Pearl Harbor Child. Dorinda MD Nicholson
many of the old time Hawaiian fishermen.
1—My Family Moves to Pearl Harbor
One day, she told me the legend of the Little Yellow Shark that lived in the Bay of Pu’uloa. She also told me about the shark goddess, Ka’ahupahau, who lived in the same bay full of pearl oysters which is called Pearl Harbor. That’s when I first learned that we would be moving to the Pearl City Peninsula, a small strip of land surrounded on three sides by the waters of the Bay of Pu’uloa, better known as Pearl Harbor.
Our house was at 443 Jean Street in the area called Pearl City Peninsula. It was so close to the harbor that Mom could walk to her new job at the Pan American World Airways Clipper Base. She could come home on work days for lunch with my baby brother, Ishmael and our dog, Hula Girl. I was away in kindergarten at Sacred Hearts Convent, and Dad was at work at the Honolulu Post Office. The year was 1940.
To be a child of the harbor was special. My friends and I would take our nets down to the piers where the airplanes were moored, and drop them into the shiny water to catch crabs. The best bait was fish heads, and we tied them to the center of the circular net to lure the crabs. I wanted the best bait, aku heads, so I could attract the most crabs, and especially Samoan crabs, which were the largest of all.
In the fall of 1941, I began first grade at Sacred Hearts Convent in Nu’uanu. But I wouldn’t finish out the year there, because of events that were beyond my control, even beyond imagining!
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