
Around 1927, the Bank of Hawaii built a new bank in Honolulu designed by Goodhue and illustrated by Lee Lawrie.
This bas-relief once graced the building. The building was razed in the 1960s and a new bank building was erected in its place. Again, whether this work may have been salvaged remains unknown. It may have been cast in bronze, but little more information is available about it, other than it's not there now. Hopefully, these are the only two examples of Lawrie's to perish, but this, too, remains a mystery.