Honolulu Night Marchers Walking Tour.

Ask several people who work in Downtown Honolulu and a number of them will tell you that their buildings are haunted. From moving shadows, to objects being shifted around an office, to that familiar chicken skin feeling, to the legendary Night Marchers, the spooky tales abound.

Hawaii’s Night Marchers, also known as the Huaka‘i Pō are the ghosts of warriors past who are carrying out in death their duties once performed in life. They are the priests, warriors, and entourage of high-ranking ali‘i, and as it was in those ancient days, to look upon them, even in passing, meant death. Today, the buildings and landscape of Downtown Honolulu hide numerous Night Marcher paths, most of them ending where Pakaka once stood, the ancient sacrificial temple.

Join us and hear tales of eyewitness accounts of the feared Huaka‘i Pō on this 90-minute walking tour along the paths of Honolulu’s Night Marchers.

Honolulu Night Marchers Walking Tour - Monday or Friday Nights

WE MEET IN FRONT OF THE KAMEHAMEHA STATUE at Ali‘iolani Hale, 417 S King Street, Honolulu. Parking on S. King and Punchbowl Streets is free after 6pm.

 
  • Tour length, 90 minutes

  • Tour begins promptly at 7pm

  • $40  per person

  • View Dates and book your experience through the link below

Ghost of Postal Worker Haunts Downtown Post Office

 
Headline: Assistant in Postoffice to be arrested

On January 29th, 1925, dedicated Postal Assistant, Benedict L. Westkaemper, was arrested and suspended from work on the charge of sending banned matter in the mail.

The complaint was filed by the Post-Office Inspector. Westkaemper was charged with (and admitted to) sending an obscene letter through the US mail to a woman in San Francisco. Bail was set at $1500, which was posted and Westkaemper was released awaiting trial.

It is said that Westkaemper stopped outside the federal building a few moments, then made his way to the corner of Richards and King streets where he boarded a Waikiki car. He went to his room at the Elks club in Waikiki where he remained alone almost an hour.

The police received a mysterious phone call at 3pm by a woman who said, “Watch Westkaemper, he said he’s going to shoot himself.”

He slipped out of the Elks club without a word to anyone, walking directly toward Diamond Head.

A few minutes later, after the sharp report of a pistol, a dairyman found Westkaemper in a gulch on his back with a revolver in his hand and a bullet wound through his heart.

Headline: B. L. Westkaemper shoots self in heart on Ft Ruger grounds

Westkaemper’s boss, Postmaster MacAdam said, “He was a very efficient postal man, one of the best men we have ever had here. He was a hard worker, intensely interested in his work, and accomplished real results in any task he tackled. The letter, which ultimately led to his suicide, was a distinct surprise to me. It was hard to believe he would do such a thing. It was not like him. Perhaps it was strain from work that was responsible but I at least feel confident that something unusual prompted it, probably the first time in his life that it happened, and it might have been the last if nothing had come of the letter.”

Barely a month later, postal laborer, Adam Wong, along with the foreman of carriers, was in the basement of the federal building getting supplies.

Headline: Ghost of Westkaemper keeps tabs on supplies

Supplies procured, Wong was stepping from the supply room into the corridor, when he glanced up. Approaching him, he says, was the tall brooding figure of Westkaemper.

The ghost did not speak - nor did it raise its eyes. It came forward toward the door.

Belief was rampant in the federal building that Westkaemper was back, watching the postal supplies to see that there is no waste of them.

Postal workers today have told Lopaka and Mysteries of Hawaii that the building is still haunted by the ghost of the old postal worker, Benedict Westkaemper... and so much more...

You can read more about Benedict Westkaemper HERE.