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Wikipedia

American Samoa

American Samoa (Samoan: Amerika Sāmoa, pronounced [aˈmɛɾika ˈsaːmʊa]; also Amelika Sāmoa or Sāmoa Amelika) is an unincorporated territory of the United States located in the South Pacific Ocean, southeast of the island country of Samoa.[1] Its location is centered on 14°18′S 170°42′W / 14.3°S 170.7°W / -14.3; -170.7. It is east of the International Date Line, while Samoa is west of the Line. The total land area is 199 square kilometers (76.8 sq mi), slightly more than Washington, D.C. American Samoa is the southernmost territory of the United States and one of two U.S. territories south of the Equator, along with the uninhabited Jarvis Island. Tuna products are the main exports, and the main trading partner is the rest of the United States.

American Samoa
Amerika Sāmoa
Motto: 
"Sāmoa, Muamua Le Atua" (Samoan) (English: "Samoa, Let God Be First")
Anthem: "Amerika Samoa"
Location of American Samoa
(circled in red)
Sovereign state United States[a]
Partition of SamoaDecember 2, 1899
Ratification ActFebruary 20, 1929
CapitalPago Pago[b]
Government seatFagatogo[b]
Largest villageTāfuna
Official languages
Ethnic groups
Religion
Demonym(s)American Samoan
GovernmentDevolved presidential constitutional dependency
• President
Joe Biden (D)
• Governor
Lemanu Peleti Mauga (D)
Salo Ale (D)
LegislatureFono
Senate
House of Representatives
United States Congress
Amata Coleman Radewagen (R)
Area
• Total
77 sq mi (200 km2)
Highest elevation
970 m (3,170 ft)
Population
• 2022 estimate
45,443[1] (213th)
• 2020 census
49,710[2]
• Density
670.8/sq mi (259.0/km2)
GDP (PPP)2020 estimate
• Total
$709 million[3]
• Per capita
$11,200 (2016)[1][4]
CurrencyUnited States dollar (US$) (USD)
Time zoneUTC−11:00 (SST)
Date formatmm/dd/yyyy
Driving sideright
Calling code+1-684
USPS abbreviation
AS
ISO 3166 code
Internet TLD.as

American Samoa consists of five main islands and two coral atolls. The largest and most populous island is Tutuila, with the Manuʻa Islands, Rose Atoll and Swains Island also included in the territory. All islands except for Swains Island are part of the Samoan Islands, west of the Cook Islands, north of Tonga, and some 500 kilometres (310 mi) south of Tokelau. To the west are the islands of the Wallis and Futuna group. As of 2022, the population of American Samoa is approximately 45,443 people.[1] Most American Samoans are bilingual and can speak English and Samoan fluently.[1][5]

American Samoa has been a member of the Pacific Community since 1983. American Samoa is noted for having the highest rate of military enlistment of any U.S. state or territory. As of September 9, 2014, the local U.S. Army recruiting station in Pago Pago was ranked first in production out of the 885 Army recruiting stations and centers under the United States Army Recruiting Command.[6]

American Samoa is the only permanently inhabited territory of the United States in which citizenship is not granted at birth, and people born there are considered "non-citizen nationals".

History

 
Samoa Islands

Traditional oral literature of Samoa and Manuʻa talks of a widespread Polynesian network or confederacy (or "empire") that was prehistorically ruled by the successive Tui Manuʻa dynasties. Manuan genealogies and religious oral literature also suggest that the Tui Manuʻa had long been one of the most prestigious and powerful paramounts of Samoa. Oral history suggests that the Tui Manuʻa kings governed a confederacy of far-flung islands which included Fiji, Tonga[7][8] as well as smaller western Pacific chiefdoms and Polynesian outliers such as Uvea, Futuna, Tokelau, and Tuvalu. Commerce and exchange routes between the western Polynesian societies are well documented and it is speculated that the Tui Manuʻa dynasty grew through its success in obtaining control over the oceanic trade of currency goods such as finely woven ceremonial mats, whale ivory "tabua", obsidian and basalt tools, chiefly red feathers, and seashells reserved for royalty (such as polished nautilus and the egg cowry).

18th century: First Western contact

Contact with Europeans began in the early 18th century. Dutchman Jacob Roggeveen was the first known European to sight the Samoan Islands in 1722, calling them the "Baumann Islands" after one of his captains. The next explorer to visit the islands was Louis-Antoine de Bougainville, who named them the "Îles des Navigateurs" in 1768. British explorer James Cook recorded the island names in 1773, but never visited.[9]

The 1789 visit by La Pérouse ended in an attack, on a Tutuila water collection expedition, resulting in the death of his second in command Capt. de Langle and several of his crew. La Pérouse named the island "Massacre Island", and the bay near Aasu is still called "Massacre Bay".[9]

HMS Pandora, under the command of Admiral Edward Edwards (Royal Navy officer), visited the island in 1791 during its search for the H.M.S. Bounty mutineers. Von Kotzebue visited in 1824.[9]

19th century

 
German, British and American warships in Apia Harbor, Samoa, 1899

Mission work in the Samoas had begun in late 1830 when John Williams of the London Missionary Society arrived from the Cook Islands and Tahiti.[10] By the late nineteenth century, French, British, German, and American vessels routinely stopped at Samoa, as they valued Pago Pago Harbor as a refueling station for coal-fired shipping and whaling.

The United States Exploring Expedition visited the islands in 1839.[11]

 
1896 map of the Samoa Islands

In March 1889, an Imperial German naval force entered a village in Samoa, and in doing so destroyed some American property. Three American warships then entered the Apia harbor and prepared to engage the three German warships found there. Before any shots were fired, a typhoon wrecked both the American and German ships. A compulsory armistice was then called because of the lack of any warships.[12]

20th century

Early 20th century

 
Tuimanuʻa Elisala Alalamua, the last official titleholder of Tui Manuʻa (1899–1909)

At the turn of the twentieth century, international rivalries in the latter half of the century were settled by the 1899 Tripartite Convention in which Germany and the United States partitioned the Samoan Islands into two:[13] the eastern island group became a territory of the United States (Tutuila in 1900 and officially Manuʻa in 1904)[14] and is today known as American Samoa; the western islands, by far the greater landmass, became known as German Samoa, after Britain gave up all claims to Samoa and in return accepted the termination of German rights in Tonga and certain areas in the Solomon Islands and West Africa.[15] Forerunners to the Tripartite Convention of 1899 were the Washington Conference of 1887, the Treaty of Berlin of 1889 and the Anglo-German Agreement on Samoa of 1899.

American colonization

 
Rear Admiral Benjamin Franklin Tilley, the first Governor of American Samoa (1900–1901)

The following year, the U.S. formally annexed its portion, a smaller group of eastern islands, one of which contains the noted harbor of Pago Pago.[16] After the United States Navy took possession of eastern Samoa for the United States government, the existing coaling station at Pago Pago Bay was expanded into a full naval station, known as United States Naval Station Tutuila and commanded by a commandant. The Navy secured a Deed of Cession of Tutuila in 1900 and a Deed of Cession of Manuʻa in 1904 on behalf of the U.S. government. The last sovereign of Manuʻa, the Tui Manuʻa Elisala, signed a Deed of Cession of Manuʻa following a series of U.S. naval trials, known as the "Trial of the Ipu", in Pago Pago, Taʻu, and aboard a Pacific Squadron gunboat.[17] The territory became known as the U.S. Naval Station Tutuila.

On July 17, 1911, the U.S. Naval Station Tutuila, which was composed of Tutuila, Aunuʻu and Manuʻa, was officially renamed American Samoa.[18][19] People of Manuʻa had been unhappy since they were left out of the name "Naval Station Tutuila". In May 1911, Governor William Michael Crose authored a letter to the Secretary of the Navy conveying the sentiments of Manuʻa. The department responded that the people should choose a name for their new territory. The traditional leaders chose “American Samoa”, and, on July 7, 1911, the solicitor general of the Navy authorized the governor to proclaim it as the name for the new territory.[20]: 209 

World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic

 
Commander John Martin Poyer served as the 12th Governor of American Samoa (1915–1919).[21]

In 1918, during the final stages of World War I, the Great Influenza epidemic had taken its toll, spreading rapidly from country to country. American Samoa became one of the only places in the world (the others being New Caledonia and Marajó island in Brazil) to have proactively prevented any deaths during the pandemic through the quick response from Governor John Martin Poyer after hearing news reports of the outbreak on the radio and requesting quarantine ships from the U.S. mainland. The result of Poyer's quick actions earned him the Navy Cross from the U.S. Navy. With this distinction, American Samoans regarded Poyer as their hero for what he had done to prevent the deadly disease. The neighboring New Zealand territory at the time, Western Samoa, suffered the most of all Pacific islands, with 90% of the population infected; 30% of adult men, 22% of adult women and 10% of children died.[22] Poyer offered assistance to help his New Zealand counterparts but was refused by the administrator of Western Samoa, Robert Logan, who became outraged after witnessing the number of quarantine ships surrounding American Samoa. Angered by this, Logan cut off communications with his American counterparts.

Interwar period

American Samoa Mau movement

After World War I, during the time of the Mau movement in Western Samoa (then a League of Nations mandate governed by New Zealand), there was a corresponding American Samoa Mau movement led by Samuelu Ripley, a World War I veteran who was from Leone village, Tutuila. After meetings on the United States mainland, he was prevented from disembarking from the ship that brought him home to American Samoa and was not allowed to return because the American Samoa Mau movement was suppressed by the U.S. Navy. In 1930 the U.S. Congress sent a committee to investigate the status of American Samoa, led by Americans who had a part in the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii.

Annexation of Swains Island

Swains Island, which had been included in the list of guano islands appertaining to the United States and bonded under the Guano Islands Act, was annexed in 1925 by Pub. Res. 68–75,[23] following the dissolution of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony by the United Kingdom.

World War II and aftermath

During World War II, U.S. Marines stationed in Samoa outnumbered the local population and had a huge cultural influence. Young Samoan men from age 14 and above were combat trained by U.S. military personnel. Samoans served in various capacities during World War II, including as combatants, medical personnel, code personnel, and ship repairmen.

In 1949, Organic Act 4500, a U.S. Department of Interior–sponsored attempt to incorporate American Samoa, was introduced in Congress. It was ultimately defeated, primarily through the efforts of Samoan chiefs, led by Tuiasosopo Mariota.[24] The efforts of these chiefs led to the creation of a territorial legislature, the American Samoa Fono, which meets in the village of Fagatogo. In 1950 the Department of the Interior began to administer the American Samoa.[25]

1951–1999

 
Locations of Pacific Ocean splashdowns of American spacecraft

By 1956, the U.S. Navy-appointed governor was replaced by Peter Tali Coleman, who was locally elected. Although technically considered "unorganized" since the U.S. Congress has not passed an Organic Act for the territory, American Samoa is self-governing under a constitution that became effective on July 1, 1967. The U.S. Territory of American Samoa is on the United Nations list of non-self-governing territories, a listing which is disputed by the territorial government officials, who do consider themselves to be self-governing.

American Samoa and Pago Pago International Airport had historic significance with the Apollo Program.[26] The astronaut crews of Apollo 10, 12, 13, 14, and 17 were retrieved a few hundred miles from Pago Pago and transported by helicopter to the airport prior to being flown to Honolulu on C-141 Starlifter military aircraft.[27]

While the two Samoas share language and ethnicity, their cultures have recently followed different paths, with American Samoans often emigrating to Hawaiʻi and the U.S. mainland, and adopting many U.S. customs, such as the playing of American football and baseball. Samoans have tended to emigrate instead to New Zealand, whose influence has made the sports of rugby and cricket more popular in the western Samoan islands. Travel writer Paul Theroux noted that there were marked differences between the societies in Samoa and American Samoa.

21st century

American Samoans have a high rate of service in the U.S. Armed Forces.[28] Because of economic hardship, military service has been seen as an opportunity in American Samoa and other U.S. Overseas territories.[29] As of March 23, 2009, ten American Samoans had died in Iraq, and two had died in Afghanistan.

Notable events

Pre-20th century

 
Death of Fleuriot de Langle in 1787

On December 13, 1784, French navigator Jean-François de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse landed two exploration parties on Tutuila's north shore: one from the ship La Boussole at Fagasa, and the other from L'Astrolabe at Aʻasu. One of the cooks, David, died of "scorbutic dropsy". On December 11, twelve members of Lapérouse's crew (including First Officer Paul Antoine Fleuriot de Langle) were killed by angry Samoans at Aʻasu Bay, Tutuila, thereafter known as "Massacre Bay", which Lapérouse described as "this den, more fearful from its treacherous situation and the cruelty of its inhabitants than the lair of a lion or a tiger". This incident gave Samoa a reputation for savagery that kept Europeans away until the arrival of the first Christian missionaries four decades later. On December 12, at Aʻasu Bay, Lapérouse ordered his gunners to fire one cannonball amid the attackers who had killed his men the day before and were now returning to launch another attack. He later wrote in his journal "I could have destroyed or sunk a hundred canoes, with more than 500 people in them: but I was afraid of striking the wrong victims; the call of my conscience saved their lives."[30][31]

20th century

 
English author W. Somerset Maugham stayed at Sadie Thompson Inn during his six-week visit to Pago Pago in 1916.

On December 19, 1912, English writer William Somerset Maugham arrived in Pago Pago, allegedly accompanied by a missionary and Miss Sadie Thompson. His visit inspired his short story "Rain" which later became plays and three major motion pictures. The building still stands where Maugham stayed and has been renamed the Sadie Thompson Building. Today it is a prominent restaurant and inn.[32]

On November 2, 1921, American Samoa's 13th naval governor, Commander Warren Jay Terhune, died by suicide with a pistol in the bathroom of the government mansion, overlooking the entrance to Pago Pago Harbor. His body was discovered by Government House's cook, SDI[clarification needed] First Class Felisiano Debid Ahchica, USN. His ghost is rumored to walk about the grounds at night.

 
Pago Pago Harbor today and inter-island dock area

On August 17, 1924, Margaret Mead arrived in American Samoa aboard the SS Sonoma to begin fieldwork for her doctoral dissertation in anthropology at Columbia University, where she was a student of Professor Franz Boas. Her work Coming of Age in Samoa was published in 1928, at the time becoming the most widely read book in the field of anthropology. The book has sparked years of ongoing and intense debate and controversy. Mead returned to American Samoa in 1971 for the dedication of the Jean P. Haydon Museum.

 
The Samoan Clipper

In 1938, the noted aviator Ed Musick and his crew died on the Pan American World Airways S-42 Samoan Clipper over Pago Pago, while on a survey flight to Auckland, New Zealand. Sometime after takeoff, the aircraft experienced trouble, and Musick turned it back toward Pago Pago. While the crew dumped fuel in preparation for an emergency landing, an explosion occurred that tore the aircraft apart.[33]

On November 21, 1939, American Samoa's last execution was carried out. Imoa was convicted of stabbing Sema to death and was hanged in the Customs House. The popular Samoan song "Faʻafofoga Samoa" is based on this, said to be the final words of Imoa.[34]

On January 13, 1942, at 2:26 am, a Japanese submarine surfaced off Tutuila between Southworth Point and Fagasa Bay and fired about 15 shells from its 5.5-inch deck gun at the U.S. Naval Station Tutuila over the next 10 minutes. The first shell struck the rear of Frank Shimasaki's store, ironically owned by one of Tutuila's few Japanese residents. The store was closed, as Mr. Shimasaki had been interned as an enemy alien. The next shell caused slight damage to the naval dispensary, the third landed on the lawn behind the naval quarters known as "Centipede Row," and the fourth struck the stone seawall outside the customs house. The other rounds fell harmlessly into the harbor. As one writer described it, "The fire was not returned, notwithstanding the eagerness of the Samoan Marines to test their skill against the enemy ... No American or Samoan Marines were wounded."[35] Commander Edwin B. Robinson was bicycling behind Centipede Row and was wounded in the knee by a piece of shrapnel, and "a member of the colorful native Fita Fita Guard" received minor injuries; they were the only casualties. This was the only time the Japanese attacked Tutuila during World War II, although "Japanese submarines had patrolled the waters around Samoa before the war, and continued to be active there throughout the war."[35]

On August 24, 1943, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt visited American Samoa and inspected the Fita Fita Guard and Band and the First Samoan Battalion of U.S. Marine Corps Reserve at the U.S. Naval Station American Samoa.[36]: 178 [37] The fact that First Lady reviewed the troops led to further assurance that Tutuila Island was considered safe.[38] Her presence underscored that World War II had passed by American Samoa. While the Fita Fita band played, Eleanor Roosevelt inspected the guard.[39]

On October 18, 1966, President Lyndon Baines Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson visited American Samoa. Mrs. Johnson dedicated the "Manulele Tausala" ("Lady Bird") Elementary School in Nuʻuuli, which was named after her. Johnson is the only US president to have visited American Samoa, while Mrs. Johnson was the second First Lady, preceded by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1943.[36]: 192  The territory's only hospital was renamed the LBJ Tropical Medical Center in honor of President Johnson.[40]

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, American Samoa played a pivotal role in five of the Apollo Program missions. The astronauts landed several hundred miles from Pago and were transported to the islands en route back to the mainland. President Richard Nixon gave three moon rocks to the American Samoan government, and these are on display in the Jean P. Haydon Museum, along with a flag carried to the moon on one of the missions.[41]

In November 1970, Pope Paul VI visited American Samoa in a brief but lavish greeting.[20]: 292 

On January 30, 1974, Pan Am Flight 806 from Auckland, New Zealand crashed at Pago Pago International Airport at 10:41 pm, with 91 passengers aboard. 86 people were killed, including Captain Leroy A. Petersen and the entire flight crew. Four of the five surviving passengers were seriously injured, with the other only slightly injured. The airliner was destroyed by the impact and succeeding fire. The crash was attributed to poor visibility, pilot error, or wind shear since a violent storm was raging at the time.[42] In January 2014, filmmaker Paul Crompton visited the territory to interview local residents for a documentary film about the 1974 crash.

A U.S. Navy P-3 Orion patrol plane from Patrol Squadron 50 (VP-50) had its vertical stabilizer shorn off by the Solo Ridge-Mount Alava aerial tramway cable across Pago Pago harbor on April 17, 1980, during the Flag Day celebrations, when carrying six skydivers from the U.S. Army's Hawaii-based Tropic Lightning Parachute Club. The plane crashed, demolishing a wing of the Rainmaker Hotel and killing all six crew members and one civilian. The six skydivers had already left the aircraft during a demonstration jump. A memorial monument is erected on Mt. Mauga O Aliʻi to honor their memory.

On November 1, 1988, President Ronald Reagan signed a bill which created American Samoa National Park.[43]

21st century

On July 22, 2010, Detective Lieutenant Lusila Brown was fatally shot outside the temporary High Court building in Fagatogo. It was the first time in more than 15 years that a police officer was killed in the line of duty. The last was Sa Fuimaono, who drowned after saving a teenager from rough seas.[44]

On November 8, 2010, United States Secretary of State and former First Lady Hillary Clinton made a refueling stopover at the Pago Pago International Airport. She was greeted by government dignitaries and presented with gifts and a traditional ava ceremony.[45]

Mike Pence was the third sitting U.S. vice president to visit American Samoa (after Dan Quayle and Joe Biden)[46] when he made a stopover in Pago Pago in April 2017.[47] He addressed 200 soldiers here during his refueling stop.[48] U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited town on June 3, 2017.[49]

September 2009 earthquake and tsunami

 
Tonga Trench south of the Samoa Islands and north of New Zealand

On September 28, 2009, at 17:48:11 UTC, an 8.1 magnitude earthquake struck 120 miles (190 km) off the coast of American Samoa, followed by smaller aftershocks.[50] It was the largest earthquake of 2009. The quake occurred on the outer rise of the Kermadec-Tonga Subduction Zone. This is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire, where tectonic plates in the Earth's lithosphere meet, and earthquakes and volcanic activity are common. The quake struck 11.2 miles (18.0 km) below the ocean floor and generated an onsetting tsunami that killed more than 170 people in the Samoa Islands and Tonga.[51][52] Four waves with heights from 15 feet (4.6 m) to 20 feet (6.1 m) high were reported to have reached up to one mile (1.6 km) inland on the island of Tutuila.[53]

The Defense Logistics Agency worked with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide 16' × 16' humanitarian tents to the devastated areas of American Samoa.

Government and politics

Government

American Samoa is classified in U.S. law as an unincorporated territory; the Ratification Act of 1929 vested all civil, judicial, and military powers in the President of the United States.[16] In 1951, with Executive Order 10264, President Harry Truman delegated that authority to the Secretary of the Interior. On June 21, 1963 Paramount Chief Tuli Leʻiato of Fagaʻitua was sworn in and installed as the first Secretary of Samoan Affairs by Governor H. Rex Lee.[54] On June 2, 1967, Interior Secretary Stewart Udall promulgated the Revised Constitution of American Samoa, which took effect on July 1, 1967.[55]

 
Lemanu Peleti Mauga, the 58th and incumbent Governor of American Samoa (2021–present)

The Governor of American Samoa is the head of government and along with the Lieutenant Governor of American Samoa is elected on the same ticket by popular vote for a four-year term.[56] The governor's office is located in Utulei.[57][58] Since American Samoa is a U.S. territory, the President of the United States serves as the head of state but does not play a direct role in government. The Secretary of the Interior oversees the government, retaining the power to approve constitutional amendments, overrides the governor's vetoes, and nomination of justices.[55]

The legislative power is vested in the American Samoa Fono, which has two chambers. The House of Representatives has 21 members serving two-year terms, being 20 representatives popularly elected from various districts and one non-voting delegate from Swains Island elected in a public meeting. The Senate has 18 members, elected for four-year terms by and from the chiefs of the islands.[55] The Fono is located in Fagatogo.[59][58]

The judiciary of American Samoa is composed of the High Court of American Samoa, a District Court, and village courts.[60] The High Court and District Court are located in Fagatogo, near the Fono.[61][62][59] The High Court is led by a Chief Justice and an Associate Justice, appointed by the Secretary of the Interior.[63] Other judges are appointed by the governor upon the recommendation of the Chief Justice and confirmed by the Senate.[64][65]

Politics

American Samoa is an unincorporated and unorganized territory of the United States, administered by the Office of Insular Affairs, U.S. Department of the Interior. American Samoa's constitution was ratified in 1966 and came into effect in 1967.

However, despite being de jure unorganized, American Samoa is de facto organized, with its politics taking place in the framework of a presidential representative democratic dependency, whereby the Governor is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system.

Executive power is exercised by the governor. Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of the legislature. The American political parties (Republican and Democratic) exist in American Samoa, but few politicians are aligned with the parties. The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature.

There is also the traditional village politics of the Samoa Islands, the "faʻamatai" and the "faʻa Sāmoa", which continues in American Samoa and independent Samoa, and which interacts across these current boundaries. The faʻa Sāmoa is the language and customs, and the faʻamatai are the protocols of the "fono" (council) and the chief system. The faʻamatai and the fono take place at all levels of the Samoan body politic, from the family to the village, to the region, to national matters.

The ʻaiga is the family unit of Samoan society, which differs from the Western sense of a family[66] in that it consists of an "extended family" based on the culture's communal socio-political organization. The head of the ʻaiga is the matai. The matai (chiefs) are elected by consensus within the fono of the extended family and village(s) concerned. The matai and the fono, which are themselves made of matai, decide on the distribution of family exchanges and tenancy of communal lands. The majority of lands in American Samoa and independent Samoa are communal. A matai can represent a small family group or a great extended family that reaches across islands and to both American Samoa and independent Samoa.

In 2010, voters rejected a package of amendments to the territorial constitution, which would have, among other things, allowed U.S. citizens to be legislators only if they had Samoan ancestry.

In 2012, both the Governor and American Samoa's delegate to the U.S. Congress Eni Faleomavaega called for the populace to consider a move towards autonomy if not independence, with a mixed response.[67][68]

Nationality

According to the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), the people born in American Samoa—including those born on Swains Island—are "nationals but not citizens of the United States at birth".[69][70][71] If a child is born on any of these islands to any U.S. citizen, then that child is considered a national and a citizen of the United States at birth.[72] All U.S. nationals have statutory rights to reside in all parts of the United States, and may apply for citizenship by naturalization after three months of residency by paying a fee, passing a test in English and civics, and taking an oath of allegiance to the United States.[73] All U.S. nationals also have the right to work in the United States, except in certain government jobs that specifically require U.S. citizenship.

In 2012, a group of American Samoans sued the federal government seeking recognition of birthright citizenship for American Samoans in the case Tuaua v. United States. In an amicus curiae brief filed in federal court, American Samoan Congressman Faleomavaega supported the legal interpretation that the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not extend birthright citizenship to United States nationals born in unincorporated territories.[74][75] In June 2015, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia affirmed that Fourteenth Amendment citizenship guarantees did not apply to persons born in unincorporated territories and a year later the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the lower court's decision.[76]

In December 2019, U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups struck down 8 U.S.C. § 1408(1) as facially unconstitutional, holding that "Persons born in American Samoa are citizens of the United States by the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment",[77] but the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reversed the district court's judgment and found the statute constitutional.[78] On July 20, 2021, the Legislature of American Samoa unanimously passed a resolution in support of the 10th Circuit Court's decision to reverse.[79]

Voting rights

As U.S. nationals, American Samoans can vote in local elections in the territory; however, if they live in other parts of the United States, they are not allowed to vote in federal, state or the vast majority of local elections unless they become U.S. citizens. The only federal office American Samoans elect directly is a non-voting delegate to the United States House of Representatives.[80] Since the delegate's office was created in 1978, three people have held the seat: Democrat Fofō Iosefa Fiti Sunia (1981–1988); Democrat Eni Faleomavaega (1989–2015); and Republican Aumua Amata Radewagen (2015–)[81] American Samoans also participate in partisan presidential primaries, as well as send delegates to the Democratic and Republican National Conventions.[82]

Immigration

Unique among U.S. territories, American Samoa has its own immigration law, separate from the laws that apply in other parts of the United States. U.S. nationals may freely reside in American Samoa.[c] The American Samoan government, via its Immigration Office, controls the migration of foreign nationals to the islands.[85] Special application forms exist for migration to American Samoa based on family or employment sponsorship.[86]

Unlike all other permanently inhabited U.S. jurisdictions (states, District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam and Northern Mariana Islands), American Samoa is not considered a U.S. state for the purposes of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act.[87] As a result, there is no path for immigrants to American Samoa to apply for U.S. citizenship, or U.S. nationality at all, without permanent residence in another U.S. jurisdiction.[88][89] In addition, foreign nationals who do have lawful permanent residence in the United States may be considered to have abandoned it if they have moved to live in American Samoa, and time spent there does not count in the required period of U.S. presence for naturalization.[90]

U.S. nationals without U.S. citizenship (the status of most American Samoans) have the right to reside in all parts of the United States without immigration restrictions. They also have the same rights as lawful permanent residents to sponsor foreign family members to immigrate to the United States (they may sponsor spouses and unmarried children), but not the same rights as U.S. citizens (who may also sponsor parents, married children, and siblings).[91]

Land ownership

Under American Samoan law, land ownership is subject to racial restrictions.[92] Since 1900, there have been three main categories of land ownership: native, individual, and freehold. Native land, which makes up over 90% of all land in the territory, is land under the communal ownership of an ʻaiga, as opposed to the private ownership of an individual. Freehold land, which makes up only about 2% of the total, is land which was granted to foreigners before the U.S. took possession of the territory in 1900 and whose owners have not chosen to revert to native or individual land status.[93] [94]

The American Samoa Code (Annotated) prohibits the transfer of ownership (whether by sale or otherwise) of any land other than freehold land to any person who has less than one-half native Samoan blood, which in this context includes both American and Western Samoa.[95] In addition, it is prohibited to transfer ownership of any native (communal) land to any person who is not a full-blooded native Samoan: this includes any person who has any non-native blood whatsoever, even if they are more than one-half native Samoan.[96] [97]

In Craddick v. Territorial Registrar, 1 Am. Samoa 2d. 10, 14 (1980), the Appellate Division of the High Court of American Samoa held that while these laws created a classification based on race, they did not violate the guarantees of equal protection and due process contained in the U.S. Constitution and the Revised American Samoan Constitution. Given the cruciality of land ownership and the communal ownership structure to American Samoan culture, and the American Samoan government's vital and demonstrated interest in preserving Samoan land and culture, the Court found that the laws in question pursued a proper purpose rather than a discriminatory one, and, being necessary to achieve that purpose, were sufficiently justified and thus constitutional.[98]

Official protest to naming of neighboring Samoa

The U.S. Embassy in Samoa notes that: "In July 1997 the Constitution was amended to change the country's name from Western Samoa to Samoa. Samoa had been known simply as Samoa in the United Nations since joining the organization in 1976. The neighboring U.S. territory of American Samoa protested the move, feeling that the change diminished its own Samoan identity. American Samoans still use the terms Western Samoa and Western Samoans."[99]

Administrative divisions

American Samoa is administratively divided into three districts – Western, Eastern and Manuʻa – and two "unorganized" atolls, Swains Island and the uninhabited Rose Atoll. The districts are subdivided into counties and villages. Pago Pago, often cited as the capital of American Samoa,[b] is one of the largest villages and is located on the central part of Tutuila island in Maʻoputasi County.

Geography

 
Map of American Samoa

American Samoa, located within the geographical region of Oceania, is one of only two possessions of the United States in the Southern Hemisphere, the other being Jarvis Island. Its total land area is 76.1 square miles (197.1 km2)—slightly larger than Washington, D.C.—consisting of five rugged, volcanic islands and two coral atolls.[106]

 
Cockscomb Point on Pola Island is seen jutting into the ocean.

The five volcanic islands are Tutuila, Aunuʻu, Ofu, Olosega, and Taʻū. The coral atolls are Swains and Rose Atoll. Of the seven islands, Rose Atoll is the only uninhabited one; it is a Marine National Monument. American Samoa is the southernmost reach of the United States at fourteen degrees below the equator.[107]

 
A view of American Samoa's Ofu Beach on Ofu Island in the Manuʻa Islands

Due to its positioning in the South Pacific Ocean, it is frequently hit by tropical cyclones between November and April. Rose Atoll is the easternmost point of the territory. American Samoa's Rose Atoll is the southernmost point of the United States.[108] American Samoa is home to the National Park of American Samoa.

The highest mountains are: Lata Mountain (Taʻū), 3,170 ft (970 m); Matafao Peak, 2,141 ft (653 m); Piumafua (Olosega), 2,095 ft (639 m); and Tumutumu (Ofu), 1,621 ft (494 m). Mount Pioa, nicknamed the Rainmaker, is 1,718 ft (524 m).[20]: 3  American Samoa is also home to some of the world's highest sea cliffs at 3,000 ft (910 m).[109]

 
Coastline of American Samoa (in Vatia)

The Vailuluʻu seamount, an active submerged volcano, lies 28 miles (45 km) east of Taʻū in American Samoa. It was discovered in 1975 and has since been studied by an international team of scientists, contributing towards understanding of the Earth's fundamental processes.[110] Growing inside the summit crater of Vailuluʻu is an active underwater volcanic cone, named after Samoa's goddess of war, Nafanua.

American Samoa lies within two terrestrial ecoregions: Samoan tropical moist forests and Western Polynesian tropical moist forests.[111]

Climate

American Samoa has a tropical climate all year round with two distinct seasons, the wet and dry season. The wet season is usually between December and March and the dry season is from April through to September with the average daily temperature around 81–83 °F (27–28 °C) all year round.

The climate is warm, tropical, and humid, averaging around 80 °F or 26.7 °C, with a variation of about 15 °F or 8 °C during the year. The southern hemisphere winter, from June to September, is the coolest time of the year. The summer months of December to March bring hotter temperatures, while the months from April to November are considered the “dry” season. Throughout the year, however, rain follows clouds blown in by the trade winds that rise from the east almost daily. The mountains of the Pago Pago area, standing protectively over Pago Pago Harbor, catch these clouds, bringing an average of 200 inches or 5,100 millimeters of rainfall per year.[20]: 4 

Climate data for Pago Pago International Airport, Pago Pago (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1957–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 95
(35)
99
(37)
95
(35)
95
(35)
93
(34)
95
(35)
91
(33)
92
(33)
92
(33)
94
(34)
95
(35)
94
(34)
99
(37)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 91.0
(32.8)
91.3
(32.9)
91.3
(32.9)
90.7
(32.6)
89.6
(32.0)
88.0
(31.1)
87.7
(30.9)
88.0
(31.1)
88.9
(31.6)
89.6
(32.0)
90.4
(32.4)
90.7
(32.6)
92.4
(33.6)
Average high °F (°C) 87.8
(31.0)
88.1
(31.2)
88.4
(31.3)
87.8
(31.0)
86.5
(30.3)
85.3
(29.6)
84.6
(29.2)
84.8
(29.3)
85.7
(29.8)
86.4
(30.2)
87.0
(30.6)
87.6
(30.9)
86.7
(30.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 83.0
(28.3)
83.2
(28.4)
83.3
(28.5)
83.0
(28.3)
82.2
(27.9)
81.5
(27.5)
80.9
(27.2)
80.9
(27.2)
81.6
(27.6)
82.1
(27.8)
82.5
(28.1)
82.9
(28.3)
82.3
(27.9)
Average low °F (°C) 78.2
(25.7)
78.3
(25.7)
78.2
(25.7)
78.1
(25.6)
77.9
(25.5)
77.8
(25.4)
77.2
(25.1)
77.0
(25.0)
77.5
(25.3)
77.7
(25.4)
78.0
(25.6)
78.2
(25.7)
77.8
(25.4)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 75.1
(23.9)
75.2
(24.0)
75.0
(23.9)
74.7
(23.7)
73.6
(23.1)
73.4
(23.0)
72.4
(22.4)
72.6
(22.6)
73.3
(22.9)
73.7
(23.2)
73.9
(23.3)
74.7
(23.7)
70.7
(21.5)
Record low °F (°C) 67
(19)
65
(18)
63
(17)
68
(20)
65
(18)
61
(16)
62
(17)
60
(16)
62
(17)
59
(15)
60
(16)
65
(18)
59
(15)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 15.25
(387)
13.70
(348)
10.95
(278)
11.27
(286)
11.73
(298)
6.37
(162)
7.51
(191)
6.93
(176)
7.99
(203)
10.24
(260)
12.05
(306)
14.35
(364)
128.34
(3,260)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 24.3 22.0 23.8 22.2 20.8 18.8 20.0 19.0 18.4 21.1 21.3 23.8 255.5
Average relative humidity (%) 82.8 83.3 83.2 84.0 83.6 82.0 80.4 79.8 80.2 81.5 82.3 82.1 82.1
Mean monthly sunshine hours 165.3 150.3 179.2 132.2 123.3 113.7 148.0 168.0 196.0 159.6 156.7 156.8 1,849.1
Percent possible sunshine 41 43 48 37 35 34 42 47 54 41 41 39 42
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and sun 1961–1990)[112][113][114]

Climate change

 
Locations of the Samoan Islands, including American Samoa
Climate change in American Samoa encompasses the effects of climate change, attributed to man-made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, in the U.S. territory of American Samoa. The American Samoa Environmental Protection Agency (ASEPA) notes that the territory "has a fragile ecosystem" which is "directly and immediately impacted by global climate change".[115]

Economy

 
A proportional representation of American Samoa exports, 2019
 
Tuna boats in the port of Pago Pago

The economic health of American Samoa reflects the trends in other populated U.S. territories, which are in turn dependent on federal appropriations. Federal dollars enter the economy through congressional appropriations, categorical grants, Social Security payments, and payments to Samoans retired from the military. Tuna canning is the backbone of the American Samoa economy. Cannery employment and local auxiliary businesses provide additional revenues for the territorial government. In the mid-1960s, efforts began to develop a tourism industry in American Samoa. These efforts have been delayed due to issues such as inconsistent airline services, insufficient high-quality accommodations, and the lack of well-trained workers in the hospitality and tourism industries. Agriculture and fishing still provide sustenance for local families.[20]: 8–9 

Employment on the island falls into three relatively equal-sized categories of approximately 5,000 workers each: the public sector, the single remaining tuna cannery, and the rest of the private sector.

There are only a few federal employees in American Samoa and a few active duty military personnel, except members of the U.S. Coast Guard, military recruiters, and some Full-Time Support staff at the Pele Army Reserve unit that maintains the facility and provides cadre, training, and logistics support. The Pele US Army Reserve Center is in Tafuna,[116] and a U.S. Army and United States Marine Corps recruiting station is in Nuʻuuli.

There are six Army Reserve units at Pele:[117]

  • Bravo Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry
  • Charlie Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry
  • 411th Forward Support Company (Engineer)
  • USAR Theater Support Group Detachment American Samoa
  • 1st Evacuation/Mortuary Platoon, 2nd Platoon, 962nd Quartermaster Company
  • 127th Chaplain Detachment
 
Mascot "Charlie the Tuna" at the StarKist cannery in Atuʻu

The overwhelming majority of public sector employees work for the American Samoa territorial government. One tuna cannery is StarKist, which exports several hundred million dollars worth of canned tuna to the United States each year. In early 2007, the Samoan economy was highlighted in the Congress at the request of Eni Faleomavaega, the Samoan delegate to the United States House of Representatives, as it was not mentioned in the minimum wage bill. It was given no exemption from the coming increases, which he protested as unfair to the Samoan economy. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi initially granted his request for an exemption, but backed down after being accused of serving special interests, since tuna packing company Chicken of the Sea was based in her district. Samoa Packing, a Chicken of the Sea subsidiary closed in 2009, citing both minimum wage increases and increasing foreign competition, with the latter as the "main reason". Minimum wage in Samoa has been the topic of much debate, with the Samoan government and Chamber of Commerce strongly opposed, while businesses and workers hold nuanced views.[118][119]

From 2002 to 2007, real GDP of American Samoa increased at an average annual rate of 0.4 percent. The annual growth rates of real GDP ranged from −2.9 percent to +2.1 percent. The volatility in the growth rates of real GDP was primarily accounted for by changes in the exports of canned tuna. The tuna canning industry was the largest private employer in American Samoa during this period. In 2017, GDP in American Samoa decreased by 5.8%, but in 2018 it increased by 2.2%.[120]

Summary statistics for American Samoa
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2002–2007 AAGRA
GDPB 536 527 553 550 548 532 −0.1%
Real GDPC 527 535 539 550 534 537 0.4%
PopulationD 60,800 62,600 64,100 65,500 66,900 68,200 2.3%
Real GDP per capita 8,668 8,546 8,409 8,397 7,982 7,874 −1.9%
  • A Average annual growth rate.
  • B In millions of dollars.
  • C In millions of 2005 chained dollars.
  • D Source: 2008 American Samoa Statistical Yearbook.

From 2002 to 2007, the population of American Samoa increased at an average annual rate of 2.3 percent, and real GDP per capita decreased at an average annual rate of 1.9 percent.

Agricultural production serves as a cover for domestic needs and only a small share of fruits and vegetables are exported. According to figures as of 2013, the ratio between import and export is almost balanced. Many residents rely on transfer payments from relatives living on the mainland or from federal subsidies.[121]

 
Tisa's Barefoot Bar & Grill

The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 has contained special provisions for American Samoa since its inception, citing its limited economy.[122] American Samoan wages are based on the recommendations of a Special Industry Committee meeting bi-annually.[123] Originally, the act contained provisions for other territories, provisions which were phased out as those territories developed more diverse economies.[124]

In 2007, the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2007 was passed, increasing the minimum wage in American Samoa by 50¢ per hour in 2007 and another 50¢ per hour each year thereafter until the minimum wage in American Samoa equals the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour in the United States.[125] In response to the minimum wage increase, the Chicken of the Sea tuna canning plant was shut down in 2009, and 2,041 employees were laid off in the process.[126] The other major tuna canning plant in American Samoa is StarKist, which began laying off workers in August 2010, with plans to lay off a total of 800 workers due to the minimum wage increases and other rising operation costs.[127] American Samoa Governor Togiola Tulafono suggested that, rather than laying off minimum wage workers, the companies could reduce salaries and bonuses of top-tier employees.[128]

The unemployment rate was 29.8% in 2005, but improved to 23.8% as of 2010. In 2020, American Samoa's GDP was $709 million.[3] Its GDP per capita (PPP) was $11,200 as of 2016.[1]

Some aspects of telecommunications in American Samoa are, like other U.S. territories, inferior to that of the mainland United States; a recent estimate showed that American Samoa's Internet speed is slower than that of several Eastern European countries.[129]

Taxation

As in other U.S. territories, the U.S. federal government imposes payroll taxes[130][131] and the equivalent self-employment tax[132] on income from work in American Samoa, but not the federal income tax on income generated in American Samoa by its residents (except from work as U.S. government employees).[133] Instead, the government of American Samoa itself taxes the worldwide income of its residents, as well as the income generated there by nonresidents, largely under the same rules and rates as the U.S. tax code in effect in 2000,[134] with certain modifications such as a minimum tax rate of 4%.[135][136] A similar situation applies to corporations.[137] In 1983, the use of citizenship in taxation by American Samoa (due to its incorporation of the U.S. tax code) was ruled unconstitutional.[138]

The U.S. federal government does not impose estate or gift taxes on property not located in the United States (states and District of Columbia) owned by residents of a U.S. territory (including American Samoa) who are not U.S. citizens or who acquired U.S. citizenship by birth or naturalization in that same U.S. territory.[139] However, these taxes still apply to residents of a U.S. territory who acquired U.S. citizenship by birth or naturalization in a different part of the U.S. or by descent.[140] It has been argued that this distinction based on place of birth, and not only residence or citizenship, is a rare case of unconstitutional tax discrimination, but it has never been challenged in court.[141] The government of American Samoa itself does not impose estate or gift taxes.[142]

Unlike U.S. citizens, U.S. nationals without U.S. citizenship (the status of most American Samoans) who do not reside in the United States or any U.S. territory enjoy the unique combination of maintaining a U.S. passport and the right of return to the U.S. while not being subject to U.S. federal income tax on their non-U.S. income,[143] or to U.S. federal estate or gift taxes on their non-U.S. property.[144][145] U.S. citizens (or anyone) cannot acquire this status after birth.[146][147]

American Samoa does not impose a sales tax, but it imposes a general import tax of 8%.[148][149] American Samoa is an independent customs territory, whose importation rules and taxes differ from those applicable to other parts of the United States.[150][151]

Telecommunications

In 2012 Michael Calabrese, Daniel Calarco, and Colin Richardson stated that American Samoa had the most expensive internet of any U.S. territory and that the speeds were only slightly superior to those of dial-up internet in the U.S. Mainland in the 1990s. They also stated that many American Samoans are too poor to afford "high-speed internet".[152]

Transportation

 
The current territorial license plate design, introduced in 2011
 
American Samoa Route Marker – Main Road

American Samoa has 150 miles (240 km) of highways (estimated in 2008).[1] The maximum speed limit is 30 miles per hour.[153] Ports and harbors include Aunuʻu, Auasi, Faleasao, Ofu and Pago Pago.[1] American Samoa has no railways.[1] The territory has three airports, all of which have paved runways. The main airport is Pago Pago International Airport,[1] on the island of Tutuila. The Manuʻa group has two airports: Ofu Airport on the island of Ofu, and Fitiuta Airport on the island of Taʻū. According to a 1999 estimate, the territory has no merchant marine.[1]

On June 8, 1922, the first bus service on Tutuila began its operations.[154] There is currently a bus system in American Samoa called the ʻaiga bus system—it consists of buses that travel across the island of Tutuila.[155][156]

Demographics

As of 2022, the population of American Samoa is estimated around 45,443 people.[1] The 2020 census counted 49,710 people, 97.5% of whom lived on the largest island, Tutuila.[2][157] About 57.6% of the population were born in American Samoa, 28.6% in independent Samoa, 6.1% in other parts of the United States, 4.5% in Asia, 2.9% in other parts of Oceania, and 0.2% elsewhere. At least 69% of the population had a parent born outside American Samoa.[5]

American Samoa is small enough to have just one ZIP code, 96799, and uses the U.S. Postal Service (state code "AS") for mail delivery.[158][159]

Ethnicity and language

In the 2020 census, 89.4% of the population reported at least partial Samoan ethnicity, 83.2% only Samoan, 5.8% Asian, 5.5% other Pacific island ethnicities, 4.4% mixed, and 1.1% other ethnicities.[160] The Samoan language was spoken at home by 87.9% of the population, while 6.1% spoke other Pacific island languages, 3.3% spoke English, 2.1% spoke an Asian language, and 0.5% spoke other languages; 47.2% of the population spoke English at home or "very well".[5] In 2022, Samoan and English were designated as official languages of the territory.[161] At least some of the deaf population use Samoan Sign Language.

Religion

 
Zion Church in Leone

Major Christian denominations on the island include the Congregational Christian Church in American Samoa, the Catholic Church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the Methodist Church of Samoa. Collectively, these churches account for the vast majority of the population.

J. Gordon Melton in his book claims that the Methodists, Congregationalists with the London Missionary Society, and Roman Catholics led the first Christian missions to the islands. Other denominations arrived later, beginning in 1895 with the Seventh-day Adventists, various Pentecostals (including the Assemblies of God), Church of the Nazarene, Jehovah's Witnesses and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

 
One of many churches in Samoa

CIA Factbook 2010 estimate shows the religious affiliations of American Samoa as 98.3% Christian, other 1%, unaffiliated 0.7%.[1] World Christian Database 2010 estimate shows the religious affiliations of American Samoa as 98.3% Christian, 0.7% agnostic, 0.4% Chinese Universalist, 0.3% Buddhist and 0.3% followers of the Baháʼí Faith.[162]

According to Pew Research Center, 98.3% of the total population is Christian. Among Christians, 59.5% are Protestant, 19.7% are Roman Catholic and 19.2% are other Christians. A major Protestant church on the island, gathering a substantial part of the local Protestant population, is the Congregational Christian Church in American Samoa, a Reformed denomination in the Congregationalist tradition. As of August 2017, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints website claims a membership of 16,180 (one-quarter of American Samoa's entire population), with 41 congregations and four family history centers.[163] Jehovah's Witnesses claim 210 "ministers of the word" and three congregations.[164]

Education

The island contains 23 primary schools. Of the ten secondary schools, five are operated by the American Samoa Department of Education;[165] the other five are either administered by religious denominations or are privately owned. American Samoa Community College, founded in 1970, provides post-secondary education on the islands.

American Samoa was home to one high school as of 1961, which existed due to the matai's pressure on the naval governor to transform the old Marine barracks at Utulei into a school. The teenagers of well-off and more politically connected families attended the school, which would later be known as Samoana High School. With a median age of 15, the demand for more high schools was increasing, and three new high schools were established by 1968. Another two soon followed, and by 1979, 2,800 high school students were attending six public and private high schools in American Samoa. Looking for a cost-effective way for educational reformation, Governor H. Rex Lee introduced the public television system in 1964.[39]

Culture

The Samoan culture has developed over 3,500 years and largely withstood interaction with European cultures. It was adapted well to the teachings of Christianity. The Samoan language is still in use in daily exchange; however, English is widely used and also the legal official language. Besides Samoan language classes and cultural courses, all instructions in public schools are in English. The basic unit of the American Samoa culture is the ʻaiga (family). It consists of both immediate and extended family.

The matai, or chief, is the head of the ʻaiga. The chief is the custodian of all ʻaiga properties. A village (nuʻu) is made up of several or many ʻaiga with a common or shared interest. Each ʻaiga is represented by their chief in the village councils.[20]: 5–6 

Music

 
Samoan Talipalau log drums at Piula Theological College, distant ancestor of the Fijian Lali drums

Music of Samoa is a complex mix of cultures and traditions, with pre- and post-European contact histories. Since American colonization, popular traditions such as rap and hip hop have been integrated into Samoan music.

Traditional Samoan musical instruments includes several different distinctive instruments, including a fala, which is a rolled-up mat beaten with sticks and several types of slit drum.

Sports

 
American Samoa at the South Pacific Games

The main sports played in American Samoa are football, Samoan cricket, canoeing, yachting, basketball, golf, netball, tennis, rugby, table tennis, boxing, bowling, volleyball, and fishing tournaments. Some current and former sports clubs are the American Samoa Tennis Association, Rugby Unions, Lavalava Golf Club, and Gamefish Association. Leagues improved and organized better after the completion of the Veterans Memorial Stadium.[20]: 338 

The 1997 South Pacific Mini Games were the biggest international event ever to take place in American Samoa. The bid to host the games for the 23 participating countries was approved in May 1993. In January 1994, Governor A. P. Lutali appointed Fuga Teleso to head the task force charged with game preparations, including the construction of a stadium. Groundbreaking was in January 1994. The Governor later handed the task force on preparations to Lieutenant Governor Togiola. The task force merged with the American Samoa National Olympics Committee to better coordinate and facilitate preparations. V.P. Willis Construction built the 1,500-seat stands. The Department of Public Safety trained its force for special games security. The opening ceremony became extravagant where the U.S. Army Reserve carried the torch from Tula and Leone.[20]: 357–358 

About 2,000 athletes, coaches, and sponsors attended from 19 countries and competed in 11 sports at the game. American Samoa fielded a team of 248 athletes. The team won 48 medals, 22 of which were gold medals, and American Samoa came in fourth overall in the ratings. American Samoa Rotary Club honored Fuga Tolani Teleso with the community's top award, the Paul Harris Fellowship Award, for his work on constructing the Veterans Memorial Stadium.[20]: 359 

In 1982, yachters competed in the Hobie World Championship held in Tahiti. American Samoa beat the Apia team by half a point and won the Samoa Cup. In 1983, a team coached by Dr. Adele Satele-Galeai brought home the winning trophy from the Regional women's volleyball tournament in Hawaii. Also in 1983, the South Pacific Games were held in Apia. American Samoa received 13 medals: four gold, four silver, and five bronze. That same year, three junior golfers made the cut out of 1,000 players to attend the World Junior Golf Tournament in San Diego, California.[20]: 338 

In 1987, American Samoa became the 167th member of the International Olympic Committee. The first South Pacific Junior Tennis Tournament was held at the Tafuna courts in January 1990.[20]: 339 

Tony Solaita was the first American Samoan to play in Major League Baseball.[20]: 339  There are thirty players from American Samoa in the National Football League (NFL) as of 2015 and over 200 play Div. I NCAA Football.[166] Some American Samoan NFL football players are Shalom Luani, Junior Siavii, Jonathan Fanene, Mosi Tatupu, Shaun Nua, Isaac Sopoaga, and Daniel Te'o-Nesheim.

After World War II, a Welfare and Recreation Department was created. This department arranged bowling, softball, badminton tournaments, basketball, and volleyball at various Tutuila locations. Boxing matches and dancing also became popular activities.[167]

American football

 
High school football game

About 30 ethnic Samoans, all from American Samoa, currently play in the National Football League, and more than 200 play NCAA Division I college football.[168] In recent years, it has been estimated that a Samoan male (either an American Samoan, or a Samoan living in the mainland United States) is anywhere from 40[169] to 56 times[168] more likely to play in the NFL than a non-Samoan American, giving American Samoa the nickname "Football Islands".[170] Samoans are the most disproportionately overrepresented ethnic group in the National Football League.[171][172]

Six-time All-Pro Junior Seau was one of the most famous Americans of Samoan heritage ever to play in the NFL, having been elected to the NFL 1990s All-Decade Team and Pro Football Hall of Fame. Pittsburgh Steelers safety Troy Polamalu, though born and raised in the mainland United States, is another famous American of Samoan heritage to have played in the NFL, not having his hair cut since 2000 (and only because a USC coach told him he had to) and wearing it down during games in honor of his heritage. The football culture was featured on 60 Minutes on January 17, 2010.

At the 2016 Republican National Convention, American Samoa's delegation said American Samoa is "the greatest exporter of NFL players".[173][174]

Football

The American Samoa national football team is one of the newest teams in the world and is also noted for being the world's weakest. They lost to Australia 31–0 in a FIFA World Cup qualifying match on April 11, 2001, but on November 22, 2011, they finally won their first ever game, beating Tonga 2–1 in a FIFA World Cup qualifier.[175] The appearance of American Samoa's Jaiyah Saelua in the contest "apparently became the first transgender player to compete on a World Cup stage".[176]

The American Samoan national team features in the highly rated 2014 British film Next Goal Wins. The film documents the team's 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifying campaign, in which they achieved their first-ever international win. Saelua and Nicky Salapu, the man famous for being the goalkeeper during the team's 31–0 loss to Australia in 2001, feature prominently in the film.[177][178] A feature film adaptation of the documentary was planned, to be directed by Taika Waititi.[179]

Rugby league

The American Samoa national rugby league team represents the country in international rugby league. The team competed in the 1988, 1992, 1998 and 2004 Pacific Cup competitions. The team has also competed in the 2003 and 2004 World Sevens qualifiers in the 2005 World Sevens. America Samoa's first match in the international Rugby League was in the 1988 Pacific Cup against Tonga, Tonga won the match 38–14 which is still the biggest loss by an American Samoan side. American Samoa's biggest win was in 2004 against New Caledonia with a final score of 62–6.

American Samoa gets broadcasts of the National Rugby League in Australia on free-to-air television.[180]

There is also a new movement that aims to set up a four-team domestic competition in American Samoa.[180]

Rugby union

Rugby union is a growing sport in American Samoa. The first rugby game recorded in American Samoa was in 1924, since then the development of the game had been heavily overshadowed by the influence of American Football during the 1970s. The highest governing body of rugby in American Samoa is the American Samoa Rugby Union which was founded in 1990 and was not affiliated with the IRB until 2012. Internationally, two American Samoans have played for the New Zealand national rugby union team, known as the All Blacks. Frank Solomon (born in Pago Pago) became the first American national of Samoan descent to play for a New Zealand team. Considered a pacific pioneer in New Zealand rugby,[181] Solomon scored a try against Australia in the inaugural Bledisloe Cup match in 1932, which New Zealand won 21–13.

The second American Samoan to play for the All Blacks is Jerome Kaino (born in Fagaʻalu). A native of Leone, Kaino moved to New Zealand when he was four. In 2004, at age 21, he played his first match for New Zealand against the Barbarians where he scored his first try, contributing to New Zealand's 47–19 victory that resulted in him becoming a man of the match.[182] He also played a crucial role in the Rugby World Cup 2011 playing every match in the tournament. He scored four tries in the event which led to New Zealand winning the final against France 8–7. Kaino was also a key member of the 2015 Rugby World Cup squad, where he played every match including a try he scored in the quarterfinals against France which New Zealand won 62–13. He scored again in the semifinals against South Africa, which New Zealand won 20–18. He played in the World Cup final against Australia where New Zealand won again 34–17 to become world champions for a record three times (1987, 2011, and 2015). Kaino is one of twenty New Zealand rugby players to have won the Rugby World Cup twice, back to back in 2011 and 2015. In August 2015, the American Samoa Rugby Union Board selected Leota Toma Patu from the village of Leone as the coach for the Talavalu 15 men's team that represented American Samoa at the Ocean Cup 2015 in Papua New Guinea.

Other sports

Recreation

 
Aunuʻu Island

A team from the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation conducted a parks survey on American Samoa in the 1960s. Their team recommended sites at Cape Taputapu, Leʻala at Vailoatai, Aʻoloau Fou (the plateau), Matautuloa Point, Nuʻuuli, Matafao Peak, Pago Pago, Vaiʻava Strait, Anasosopo, ʻAoa, Cape Matautuloa, and Aunuʻu Island. After an initial objection, Secretary Leʻiato gave his support and was appointed Chairman of the Territorial Parks and Recreation Committee. The first field meeting for a parkland acquisition was held between Judge Morrow on behalf of the government and the village council of Vatia to make the Pola Island area a public park. The dredge Palolo was hired from Upolu in January 1966 in order to dredge sand for Utulei Beach. A specialist in beach developments, Ala Varone of the Army, directed the project. The centerpiece of the park was to be at the head of Pago Pago Harbor, where it proposed a 13-acre site created by the dredge. The park would have facilities for sports and recreation as well as facilities for boats and the growing number of Asian immigrants arriving from Korea, Japan, and China.[20]: 285 

The Department of Parks and Recreation was created by law in 1980 and the Parks Commission was also established.[20]: 315  In 1981, Governor Peter Tali Coleman appointed Fuga Tolani Teleso as Director of Parks and Recreation. On May 25, 1984, a groundbreaking ceremony was held at the Onesosopo reclamation to initiate work on the first park in the Eastern District.[20]: 332 

At the urging of Dr. Paul Cox, High Chief Nafanua of Falealupo, and the Bat Preservers Association, Congressman Fofō Iosefa Fiti Sunia introduced a bill in 1984 which would enter American Samoa into the Federal Fish and Wildlife Restoration Act. The purpose of the bill was to protect the ancient paleotropical rainforests and the Flying fox megabat. The signing marked the beginning of American Samoa's entry into the U.S. National Park System. In July 1987, the National Park Service began establishing a federal park, the National Park of American Samoa. An initial appropriation of $400,000 was made in 1989. It contains one of the world's most remarkable rainforest and coastal reef ecologies and spreads across three islands. One of the most popular sites on Tutuila Island include Pola Rock, a rise of sheer rock formations that protrudes over 400 feet (120 m) above the ocean's surface. It is located off the shores of Vatia.[20]: 332  On September 19, 1991, Governor Peter Tali Coleman and Department of the Interior secretary Manuel Lujan signed leases formalizing the establishment of the fiftieth U.S. National Park.[20]: 335 

 
National Natural Landmarks

The ASG Parks and Recreation oversees the maintenance of all public parks, including the Amanave Mini Park, Lions Park in Tafuna, Onesosopo Park in Aua, Malaloa Mini Park, Fagaʻalu Park, Tia Seu Lupe historical site at Fatuoaiga, Pago Pago Park, Pago Pago Tennis Courts, the Little League Softball Field, Tony Solaʻita Baseball Field, Solo Ridge at the Utulei Tramway, Utulei Beach Park and Suʻigaulaoleatuvasa in Utulei.[183]

 
Matafao Peak National Natural Landmark

American Samoa has seven areas designated as National Natural Landmarks on Tutuila Island. This program is administrated by the U.S. National Park Service and the areas contain unique ecological or geological features. Except Vaiʻava Strait, none of the areas are within the National Park of American Samoa.[184]: 281  American Samoa's seven National Natural Landmarks (NNL) were designated in 1972:

Wildlife

Notable terrestrial species include the Pacific tree boa and the Samoa flying fox, which has a three-foot wingspread.[185] Two snake species can be found in American Samoa: The Brahminy blind snake is found on Tutuila, while the Pacific tree boa occurs on Taʻū. The islands are home to five species of geckos: Pacific slender-toed gecko, Oceanic gecko, Mourning gecko, Stump-toed gecko, and House gecko.[186][184]: 253 

Turtles include the threatened Green sea turtle and the endangered Hawksbill sea turtle. Hawksbill sea turtles tend to nest on Tutuila beaches, while the Green sea turtle is most common on Rose Atoll.[187] Tutuila has the highest number of nesting turtles, consisting of around fifty nesting females per year.[188]

American Samoa is home to one species of amphibian: the Cane toad. Biologists estimate that there are over two million toads on Tutuila.[184]: 252 

915 nearshore fish species have been recorded in American Samoa, compared to only 460 nearshore fish species in Hawaii.[184]: 20  With over 950 species of native fish and 250 coral species, American Samoa has the greatest marine biodiversity in the United States.[189]

Fruit bats

 
The Samoa flying fox is only found in Fiji and the Samoan Islands.

Megabats are the only native mammal in American Samoa. The islands are home to two species of fruit bats: Pacific flying fox and Samoa flying fox. The Sheath-tailed bat is another species found here, which is a smaller insect-eating bat. In 1992, the American Samoa Government banned the hunting of fruit bats to help their populations recover.[190] The Samoa flying fox is only found in Fiji and the Samoan Islands.[186][184]: 200 

From 1995 to 2000, the population of Samoa flying fox remained stable at about 900 animals on Tutuila, and 100 in the Manuʻa Islands.[191] As of the year 2000, scientists from the American Samoa Department of Marine and Wildlife Resource estimated that there are fewer than 5,500 Pacific flying foxes in American Samoa, and an estimated 900 or fewer Samoa flying foxes.[184]: 199  The best and biggest known roost on Tutuila Island for the Sheath-tailed bat is in the Anapeʻape Cove near Āfono.[192]

Amalau Valley on Tutuila's north coast offers great roadside views of many bird species and both species of fruit bat.[184]: 274  The valley has been called a prime bird- and bat-watching area.[193][194][195]

Avifauna

 
The Blue-crowned lorikeet is the only parrot found in American Samoa.

Sixteen of the Samoan Islands' 34 bird species are found nowhere else on Earth. This includes the critically endangered tooth-billed pigeon.[196] Four species of birds are only found in the Manuʻa Islands and not on Tutuila. These include American Samoa's only parrot, the blue-crowned Lory. Other special birds to Manuʻa are the lesser shrikebill and the friendly ground-dove. The spotless crake has only been observed on Taʻū Island.[186]

There are more species of birds than all species of reptiles, mammals and amphibians combined. Native land birds include two honeyeaters: cardinal honeyeater and wattled honeyeater. Cardinal honeyeaters only occur on Tutuila Island. The only endemic land bird to American Samoa is the Samoan starling. Four pigeons are native to American Samoa: Pacific imperial pigeon, many-colored fruit dove, white-capped fruit dove, and shy ground dove. The local government banned all pigeon hunting in 1992.[197]

The many-colored fruit dove is one of the rarest birds that nest on Tutuila. Studies in the 1980s estimated their population size at Tutuila to be only around 80 birds.[186] Amalau Valley has been described as the best place in American Samoa to observe the many-colored fruit dove.[198]

The offshore islet of Pola Island near Vatia is a nesting site for many seabird species and an excellent area to observe seabirds.[199][198] The Pola region of Vatia and Rose Atoll are the only places in American Samoa where there are breeding colonies of red-footed boobies.[200]

Birds that depend on freshwater habitat include the Pacific reef heron and Pacific black duck, the Samoan Islands' only species of duck. The largest wetland areas are the pala lagoons in Nuʻuuli and Leone as well as Pala Lake on Aunuʻu Island.[186]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ American Samoa belongs to, but is not a part of, the United States. See the page for the Insular Cases for more information.
  2. ^ a b c The constitution specifies the seat of government at Fagatogo, where the legislature, High Court and District Court are located.[55][61][62][59] The executive office building is located in neighboring Utulei.[57][58] These two villages are located along Pago Pago Harbor, whose largest village is Pago Pago. Many sources list Pago Pago as the capital, referring to the whole agglomeration around the harbor.[105][1]
  3. ^ To travel to American Samoa, U.S. nationals need to show proof of existing residence or future employment in American Samoa, or a ticket for future departure from the territory.[83] However, once there, U.S. nationals may reside indefinitely and cannot be deported.[84]
  4. ^ An American Samoan law of 1962 defined 14 counties.[100] The constitution of 1967, signed by delegates from these 14 counties, established 15 counties from then on, separating Fofo from Lealataua.[55] The election law was later revised accordingly.[101][102][103] However, the U.S. Census Bureau continues to list 14 counties, treating Fofo as part of Lealataua.[2]

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Further reading

  • Ellison, Joseph (1938). Opening and Penetration of Foreign Influence in Samoa to 1880. Corvallis: Oregon State College.
  • Sunia, Fofo (1988). The Story of the Legislature of American Samoa. Pago Pago: American Samoa Legislature.
  • Meti, Lauofo (2002). Samoa: The Making of the Constitution. Apia: Government of Samoa.

External links

  • AmericanSamoa.gov – official government website
  • Samoan Bios May 22, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  • American Samoa at Curlie
  •   Wikimedia Atlas of American Samoa
  • NOAA's National Weather Service – American Samoa

Country data

Coordinates: 14°18′S 170°42′W / 14.3°S 170.7°W / -14.3; -170.7

american, samoa, samoan, amerika, sāmoa, pronounced, aˈmɛɾika, ˈsaːmʊa, also, amelika, sāmoa, sāmoa, amelika, unincorporated, territory, united, states, located, south, pacific, ocean, southeast, island, country, samoa, location, centered, east, international,. American Samoa Samoan Amerika Samoa pronounced aˈmɛɾika ˈsaːmʊa also Amelika Samoa or Samoa Amelika is an unincorporated territory of the United States located in the South Pacific Ocean southeast of the island country of Samoa 1 Its location is centered on 14 18 S 170 42 W 14 3 S 170 7 W 14 3 170 7 It is east of the International Date Line while Samoa is west of the Line The total land area is 199 square kilometers 76 8 sq mi slightly more than Washington D C American Samoa is the southernmost territory of the United States and one of two U S territories south of the Equator along with the uninhabited Jarvis Island Tuna products are the main exports and the main trading partner is the rest of the United States American SamoaAmerika SamoaUnincorporated and unorganized territoryFlagSealMotto Samoa Muamua Le Atua Samoan English Samoa Let God Be First Anthem Amerika Samoa source source Location of American Samoa circled in red Sovereign state United States a Partition of SamoaDecember 2 1899Ratification ActFebruary 20 1929CapitalPago Pago b Government seatFagatogo b Largest villageTafunaOfficial languagesSamoanEnglishEthnic groups83 2 Samoan 5 8 Asian 5 5 other Pacific Islander 4 4 mixed 1 1 otherReligion98 3 Christian 1 1 7 otherDemonym s American SamoanGovernmentDevolved presidential constitutional dependency PresidentJoe Biden D GovernorLemanu Peleti Mauga D Lt GovernorSalo Ale D LegislatureFono Upper houseSenate Lower houseHouse of RepresentativesUnited States Congress House delegateAmata Coleman Radewagen R Area Total77 sq mi 200 km2 Highest elevation970 m 3 170 ft Population 2022 estimate45 443 1 213th 2020 census49 710 2 Density670 8 sq mi 259 0 km2 GDP PPP 2020 estimate Total 709 million 3 Per capita 11 200 2016 1 4 CurrencyUnited States dollar US USD Time zoneUTC 11 00 SST Date formatmm dd yyyyDriving siderightCalling code 1 684USPS abbreviationASISO 3166 codeASUS ASInternet TLD asAmerican Samoa consists of five main islands and two coral atolls The largest and most populous island is Tutuila with the Manuʻa Islands Rose Atoll and Swains Island also included in the territory All islands except for Swains Island are part of the Samoan Islands west of the Cook Islands north of Tonga and some 500 kilometres 310 mi south of Tokelau To the west are the islands of the Wallis and Futuna group As of 2022 the population of American Samoa is approximately 45 443 people 1 Most American Samoans are bilingual and can speak English and Samoan fluently 1 5 American Samoa has been a member of the Pacific Community since 1983 American Samoa is noted for having the highest rate of military enlistment of any U S state or territory As of September 9 2014 the local U S Army recruiting station in Pago Pago was ranked first in production out of the 885 Army recruiting stations and centers under the United States Army Recruiting Command 6 American Samoa is the only permanently inhabited territory of the United States in which citizenship is not granted at birth and people born there are considered non citizen nationals Contents 1 History 1 1 18th century First Western contact 1 2 19th century 1 3 20th century 1 3 1 Early 20th century 1 3 2 American colonization 1 3 3 World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic 1 3 4 Interwar period 1 3 4 1 American Samoa Mau movement 1 3 4 2 Annexation of Swains Island 1 3 5 World War II and aftermath 1 3 6 1951 1999 1 4 21st century 2 Notable events 2 1 Pre 20th century 2 2 20th century 2 3 21st century 2 3 1 September 2009 earthquake and tsunami 3 Government and politics 3 1 Government 3 2 Politics 3 2 1 Nationality 3 2 1 1 Voting rights 3 2 2 Immigration 3 2 3 Land ownership 3 2 4 Official protest to naming of neighboring Samoa 3 3 Administrative divisions 4 Geography 5 Climate 5 1 Climate change 6 Economy 6 1 Taxation 6 2 Telecommunications 7 Transportation 8 Demographics 8 1 Ethnicity and language 8 2 Religion 8 3 Education 9 Culture 9 1 Music 9 2 Sports 9 2 1 American football 9 2 2 Football 9 2 3 Rugby league 9 2 4 Rugby union 9 2 5 Other sports 10 Recreation 11 Wildlife 11 1 Fruit bats 11 2 Avifauna 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External links 16 1 Country dataHistory Edit Samoa Islands Main articles History of Samoa History of American Samoa and Tui Manu a Traditional oral literature of Samoa and Manuʻa talks of a widespread Polynesian network or confederacy or empire that was prehistorically ruled by the successive Tui Manuʻa dynasties Manuan genealogies and religious oral literature also suggest that the Tui Manuʻa had long been one of the most prestigious and powerful paramounts of Samoa Oral history suggests that the Tui Manuʻa kings governed a confederacy of far flung islands which included Fiji Tonga 7 8 as well as smaller western Pacific chiefdoms and Polynesian outliers such as Uvea Futuna Tokelau and Tuvalu Commerce and exchange routes between the western Polynesian societies are well documented and it is speculated that the Tui Manuʻa dynasty grew through its success in obtaining control over the oceanic trade of currency goods such as finely woven ceremonial mats whale ivory tabua obsidian and basalt tools chiefly red feathers and seashells reserved for royalty such as polished nautilus and the egg cowry 18th century First Western contact Edit Contact with Europeans began in the early 18th century Dutchman Jacob Roggeveen was the first known European to sight the Samoan Islands in 1722 calling them the Baumann Islands after one of his captains The next explorer to visit the islands was Louis Antoine de Bougainville who named them the Iles des Navigateurs in 1768 British explorer James Cook recorded the island names in 1773 but never visited 9 The 1789 visit by La Perouse ended in an attack on a Tutuila water collection expedition resulting in the death of his second in command Capt de Langle and several of his crew La Perouse named the island Massacre Island and the bay near Aasu is still called Massacre Bay 9 HMS Pandora under the command of Admiral Edward Edwards Royal Navy officer visited the island in 1791 during its search for the H M S Bounty mutineers Von Kotzebue visited in 1824 9 19th century Edit German British and American warships in Apia Harbor Samoa 1899 Main articles Samoan crisis Samoan Civil War Second Samoan Civil War and Tripartite Convention Mission work in the Samoas had begun in late 1830 when John Williams of the London Missionary Society arrived from the Cook Islands and Tahiti 10 By the late nineteenth century French British German and American vessels routinely stopped at Samoa as they valued Pago Pago Harbor as a refueling station for coal fired shipping and whaling The United States Exploring Expedition visited the islands in 1839 11 1896 map of the Samoa Islands In March 1889 an Imperial German naval force entered a village in Samoa and in doing so destroyed some American property Three American warships then entered the Apia harbor and prepared to engage the three German warships found there Before any shots were fired a typhoon wrecked both the American and German ships A compulsory armistice was then called because of the lack of any warships 12 20th century Edit Early 20th century Edit Tuimanuʻa Elisala Alalamua the last official titleholder of Tui Manuʻa 1899 1909 At the turn of the twentieth century international rivalries in the latter half of the century were settled by the 1899 Tripartite Convention in which Germany and the United States partitioned the Samoan Islands into two 13 the eastern island group became a territory of the United States Tutuila in 1900 and officially Manuʻa in 1904 14 and is today known as American Samoa the western islands by far the greater landmass became known as German Samoa after Britain gave up all claims to Samoa and in return accepted the termination of German rights in Tonga and certain areas in the Solomon Islands and West Africa 15 Forerunners to the Tripartite Convention of 1899 were the Washington Conference of 1887 the Treaty of Berlin of 1889 and the Anglo German Agreement on Samoa of 1899 American colonization Edit Rear Admiral Benjamin Franklin Tilley the first Governor of American Samoa 1900 1901 The following year the U S formally annexed its portion a smaller group of eastern islands one of which contains the noted harbor of Pago Pago 16 After the United States Navy took possession of eastern Samoa for the United States government the existing coaling station at Pago Pago Bay was expanded into a full naval station known as United States Naval Station Tutuila and commanded by a commandant The Navy secured a Deed of Cession of Tutuila in 1900 and a Deed of Cession of Manuʻa in 1904 on behalf of the U S government The last sovereign of Manuʻa the Tui Manuʻa Elisala signed a Deed of Cession of Manuʻa following a series of U S naval trials known as the Trial of the Ipu in Pago Pago Taʻu and aboard a Pacific Squadron gunboat 17 The territory became known as the U S Naval Station Tutuila On July 17 1911 the U S Naval Station Tutuila which was composed of Tutuila Aunuʻu and Manuʻa was officially renamed American Samoa 18 19 People of Manuʻa had been unhappy since they were left out of the name Naval Station Tutuila In May 1911 Governor William Michael Crose authored a letter to the Secretary of the Navy conveying the sentiments of Manuʻa The department responded that the people should choose a name for their new territory The traditional leaders chose American Samoa and on July 7 1911 the solicitor general of the Navy authorized the governor to proclaim it as the name for the new territory 20 209 World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic Edit Commander John Martin Poyer served as the 12th Governor of American Samoa 1915 1919 21 In 1918 during the final stages of World War I the Great Influenza epidemic had taken its toll spreading rapidly from country to country American Samoa became one of the only places in the world the others being New Caledonia and Marajo island in Brazil to have proactively prevented any deaths during the pandemic through the quick response from Governor John Martin Poyer after hearing news reports of the outbreak on the radio and requesting quarantine ships from the U S mainland The result of Poyer s quick actions earned him the Navy Cross from the U S Navy With this distinction American Samoans regarded Poyer as their hero for what he had done to prevent the deadly disease The neighboring New Zealand territory at the time Western Samoa suffered the most of all Pacific islands with 90 of the population infected 30 of adult men 22 of adult women and 10 of children died 22 Poyer offered assistance to help his New Zealand counterparts but was refused by the administrator of Western Samoa Robert Logan who became outraged after witnessing the number of quarantine ships surrounding American Samoa Angered by this Logan cut off communications with his American counterparts Interwar period Edit American Samoa Mau movement Edit After World War I during the time of the Mau movement in Western Samoa then a League of Nations mandate governed by New Zealand there was a corresponding American Samoa Mau movement led by Samuelu Ripley a World War I veteran who was from Leone village Tutuila After meetings on the United States mainland he was prevented from disembarking from the ship that brought him home to American Samoa and was not allowed to return because the American Samoa Mau movement was suppressed by the U S Navy In 1930 the U S Congress sent a committee to investigate the status of American Samoa led by Americans who had a part in the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii Annexation of Swains Island Edit Swains Island which had been included in the list of guano islands appertaining to the United States and bonded under the Guano Islands Act was annexed in 1925 by Pub Res 68 75 23 following the dissolution of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony by the United Kingdom World War II and aftermath Edit During World War II U S Marines stationed in Samoa outnumbered the local population and had a huge cultural influence Young Samoan men from age 14 and above were combat trained by U S military personnel Samoans served in various capacities during World War II including as combatants medical personnel code personnel and ship repairmen In 1949 Organic Act 4500 a U S Department of Interior sponsored attempt to incorporate American Samoa was introduced in Congress It was ultimately defeated primarily through the efforts of Samoan chiefs led by Tuiasosopo Mariota 24 The efforts of these chiefs led to the creation of a territorial legislature the American Samoa Fono which meets in the village of Fagatogo In 1950 the Department of the Interior began to administer the American Samoa 25 1951 1999 Edit Locations of Pacific Ocean splashdowns of American spacecraft By 1956 the U S Navy appointed governor was replaced by Peter Tali Coleman who was locally elected Although technically considered unorganized since the U S Congress has not passed an Organic Act for the territory American Samoa is self governing under a constitution that became effective on July 1 1967 The U S Territory of American Samoa is on the United Nations list of non self governing territories a listing which is disputed by the territorial government officials who do consider themselves to be self governing American Samoa and Pago Pago International Airport had historic significance with the Apollo Program 26 The astronaut crews of Apollo 10 12 13 14 and 17 were retrieved a few hundred miles from Pago Pago and transported by helicopter to the airport prior to being flown to Honolulu on C 141 Starlifter military aircraft 27 While the two Samoas share language and ethnicity their cultures have recently followed different paths with American Samoans often emigrating to Hawaiʻi and the U S mainland and adopting many U S customs such as the playing of American football and baseball Samoans have tended to emigrate instead to New Zealand whose influence has made the sports of rugby and cricket more popular in the western Samoan islands Travel writer Paul Theroux noted that there were marked differences between the societies in Samoa and American Samoa 21st century Edit American Samoans have a high rate of service in the U S Armed Forces 28 Because of economic hardship military service has been seen as an opportunity in American Samoa and other U S Overseas territories 29 As of March 23 2009 ten American Samoans had died in Iraq and two had died in Afghanistan Notable events EditPre 20th century Edit Death of Fleuriot de Langle in 1787 On December 13 1784 French navigator Jean Francois de Galaup comte de Laperouse landed two exploration parties on Tutuila s north shore one from the ship La Boussole at Fagasa and the other from L Astrolabe at Aʻasu One of the cooks David died of scorbutic dropsy On December 11 twelve members of Laperouse s crew including First Officer Paul Antoine Fleuriot de Langle were killed by angry Samoans at Aʻasu Bay Tutuila thereafter known as Massacre Bay which Laperouse described as this den more fearful from its treacherous situation and the cruelty of its inhabitants than the lair of a lion or a tiger This incident gave Samoa a reputation for savagery that kept Europeans away until the arrival of the first Christian missionaries four decades later On December 12 at Aʻasu Bay Laperouse ordered his gunners to fire one cannonball amid the attackers who had killed his men the day before and were now returning to launch another attack He later wrote in his journal I could have destroyed or sunk a hundred canoes with more than 500 people in them but I was afraid of striking the wrong victims the call of my conscience saved their lives 30 31 20th century Edit English author W Somerset Maugham stayed at Sadie Thompson Inn during his six week visit to Pago Pago in 1916 On December 19 1912 English writer William Somerset Maugham arrived in Pago Pago allegedly accompanied by a missionary and Miss Sadie Thompson His visit inspired his short story Rain which later became plays and three major motion pictures The building still stands where Maugham stayed and has been renamed the Sadie Thompson Building Today it is a prominent restaurant and inn 32 On November 2 1921 American Samoa s 13th naval governor Commander Warren Jay Terhune died by suicide with a pistol in the bathroom of the government mansion overlooking the entrance to Pago Pago Harbor His body was discovered by Government House s cook SDI clarification needed First Class Felisiano Debid Ahchica USN His ghost is rumored to walk about the grounds at night Pago Pago Harbor today and inter island dock area On August 17 1924 Margaret Mead arrived in American Samoa aboard the SS Sonoma to begin fieldwork for her doctoral dissertation in anthropology at Columbia University where she was a student of Professor Franz Boas Her work Coming of Age in Samoa was published in 1928 at the time becoming the most widely read book in the field of anthropology The book has sparked years of ongoing and intense debate and controversy Mead returned to American Samoa in 1971 for the dedication of the Jean P Haydon Museum The Samoan Clipper In 1938 the noted aviator Ed Musick and his crew died on the Pan American World Airways S 42 Samoan Clipper over Pago Pago while on a survey flight to Auckland New Zealand Sometime after takeoff the aircraft experienced trouble and Musick turned it back toward Pago Pago While the crew dumped fuel in preparation for an emergency landing an explosion occurred that tore the aircraft apart 33 On November 21 1939 American Samoa s last execution was carried out Imoa was convicted of stabbing Sema to death and was hanged in the Customs House The popular Samoan song Faʻafofoga Samoa is based on this said to be the final words of Imoa 34 On January 13 1942 at 2 26 am a Japanese submarine surfaced off Tutuila between Southworth Point and Fagasa Bay and fired about 15 shells from its 5 5 inch deck gun at the U S Naval Station Tutuila over the next 10 minutes The first shell struck the rear of Frank Shimasaki s store ironically owned by one of Tutuila s few Japanese residents The store was closed as Mr Shimasaki had been interned as an enemy alien The next shell caused slight damage to the naval dispensary the third landed on the lawn behind the naval quarters known as Centipede Row and the fourth struck the stone seawall outside the customs house The other rounds fell harmlessly into the harbor As one writer described it The fire was not returned notwithstanding the eagerness of the Samoan Marines to test their skill against the enemy No American or Samoan Marines were wounded 35 Commander Edwin B Robinson was bicycling behind Centipede Row and was wounded in the knee by a piece of shrapnel and a member of the colorful native Fita Fita Guard received minor injuries they were the only casualties This was the only time the Japanese attacked Tutuila during World War II although Japanese submarines had patrolled the waters around Samoa before the war and continued to be active there throughout the war 35 On August 24 1943 First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt visited American Samoa and inspected the Fita Fita Guard and Band and the First Samoan Battalion of U S Marine Corps Reserve at the U S Naval Station American Samoa 36 178 37 The fact that First Lady reviewed the troops led to further assurance that Tutuila Island was considered safe 38 Her presence underscored that World War II had passed by American Samoa While the Fita Fita band played Eleanor Roosevelt inspected the guard 39 On October 18 1966 President Lyndon Baines Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson visited American Samoa Mrs Johnson dedicated the Manulele Tausala Lady Bird Elementary School in Nuʻuuli which was named after her Johnson is the only US president to have visited American Samoa while Mrs Johnson was the second First Lady preceded by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1943 36 192 The territory s only hospital was renamed the LBJ Tropical Medical Center in honor of President Johnson 40 In the late 1960s and early 1970s American Samoa played a pivotal role in five of the Apollo Program missions The astronauts landed several hundred miles from Pago and were transported to the islands en route back to the mainland President Richard Nixon gave three moon rocks to the American Samoan government and these are on display in the Jean P Haydon Museum along with a flag carried to the moon on one of the missions 41 In November 1970 Pope Paul VI visited American Samoa in a brief but lavish greeting 20 292 On January 30 1974 Pan Am Flight 806 from Auckland New Zealand crashed at Pago Pago International Airport at 10 41 pm with 91 passengers aboard 86 people were killed including Captain Leroy A Petersen and the entire flight crew Four of the five surviving passengers were seriously injured with the other only slightly injured The airliner was destroyed by the impact and succeeding fire The crash was attributed to poor visibility pilot error or wind shear since a violent storm was raging at the time 42 In January 2014 filmmaker Paul Crompton visited the territory to interview local residents for a documentary film about the 1974 crash A U S Navy P 3 Orion patrol plane from Patrol Squadron 50 VP 50 had its vertical stabilizer shorn off by the Solo Ridge Mount Alava aerial tramway cable across Pago Pago harbor on April 17 1980 during the Flag Day celebrations when carrying six skydivers from the U S Army s Hawaii based Tropic Lightning Parachute Club The plane crashed demolishing a wing of the Rainmaker Hotel and killing all six crew members and one civilian The six skydivers had already left the aircraft during a demonstration jump A memorial monument is erected on Mt Mauga O Aliʻi to honor their memory On November 1 1988 President Ronald Reagan signed a bill which created American Samoa National Park 43 21st century Edit On July 22 2010 Detective Lieutenant Lusila Brown was fatally shot outside the temporary High Court building in Fagatogo It was the first time in more than 15 years that a police officer was killed in the line of duty The last was Sa Fuimaono who drowned after saving a teenager from rough seas 44 On November 8 2010 United States Secretary of State and former First Lady Hillary Clinton made a refueling stopover at the Pago Pago International Airport She was greeted by government dignitaries and presented with gifts and a traditional ava ceremony 45 Mike Pence was the third sitting U S vice president to visit American Samoa after Dan Quayle and Joe Biden 46 when he made a stopover in Pago Pago in April 2017 47 He addressed 200 soldiers here during his refueling stop 48 U S Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited town on June 3 2017 49 September 2009 earthquake and tsunami Edit Tonga Trench south of the Samoa Islands and north of New Zealand Main article 2009 Samoa earthquake and tsunami On September 28 2009 at 17 48 11 UTC an 8 1 magnitude earthquake struck 120 miles 190 km off the coast of American Samoa followed by smaller aftershocks 50 It was the largest earthquake of 2009 The quake occurred on the outer rise of the Kermadec Tonga Subduction Zone This is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire where tectonic plates in the Earth s lithosphere meet and earthquakes and volcanic activity are common The quake struck 11 2 miles 18 0 km below the ocean floor and generated an onsetting tsunami that killed more than 170 people in the Samoa Islands and Tonga 51 52 Four waves with heights from 15 feet 4 6 m to 20 feet 6 1 m high were reported to have reached up to one mile 1 6 km inland on the island of Tutuila 53 The Defense Logistics Agency worked with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide 16 16 humanitarian tents to the devastated areas of American Samoa Government and politics EditGovernment Edit Main article Government of American Samoa American Samoa is classified in U S law as an unincorporated territory the Ratification Act of 1929 vested all civil judicial and military powers in the President of the United States 16 In 1951 with Executive Order 10264 President Harry Truman delegated that authority to the Secretary of the Interior On June 21 1963 Paramount Chief Tuli Leʻiato of Fagaʻitua was sworn in and installed as the first Secretary of Samoan Affairs by Governor H Rex Lee 54 On June 2 1967 Interior Secretary Stewart Udall promulgated the Revised Constitution of American Samoa which took effect on July 1 1967 55 Lemanu Peleti Mauga the 58th and incumbent Governor of American Samoa 2021 present The Governor of American Samoa is the head of government and along with the Lieutenant Governor of American Samoa is elected on the same ticket by popular vote for a four year term 56 The governor s office is located in Utulei 57 58 Since American Samoa is a U S territory the President of the United States serves as the head of state but does not play a direct role in government The Secretary of the Interior oversees the government retaining the power to approve constitutional amendments overrides the governor s vetoes and nomination of justices 55 The legislative power is vested in the American Samoa Fono which has two chambers The House of Representatives has 21 members serving two year terms being 20 representatives popularly elected from various districts and one non voting delegate from Swains Island elected in a public meeting The Senate has 18 members elected for four year terms by and from the chiefs of the islands 55 The Fono is located in Fagatogo 59 58 The judiciary of American Samoa is composed of the High Court of American Samoa a District Court and village courts 60 The High Court and District Court are located in Fagatogo near the Fono 61 62 59 The High Court is led by a Chief Justice and an Associate Justice appointed by the Secretary of the Interior 63 Other judges are appointed by the governor upon the recommendation of the Chief Justice and confirmed by the Senate 64 65 Politics Edit Main article Politics of American Samoa See also Elections in American Samoa and Political party strength in American Samoa American Samoa is an unincorporated and unorganized territory of the United States administered by the Office of Insular Affairs U S Department of the Interior American Samoa s constitution was ratified in 1966 and came into effect in 1967 However despite being de jure unorganized American Samoa is de facto organized with its politics taking place in the framework of a presidential representative democratic dependency whereby the Governor is the head of government and of a pluriform multi party system Executive power is exercised by the governor Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of the legislature The American political parties Republican and Democratic exist in American Samoa but few politicians are aligned with the parties The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature There is also the traditional village politics of the Samoa Islands the faʻamatai and the faʻa Samoa which continues in American Samoa and independent Samoa and which interacts across these current boundaries The faʻa Samoa is the language and customs and the faʻamatai are the protocols of the fono council and the chief system The faʻamatai and the fono take place at all levels of the Samoan body politic from the family to the village to the region to national matters The ʻaiga is the family unit of Samoan society which differs from the Western sense of a family 66 in that it consists of an extended family based on the culture s communal socio political organization The head of the ʻaiga is the matai The matai chiefs are elected by consensus within the fono of the extended family and village s concerned The matai and the fono which are themselves made of matai decide on the distribution of family exchanges and tenancy of communal lands The majority of lands in American Samoa and independent Samoa are communal A matai can represent a small family group or a great extended family that reaches across islands and to both American Samoa and independent Samoa In 2010 voters rejected a package of amendments to the territorial constitution which would have among other things allowed U S citizens to be legislators only if they had Samoan ancestry In 2012 both the Governor and American Samoa s delegate to the U S Congress Eni Faleomavaega called for the populace to consider a move towards autonomy if not independence with a mixed response 67 68 Nationality Edit Further information Tuaua v United States According to the Immigration and Nationality Act INA the people born in American Samoa including those born on Swains Island are nationals but not citizens of the United States at birth 69 70 71 If a child is born on any of these islands to any U S citizen then that child is considered a national and a citizen of the United States at birth 72 All U S nationals have statutory rights to reside in all parts of the United States and may apply for citizenship by naturalization after three months of residency by paying a fee passing a test in English and civics and taking an oath of allegiance to the United States 73 All U S nationals also have the right to work in the United States except in certain government jobs that specifically require U S citizenship In 2012 a group of American Samoans sued the federal government seeking recognition of birthright citizenship for American Samoans in the case Tuaua v United States In an amicus curiae brief filed in federal court American Samoan Congressman Faleomavaega supported the legal interpretation that the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not extend birthright citizenship to United States nationals born in unincorporated territories 74 75 In June 2015 the U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia affirmed that Fourteenth Amendment citizenship guarantees did not apply to persons born in unincorporated territories and a year later the U S Supreme Court declined to review the lower court s decision 76 In December 2019 U S District Judge Clark Waddoups struck down 8 U S C 1408 1 as facially unconstitutional holding that Persons born in American Samoa are citizens of the United States by the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment 77 but the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reversed the district court s judgment and found the statute constitutional 78 On July 20 2021 the Legislature of American Samoa unanimously passed a resolution in support of the 10th Circuit Court s decision to reverse 79 Voting rights Edit As U S nationals American Samoans can vote in local elections in the territory however if they live in other parts of the United States they are not allowed to vote in federal state or the vast majority of local elections unless they become U S citizens The only federal office American Samoans elect directly is a non voting delegate to the United States House of Representatives 80 Since the delegate s office was created in 1978 three people have held the seat Democrat Fofō Iosefa Fiti Sunia 1981 1988 Democrat Eni Faleomavaega 1989 2015 and Republican Aumua Amata Radewagen 2015 81 American Samoans also participate in partisan presidential primaries as well as send delegates to the Democratic and Republican National Conventions 82 Immigration Edit Unique among U S territories American Samoa has its own immigration law separate from the laws that apply in other parts of the United States U S nationals may freely reside in American Samoa c The American Samoan government via its Immigration Office controls the migration of foreign nationals to the islands 85 Special application forms exist for migration to American Samoa based on family or employment sponsorship 86 Unlike all other permanently inhabited U S jurisdictions states District of Columbia Puerto Rico U S Virgin Islands Guam and Northern Mariana Islands American Samoa is not considered a U S state for the purposes of the U S Immigration and Nationality Act 87 As a result there is no path for immigrants to American Samoa to apply for U S citizenship or U S nationality at all without permanent residence in another U S jurisdiction 88 89 In addition foreign nationals who do have lawful permanent residence in the United States may be considered to have abandoned it if they have moved to live in American Samoa and time spent there does not count in the required period of U S presence for naturalization 90 U S nationals without U S citizenship the status of most American Samoans have the right to reside in all parts of the United States without immigration restrictions They also have the same rights as lawful permanent residents to sponsor foreign family members to immigrate to the United States they may sponsor spouses and unmarried children but not the same rights as U S citizens who may also sponsor parents married children and siblings 91 Land ownership Edit Under American Samoan law land ownership is subject to racial restrictions 92 Since 1900 there have been three main categories of land ownership native individual and freehold Native land which makes up over 90 of all land in the territory is land under the communal ownership of an ʻaiga as opposed to the private ownership of an individual Freehold land which makes up only about 2 of the total is land which was granted to foreigners before the U S took possession of the territory in 1900 and whose owners have not chosen to revert to native or individual land status 93 94 The American Samoa Code Annotated prohibits the transfer of ownership whether by sale or otherwise of any land other than freehold land to any person who has less than one half native Samoan blood which in this context includes both American and Western Samoa 95 In addition it is prohibited to transfer ownership of any native communal land to any person who is not a full blooded native Samoan this includes any person who has any non native blood whatsoever even if they are more than one half native Samoan 96 97 In Craddick v Territorial Registrar 1 Am Samoa 2d 10 14 1980 the Appellate Division of the High Court of American Samoa held that while these laws created a classification based on race they did not violate the guarantees of equal protection and due process contained in the U S Constitution and the Revised American Samoan Constitution Given the cruciality of land ownership and the communal ownership structure to American Samoan culture and the American Samoan government s vital and demonstrated interest in preserving Samoan land and culture the Court found that the laws in question pursued a proper purpose rather than a discriminatory one and being necessary to achieve that purpose were sufficiently justified and thus constitutional 98 Official protest to naming of neighboring Samoa Edit The U S Embassy in Samoa notes that In July 1997 the Constitution was amended to change the country s name from Western Samoa to Samoa Samoa had been known simply as Samoa in the United Nations since joining the organization in 1976 The neighboring U S territory of American Samoa protested the move feeling that the change diminished its own Samoan identity American Samoans still use the terms Western Samoa and Western Samoans 99 Administrative divisions Edit Swains Island Rose Atoll Saʻole Ofu Olosega Taʻu Faleasao Fitiuta Vaifanua Sua Maʻoputasi Ituʻau Tualauta Leasina Lealataua Fofo Tualatai Western District Eastern District Manuʻa District Pacific Ocean Tutuila Aunuʻu Ofu Olosega TaʻuIslands atolls districts and counties of American Samoa d 104 Main article Administrative divisions of American Samoa American Samoa is administratively divided into three districts Western Eastern and Manuʻa and two unorganized atolls Swains Island and the uninhabited Rose Atoll The districts are subdivided into counties and villages Pago Pago often cited as the capital of American Samoa b is one of the largest villages and is located on the central part of Tutuila island in Maʻoputasi County Geography Edit Map of American Samoa American Samoa located within the geographical region of Oceania is one of only two possessions of the United States in the Southern Hemisphere the other being Jarvis Island Its total land area is 76 1 square miles 197 1 km2 slightly larger than Washington D C consisting of five rugged volcanic islands and two coral atolls 106 Cockscomb Point on Pola Island is seen jutting into the ocean The five volcanic islands are Tutuila Aunuʻu Ofu Olosega and Taʻu The coral atolls are Swains and Rose Atoll Of the seven islands Rose Atoll is the only uninhabited one it is a Marine National Monument American Samoa is the southernmost reach of the United States at fourteen degrees below the equator 107 A view of American Samoa s Ofu Beach on Ofu Island in the Manuʻa Islands Due to its positioning in the South Pacific Ocean it is frequently hit by tropical cyclones between November and April Rose Atoll is the easternmost point of the territory American Samoa s Rose Atoll is the southernmost point of the United States 108 American Samoa is home to the National Park of American Samoa The highest mountains are Lata Mountain Taʻu 3 170 ft 970 m Matafao Peak 2 141 ft 653 m Piumafua Olosega 2 095 ft 639 m and Tumutumu Ofu 1 621 ft 494 m Mount Pioa nicknamed the Rainmaker is 1 718 ft 524 m 20 3 American Samoa is also home to some of the world s highest sea cliffs at 3 000 ft 910 m 109 Coastline of American Samoa in Vatia The Vailuluʻu seamount an active submerged volcano lies 28 miles 45 km east of Taʻu in American Samoa It was discovered in 1975 and has since been studied by an international team of scientists contributing towards understanding of the Earth s fundamental processes 110 Growing inside the summit crater of Vailuluʻu is an active underwater volcanic cone named after Samoa s goddess of war Nafanua American Samoa lies within two terrestrial ecoregions Samoan tropical moist forests and Western Polynesian tropical moist forests 111 Climate EditAmerican Samoa has a tropical climate all year round with two distinct seasons the wet and dry season The wet season is usually between December and March and the dry season is from April through to September with the average daily temperature around 81 83 F 27 28 C all year round The climate is warm tropical and humid averaging around 80 F or 26 7 C with a variation of about 15 F or 8 C during the year The southern hemisphere winter from June to September is the coolest time of the year The summer months of December to March bring hotter temperatures while the months from April to November are considered the dry season Throughout the year however rain follows clouds blown in by the trade winds that rise from the east almost daily The mountains of the Pago Pago area standing protectively over Pago Pago Harbor catch these clouds bringing an average of 200 inches or 5 100 millimeters of rainfall per year 20 4 Climate data for Pago Pago International Airport Pago Pago 1991 2020 normals extremes 1957 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 95 35 99 37 95 35 95 35 93 34 95 35 91 33 92 33 92 33 94 34 95 35 94 34 99 37 Mean maximum F C 91 0 32 8 91 3 32 9 91 3 32 9 90 7 32 6 89 6 32 0 88 0 31 1 87 7 30 9 88 0 31 1 88 9 31 6 89 6 32 0 90 4 32 4 90 7 32 6 92 4 33 6 Average high F C 87 8 31 0 88 1 31 2 88 4 31 3 87 8 31 0 86 5 30 3 85 3 29 6 84 6 29 2 84 8 29 3 85 7 29 8 86 4 30 2 87 0 30 6 87 6 30 9 86 7 30 4 Daily mean F C 83 0 28 3 83 2 28 4 83 3 28 5 83 0 28 3 82 2 27 9 81 5 27 5 80 9 27 2 80 9 27 2 81 6 27 6 82 1 27 8 82 5 28 1 82 9 28 3 82 3 27 9 Average low F C 78 2 25 7 78 3 25 7 78 2 25 7 78 1 25 6 77 9 25 5 77 8 25 4 77 2 25 1 77 0 25 0 77 5 25 3 77 7 25 4 78 0 25 6 78 2 25 7 77 8 25 4 Mean minimum F C 75 1 23 9 75 2 24 0 75 0 23 9 74 7 23 7 73 6 23 1 73 4 23 0 72 4 22 4 72 6 22 6 73 3 22 9 73 7 23 2 73 9 23 3 74 7 23 7 70 7 21 5 Record low F C 67 19 65 18 63 17 68 20 65 18 61 16 62 17 60 16 62 17 59 15 60 16 65 18 59 15 Average precipitation inches mm 15 25 387 13 70 348 10 95 278 11 27 286 11 73 298 6 37 162 7 51 191 6 93 176 7 99 203 10 24 260 12 05 306 14 35 364 128 34 3 260 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 24 3 22 0 23 8 22 2 20 8 18 8 20 0 19 0 18 4 21 1 21 3 23 8 255 5Average relative humidity 82 8 83 3 83 2 84 0 83 6 82 0 80 4 79 8 80 2 81 5 82 3 82 1 82 1Mean monthly sunshine hours 165 3 150 3 179 2 132 2 123 3 113 7 148 0 168 0 196 0 159 6 156 7 156 8 1 849 1Percent possible sunshine 41 43 48 37 35 34 42 47 54 41 41 39 42Source NOAA relative humidity and sun 1961 1990 112 113 114 Climate change Edit This section is an excerpt from Climate change in American Samoa edit Locations of the Samoan Islands including American Samoa Climate change in American Samoa encompasses the effects of climate change attributed to man made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide in the U S territory of American Samoa The American Samoa Environmental Protection Agency ASEPA notes that the territory has a fragile ecosystem which is directly and immediately impacted by global climate change 115 Economy EditMain article Economy of American Samoa A proportional representation of American Samoa exports 2019 Tuna boats in the port of Pago Pago The economic health of American Samoa reflects the trends in other populated U S territories which are in turn dependent on federal appropriations Federal dollars enter the economy through congressional appropriations categorical grants Social Security payments and payments to Samoans retired from the military Tuna canning is the backbone of the American Samoa economy Cannery employment and local auxiliary businesses provide additional revenues for the territorial government In the mid 1960s efforts began to develop a tourism industry in American Samoa These efforts have been delayed due to issues such as inconsistent airline services insufficient high quality accommodations and the lack of well trained workers in the hospitality and tourism industries Agriculture and fishing still provide sustenance for local families 20 8 9 Employment on the island falls into three relatively equal sized categories of approximately 5 000 workers each the public sector the single remaining tuna cannery and the rest of the private sector There are only a few federal employees in American Samoa and a few active duty military personnel except members of the U S Coast Guard military recruiters and some Full Time Support staff at the Pele Army Reserve unit that maintains the facility and provides cadre training and logistics support The Pele US Army Reserve Center is in Tafuna 116 and a U S Army and United States Marine Corps recruiting station is in Nuʻuuli There are six Army Reserve units at Pele 117 Bravo Company 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry Charlie Company 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry 411th Forward Support Company Engineer USAR Theater Support Group Detachment American Samoa 1st Evacuation Mortuary Platoon 2nd Platoon 962nd Quartermaster Company 127th Chaplain Detachment Mascot Charlie the Tuna at the StarKist cannery in Atuʻu The overwhelming majority of public sector employees work for the American Samoa territorial government One tuna cannery is StarKist which exports several hundred million dollars worth of canned tuna to the United States each year In early 2007 the Samoan economy was highlighted in the Congress at the request of Eni Faleomavaega the Samoan delegate to the United States House of Representatives as it was not mentioned in the minimum wage bill It was given no exemption from the coming increases which he protested as unfair to the Samoan economy House Speaker Nancy Pelosi initially granted his request for an exemption but backed down after being accused of serving special interests since tuna packing company Chicken of the Sea was based in her district Samoa Packing a Chicken of the Sea subsidiary closed in 2009 citing both minimum wage increases and increasing foreign competition with the latter as the main reason Minimum wage in Samoa has been the topic of much debate with the Samoan government and Chamber of Commerce strongly opposed while businesses and workers hold nuanced views 118 119 From 2002 to 2007 real GDP of American Samoa increased at an average annual rate of 0 4 percent The annual growth rates of real GDP ranged from 2 9 percent to 2 1 percent The volatility in the growth rates of real GDP was primarily accounted for by changes in the exports of canned tuna The tuna canning industry was the largest private employer in American Samoa during this period In 2017 GDP in American Samoa decreased by 5 8 but in 2018 it increased by 2 2 120 This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2020 Summary statistics for American Samoa 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2002 2007 AAGRAGDPB 536 527 553 550 548 532 0 1 Real GDPC 527 535 539 550 534 537 0 4 PopulationD 60 800 62 600 64 100 65 500 66 900 68 200 2 3 Real GDP per capita 8 668 8 546 8 409 8 397 7 982 7 874 1 9 A Average annual growth rate B In millions of dollars C In millions of 2005 chained dollars D Source 2008 American Samoa Statistical Yearbook From 2002 to 2007 the population of American Samoa increased at an average annual rate of 2 3 percent and real GDP per capita decreased at an average annual rate of 1 9 percent Agricultural production serves as a cover for domestic needs and only a small share of fruits and vegetables are exported According to figures as of 2013 the ratio between import and export is almost balanced Many residents rely on transfer payments from relatives living on the mainland or from federal subsidies 121 Tisa s Barefoot Bar amp Grill The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 has contained special provisions for American Samoa since its inception citing its limited economy 122 American Samoan wages are based on the recommendations of a Special Industry Committee meeting bi annually 123 Originally the act contained provisions for other territories provisions which were phased out as those territories developed more diverse economies 124 In 2007 the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2007 was passed increasing the minimum wage in American Samoa by 50 per hour in 2007 and another 50 per hour each year thereafter until the minimum wage in American Samoa equals the federal minimum wage of 7 25 per hour in the United States 125 In response to the minimum wage increase the Chicken of the Sea tuna canning plant was shut down in 2009 and 2 041 employees were laid off in the process 126 The other major tuna canning plant in American Samoa is StarKist which began laying off workers in August 2010 with plans to lay off a total of 800 workers due to the minimum wage increases and other rising operation costs 127 American Samoa Governor Togiola Tulafono suggested that rather than laying off minimum wage workers the companies could reduce salaries and bonuses of top tier employees 128 The unemployment rate was 29 8 in 2005 but improved to 23 8 as of 2010 update In 2020 American Samoa s GDP was 709 million 3 Its GDP per capita PPP was 11 200 as of 2016 update 1 Some aspects of telecommunications in American Samoa are like other U S territories inferior to that of the mainland United States a recent estimate showed that American Samoa s Internet speed is slower than that of several Eastern European countries 129 Taxation Edit As in other U S territories the U S federal government imposes payroll taxes 130 131 and the equivalent self employment tax 132 on income from work in American Samoa but not the federal income tax on income generated in American Samoa by its residents except from work as U S government employees 133 Instead the government of American Samoa itself taxes the worldwide income of its residents as well as the income generated there by nonresidents largely under the same rules and rates as the U S tax code in effect in 2000 134 with certain modifications such as a minimum tax rate of 4 135 136 A similar situation applies to corporations 137 In 1983 the use of citizenship in taxation by American Samoa due to its incorporation of the U S tax code was ruled unconstitutional 138 The U S federal government does not impose estate or gift taxes on property not located in the United States states and District of Columbia owned by residents of a U S territory including American Samoa who are not U S citizens or who acquired U S citizenship by birth or naturalization in that same U S territory 139 However these taxes still apply to residents of a U S territory who acquired U S citizenship by birth or naturalization in a different part of the U S or by descent 140 It has been argued that this distinction based on place of birth and not only residence or citizenship is a rare case of unconstitutional tax discrimination but it has never been challenged in court 141 The government of American Samoa itself does not impose estate or gift taxes 142 Unlike U S citizens U S nationals without U S citizenship the status of most American Samoans who do not reside in the United States or any U S territory enjoy the unique combination of maintaining a U S passport and the right of return to the U S while not being subject to U S federal income tax on their non U S income 143 or to U S federal estate or gift taxes on their non U S property 144 145 U S citizens or anyone cannot acquire this status after birth 146 147 American Samoa does not impose a sales tax but it imposes a general import tax of 8 148 149 American Samoa is an independent customs territory whose importation rules and taxes differ from those applicable to other parts of the United States 150 151 Telecommunications Edit In 2012 Michael Calabrese Daniel Calarco and Colin Richardson stated that American Samoa had the most expensive internet of any U S territory and that the speeds were only slightly superior to those of dial up internet in the U S Mainland in the 1990s They also stated that many American Samoans are too poor to afford high speed internet 152 Transportation Edit The current territorial license plate design introduced in 2011 American Samoa Route Marker Main Road American Samoa has 150 miles 240 km of highways estimated in 2008 1 The maximum speed limit is 30 miles per hour 153 Ports and harbors include Aunuʻu Auasi Faleasao Ofu and Pago Pago 1 American Samoa has no railways 1 The territory has three airports all of which have paved runways The main airport is Pago Pago International Airport 1 on the island of Tutuila The Manuʻa group has two airports Ofu Airport on the island of Ofu and Fitiuta Airport on the island of Taʻu According to a 1999 estimate the territory has no merchant marine 1 On June 8 1922 the first bus service on Tutuila began its operations 154 There is currently a bus system in American Samoa called the ʻaiga bus system it consists of buses that travel across the island of Tutuila 155 156 Demographics EditMain article Demographics of American Samoa As of 2022 the population of American Samoa is estimated around 45 443 people 1 The 2020 census counted 49 710 people 97 5 of whom lived on the largest island Tutuila 2 157 About 57 6 of the population were born in American Samoa 28 6 in independent Samoa 6 1 in other parts of the United States 4 5 in Asia 2 9 in other parts of Oceania and 0 2 elsewhere At least 69 of the population had a parent born outside American Samoa 5 American Samoa is small enough to have just one ZIP code 96799 and uses the U S Postal Service state code AS for mail delivery 158 159 Ethnicity and language Edit In the 2020 census 89 4 of the population reported at least partial Samoan ethnicity 83 2 only Samoan 5 8 Asian 5 5 other Pacific island ethnicities 4 4 mixed and 1 1 other ethnicities 160 The Samoan language was spoken at home by 87 9 of the population while 6 1 spoke other Pacific island languages 3 3 spoke English 2 1 spoke an Asian language and 0 5 spoke other languages 47 2 of the population spoke English at home or very well 5 In 2022 Samoan and English were designated as official languages of the territory 161 At least some of the deaf population use Samoan Sign Language Religion Edit Zion Church in Leone Major Christian denominations on the island include the Congregational Christian Church in American Samoa the Catholic Church The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints and the Methodist Church of Samoa Collectively these churches account for the vast majority of the population J Gordon Melton in his book claims that the Methodists Congregationalists with the London Missionary Society and Roman Catholics led the first Christian missions to the islands Other denominations arrived later beginning in 1895 with the Seventh day Adventists various Pentecostals including the Assemblies of God Church of the Nazarene Jehovah s Witnesses and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints One of many churches in Samoa CIA Factbook 2010 estimate shows the religious affiliations of American Samoa as 98 3 Christian other 1 unaffiliated 0 7 1 World Christian Database 2010 estimate shows the religious affiliations of American Samoa as 98 3 Christian 0 7 agnostic 0 4 Chinese Universalist 0 3 Buddhist and 0 3 followers of the Bahaʼi Faith 162 According to Pew Research Center 98 3 of the total population is Christian Among Christians 59 5 are Protestant 19 7 are Roman Catholic and 19 2 are other Christians A major Protestant church on the island gathering a substantial part of the local Protestant population is the Congregational Christian Church in American Samoa a Reformed denomination in the Congregationalist tradition As of August 2017 update The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints website claims a membership of 16 180 one quarter of American Samoa s entire population with 41 congregations and four family history centers 163 Jehovah s Witnesses claim 210 ministers of the word and three congregations 164 Education Edit American Samoa Community College The island contains 23 primary schools Of the ten secondary schools five are operated by the American Samoa Department of Education 165 the other five are either administered by religious denominations or are privately owned American Samoa Community College founded in 1970 provides post secondary education on the islands Leone High School American Samoa was home to one high school as of 1961 which existed due to the matai s pressure on the naval governor to transform the old Marine barracks at Utulei into a school The teenagers of well off and more politically connected families attended the school which would later be known as Samoana High School With a median age of 15 the demand for more high schools was increasing and three new high schools were established by 1968 Another two soon followed and by 1979 2 800 high school students were attending six public and private high schools in American Samoa Looking for a cost effective way for educational reformation Governor H Rex Lee introduced the public television system in 1964 39 Culture EditSee also Culture of Samoa Jean P Haydon Museum in Pago Pago The Samoan culture has developed over 3 500 years and largely withstood interaction with European cultures It was adapted well to the teachings of Christianity The Samoan language is still in use in daily exchange however English is widely used and also the legal official language Besides Samoan language classes and cultural courses all instructions in public schools are in English The basic unit of the American Samoa culture is the ʻaiga family It consists of both immediate and extended family The matai or chief is the head of the ʻaiga The chief is the custodian of all ʻaiga properties A village nuʻu is made up of several or many ʻaiga with a common or shared interest Each ʻaiga is represented by their chief in the village councils 20 5 6 Music Edit This section is an excerpt from Music of Samoa edit Samoan Talipalau log drums at Piula Theological College distant ancestor of the Fijian Lali drums Music of Samoa is a complex mix of cultures and traditions with pre and post European contact histories Since American colonization popular traditions such as rap and hip hop have been integrated into Samoan music Traditional Samoan musical instruments includes several different distinctive instruments including a fala which is a rolled up mat beaten with sticks and several types of slit drum Sports Edit See also Sports in American Samoa American Samoa at the South Pacific Games The main sports played in American Samoa are football Samoan cricket canoeing yachting basketball golf netball tennis rugby table tennis boxing bowling volleyball and fishing tournaments Some current and former sports clubs are the American Samoa Tennis Association Rugby Unions Lavalava Golf Club and Gamefish Association Leagues improved and organized better after the completion of the Veterans Memorial Stadium 20 338 The 1997 South Pacific Mini Games were the biggest international event ever to take place in American Samoa The bid to host the games for the 23 participating countries was approved in May 1993 In January 1994 Governor A P Lutali appointed Fuga Teleso to head the task force charged with game preparations including the construction of a stadium Groundbreaking was in January 1994 The Governor later handed the task force on preparations to Lieutenant Governor Togiola The task force merged with the American Samoa National Olympics Committee to better coordinate and facilitate preparations V P Willis Construction built the 1 500 seat stands The Department of Public Safety trained its force for special games security The opening ceremony became extravagant where the U S Army Reserve carried the torch from Tula and Leone 20 357 358 About 2 000 athletes coaches and sponsors attended from 19 countries and competed in 11 sports at the game American Samoa fielded a team of 248 athletes The team won 48 medals 22 of which were gold medals and American Samoa came in fourth overall in the ratings American Samoa Rotary Club honored Fuga Tolani Teleso with the community s top award the Paul Harris Fellowship Award for his work on constructing the Veterans Memorial Stadium 20 359 In 1982 yachters competed in the Hobie World Championship held in Tahiti American Samoa beat the Apia team by half a point and won the Samoa Cup In 1983 a team coached by Dr Adele Satele Galeai brought home the winning trophy from the Regional women s volleyball tournament in Hawaii Also in 1983 the South Pacific Games were held in Apia American Samoa received 13 medals four gold four silver and five bronze That same year three junior golfers made the cut out of 1 000 players to attend the World Junior Golf Tournament in San Diego California 20 338 In 1987 American Samoa became the 167th member of the International Olympic Committee The first South Pacific Junior Tennis Tournament was held at the Tafuna courts in January 1990 20 339 Tony Solaita was the first American Samoan to play in Major League Baseball 20 339 There are thirty players from American Samoa in the National Football League NFL as of 2015 and over 200 play Div I NCAA Football 166 Some American Samoan NFL football players are Shalom Luani Junior Siavii Jonathan Fanene Mosi Tatupu Shaun Nua Isaac Sopoaga and Daniel Te o Nesheim After World War II a Welfare and Recreation Department was created This department arranged bowling softball badminton tournaments basketball and volleyball at various Tutuila locations Boxing matches and dancing also became popular activities 167 American football Edit Main article American football in American Samoa High school football game About 30 ethnic Samoans all from American Samoa currently play in the National Football League and more than 200 play NCAA Division I college football 168 In recent years it has been estimated that a Samoan male either an American Samoan or a Samoan living in the mainland United States is anywhere from 40 169 to 56 times 168 more likely to play in the NFL than a non Samoan American giving American Samoa the nickname Football Islands 170 Samoans are the most disproportionately overrepresented ethnic group in the National Football League 171 172 Six time All Pro Junior Seau was one of the most famous Americans of Samoan heritage ever to play in the NFL having been elected to the NFL 1990s All Decade Team and Pro Football Hall of Fame Pittsburgh Steelers safety Troy Polamalu though born and raised in the mainland United States is another famous American of Samoan heritage to have played in the NFL not having his hair cut since 2000 and only because a USC coach told him he had to and wearing it down during games in honor of his heritage The football culture was featured on 60 Minutes on January 17 2010 At the 2016 Republican National Convention American Samoa s delegation said American Samoa is the greatest exporter of NFL players 173 174 Football Edit The American Samoa national football team is one of the newest teams in the world and is also noted for being the world s weakest They lost to Australia 31 0 in a FIFA World Cup qualifying match on April 11 2001 but on November 22 2011 they finally won their first ever game beating Tonga 2 1 in a FIFA World Cup qualifier 175 The appearance of American Samoa s Jaiyah Saelua in the contest apparently became the first transgender player to compete on a World Cup stage 176 The American Samoan national team features in the highly rated 2014 British film Next Goal Wins The film documents the team s 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifying campaign in which they achieved their first ever international win Saelua and Nicky Salapu the man famous for being the goalkeeper during the team s 31 0 loss to Australia in 2001 feature prominently in the film 177 178 A feature film adaptation of the documentary was planned to be directed by Taika Waititi 179 Rugby league Edit The American Samoa national rugby league team represents the country in international rugby league The team competed in the 1988 1992 1998 and 2004 Pacific Cup competitions The team has also competed in the 2003 and 2004 World Sevens qualifiers in the 2005 World Sevens America Samoa s first match in the international Rugby League was in the 1988 Pacific Cup against Tonga Tonga won the match 38 14 which is still the biggest loss by an American Samoan side American Samoa s biggest win was in 2004 against New Caledonia with a final score of 62 6 American Samoa gets broadcasts of the National Rugby League in Australia on free to air television 180 There is also a new movement that aims to set up a four team domestic competition in American Samoa 180 Rugby union Edit Rugby union is a growing sport in American Samoa The first rugby game recorded in American Samoa was in 1924 since then the development of the game had been heavily overshadowed by the influence of American Football during the 1970s The highest governing body of rugby in American Samoa is the American Samoa Rugby Union which was founded in 1990 and was not affiliated with the IRB until 2012 Internationally two American Samoans have played for the New Zealand national rugby union team known as the All Blacks Frank Solomon born in Pago Pago became the first American national of Samoan descent to play for a New Zealand team Considered a pacific pioneer in New Zealand rugby 181 Solomon scored a try against Australia in the inaugural Bledisloe Cup match in 1932 which New Zealand won 21 13 The second American Samoan to play for the All Blacks is Jerome Kaino born in Fagaʻalu A native of Leone Kaino moved to New Zealand when he was four In 2004 at age 21 he played his first match for New Zealand against the Barbarians where he scored his first try contributing to New Zealand s 47 19 victory that resulted in him becoming a man of the match 182 He also played a crucial role in the Rugby World Cup 2011 playing every match in the tournament He scored four tries in the event which led to New Zealand winning the final against France 8 7 Kaino was also a key member of the 2015 Rugby World Cup squad where he played every match including a try he scored in the quarterfinals against France which New Zealand won 62 13 He scored again in the semifinals against South Africa which New Zealand won 20 18 He played in the World Cup final against Australia where New Zealand won again 34 17 to become world champions for a record three times 1987 2011 and 2015 Kaino is one of twenty New Zealand rugby players to have won the Rugby World Cup twice back to back in 2011 and 2015 In August 2015 the American Samoa Rugby Union Board selected Leota Toma Patu from the village of Leone as the coach for the Talavalu 15 men s team that represented American Samoa at the Ocean Cup 2015 in Papua New Guinea Other sports Edit Boxing Maselino Masoe who represented American Samoa in three consecutive Olympics from 1988 to 1996 was WBA middleweight champion from 2004 to 2006 Professional wrestling Several American Samoan athletes have been very visible in professional wrestling The Anoa i family in particular has had many of its members employed by WWE Sumo wrestling Some Samoan Sumo wrestlers most famously Musashimaru and Konishiki have reached the highest ranks of ōzeki and yokozuna Track and field Hammer thrower Lisa Misipeka attracted international attention by winning a bronze medal in the 1999 World Championships in Athletics Recreation Edit Pola Island Aunuʻu Island A team from the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation conducted a parks survey on American Samoa in the 1960s Their team recommended sites at Cape Taputapu Leʻala at Vailoatai Aʻoloau Fou the plateau Matautuloa Point Nuʻuuli Matafao Peak Pago Pago Vaiʻava Strait Anasosopo ʻAoa Cape Matautuloa and Aunuʻu Island After an initial objection Secretary Leʻiato gave his support and was appointed Chairman of the Territorial Parks and Recreation Committee The first field meeting for a parkland acquisition was held between Judge Morrow on behalf of the government and the village council of Vatia to make the Pola Island area a public park The dredge Palolo was hired from Upolu in January 1966 in order to dredge sand for Utulei Beach A specialist in beach developments Ala Varone of the Army directed the project The centerpiece of the park was to be at the head of Pago Pago Harbor where it proposed a 13 acre site created by the dredge The park would have facilities for sports and recreation as well as facilities for boats and the growing number of Asian immigrants arriving from Korea Japan and China 20 285 The Department of Parks and Recreation was created by law in 1980 and the Parks Commission was also established 20 315 In 1981 Governor Peter Tali Coleman appointed Fuga Tolani Teleso as Director of Parks and Recreation On May 25 1984 a groundbreaking ceremony was held at the Onesosopo reclamation to initiate work on the first park in the Eastern District 20 332 At the urging of Dr Paul Cox High Chief Nafanua of Falealupo and the Bat Preservers Association Congressman Fofō Iosefa Fiti Sunia introduced a bill in 1984 which would enter American Samoa into the Federal Fish and Wildlife Restoration Act The purpose of the bill was to protect the ancient paleotropical rainforests and the Flying fox megabat The signing marked the beginning of American Samoa s entry into the U S National Park System In July 1987 the National Park Service began establishing a federal park the National Park of American Samoa An initial appropriation of 400 000 was made in 1989 It contains one of the world s most remarkable rainforest and coastal reef ecologies and spreads across three islands One of the most popular sites on Tutuila Island include Pola Rock a rise of sheer rock formations that protrudes over 400 feet 120 m above the ocean s surface It is located off the shores of Vatia 20 332 On September 19 1991 Governor Peter Tali Coleman and Department of the Interior secretary Manuel Lujan signed leases formalizing the establishment of the fiftieth U S National Park 20 335 National Natural Landmarks The ASG Parks and Recreation oversees the maintenance of all public parks including the Amanave Mini Park Lions Park in Tafuna Onesosopo Park in Aua Malaloa Mini Park Fagaʻalu Park Tia Seu Lupe historical site at Fatuoaiga Pago Pago Park Pago Pago Tennis Courts the Little League Softball Field Tony Solaʻita Baseball Field Solo Ridge at the Utulei Tramway Utulei Beach Park and Suʻigaulaoleatuvasa in Utulei 183 Matafao Peak National Natural Landmark American Samoa has seven areas designated as National Natural Landmarks on Tutuila Island This program is administrated by the U S National Park Service and the areas contain unique ecological or geological features Except Vaiʻava Strait none of the areas are within the National Park of American Samoa 184 281 American Samoa s seven National Natural Landmarks NNL were designated in 1972 Cape Taputapu Fogamaʻa Crater Matafao Peak Leʻala Shoreline Rainmaker Mountain Vaiʻava Strait Aunuʻu IslandWildlife EditNotable terrestrial species include the Pacific tree boa and the Samoa flying fox which has a three foot wingspread 185 Two snake species can be found in American Samoa The Brahminy blind snake is found on Tutuila while the Pacific tree boa occurs on Taʻu The islands are home to five species of geckos Pacific slender toed gecko Oceanic gecko Mourning gecko Stump toed gecko and House gecko 186 184 253 Turtles include the threatened Green sea turtle and the endangered Hawksbill sea turtle Hawksbill sea turtles tend to nest on Tutuila beaches while the Green sea turtle is most common on Rose Atoll 187 Tutuila has the highest number of nesting turtles consisting of around fifty nesting females per year 188 American Samoa is home to one species of amphibian the Cane toad Biologists estimate that there are over two million toads on Tutuila 184 252 915 nearshore fish species have been recorded in American Samoa compared to only 460 nearshore fish species in Hawaii 184 20 With over 950 species of native fish and 250 coral species American Samoa has the greatest marine biodiversity in the United States 189 Fruit bats Edit The Samoa flying fox is only found in Fiji and the Samoan Islands Megabats are the only native mammal in American Samoa The islands are home to two species of fruit bats Pacific flying fox and Samoa flying fox The Sheath tailed bat is another species found here which is a smaller insect eating bat In 1992 the American Samoa Government banned the hunting of fruit bats to help their populations recover 190 The Samoa flying fox is only found in Fiji and the Samoan Islands 186 184 200 From 1995 to 2000 the population of Samoa flying fox remained stable at about 900 animals on Tutuila and 100 in the Manuʻa Islands 191 As of the year 2000 scientists from the American Samoa Department of Marine and Wildlife Resource estimated that there are fewer than 5 500 Pacific flying foxes in American Samoa and an estimated 900 or fewer Samoa flying foxes 184 199 The best and biggest known roost on Tutuila Island for the Sheath tailed bat is in the Anapeʻape Cove near Afono 192 Amalau Valley on Tutuila s north coast offers great roadside views of many bird species and both species of fruit bat 184 274 The valley has been called a prime bird and bat watching area 193 194 195 Avifauna Edit The Blue crowned lorikeet is the only parrot found in American Samoa Sixteen of the Samoan Islands 34 bird species are found nowhere else on Earth This includes the critically endangered tooth billed pigeon 196 Four species of birds are only found in the Manuʻa Islands and not on Tutuila These include American Samoa s only parrot the blue crowned Lory Other special birds to Manuʻa are the lesser shrikebill and the friendly ground dove The spotless crake has only been observed on Taʻu Island 186 There are more species of birds than all species of reptiles mammals and amphibians combined Native land birds include two honeyeaters cardinal honeyeater and wattled honeyeater Cardinal honeyeaters only occur on Tutuila Island The only endemic land bird to American Samoa is the Samoan starling Four pigeons are native to American Samoa Pacific imperial pigeon many colored fruit dove white capped fruit dove and shy ground dove The local government banned all pigeon hunting in 1992 197 The many colored fruit dove is one of the rarest birds that nest on Tutuila Studies in the 1980s estimated their population size at Tutuila to be only around 80 birds 186 Amalau Valley has been described as the best place in American Samoa to observe the many colored fruit dove 198 The offshore islet of Pola Island near Vatia is a nesting site for many seabird species and an excellent area to observe seabirds 199 198 The Pola region of Vatia and Rose Atoll are the only places in American Samoa where there are breeding colonies of red footed boobies 200 Birds that depend on freshwater habitat include the Pacific reef heron and Pacific black duck the Samoan Islands only species of duck The largest wetland areas are the pala lagoons in Nuʻuuli and Leone as well as Pala Lake on Aunuʻu Island 186 See also Edit Oceania portal United States portalIndex of American Samoa related articles List of lakes in American Samoa List of National Natural Landmarks in American Samoa List of people from American Samoa National Register of Historic Places listings in American Samoa Outline of American Samoa PolynesiaNotes Edit American Samoa belongs to but is not a part of the United States See the page for the Insular Cases for more information a b c The constitution specifies the seat of government at Fagatogo where the legislature High Court and District Court are located 55 61 62 59 The executive office building is located in neighboring Utulei 57 58 These two villages are located along Pago Pago Harbor whose largest village is Pago Pago Many sources list Pago Pago as the capital referring to the whole agglomeration around the harbor 105 1 To travel to American Samoa U S nationals need to show proof of existing residence or future employment in American Samoa or a ticket for future departure from the territory 83 However once there U S nationals may reside indefinitely and cannot be deported 84 An American Samoan law of 1962 defined 14 counties 100 The constitution of 1967 signed by delegates from these 14 counties established 15 counties from then on separating Fofo from Lealataua 55 The election law was later revised accordingly 101 102 103 However the U S Census Bureau continues to list 14 counties treating Fofo as part of Lealataua 2 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o American Samoa The World Factbook CIA Retrieved August 30 2019 a b c Population of American Samoa 2010 and 2020 U S Census Bureau a b American Samoa World Bank Gross domestic product for American Samoa increases for the second year in a row PDF Bureau of Economic Analysis Archived from the original PDF on May 13 2017 Retrieved July 14 2017 a b c Selected social characteristics 2020 Decennial Census of the Island Areas American Samoa demographic profile U S Census Bureau Local US Army recruiting station ranked 1 in the world Samoa News Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 10 2015 Calder Alex Lamb Jonathan Orr Bridget April 1 1999 Voyages and Beaches Pacific Encounters 1769 1840 University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2039 8 Journal of the Polynesian Society An Experiment In Tongan History By E E V Collocott P 166 184 www jps auckland ac nz Retrieved November 19 2020 a b c Keating Barbara 1991 Keating Barbara Bolton Barrie eds The Geology of the Samoan Islands in Geology and Offshore Mineral Resources of the Central Pacific Basin Circum Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources Earth Science Series Vol 14 Springer Verlag pp 128 129 ISBN 0387977716 Watson R M 1919 History of Samoa The Advent of the Missionary 1830 1839 Chapter III Archived from the original on May 3 2011 Stanton William 1975 The Great United States Exploring Expedition Berkeley University of California Press pp 132 133 ISBN 0520025571 Stevenson Robert Louis 1892 A Footnote to History Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa BiblioBazaar ISBN 1 4264 0754 8 Ryden George Herbert The Foreign Policy of the United States in Relation to Samoa New York Octagon Books 1975 Reprint by special arrangement with Yale University Press Originally published at New Haven Yale University Press 1928 p 574 The Tripartite Convention United States Germany Great Britain was signed at Washington on December 2 1899 with ratifications exchanged on February 16 1900 American Samoa Office of Insular Affairs www doi gov U S Department of the Interior June 11 2015 Archived from the original on March 9 2018 Retrieved August 11 2018 Ryden p 571 a b Lin Tom C W Americans Almost and Forgotten 107 California Law Review 2019 Joanne Barker 2005 Passive Resistance of Samoans to US and Other Colonialisms Sovereignty Matters Locations of Contestation and Possibility in Indigenous Struggles for Self determination U of Nebraska Press p 109 ISBN 0 8032 5198 X Sorensen Stan July 12 2006 Historical Notes PDF Tapuitea p 2 Archived from the original PDF on September 26 2011 Retrieved August 16 2011 Manuʻa celebrates 105 years under the U S Flag Samoa News July 16 2009 Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved August 16 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Sunia Fofo I F 2009 A History of American Samoa Amerika Samoa Humanities Council ISBN 978 1573062992 Life in Samoa from 1916 to 1919 archived from the original on 2015 09 26 Tomkins Sandra M 1992 The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 19 in Western Samoa Journal of Pacific History 27 2 181 197 doi 10 1080 00223349208572706 JSTOR 25169127 Pub Res 68 75 43 Stat 1357 enacted March 4 1925 Story of the Legislature of American Samoa 1988 Pettey Janice Gow 2002 Cultivating Diversity in Fundraising John Wiley and Sons Inc p 22 ISBN 978 0471226017 Apollo Splashdowns Near American Samoa Tavita Herdrich and News Bulletin Retrieved July 7 2010 Apollo 17 Lunar Surface Journal Kevin Steen Eric M Jones Archived from the original on May 13 2011 Retrieved February 23 2011 Madsen Deborah L 2015 The Routledge Companion to Native American Literature Routledge p 44 ISBN 978 1317693192 James Brooke August 1 2005 In South Pacific US Army has strong appeal The New York Times Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved September 30 2009 A Brief History of Aʻasu Tamug edu Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved February 26 2014 Marchant Leslie R La Perouse Jean Francois de Galaup 1741 1788 Biography Jean Francois de Galaup La Perouse Australian Dictionary of Biography Adb anu edu au Archived from the original on May 14 2013 Retrieved February 26 2014 Sadie Thompson Inn Sadie s Hotels Sadieshotels com Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved February 26 2014 Edwin Musick Pan Am Captain Ed Musick Pan Am Clipper Flying Boats Archived from the original on December 25 2010 Retrieved February 25 2011 American Samoa Gov t v Imoa Asbar org Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved February 26 2014 a b Enright John Tutuila in WWII In the Cross hairs of History Part 1 Samoa News Archived from the original on January 30 2014 Retrieved February 26 2014 a b Shaffer Robert J 2000 American Samoa 100 Years Under the United States Flag Island Heritage ISBN 978 0896103399 Eleanor Roosevelt in the Pacific July 8 2012 David Huebner US Ambassador to New Zealand Blogs newzealand usembassy gov Archived from the original on February 27 2013 Retrieved February 26 2014 Kennedy Joseph 2009 The Tropical Frontier America s South Sea Colony University of Hawaii Press p 218 ISBN 978 0980033151 a b Ruck Rob 2018 Tropic of Football The Long and Perilous Journey of Samoans to the NFL The New Press ISBN 978 1620973387 Lyndon B Johnson Remarks Upon Arrival at Tafuna International Airport Pago Pago American Samoa Presidency ucsb edu October 18 1966 Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved February 26 2014 NASA History The Apollo Program History nasa gov Archived from the original on May 26 2013 Retrieved February 26 2014 Pago Pago s Worst Air Disaster Pan Am Flight 806 Subject of Documentary Samoa News January 22 2014 Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved February 26 2014 Swaney Deanna 1994 Samoa Western amp American Samoa a Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit Lonely Planet Publications p 164 ISBN 978 0864422255 Man fatally shoots American Samoa police officer outside courthouse just after hearing Fox News July 23 2010 Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Retrieved February 26 2014 Clinton visits American Samoa after two week trip to Asia Honolulu Star Advertiser November 8 2010 Archived from the original on August 16 2017 Retrieved August 16 2017 US Vice President to dedicate American Samoa clinic to Eni RNZ April 19 2017 Archived from the original on October 19 2019 Retrieved October 19 2019 Pence cutting Pacific trip short Politico Archived from the original on October 20 2017 Retrieved November 28 2017 Mike Pence cuts short his stop in Hawaii to deal with domestic issues CBS News Archived from the original on October 20 2017 Retrieved November 28 2017 Aumua And Governor Talk AS Issues With Secretary Of State Tillerson June 6 2017 Retrieved March 29 2021 American Samoa Earthquake and Tsunami U S Department of the Interior October 13 2009 Archived from the original on March 16 2013 Retrieved September 22 2014 Pacific tsunami warning cancelled Samoa takes brunt Reuters September 29 2009 Archived from the original on October 3 2009 Retrieved September 29 2009 Foley Meraiah October 1 2009 Scores Are Killed as Tsunami Hits Samoa Islands The New York Times Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved September 30 2009 Joyce Stacey September 29 2009 8 0 magnitude quake generates tsunami off Samoa islands Reuters Archived from the original on October 3 2009 Retrieved September 29 2009 This folder contains material collected by the office of President John F Kennedy s secretary Evelyn Lincoln concerning American Samoa and consists of a letter to the President from Secretary of Samoan Affairs Leʻiato Tuli jfklibrary org John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Archived from the original on June 4 2016 a b c d e Revised Constitution of American Samoa American Samoa Bar Association Archived January 13 2021 at the Wayback Machine 4 0105 Term of office Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association a b American Samoa Representative and Liaison Offices U S Department of the Interior a b c Tutuila Island Map National Park Service a b c American Samoa Observatory Trip to Tula National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 3 0101 Vesting of judicial power Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association a b 3 0207 Divisions and sessions Composition Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association a b 3 0303 Sessions Petit jury Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association 3 1001 Chief and Associate Justices Appointment Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association 3 1010 District court judges Term Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association 3 1004 Associate judges Appointment Term Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association F J H Grattan 1948 The Organisation of Samoan Society An Introduction to Samoan Custom Papakura R McMILLAN p 10 Retrieved June 30 2022 via NZETC American Samoa must consider independence congressman Radioaustralia net au May 18 2012 Archived from the original on October 30 2013 Retrieved February 26 2014 Call for independence discussion for American Samoa Radioaustralia net au May 18 2012 Archived from the original on October 30 2013 Retrieved February 26 2014 U S nationals born in American Samoa sue for citizenship NBC News Associated Press March 28 2018 Archived from the original on September 28 2018 Retrieved 2018 10 01 8 U S C 1408 Tuaua v United States 788 F 3d 300 D C Cir 2015 Mohammadi v Islamic Republic of Iran 782 F 3d 9 15 D C Cir 2015 The sole such statutory provision that presently confers United States nationality upon non citizens is 8 U S C 1408 Matter of Navas Acosta 23 I amp N Dec 586 B I A 2003 See also 8 U S C 1483 Restrictions on loss of nationality 8 U S C 1501 1503 8 U S C 1252 b 5 Treatment of nationality claims Profile The Samoas BBC News September 30 2009 Archived from the original on October 3 2009 Retrieved September 30 2009 8 U S C 1401 Nationals and citizens of United States at birth America Samoa Performing a Risk Assessment Would Better Inform U S Agencies of the Risks Related to Acceptance of Certificates of Identity PDF U S Government Accountability Office June 2010 p 11 p 15 of the pdf Archived PDF from the original on July 8 2015 Retrieved September 21 2014 Amicus Curiae Brief of Eni F H Faleomavaega PDF November 7 2012 archived from the original PDF on September 23 2015 retrieved April 26 2014 More than a century ago the Supreme Court held that the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not extend birthright citizenship to United States nationals who are born in unincorporated territories See Downes v Bidwell 182 US 244 251 1901 The Court has reaffirmed this principle through the years noting that individuals who are born in an unincorporated territory though subject to the jurisdiction of the United States are American nationals who are not birthright citizens of the United States Barber v Gonzales 347 U S 637 639 n 1 1954 American Samoa and the Citizenship Clause A Study in Insular Cases Revisionism Chapter 3 Harvard Law Review Retrieved 7 January 2018 Wang Frances Kai Hwa February 2 2016 American Samoa Citizenship Case Arrives at Supreme Court NBC News Retrieved February 17 2016 Fitisemanu v US 426 F Supp 3d 1155 D Utah Dec 12 2019 Fitisemanu v United States Nos 20 4017 amp 20 4019 June 15 2021 WILLIAMS MICHAEL September 15 2021 INTERVENOR DEFENDANTS APPELLANTS BRIEF OPPOSING REHEARING EN BANC PDF Exhibit A Archived PDF from the original on September 17 2021 Sunia Fofō I F 1998 The Story of the Legislature of American Samoa In Commemoration of the Golden Jubilee 1948 1998 Pago Pago AS Legislature of American Samoa pp 234 235 ISBN 978 9829008015 American Samoa delegate loses seat The Hill November 2014 Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved November 8 2014 Registration information Election Office of American Samoa 41 0502 Entry requirements Code Annotated American Samoa Bar Association Immigration American Samoa Bar Association American Samoa Performing a Risk Assessment Would Better Inform U S Agencies of the Risks Related to Acceptance of Certificates of Identity U S Government Accountability Office June 11 2010 Archived November 16 2017 at the Wayback Machine Immigration Office Department of Legal Affairs of American Samoa 8 U S C 1101 a 36 8 U S C 1101 a 38 Who is eligible for naturalization A Guide to Naturalization U S Citizenship and Immigration Services Op ed Lamentations of a third class American Samoan citizen Samoa News July 23 2018 Volume 12 Part D Chapter 3 Continuous Residence Chapter 4 Physical Presence Policy Manual U S Citizenship and Immigration Services 15 December 2020 Until November 28 2009 the Northern Mariana Islands were also not treated as a state for the purposes of maintaining U S permanent residence or physical presence for naturalization Instructions for Form I 130 Petition for Alien Relative U S Citizenship and Immigration Services American Samoa Bar Association Craddick v Territorial Registrar 1980 1ASR2d10 American Samoa Bar Association Retrieved December 8 2022 American Samoa Bar Association American Samoa Code Annotated 37 0201 Definitions American Samoa Bar Association Retrieved December 8 2022 Institute of Island Studies University of Prince Edward Island American Samoa PDF Institute of Island Studies UPEI Retrieved December 8 2022 American Samoa Bar Association Craddick v Territorial Registrar 1980 1ASR2d10 American Samoa Bar Association Retrieved December 8 2022 American Samoa Bar Association Craddick v Territorial Registrar 1980 1ASR2d10 American Samoa Bar Association Retrieved December 8 2022 Julia Longoria April 10 2019 Americanish Audio Podcast with Notes Radiolab Archived from the original on April 30 2019 Retrieved April 30 2019 American Samoa Bar Association Craddick v Territorial Registrar 1980 1ASR2d10 American Samoa Bar Association Retrieved December 8 2022 Samoan history U S Embassy in Samoa 5 0102 Division of districts into counties Annontated Code of American Samoa American Samoa Bar Association 2 0202 Districts Annontated Code of American Samoa American Samoa Bar Association 2 0302 Districts Annontated Code of American Samoa American Samoa Bar Association 6 0102 Definitions Annontated Code of 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ISSN 1525 2027 Archived PDF from the original on May 14 2011 Retrieved March 20 2011 Dinerstein Eric Olson David Joshi Anup Vynne Carly Burgess Neil D Wikramanayake Eric Hahn Nathan Palminteri Suzanne Hedao Prashant Noss Reed Hansen Matt Locke Harvey Ellis Erle C Jones Benjamin Barber Charles Victor Hayes Randy Kormos Cyril Martin Vance Crist Eileen Sechrest Wes Price Lori Baillie Jonathan E M Weeden Don Suckling Kieran Davis Crystal Sizer Nigel Moore Rebecca Thau David Birch Tanya Potapov Peter Turubanova Svetlana Tyukavina Alexandra de Souza Nadia Pintea Lilian Brito Jose C Llewellyn Othman A Miller Anthony G Patzelt Annette Ghazanfar Shahina A Timberlake Jonathan Kloser Heinz Shennan Farpon Yara Kindt Roeland Lilleso Jens Peter Barnekow van Breugel Paulo Graudal Lars Voge Maianna Al Shammari Khalaf F Saleem Muhammad 2017 An Ecoregion Based Approach to Protecting Half the Terrestrial Realm BioScience 67 6 534 545 doi 10 1093 biosci bix014 ISSN 0006 3568 PMC 5451287 PMID 28608869 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BBC News December 24 2011 Retrieved April 16 2020 Kroll Justin September 13 2019 Michael Fassbender to Star in Taika Waititi s Next Goal Wins Variety Retrieved April 16 2020 a b American Samoa Rugby League Planet November 24 2011 Archived from the original on December 16 2011 Retrieved December 25 2011 The first Island men to play for the All Blacks Oceania Rugby November 4 2008 Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Perrott Alan August 11 2011 Jerome Kaino The enforcer The New Zealand Herald Retrieved June 30 2022 Park usage numbers increase despite major problems with vandalism and limited facilities www samoanews com February 25 2013 Archived from the original on July 23 2019 Retrieved July 23 2019 a b c d e f g Goldin Meryl Rose 2002 Field Guide to the Samoan Archipelago Fish Wildlife and Protected Areas Bess Press ISBN 9781573061117 Butcher Russell D and Lynn P Whitaker 1999 National Parks and Conservation Association Guide to National Parks Pacific Region Globe Pequot Press p 82 ISBN 978 0762705733 a b c d e Natural History Guide to American Samoa National Park Service 2009 Natural History Guide to American Samoa 3rd Edition at the Wayback Machine archived February 24 2017 American Samoa Sea Turtles PDF EcoAdapt Archived PDF from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 7 2019 Status of Sea Turtles in American Samoa in 1991 Natasha Tuatoʻo Bartley Thomas E Morrell and Peter Craig American Samoa Department of Marine and Wildlife Resources 1993 p 218 Archived December 3 2017 at the Wayback Machine Nichols Wallace J and Brad Nahill 2014 A Worldwide Travel Guide To Sea Turtles Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1623491741 Haberle Simon and Janelle Stevenson 2010 Altered Ecologies Fire Climate and Human Influence on Terrestrial Landscapes ANU E Press p 102 ISBN 978 1921666810 Fleming Theodore H and Paul A Racey 2010 Island Bats Evolution Ecology and Conservation University of Chicago Press p 432 ISBN 978 0226253312 National Park of American Samoa General Management Plan Environmental Impact Statement National Park Service 1997 pp 129 131 Archived February 28 2017 at the Wayback Machine Stanley David 2004 Moon Handbooks South Pacific Moon Travel Guides p 483 ISBN 978 1566914116 Stanley David 1996 South Pacific Handbook David Stanley p 417 ISBN 978 1566910408 Stanley David 1999 Moon Handbooks Tonga Samoa Moon Travel Guides p 180 ISBN 978 1566911740 Stanley David 1982 South Pacific Handbook David Stanley p 155 ISBN 978 0960332236 Haberle Simon and Janelle Stevenson 2010 Altered Ecologies Fire Climate and Human Influence on Terrestrial Landscapes ANU E Press pp 102 103 ISBN 978 1921666810 a b Watling Dick and Dieter R Rinke 2001 A Guide to the Birds of Fiji and Western Polynesia Including American Samoa Niue Samoa Tokelau Tonga Tuvalu and Wallis amp Futuna Environmental Consultants p 246 ISBN 978 9829047014 Muse Corey and Shirley 1982 The Birds of Birdlore of Samoa Pioneer Press p 15 ISBN 978 0936546056 Faiʻivae Alex Godinet 2018 Ole Manuō o Tala Tuʻu Ma Fisaga o Tala Ave Amerika Samoa Humanities Council p 59 ISBN 978 1546229070 Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of American Samoa Ellison Joseph 1938 Opening and Penetration of Foreign Influence in Samoa to 1880 Corvallis Oregon State College Sunia Fofo 1988 The Story of the Legislature of American Samoa Pago Pago American Samoa Legislature Meti Lauofo 2002 Samoa The Making of the Constitution Apia Government of Samoa External links EditAmerican Samoa at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Texts from Wikisource Travel information from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata AmericanSamoa gov official government website Samoan Bios Archived May 22 2019 at the Wayback Machine American Samoa at Curlie Wikimedia Atlas of American Samoa NOAA s National Weather Service American SamoaCountry data Edit American Samoa The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency American Samoa national profile from the Association of Religion Data Archives Coordinates 14 18 S 170 42 W 14 3 S 170 7 W 14 3 170 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Samoa amp oldid 1127144038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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