In early 1778, a European ocean explorer named Captain James Cook caught sighting of the Hawaiian Islands. The location is a quiet respite that lends memory to Hawaii’s first non-native explorers to arrive in the islands. Today, the
Captain Cook Landing Site is located in the Lucy Wright Park and just across the Waimea River from
Russian Fort Elizabeth. A pier runs into the water from the shore which is believed to have grown significantly over the past 150 years with sediment buildup.
History
On January 20, 1778, Cook landed his two ships, Resolution and Discover, at Waimea, Kauai. Although he made several landings throughout the islands of Hawaii over the coming months, his landfall on Kauai was the first arrival of Europeans in Hawaii. In 1779, Cook was killed by Hawaiians following strife with locals on the Big Island at Kealakekua Bay. Cook’s Landing Site was registered as a National Historic Landmark on August 21, 1935.