Royal Saloon, 2 Merchant St.
Walter Peacock built the Royal Saloon on the lower side of Nuuanu Avenue, a grog strip known amongst sailors as “Fid street”–a fid is a nautical tool Webster defines as a “stout bar of wood or metal.” Except during Prohibition when the saloon was a furniture store, the hotel has been a dependable spot for swill. During the mid-19th century, Honolulu harbor would see a sharp increase in ship traffic, and seamen, merchants, captains and just about every other type of gentleman would stop at the hotel, as did King Kalakaua and Robert Louis Stevenson. In 1987, Don Murphy bought the place (then called the Royal Hawaiian Saloon) and dressed it up as Murphy’s Bar and Grill.




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