property and land management division, and Waimea Sugar Mill, Inc., which continued to raise and process
cane sugar . But, by 1969, with returns on sugar diminishing, the Faye family kept title to the lands and sold the sugar operations to Kekaha Sugar Company.
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