town and
Kāneohe Bay beyond. The Nuuanu Pali has been a vital pass from
ancient times to the present because it is a low, traversable section of the
Koolau mountain range that connects the leeward side of the mountains,
Honolulu to the windward side,
Kailua and
Kāneohe. The route drew settlers who formed villages in the area and populated Nuuanu Valley for a thousand years. The Nuuanu Pali was the site of the
Battle of Nuuanu, one of the bloodiest battles in Hawaiian history, in which
Kamehameha I conquered the island of Oahu, bringing it under his rule. In 1795 Kamehameha I sailed from his home island of
Hawaii with an army of 10,000 warriors, including a handful of non-Hawaiian foreigners. After conquering the islands of
Maui and
Molokai, he moved on to Oahu. The pivotal battle for the island occurred in Nuuanu Valley, where the defenders of Oahu, led by
Kalanikūpule, were driven back up into the valley where they were trapped above the cliff. Kamehamehaʻs warriors forced Maui Chief Kalanikupule's men to their deaths off of the cliff. Roughly 400 warriors died in this battle. In 1845 the first road was built over the Nuuanu Pali, to connect Windward Oahu with Honolulu. In 1898, as this road was developed into a highway, workers found 800 human skulls—believed to be the remains of the warriors who fell to their deaths from the cliff above. This road was later replaced by the
Pali Highway and the
Nuuanu Pali Tunnels in 1959, which is the route used today. The now extinct bird, the
Oahu nukupuu, was last collected in this valley. There is also a legend that takes place around the Nuʻuanu Pali. This is
The Ghost Dog Legend. This legend states that when people came across this dog on the Pali, they had to turn back around or else they would not make it up the steep mountain. Because of these events, it is said that coming across this dog would lead to
kaupe, meaning disaster. == Nuuanu Reservoir ==