November 4, 1887: The founding of Kamehameha Schools

Nov. 4, 2025


This story was originally published by Kaʻiwakīloumoku and is reposted here in commemoration of the founding of Kamehameha Schools. Read the original here.

In the fall of 1887, preparations for the opening of the Kamehameha School for Boys were nearly complete. A workshop, dining hall and the first two dormitories had been built at the Kaiwi‘ula campus, where the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum stands today. An invitation had been sent to all Hawaiian boys over the age of 12 to take the admission test, and on October 3, 37 boys arrived on campus to begin their schooling instruction.

One month later, on November 4, 1887, the Kamehameha School for Boys held its official dedication ceremony. Queen Kapi‘olani and other members of the royal family were in attendance that day, joined by school and community leaders as well as nearby residents of Honolulu.

Beloved Kamehameha Schools staff member Dr. Donald Kilolani Mitchell described the historic occasion in his publication Kū Kilakila ‘O Kamehameha: A Historical Account of the Campuses of the Kamehameha Schools:

“King Kalākaua addressed the boys in Hawaiian and his remarks were then translated into English. He told the boys that ‘the name the school bears is the name of one who was famous first of all for habits of industry in the fields before he became famous as a warrior.’ He emphasized that it was not simply the work of the hands that would lead to success in life, but the intelligence for which His Majesty urged the boys to strive.”

The school initially began as a three-year program, offering instruction in arithmetic, geometry, algebra, English language, original composition, bookkeeping, geography, freehand drawing, penmanship, vocal music, and “law of health and moral instruction.” Manual training courses were available in carpentry, blacksmithing, woodcutting and agriculture.

In the early months of the school, Charles Reed Bishop noticed that many of the eligible boys applying failed to pass the entrance examination. To address this problem, he presented the Trustees with a plan to expand the school by providing additional boarding and educational opportunities to younger students—particularly those who were orphaned or homeless.

Mr. Bishop erected the necessary facilities and provided the initial operating costs at his own personal expense. It grew from a three-year to a six-year program in the span of five short years, largely at his urging to help prepare young boys for the academic rigor of the school. This added branch of the Boys School became known as the Kamehameha Schools Preparatory Department, the precursor for today’s Kamehameha Elementary and Middle Schools.

Dedicated on Founder’s Day, December 19, 1891, Bishop Hall was named by the Trustees in honor of Charles Reed Bishop. The construction site was selected in 1887, and building began the following year. There were four large classrooms on the first floor and two on the second. Kamehameha Schools continued to use two of the first-floor classrooms to house its fourth-grade classes until 1961. The fourth graders utilized the Bishop Museum  for their year-long study of Hawaiian culture and history.

Kamehameha Schools gifted Bishop Hall to the museum in 1986. Of all the buildings located on the original Kaiwi‘ula campus, Bishop Hall is the only one still standing today.