Jump to content

Swains Island: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Reword to clarify meaning
2000 census figures cited 8 houses, not 8 people; no 2005 census figures available to document the population of 8; the abandoned village is in the southeast of the island.
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Swains.png|thumb|right|255px|NASA Satellite Image]]
[[Image:Swains.png|thumb|right|255px|NASA Satellite Image]]
'''Swains Island''' is an [[atoll]] in the [[Tokelau]] chain, the most northwesterly island administered by [[American Samoa]]. Although culturally belonging to Tokelau, politically, it is a territory of [[United States of America]]. It has variously been known as '''Olosenga Island''', '''Olohega Island''', '''Quiros Island''', '''Gente Hermosa Island''' and '''Jennings Island''' throughout its history. [[As of 2005]], the population of the island was 8, all located in the village of Talauga in the west. The village of Etena (southwest) is abandoned. The island has a total area of 1.865 km², of which 1.508 km² is land. The central lagoon accounts for the balance of 0.358 km². There is a small islet of 764 m² in the eastern part of the lagoon.
'''Swains Island''' is an [[atoll]] in the [[Tokelau]] chain, the most northwesterly island administered by [[American Samoa]]. Although culturally belonging to Tokelau, politically, it is a territory of [[United States of America]]. It has variously been known as '''Olosenga Island''', '''Olohega Island''', '''Quiros Island''', '''Gente Hermosa Island''' and '''Jennings Island''' throughout its history. [[As of 2005]], the population of the island was 37, all located in the village of Talauga in the west. The village of Etena (southeast) is abandoned. The island has a total area of 1.865 km², of which 1.508 km² is land. The central lagoon accounts for the balance of 0.358 km². There is a small islet of 764 m² in the eastern part of the lagoon.
[[Image:Swains island 1970.jpg|221px|thumb|right|Swains Island]]
[[Image:Swains island 1970.jpg|221px|thumb|right|Swains Island]]



Revision as of 13:56, 2 April 2007

NASA Satellite Image

Swains Island is an atoll in the Tokelau chain, the most northwesterly island administered by American Samoa. Although culturally belonging to Tokelau, politically, it is a territory of United States of America. It has variously been known as Olosenga Island, Olohega Island, Quiros Island, Gente Hermosa Island and Jennings Island throughout its history. As of 2005, the population of the island was 37, all located in the village of Talauga in the west. The village of Etena (southeast) is abandoned. The island has a total area of 1.865 km², of which 1.508 km² is land. The central lagoon accounts for the balance of 0.358 km². There is a small islet of 764 m² in the eastern part of the lagoon.

Swains Island

Geography

The island is unusual as the atoll is an unbroken circle of land and as such it features a lagoon closed off from the sea. The fate of such a lagoon depends on the amount of rain. No rain: it dries up; some rain: it changes into a small, strongly saltwater lake; lots of rain: it changes into a freshwater lake. The latter has happened here.

History

Pedro Fernandes de Queirós, a Portuguese navigator sailing for Spain, is believed to be the first European explorer to have discovered the island on 2 March 1606. He named the island Isla de la Gente Hermosa, which means "island of the beautiful people" in Spanish, on 1 February 1841.

Later, there was an expedition from Fakaofo to the island. The male inhabitants of the island either fled or were killed by the invaders, while the women were taken with the invaders to Fakaofo. The infertility of the island is attributed to a curse the chief places on it.

The American captain Henry Hudson of the Peacock visited the island in 1841 but was unable to land because of stormy weather. He then went to rename the island Swains Island, for the whaler who had alerted him to it.

In 1856 an American, Eli Hutchinson Jennings, started a community on Swains Island. He claimed that he received the ownership title from Captain Turnbull, an explorer who had claimed rights to the island. He had recently married a Samoan, Malia. On 13 October 1856 it became a semi-independent proprietary settlement of the Jennings family.

He established a coconut plantation which flourished under his son, Eli Junior. Eli Hutchinson Jennings Senior was also instrumental in helping Peruvian "blackbird" slaveships depopulate the other three Tokelau atolls — see H.E. Maude's Slavers in Paradise (A.N.U., Canberra, 1981). The Resident Commissioner of the British Gilbert and Ellice Islands (then a British protectorate, since 1916 a colony, presently Kiribati) supposedly demanded an $85 tax because of the plantation's success. He paid the tax but was upset and brought the matter to the U.S. State Department and was later refunded.

In 1907, the island was claimed by the British Gilbert Islands colony, but in 1909 Britain recognized it as within the U.S. zone of influence.

The ownership of the island came into question after Eli Jr.'s death in 1920 and his wife's in 1921. The United States decided to give the right of administration jointly to Eli's daughter Ann and son Alexander while making it officially part of American Samoa by annexation on 4 March 1925. Alexander Jennings, the son of Eli Jr., became the managing owner of the island. The population was around 100.

In 1954 the United States demanded a local government. Since then the island has sent one non-voting member to the American Samoan territorial legislature.

On 25 March 1981 New Zealand, of which Tokelau is a dependency, confirmed U.S. sovereignty over Swains Island in a treaty under which the United States surrendered its territorial claims to the other islands of Tokelau. In the draft constitution that was the subject of the Tokelau self-determination referendum, 2006, however, Swains Island is claimed as part of Tokelau. [1] As of March 2007, American Samoa has not yet taken an official position on the matter, but the governor of American Samoa has said he believes American Samoa should do everything it can to retain control of the island.[2]

The Jennings dynasty

Styling themselves Leaders, or Proprietors, the following family members have 'ruled' it:

  • 13 October 1856 - 4 December 1878 Eli Hutchinson Jennings (b. 1814 - d. 1878)
  • 4 December 1878 - 25 October 1891 Malia Jennings (his Samoan widow) (d. 1891)
  • 25 October 1891 - 24 October 1920 Eli Hutchinson Jennings, Jr. "King Jennings" (their son) (b. 1863 - d. 1920)
  • 24 October 1920 - August 1921 Ann Eliza Jennings Carruthers (b. 1897 - d. 1921) - jointly with sibling, children of Eli Jr. -
  • 24 October 1920 - 4 March 1925 Alexander Hutchinson Jennings

References

11°03′20″S 171°04′40″W / 11.05556°S 171.07778°W / -11.05556; -171.07778