Wake Island
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Wake Island - NASA NLT Landsat 7 (Visible Color) Satellite Image |
Wake Island (also known as
Wake Atoll) is a
coral atoll (having a
coastline of 12 miles (19.3 kilometers)) in the North
Pacific Ocean, located about two-thirds of the way from
Honolulu (2,300
statute miles or 3,700 km west) to
Guam (1,510 miles or 2,430 km east). It is an
unorganized,
unincorporated territory of the
United States, part of the
United States Minor Outlying Islands, administered by the
Office of Insular Affairs,
U.S. Department of the Interior. Wake is located to the west of the
International Date Line and is one day ahead of the 50 states. Access to the island is restricted and all current activities on the island are managed by the
United States Air Force, the
United States Army, and Chugach McKinley, Inc., a civilian base operations and maintenance services company.
Although Wake is officially called an
island in the singular form, it is actually an atoll comprising three islands (Wake, Wilkes, and Peale) surrounding a central
lagoon. Referring to the atoll as an island is the result of a pre-World War II desire by the
United States Navy to distinguish Wake from other atolls, most of which were
Japanese territory. The largest island (Wake Island) is the center of activity on the atoll and features a 9,800 foot (3,000 m) runway.
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Wake Island |
*Geographic coordinates:
*Area (land): 2.5 mi² (6.5 km²)
*Coastline: 12.0 mi (19.3 km)
*Maritime claims
*
exclusive economic zone: 200 nm (370.4 km)
*
territorial sea: 12 nm (22.2 km)
*Climate:
tropical, with occasional
typhoons
*Elevation extremes:
*
lowest point: Pacific Ocean, 0 feet (0 meters)
*
highest point: unnamed location, 20 feet (6 m)
Discovery and exploration
On
October 20,
1568,
Álvaro de Mendaña de Neyra, a Spanish explorer with two ships,
Los Reyes and
Todos Santos, discovered "a low barren island, judged to be eight
leagues in circumference," to which he gave the name of "San Francisco." The island was eventually named for Captain
Samuel Wake, master of the British trading
schooner,
Prince William Henry, who visited in 1796.
On
December 20,
1840, the
United States Exploring Expedition commanded by
Commodore Charles Wilkes, USN, landed on and surveyed Wake. Wilkes described the atoll as "a low coral one, of triangular form and eight feet above the surface. It has a large lagoon in the centre, which was well filled with
fish of a variety of
species among these were some fine
mullet." He also noted that Wake had no fresh water and that it was covered with
shrubs, "the most abundant of which was the
tournefortia." The
expedition's
naturalist,
Titian Peale, collected many new
specimens, including an
egg from a
short-tailed albatross and various
marine life specimens.
The wreck of the Libelle
Wake Island first received international attention with the
wreck of the
Libelle. On the night of
March 4,
1866 the
barque Libelle of
Bremen,
Germany struck the eastern
reef of Wake Island during a
gale. The ship was under the command of Captain Tobias and en route from
San Francisco to
Hong Kong. Among its passengers were the famous
opera singer
Anna Bishop, her husband Martin Schultz (a
New York diamond merchant) and three other members of an English
opera troupe.
After 21 days, the 30 stranded passengers and crew set sail in a
longboat and a
gig for the Spanish island of
Guam. The longboat, containing the opera troupe, Mr. Schultz and other passengers, arrived on Guam
April 8. The gig, commanded by the
Libelle's captain, was lost at sea. While stranded on Wake Island, Captain Tobias had buried valuable cargo including 1,000 flasks (34,500 kg) of
mercury, coins and precious stones worth approximately $150,000 and at least five ships conducted
salvage operations in their recovery. The plight of the
Libelle, its passengers and cargo was reported by many newspapers.
American possession
Wake Island was annexed by the
United States on
January 17,
1899. In 1935,
Pan American Airways constructed a small village, nicknamed "PAAville", to service flights on its
U.S.-
China route. The village was the first human settlement on the island, and relied upon the US mainland for its food and water supplies; it remained in operation up to the day of the first Japanese air raid.
Military buildup
In January 1941, the
United States Navy constructed a military base on the atoll. On
August 19, the first permanent military garrison, elements of the
1st Marine Defense Battalion, totaling 449 officers and men, were stationed on the island, commanded by
Commander Winfield Scott Cunningham. Others on the island were 68 U.S. Naval personnel and about 1,221 civilian workers.
They were armed with six old 5" (127 mm)
cannons, removed from a
scrapped cruiser, 12 3" (76.2 mm) M3 anti-aircraft guns (with only a single working anti-aircraft
sight between them), 18
Browning M2 heavy machine guns and 30 heavy, medium and light, water or air-cooled machine guns in different conditions but all were operational.
See main article: Battle of Wake IslandThe Battle of Wake Island
On
December 7,
1941 the same day as the attack on
Pearl Harbor (Wake being on the opposite side of the International Date Line), sixteen Japanese medium bombers flown from bases on the
Marshall Islands attacked Wake Island, destroying eight of the twelve
F4F Wildcat fighter aircraft belonging to Marine Corps fighter squadron
VMF-211 on the ground. All of the Marine garrison's defensive emplacements were left intact by the raid, which primarily targeted the naval aircraft.
With this equipment, the garrison - supplemented by civilian volunteers - repelled several Japanese landing attempts. After the initial Japanese amphibious assault was beaten back with heavy losses, the American commander was asked by his superiors if he needed anything; the commander was reported (erroneously) as having quipped "Send us more Japs!"
Despite this defiant spirit, the garrison was eventually overwhelmed by the determined and numerically superior Japanese invasion force. American casualties were fifty-two military personnel killed, along with approximately seventy civilians. Japanese losses exceeded 700 killed, with some estimates ranging as high as 900; in addition, the Japanese lost four destroyers and twenty aircraft.
In the aftermath of the battle, some of the captured civilian laborers were pressed into service by the Japanese and tasked with improving the island's defenses. After a successful American air raid on
October 5,
1943, the Japanese garrison commander - Rear Admiral
Shigematsu Sakaibara - ordered the execution of the ninety-eight prisoners on the pretext that they were
spies. One prisoner escaped the mass execution, but was later personally beheaded by Sakaibara. After the war, Sakaibaira was tried for war crimes, found guilty, and executed; his subordinate was sentenced to life in prison.
Captain
Henry T. Elrod, one of the pilots from VMF-211, was awarded the United States
Medal of Honor posthumously for his action on the Island during the Japanese landings on the 23rd for shooting down two Japanese
Zero fighters, and many of his comrades were also highly decorated for their roles in the fighting. The
Wake Island Device was created for American veterans of the battle.
Japanese occupation and surrender
The Japanese-occupied island was bombed several times by American air forces; one of these raids was the first mission for future United States president
George H.W. Bush.
On
September 4,
1945, the remaining Japanese garrison surrendered to a detachment of the
United States Marine Corps. In a brief ceremony, the handover of Wake was officially conducted.
Postwar
On
October 15, 1950, the island served as a one-day meeting site between
General Douglas MacArthur and President
Harry S. Truman, meeting to discuss strategy for the
Korean War hostilities that had broken out four months earlier.
Since 1974, the island's airstrip has been used by the U.S. military and some commercial cargo planes, as well as for emergency landings. There are over 700 landings a year on the island. There are also two offshore anchorages for large ships. On
September 19,
1985 the entire island was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
The United States military personnel have left and there are no indigenous inhabitants. Wake, with an undelineated maritime boundary with them, is claimed by the
Marshall Islands and some civilian personnel ("contractor inhabitants") remain.
As of July 2004, an estimated 200 contractor personnel were present. The island remains a strategic location in the North
Pacific Ocean, and serves as an emergency landing location for transpacific flights. Some World War II facilities and wreckage remain on the islands.
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Wake Island's Main Lagoon |
Subsequently the island was used for strategic defense and operations during the
Cold War. It was administered by the
United States Army Space and Missile Defense Command (formerly known as the
United States Army Space and Strategic Defense Command).
Since 1974, from Wake Island, military rockets were launched at . These rockets are launched for the test of anti-missile systems and for atmospheric re-entry tests.
From late April until the middle of August, 1975, Wake Island was used as a refugee camp for more than 8000 Vietnamese refugees who fled their homeland after the fall of Saigon that ended the War.
The territorial claim [https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/wq.html#Issues] by the Republic of the Marshall Islands on Wake Atoll leaves a certain amount of ambiguity regarding the actual or hypothetical role of the US military, responsible under agreement for the defence of Marshallese territory, in the event of any strategic crisis or hostilities involving Wake. However, the Atoll was formally annexed by the US in the 19th century and is still administered by the US Department of the Interior.
* Wake Island is featured as a map on the popular PC games
Battlefield 1942 and
Battlefield 2.
* The flightless
Wake Island Rail was the island's only native landbird. It became extinct when the Japanese garrison, cut off from resupply in 1944/1945, turned to hunting and fishing in order to avoid starvation.
* Sloan, Bill.
Given up for Dead: America's Heroic Stand at Wake Island. Bantam Books, 2003. ISBN 0-55-380302-6
*
*
AirNav - Wake Island Airfield : Airport details, facilities and navigational aids
* [https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/wq.html CIA World Factbook] : CIA World Factbook
*
History of Wake Island : from
richard's ramblings...*
Kingdom of EnenKio Group claiming that Wake Island is illegally occupied by the USA despite a lack of international recognition or historical evidence.
*
Rocket launches at Wake Island*
The Defense of Wake : USMC historical monograph
*
Surrender of Wake by the Japanese : Marines in World War II
*
U.S. Army Strategic and Missile Defense Command : Logistics, flight schedules, facilities
* [
1] Photographic history of the 1975 Vietnamese refugee camp on Wake Island.
*
Wake Island : Pacific Wreck Database
*
"Wake Island" (1942): Internet Movie Database
*
"Wake Island: Alamo of the Pacific" (2003): Internet Movie Database