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USS LST-480

1942 shipsLST-1-class tank landing ships of the United States NavyMaritime incidents in May 1944S3-M2-K2 shipsShips built in Richmond, California
Ships sunk by non-combat internal explosionsShipwrecks of HawaiiSource attributionWorld War II amphibious warfare vessels of the United States
LST 480 following West Loch disaster
LST 480 following West Loch disaster

USS LST-480 was an LST-1-class tank landing ship built for the United States Navy used in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater during World War II.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article USS LST-480 (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

USS LST-480
1st Street, Waipahu

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: USS LST-480Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 21.35725 ° E -157.9972 °
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Address

1st Street

1st Street
96706 Waipahu
Hawaii, United States
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LST 480 following West Loch disaster
LST 480 following West Loch disaster
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Nearby Places

Wakamiya Inari Shrine
Wakamiya Inari Shrine

Wakamiya Inari Shrine at Waipahu Cultural Garden in Waipahu, Hawaiʻi, is the last surviving example of Inari Shrine architecture on Oʻahu. Unlike most Shinto shrines, which are unpainted, those dedicated to the fox deity Inari, the god of the harvest, are painted bright red. This shrine thus represents not just the religious heritage of Japanese immigrants to Hawaiʻi, but also their principal early roles as agricultural laborers on sugarcane and pineapple plantations. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on 8 January 1980.The simple wood frame building measures 19 by 26 feet, with wooden steps leading up to a raised floor with a balustraded verandah that wraps around the sanctuary. Long eaves of the irimoya (hip-and-gable) roof extend over both the front steps and the verandah. The sanctuary is enclosed by sliding doors with latticework tops and contains an inner altar behind a bell rope and a box for offerings. The building has been carefully restored but still lacks the chigi (forked finials) above the ornamental ridgepole.The shrine was founded by Reverend Yoshio Akizaki, a Shinto priest who had studied in Tokyo in 1912. Originally built in 1914 in Honolulu's industrial area of Kakaʻako by a Japanese architect known only as Haschun, it was relocated in 1918 to 2132 South King Street in Moʻiliʻili, the heart of the city's Japanese community. After the death of the founder in 1951, his son Takeo inherited both the property and the priesthood. After Takeo's death, the property was sold and the shrine was relocated to Waipahu Cultural Garden in 1979 to make way for a sporting goods store.The relocated shrine is in a rural rather than urban setting and the surrounding garden lacks several of its original elements, including its water purification basin (chōzuya or temizuya), its paired stone images of guardian lions and fox deities, and its original torii, although a new torii has been reconstructed at the new site. For its 100th anniversary in 2014, it received a new roof and won a Historic Preservation Honor Award.