A hundred years among the clouds

Hawaiian Trail and Mountain Club / The green army tent hanging like a hammock from the ceiling inside Hamilton Library’s bridge gallery still smells like grass stains. The trees it once hung from left their impression and the views it once looked upon still feel alive in the dense army fabric. A 1946 German pasto compass points south inside a glass showcase where it sits among well-worn watches, machetes, knives, vintage patches and an original tube of ChapStick–all displayed to celebrate the Hawaiian Trail and Mountain Club (HTMC).
More than a year of research went into the archiving of the new exhibition celebrating 100 years of hiking with HTMC. Because of their impressive labors, generations of island residents have accessed the mountains freely to enjoying Hawaii’s striking views.
Photographs by Nathan Yuen fill the gallery’s walls, including ones so captivating that the sounds of hikers’ footsteps and the rustling of leaves are hardly absent. Yuen captured photos of hardy groups of explorers, some of whom make their way down exposed rock face onto the steep Manamana ridge where several unfortunate hikers lost their lives throughout the years. Giant hapuu tree ferns provide an aromatic backdrop in others. And historic photos of the first 20 years of the club’s existence show women dressed in flapper-style dresses with ruche collars while their hiking partners shade them with hats.
The HTMC exhibit at UH Manoa Hamilton Library includes 112 images that celebrate the club’s formation in 1910. Historic photos by Ray Jerome Baker and others from the period provide an extensive look at what they’ve restored, maintained and even saved over the last hundred years. The smells and sounds of the trails still exist in old maps, canteens and blankets and photographs line the walls waiting to transport the next viewer’s senses.





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