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Swains Island

Swains Island (/ˈswnz/; Tokelauan: Olohega [oloˈhɛŋa]; Samoan: Olosega [oloˈsɛŋa]) is a remote coral atoll in the Tokelau Islands in the South Pacific Ocean. The island is the subject of an ongoing territorial dispute between Tokelau and the United States, which has administered it as part of American Samoa since 1925.[5][6][2] Privately owned by the family of Eli Hutchinson Jennings since 1856,[7] Swains Island was used as a copra plantation until 1967.[2] It has not been permanently inhabited since 2008 but has often been visited by members of the Jennings family, scientific researchers, and amateur radio operators.[2][8][9][10][11][12]

Swains Island
Disputed island
Olohega, Olosega, Quirós, Isla de la Gente Hermosa, Jennings Island
Swains Island as seen from space
Swains Island
Geography
LocationPacific Ocean
Coordinates11°03′20″S 171°04′40″W / 11.05556°S 171.07778°W / -11.05556; -171.07778
ArchipelagoTokelau
Area2.43[a] km2 (0.94 sq mi)
Administration
TerritoryAmerican Samoa
Claimed by
Demographics
Population0[3] (2020)
Map of the island
Flag of Swains Island[4]

The island is located 180 km (97 nmi; 112 mi) south of Fakaofo (Tokelau) and 300 km (162 nmi; 186 mi) north of Savai‘i (Samoa). The land area is 2.43 km2 (0.94 sq mi),[1] and the total area including the lagoon is 3.5 km2 (1.4 sq mi).[2]

Etymology edit

A persistent misconception about Swains Island is its supposed discovery on 2 March 1606 by Pedro Fernandes de Queirós, a famous Portuguese navigator who sailed for Spain. On that day, he reckoned an island at 10°36'S 171°W, and his ship's historian named it Isla de la Gente Hermosa (meaning "island of the beautiful people" in Spanish), after its inhabitants. The closest island to that reckoned location is Swains Island at 11°03'S 171°05'W, leading later authors to identify it as the same, and thus refer to it by that Spanish name or by the Spanish version of the navigator's last name, Quirós (also spelled Quiros in English). However, the island described by Queirós was significantly larger, and at the time the calculation of longitude had a much greater uncertainty than latitude, leading later scholars to conclude that the island found by Queirós was actually Rakahanga, lying 1,100 km (590 nmi; 680 mi) to the east at 10°02'S 161°05'W.[13][14][2]

Captain William L. Hudson of the USS Peacock saw the island on 1 February 1841, during the United States Exploring Expedition of 1838–42. He claimed to have learned about the island's location from a certain Captain Swain of Nantucket, and after concluding that it did not match the description by Queirós, resolved to call it Swain's Island (the apostrophe was later dropped):

"[F]rom having its position very nearly pointed out to me by Capt. Swain of Nantucket who stated to me at Tahiti that he had seen it in passing – and in consequence of its being a considerable distance in latitude from, and not agreeing in size or character with the island described by Queros – in addition to this in view of it being peopled with a beautiful race – it is uninhabited and perhaps we are the first that have ever set foot upon it – thus much for its name."[15]

This Captain Swain has not been conclusively identified. Authors have suggested Jonathan Swain of whaler Independence in 1820,[2] or William C. Swain of whaler George Champlain[b] in the 1830s.[16][17] Other evidence suggests Obed Swain of whaler Jefferson of Nantucket, who, unlike William C. Swain, actually was at Tahiti when the United States Exploring Expedition was there with the USS Peacock and Captain Hudson.[18]

In Tokelauan, the main language formerly spoken on Swains Island, the island is called Olohega [oloˈhɛŋa]. The name is composed of the prefix olo-, indicating a collective noun, and the word hega, meaning a tuft of feathers tied to the end of a skipjack lure, possibly referring to the island's location at the end of the Tokelau chain.[19][20] A variant of this name is Olosega [oloˈsɛŋa], either also in Tokelauan or in Samoan, another language formerly spoken there.[20] It should not be confused with the homonymous island in the pair Ofu-Olosega of the Manu‘a group in American Samoa.

It is also called Jennings Island, after Eli Hutchinson Jennings, who settled there in 1856 and whose family still owns and manages the island.[citation needed]

Geography edit

 
Swains Island lagoon
 
Road on Swains Island

Swains Island has a total area of about 3.5 km2 (1.4 sq mi),[2] of which 2.43 km2 (0.94 sq mi) is land.[1] The central lagoon accounts for 1.16 km2 (0.45 sq mi).[2]

The atoll is somewhat unusual, featuring an unbroken circle of land enclosing a lagoon separated from the sea. The lagoon has a maximum depth of 12 m (39 ft) and contains algae and fish.[2] Its water has a salinity of about 0.4%,[2] described as brackish, useful for bathing and washing but not for drinking. Drinking water in the island is derived entirely from rainfall collected in tanks.[21]

Nearly all of the land is filled with coconut palms.[21] The village of Taulaga (meaning harbor or town),[19] in the west of the island, consists of a malae (open ceremonial space) surrounded by houses, but as of 2013 the only structure still standing was a church, built around 1886.[2] The village of Etena (meaning Eden),[21] in the south, contains the former residence of the Jennings family, also built in the 1880s but abandoned after a cyclone severely damaged it in 2005.[2] A road named Belt Road used to circle the entire island, but as of 2013 only the portion connecting the two villages was usable, the rest being covered in vegetation. The island also contains several cemeteries.[2]

Fauna edit

The island has been recognised as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports a breeding population of white terns. Seven reptile species have been recorded from the island, including three geckos and three skinks, as well as the green sea turtles which formerly nested on the island, but now occur only as visitors to inshore waters.[22]

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
193099—    
1940147+48.5%
1950164+11.6%
1960106−35.4%
197074−30.2%
198027−63.5%
199016−40.7%
200037+131.2%
201017−54.1%
20200−100.0%
U.S. Decennial Census[23][3]

Swains Island first appeared in the U.S. census in 1930,[24] following its annexation to American Samoa in 1925.

The 2010 census counted 17 people in six households. There were eight males (ages 20 to 61) and nine females (three under age 18, six ages 18 to 61). There were 11 U.S. nationals (eight born in American Samoa, and three in the United States) and six foreign nationals (four born in Samoa, one in Tokelau, and one in the Philippines). They reported their ethnic origins as 15 Samoans, one Tokelauan, and one Filipino. Of the 16 people over age five, 15 spoke mainly Samoan, and one spoke another Oceanic language, but all also spoke English.[25]

However, the people counted in the 2010 census did not permanently reside on Swains Island. Multiple visitors have reported the island as uninhabited since 2008.[2][8][10][12] The 2020 census recorded no residents there.[3]

History edit

Anthropologists indicate that the island was initially settled by Polynesian voyagers and later conquered by Tokelauans from Fakaofo.[2]

Whalers from New England began visiting the island in the 1830s or earlier. Frenchmen established copra production there around that time, during which the native population fled due to violence by the foreigners.[2]

Captain William L. Hudson of the USS Peacock saw the island on 1 February 1841, during the United States Exploring Expedition of 1838–42. He named it Swain's Island after a certain Captain Swain, from whom he had learned about the island's location.[2]

The Jennings family edit

 
Group of young people and children from Swains Island, late 1886. Photographed by Thomas Andrew.

Fakaofoans returned to the island soon after Hudson's visit, and were joined by three Frenchmen, who then left to sell the coconut oil they had accumulated.[21] In 1856, an American, Eli Hutchinson Jennings (14 November 1814 – 4 December 1878), joined a community on Swains with his Samoan wife, Malia. Jennings claimed to have received title to the atoll from a British Captain Turnbull, who claimed ownership of the island by discovery and named it after himself. According to one account, the sale price for Swains was 15 shillings per acre (37 shillings per hectare), and a bottle of gin.[26] One of the Frenchmen later returned, but did not care to share the island with Jennings and left.[27]

On 13 October 1856, Swains became a semi-independent proprietary settlement of the Jennings family (although under the U.S. flag), a status it would retain for approximately seventy years. It was also claimed for the U.S. by the United States Guano Company in 1860, under the Guano Islands Act.[27]

Jennings established a coconut plantation, which flourished under his son, Eli Jr. Eli Jennings Sr. was also instrumental in helping Peruvian "blackbird" slave ships to depopulate the other three Tokelau atolls.[28]

American sovereignty edit

In 1907, the Resident Commissioner of the British Gilbert and Ellice Islands (then a British protectorate; since 1979 the sovereign nations of Kiribati and Tuvalu) claimed that Swains belonged to the United Kingdom, demanding payment of a tax of US$85. Jennings paid, but he brought the matter before the U.S. State Department, and his money was ultimately refunded. The British government furthermore conceded that Swains was an American possession.

 
Swains Island Beach

The ownership of the island came into question after Eli Jr.'s death in 1920 and that of his wife in 1921. The United States decided to give the right of administration jointly to Eli's daughter Ann and son Alexander, while making it officially part of American Samoa by annexation on 4 March 1925. Alexander Jennings, the son of Eli Jennings, Jr., became managing owner of the island. The population at this time was around 100. During World War II, the island had a population of 125, and had a naval radio station.[29]

In 1953, labor troubles arose on Swains when Tokelauan-hired workers decided to claim "squatters' rights" to the atoll, by virtue of having lived on it year-round. After Alexander Jennings evicted 56 workers and their families from the island, the governor of American Samoa intervened. By executive order, the governor acknowledged Jennings' proprietary rights to Swains Island, while instituting a system of labor contracts and a local governmental structure to protect the rights of his employees.[21] The islanders were also guaranteed a representative in the territorial legislature.

Recent sovereignty and trade issues edit

 
Swains Island lies between the Samoan islands and Tokelau (upper center)

On 25 March 1981, New Zealand, of which Tokelau is a dependency, confirmed U.S. sovereignty over Swains Island in the Treaty of Tokehega, under which the United States surrendered its territorial claims to the other islands of Tokelau. In the draft constitution that was the subject of the 2006 Tokelau self-determination referendum, however, Swains Island is claimed as part of Tokelau.[30] As of March 2007, American Samoa has not yet taken an official position, but the Governor of American Samoa Togiola Tulafono has said he believes that his government should do everything it can to retain control of the island.[31]

Tokelau's claim to Swains is generally comparable to the Marshall Islands' claim to Wake Island (also administered by the U.S.). The re-emergence of this issue in the mid-2000s was an unintended consequence of the United Nations' efforts to promote decolonization in Tokelau in the early 2000s.[32] Tokelauans are reluctant to disown a common cultural, and thus national, identity with Swains Islanders who speak their language.

In 2007 Tokelau's regional parliament, the General Fono, considered the adoption of a new flag for their nation which showed a map depicting Swains Island, as a fourth star in addition to three others, at a proportional distance to that of the others. Ultimately a compromise was adopted whereby the four stars were retained, but with the arrangement and proportionality suggestive of the Southern Cross.[citation needed]

During a 2007 visit to Tokelau, Alexander Jennings, representative of Swains Island to the American Samoa legislature, indicated a desire for better trade links between Swains and its neighbor, saying he believed the then head of government of Tokelau, Kuresa Nasau, was also interested in improved relations.[33]

Cyclone Percy 2005 edit

In February 2005, Cyclone Percy struck the island, causing widespread damage and virtually destroying the village of Taulaga, as well as the old Jennings estate at Etena. Only seven people were on the island at the time.[34] Coast Guard airdrops ensured that the islanders were not left without food, water and other necessities. A United States Coast Guard visit in March 2007 listed 12 to 15 inhabitants, and showed that the island's trees had largely survived the cyclone.[35]

Amateur radio edit

Swains Island was first "discovered" as a possible amateur radio "entity" for American Radio Relay League (ARRL) Award purposes by Kan Mizoguchi JA1BK in 2005. He led a ham radio DXpedition there in 2005; however, the ARRL did not accept it for credit. Eventually the ARRL decided to approve Swains Island as a new "entity" based on the separation distance between it and American Samoa. Once accepted, Kan JA1BK led another DXpedition to the island (KH8SI) which did qualify as the first valid operation. The team consisted of JA1BK F6EXV JH1JGX/AH7C K1ER & K8YSE. 16,390 contacts were made.[citation needed]

Due to its remoteness, Swains Island is considered a separate amateur radio "entity" and several visits have been made by ham operators. The 2007 amateur radio "DXpedition", with call sign N8S, made more than 117,000 contacts worldwide. This set a new world record for an expedition using generator power and tents for living accommodations, since broken by the 2012 DXpedition to Malpelo Island.[36]

In 2012, Swains Island hosted the DXpedition NH8S; this group arrived on September 5, 2012 and departed on September 19, 2012. A total of 105,391 radio contacts were made.[37] The DXCC Country code is 515, ITU Zone 62, and CQ Zone 32.[38]

In 2023, there was another group of amateur radio operators on the island from October 4 - October 17 with 10 international operators: DJ9RR,DL2AMD,DL6JGN,KO8SCA,NG7M,PA2KW,PA3EWP,PA4WM, PA5X and PG5M; this group used the US callsign "W8S" [39].[citation needed]

Island government edit

According to the Interior Department survey cited above, Swains Island is governed by the American Samoa "government representative", a village council, a pulenu'u (civic head of the village), and a leoleo (policeman). Swains Island officials have the same rights, duties, and qualifications as in all the other villages of American Samoa. Neither the proprietor of Swains Island nor any employee of his may serve as government representative.

The government representative has the following duties:

  • to act as the governor's representative on Swains Island
  • to mediate between employees and their employer
  • to enforce those laws of the United States and of American Samoa which apply on Swains Island
  • to enforce village regulations
  • to keep the governor apprised of the state of affairs on Swains Island, particularly on the islanders' health, education, safety, and welfare
  • to ensure that Swains Islanders continue to enjoy the rights, privileges, and immunities accorded to them by the laws of the United States and of American Samoa
  • to ensure that the proprietary rights of the owner are respected

The government representative has the following rights, powers, and obligations:

  • to make arrests
  • to quell breaches of the peace
  • to call meetings of the village council to consider special subjects
  • to take such actions as may be reasonably necessary to implement and render effective his duties

Swains Island's village council consists of all men of sound mind over the age of twenty-four. According to the federal census in 1980, five men fell into this category.

Every two years, Swains Island sends one non-voting delegate to the American Samoan territorial legislature. Since 2004, this office has been held by Alexander Jennings. In October 2020 at a meeting of Swain islanders in Tafuna, American Samoa, he was re-elected for the ninth time.[40]

The Jennings dynasty edit

Styling themselves "leaders" or "proprietors", members of the Jennings family ruled Swains Island virtually independent of any outside authority from 1856 to 1925. After 1925, while retaining proprietary ownership of the island, they were subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S. territory of American Samoa.

Jenningses who ruled as semi-independent "proprietors":

  • 13 October 1856 – 4 December 1878: Eli Hutchinson Jennings, Sr. (1814–1878)
  • 4 December 1878 – 25 October 1891: Malia Jennings, his Samoan widow (d. 1891)
  • 25 October 1891 – 24 October 1920: Eli Hutchinson Jennings, Jr., (1863–1920) son of Eli, Sr. and Malia, referred to by Robert Louis Stevenson as "King Jennings" during a visit to the island.
  • 24 October 1920 – August 1921: Ann Eliza Jennings Carruthers (1897–1921), jointly with sibling, Alexander Hutchinson Jennings; both children of Eli Jr.
  • 24 October 1920 – 4 March 1925: Alexander Hutchinson Jennings III

Jenningses who ruled under direct American jurisdiction:

  • 4 March 1925 – Unknown date in 1940s: Alexander Hutchinson Jennings III
  • Unknown Dates between 1940–1954: Alexander E. Jennings
  • 1954 to present: local government instituted by American Samoa. However, the island is still owned by the Jennings family.

In popular culture edit

Swains Island: One of the Last Jewels of the Planet (2014), directed and narrated by Jean-Michel Cousteau, is the first American Samoan film to be entered in the Blue Ocean Festival in Florida.[41][42][43]

The band Te Vaka has written a song called Haloa Olohega ("Poor Olohega" in Tokelauan), lamenting about the loss of the island for Tokelau.[44]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Land area.[1] Area including lagoon is 3.5 km2 (1.4 sq mi).[2]
  2. ^ Sources refer to this ship by various spellings: Chamblain, Chamblan, Champlain, Champlin, Chaplin.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Population, Housing Units, Land Area, and Density by Place for American Samoa: 2010, U.S. Census Bureau.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Unlocking the Secrets of Swains Island, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, September 2013.
  3. ^ a b c Population of American Samoa: 2010 and 2020, U.S. Census Bureau.
  4. ^ . U.S. Department of the Interior. Archived from the original on February 8, 2012.
  5. ^ Monmonier, Mark (2010). No Dig, No Fly, No Go: How Maps Restrict and Control. University of Chicago Press. pp. 81. ISBN 9780226534633.
  6. ^ "The World Factbook". Cia.gov. Retrieved March 11, 2014.
  7. ^ "America Annexes Swain's Island". V(11) Pacific Islands Monthly. June 25, 1935. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  8. ^ a b Swains Island, Charles A. Veley, 27 November 2008.
  9. ^ 2012 Swains Island DXpedition
  10. ^ a b Assessment of the Birds of Swains Island, American Samoa, Andrew Titmus, Nicola Arcilla, and Christopher Lepczyk, The Wilson Journal of Ornithology, March 2016.
  11. ^ Swains Island – One of the Last Jewels of the Planet, Ocean Futures Society, 2014.
  12. ^ a b Atoll envisioned as a model for sustainability, Star Advertiser, 20 September 2014.
  13. ^ Maude, H.E. (1968). Of Islands & Men. Oxford University Press. pp. 74, 75.
  14. ^ Sharp, Andrew (1960). The Discovery of The Pacific Islands. Oxford University Press. pp. 61, 62.
  15. ^ Journal of William L. Hudson, comdg. U.S. Ship Peacock, one of the vessels attached to the South Sea Surveying and Exploring Expedition under the command of Charles Wilkes Esq. 1838-1842. (American Museum of Natural History)
  16. ^ File no. 811.0141q/14, Central Decimal File of the Dept. of State/Nara. (1914)
  17. ^ Lufkin and Swain family papers..., Bancroft Library, UC, Berkeley, Ca. - Banc MSS 68/122 c.
  18. ^ Dehner, Steve (2017). "The "Forged" Discovery of Swains Island: The Nantucket Connection I".
  19. ^ a b Tokelau Dictionary, Office of Tokelau Affairs, 1986.
  20. ^ a b Wayfinding in Pacific linguascapes: Negotiating Tokelau linguistic indentities in Hawai‘i, Akiemi Glenn, August 2012.
  21. ^ a b c d e . U.S. Department of the Interior. Archived from the original on February 8, 2012.
  22. ^ "Swains Atoll". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2021. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
  23. ^ "U.S. Decennial Census". Census.gov. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  24. ^ Fifteenth Census of the United States: 1930, American Samoa, U.S. Census Bureau.
  25. ^ American Samoa's 2010 Demographic Profile Summary File Data, U.S. Census Bureau.
  26. ^ Krauss, Bob (April 3, 2005). . The Honolulu Advertiser. Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  27. ^ a b Skaggs, Jimmy M. (1994). The Great Guano Rush: Entrepreneurs and American Overseas Expansion. Palgrave Macmillan US. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-312-10316-3.
  28. ^ Maude, H.E. (1981). Slavers In Paradise: The Peruvian Labour Trade In Polynesia, 1862–1864. Suva, Fiji: The University of the South Pacific. p. 63. ISBN 9780708116074.
  29. ^ Gordon L. Rottman (2002). World War II Pacific Island Guide: A Geo-military Study. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-313-31395-0.
  30. ^ "Tokelau calls for return of island". One News. February 15, 2006. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
  31. ^ "American Samoa governor ready to resist Tokelau's claim to Swains Island". Radio New Zealand International. March 26, 2007. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
  32. ^ Maclellan, Nic (February 23, 2006). The Modern House of Tokelau: Self-determination in a Pacific Atoll Nation. APSNet Policy Forum. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  33. ^ "American Samoa's Swains Island seeks trade deal with Tokelau". Radio New Zealand. March 1, 2007. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  34. ^ [1] July 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ "USCGC Kukui (WLB - 203)". Archived from the original on December 13, 2012.
  36. ^ "N8S Home Page". Yt1ad.info. Retrieved March 11, 2014.
  37. ^ "NH8S Swains Island 2012".|
  38. ^ March 2020 ARRL DXCC LIST CURRENT ENTITIES
  39. ^ https://www.qrz.com/db/W8S
  40. ^ "Swains Islanders meet to select Fono delegate". Samoa News. October 29, 2020. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  41. ^ "American Samoa ocean film wins award". Radio New Zealand. November 11, 2014.
  42. ^ ""Swains Island — One of the Last Jewels of the Planet" Wins Festival Award". Samoa News. November 10, 2014.
  43. ^ . KEYT-TV. Santa Barbara, California. June 28, 2018. Archived from the original on June 28, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  44. ^ "Te Vaka". www.tevaka.com. Retrieved April 28, 2018.

External links edit

  • Introduction to Swains Island geography and history.
  • 2005 Story from the Samoa News about a 1920s visit to Swains Island.
  • "A queen mother's last wish" Article in the Honolulu Advertiser about the death of Eliza Jennings Thompson, "queen mother" of Swains Island.
  • American Samoa, its districts and unorganized islands, United States Census Bureau
  • Alert for Cyclone Percy Gives 2005 population.
  • History of Swains Island
  • WorldStatesmen- American Samoa
  • Tokelau looks to independence February 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • An account of a visit to Swain's Island in the 1960s

swains, island, confused, with, swain, island, newfoundland, labrador, swain, islands, tokelauan, olohega, oloˈhɛŋa, samoan, olosega, oloˈsɛŋa, remote, coral, atoll, tokelau, islands, south, pacific, ocean, island, subject, ongoing, territorial, dispute, betwe. Not to be confused with Swain s Island Newfoundland and Labrador or Swain Islands Swains Island ˈ s w eɪ n z Tokelauan Olohega oloˈhɛŋa Samoan Olosega oloˈsɛŋa is a remote coral atoll in the Tokelau Islands in the South Pacific Ocean The island is the subject of an ongoing territorial dispute between Tokelau and the United States which has administered it as part of American Samoa since 1925 5 6 2 Privately owned by the family of Eli Hutchinson Jennings since 1856 7 Swains Island was used as a copra plantation until 1967 2 It has not been permanently inhabited since 2008 but has often been visited by members of the Jennings family scientific researchers and amateur radio operators 2 8 9 10 11 12 Swains IslandDisputed islandOlohega Olosega Quiros Isla de la Gente Hermosa Jennings IslandSwains Island as seen from spaceSwains IslandGeographyLocationPacific OceanCoordinates11 03 20 S 171 04 40 W 11 05556 S 171 07778 W 11 05556 171 07778ArchipelagoTokelauArea2 43 a km2 0 94 sq mi Administration United StatesTerritoryAmerican SamoaClaimed by TokelauDemographicsPopulation0 3 2020 Map of the islandFlag of Swains Island 4 The island is located 180 km 97 nmi 112 mi south of Fakaofo Tokelau and 300 km 162 nmi 186 mi north of Savai i Samoa The land area is 2 43 km2 0 94 sq mi 1 and the total area including the lagoon is 3 5 km2 1 4 sq mi 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 Fauna 4 Demographics 5 History 5 1 The Jennings family 5 2 American sovereignty 5 3 Recent sovereignty and trade issues 5 4 Cyclone Percy 2005 5 5 Amateur radio 6 Island government 7 The Jennings dynasty 8 In popular culture 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEtymology editA persistent misconception about Swains Island is its supposed discovery on 2 March 1606 by Pedro Fernandes de Queiros a famous Portuguese navigator who sailed for Spain On that day he reckoned an island at 10 36 S 171 W and his ship s historian named it Isla de la Gente Hermosa meaning island of the beautiful people in Spanish after its inhabitants The closest island to that reckoned location is Swains Island at 11 03 S 171 05 W leading later authors to identify it as the same and thus refer to it by that Spanish name or by the Spanish version of the navigator s last name Quiros also spelled Quiros in English However the island described by Queiros was significantly larger and at the time the calculation of longitude had a much greater uncertainty than latitude leading later scholars to conclude that the island found by Queiros was actually Rakahanga lying 1 100 km 590 nmi 680 mi to the east at 10 02 S 161 05 W 13 14 2 Captain William L Hudson of the USS Peacock saw the island on 1 February 1841 during the United States Exploring Expedition of 1838 42 He claimed to have learned about the island s location from a certain Captain Swain of Nantucket and after concluding that it did not match the description by Queiros resolved to call it Swain s Island the apostrophe was later dropped F rom having its position very nearly pointed out to me by Capt Swain of Nantucket who stated to me at Tahiti that he had seen it in passing and in consequence of its being a considerable distance in latitude from and not agreeing in size or character with the island described by Queros in addition to this in view of it being peopled with a beautiful race it is uninhabited and perhaps we are the first that have ever set foot upon it thus much for its name 15 This Captain Swain has not been conclusively identified Authors have suggested Jonathan Swain of whaler Independence in 1820 2 or William C Swain of whaler George Champlain b in the 1830s 16 17 Other evidence suggests Obed Swain of whaler Jefferson of Nantucket who unlike William C Swain actually was at Tahiti when the United States Exploring Expedition was there with the USS Peacock and Captain Hudson 18 In Tokelauan the main language formerly spoken on Swains Island the island is called Olohega oloˈhɛŋa The name is composed of the prefix olo indicating a collective noun and the word hega meaning a tuft of feathers tied to the end of a skipjack lure possibly referring to the island s location at the end of the Tokelau chain 19 20 A variant of this name is Olosega oloˈsɛŋa either also in Tokelauan or in Samoan another language formerly spoken there 20 It should not be confused with the homonymous island in the pair Ofu Olosega of the Manu a group in American Samoa It is also called Jennings Island after Eli Hutchinson Jennings who settled there in 1856 and whose family still owns and manages the island citation needed Geography edit nbsp Swains Island lagoon nbsp Road on Swains IslandSwains Island has a total area of about 3 5 km2 1 4 sq mi 2 of which 2 43 km2 0 94 sq mi is land 1 The central lagoon accounts for 1 16 km2 0 45 sq mi 2 The atoll is somewhat unusual featuring an unbroken circle of land enclosing a lagoon separated from the sea The lagoon has a maximum depth of 12 m 39 ft and contains algae and fish 2 Its water has a salinity of about 0 4 2 described as brackish useful for bathing and washing but not for drinking Drinking water in the island is derived entirely from rainfall collected in tanks 21 Nearly all of the land is filled with coconut palms 21 The village of Taulaga meaning harbor or town 19 in the west of the island consists of a malae open ceremonial space surrounded by houses but as of 2013 the only structure still standing was a church built around 1886 2 The village of Etena meaning Eden 21 in the south contains the former residence of the Jennings family also built in the 1880s but abandoned after a cyclone severely damaged it in 2005 2 A road named Belt Road used to circle the entire island but as of 2013 only the portion connecting the two villages was usable the rest being covered in vegetation The island also contains several cemeteries 2 Fauna editThe island has been recognised as an Important Bird Area IBA by BirdLife International because it supports a breeding population of white terns Seven reptile species have been recorded from the island including three geckos and three skinks as well as the green sea turtles which formerly nested on the island but now occur only as visitors to inshore waters 22 Demographics editHistorical populationYearPop 193099 1940147 48 5 1950164 11 6 1960106 35 4 197074 30 2 198027 63 5 199016 40 7 200037 131 2 201017 54 1 20200 100 0 U S Decennial Census 23 3 Swains Island first appeared in the U S census in 1930 24 following its annexation to American Samoa in 1925 The 2010 census counted 17 people in six households There were eight males ages 20 to 61 and nine females three under age 18 six ages 18 to 61 There were 11 U S nationals eight born in American Samoa and three in the United States and six foreign nationals four born in Samoa one in Tokelau and one in the Philippines They reported their ethnic origins as 15 Samoans one Tokelauan and one Filipino Of the 16 people over age five 15 spoke mainly Samoan and one spoke another Oceanic language but all also spoke English 25 However the people counted in the 2010 census did not permanently reside on Swains Island Multiple visitors have reported the island as uninhabited since 2008 2 8 10 12 The 2020 census recorded no residents there 3 History editAnthropologists indicate that the island was initially settled by Polynesian voyagers and later conquered by Tokelauans from Fakaofo 2 Whalers from New England began visiting the island in the 1830s or earlier Frenchmen established copra production there around that time during which the native population fled due to violence by the foreigners 2 Captain William L Hudson of the USS Peacock saw the island on 1 February 1841 during the United States Exploring Expedition of 1838 42 He named it Swain s Island after a certain Captain Swain from whom he had learned about the island s location 2 The Jennings family edit nbsp Group of young people and children from Swains Island late 1886 Photographed by Thomas Andrew Fakaofoans returned to the island soon after Hudson s visit and were joined by three Frenchmen who then left to sell the coconut oil they had accumulated 21 In 1856 an American Eli Hutchinson Jennings 14 November 1814 4 December 1878 joined a community on Swains with his Samoan wife Malia Jennings claimed to have received title to the atoll from a British Captain Turnbull who claimed ownership of the island by discovery and named it after himself According to one account the sale price for Swains was 15 shillings per acre 37 shillings per hectare and a bottle of gin 26 One of the Frenchmen later returned but did not care to share the island with Jennings and left 27 On 13 October 1856 Swains became a semi independent proprietary settlement of the Jennings family although under the U S flag a status it would retain for approximately seventy years It was also claimed for the U S by the United States Guano Company in 1860 under the Guano Islands Act 27 Jennings established a coconut plantation which flourished under his son Eli Jr Eli Jennings Sr was also instrumental in helping Peruvian blackbird slave ships to depopulate the other three Tokelau atolls 28 American sovereignty edit In 1907 the Resident Commissioner of the British Gilbert and Ellice Islands then a British protectorate since 1979 the sovereign nations of Kiribati and Tuvalu claimed that Swains belonged to the United Kingdom demanding payment of a tax of US 85 Jennings paid but he brought the matter before the U S State Department and his money was ultimately refunded The British government furthermore conceded that Swains was an American possession nbsp Swains Island BeachThe ownership of the island came into question after Eli Jr s death in 1920 and that of his wife in 1921 The United States decided to give the right of administration jointly to Eli s daughter Ann and son Alexander while making it officially part of American Samoa by annexation on 4 March 1925 Alexander Jennings the son of Eli Jennings Jr became managing owner of the island The population at this time was around 100 During World War II the island had a population of 125 and had a naval radio station 29 In 1953 labor troubles arose on Swains when Tokelauan hired workers decided to claim squatters rights to the atoll by virtue of having lived on it year round After Alexander Jennings evicted 56 workers and their families from the island the governor of American Samoa intervened By executive order the governor acknowledged Jennings proprietary rights to Swains Island while instituting a system of labor contracts and a local governmental structure to protect the rights of his employees 21 The islanders were also guaranteed a representative in the territorial legislature Recent sovereignty and trade issues edit nbsp Swains Island lies between the Samoan islands and Tokelau upper center On 25 March 1981 New Zealand of which Tokelau is a dependency confirmed U S sovereignty over Swains Island in the Treaty of Tokehega under which the United States surrendered its territorial claims to the other islands of Tokelau In the draft constitution that was the subject of the 2006 Tokelau self determination referendum however Swains Island is claimed as part of Tokelau 30 As of March 2007 American Samoa has not yet taken an official position but the Governor of American Samoa Togiola Tulafono has said he believes that his government should do everything it can to retain control of the island 31 Tokelau s claim to Swains is generally comparable to the Marshall Islands claim to Wake Island also administered by the U S The re emergence of this issue in the mid 2000s was an unintended consequence of the United Nations efforts to promote decolonization in Tokelau in the early 2000s 32 Tokelauans are reluctant to disown a common cultural and thus national identity with Swains Islanders who speak their language In 2007 Tokelau s regional parliament the General Fono considered the adoption of a new flag for their nation which showed a map depicting Swains Island as a fourth star in addition to three others at a proportional distance to that of the others Ultimately a compromise was adopted whereby the four stars were retained but with the arrangement and proportionality suggestive of the Southern Cross citation needed During a 2007 visit to Tokelau Alexander Jennings representative of Swains Island to the American Samoa legislature indicated a desire for better trade links between Swains and its neighbor saying he believed the then head of government of Tokelau Kuresa Nasau was also interested in improved relations 33 Cyclone Percy 2005 edit In February 2005 Cyclone Percy struck the island causing widespread damage and virtually destroying the village of Taulaga as well as the old Jennings estate at Etena Only seven people were on the island at the time 34 Coast Guard airdrops ensured that the islanders were not left without food water and other necessities A United States Coast Guard visit in March 2007 listed 12 to 15 inhabitants and showed that the island s trees had largely survived the cyclone 35 Amateur radio edit Swains Island was first discovered as a possible amateur radio entity for American Radio Relay League ARRL Award purposes by Kan Mizoguchi JA1BK in 2005 He led a ham radio DXpedition there in 2005 however the ARRL did not accept it for credit Eventually the ARRL decided to approve Swains Island as a new entity based on the separation distance between it and American Samoa Once accepted Kan JA1BK led another DXpedition to the island KH8SI which did qualify as the first valid operation The team consisted of JA1BK F6EXV JH1JGX AH7C K1ER amp K8YSE 16 390 contacts were made citation needed Due to its remoteness Swains Island is considered a separate amateur radio entity and several visits have been made by ham operators The 2007 amateur radio DXpedition with call sign N8S made more than 117 000 contacts worldwide This set a new world record for an expedition using generator power and tents for living accommodations since broken by the 2012 DXpedition to Malpelo Island 36 In 2012 Swains Island hosted the DXpedition NH8S this group arrived on September 5 2012 and departed on September 19 2012 A total of 105 391 radio contacts were made 37 The DXCC Country code is 515 ITU Zone 62 and CQ Zone 32 38 In 2023 there was another group of amateur radio operators on the island from October 4 October 17 with 10 international operators DJ9RR DL2AMD DL6JGN KO8SCA NG7M PA2KW PA3EWP PA4WM PA5X and PG5M this group used the US callsign W8S 39 citation needed Island government editAccording to the Interior Department survey cited above Swains Island is governed by the American Samoa government representative a village council a pulenu u civic head of the village and a leoleo policeman Swains Island officials have the same rights duties and qualifications as in all the other villages of American Samoa Neither the proprietor of Swains Island nor any employee of his may serve as government representative The government representative has the following duties to act as the governor s representative on Swains Island to mediate between employees and their employer to enforce those laws of the United States and of American Samoa which apply on Swains Island to enforce village regulations to keep the governor apprised of the state of affairs on Swains Island particularly on the islanders health education safety and welfare to ensure that Swains Islanders continue to enjoy the rights privileges and immunities accorded to them by the laws of the United States and of American Samoa to ensure that the proprietary rights of the owner are respectedThe government representative has the following rights powers and obligations to make arrests to quell breaches of the peace to call meetings of the village council to consider special subjects to take such actions as may be reasonably necessary to implement and render effective his dutiesSwains Island s village council consists of all men of sound mind over the age of twenty four According to the federal census in 1980 five men fell into this category Every two years Swains Island sends one non voting delegate to the American Samoan territorial legislature Since 2004 this office has been held by Alexander Jennings In October 2020 at a meeting of Swain islanders in Tafuna American Samoa he was re elected for the ninth time 40 The Jennings dynasty editStyling themselves leaders or proprietors members of the Jennings family ruled Swains Island virtually independent of any outside authority from 1856 to 1925 After 1925 while retaining proprietary ownership of the island they were subject to the jurisdiction of the U S territory of American Samoa Jenningses who ruled as semi independent proprietors 13 October 1856 4 December 1878 Eli Hutchinson Jennings Sr 1814 1878 4 December 1878 25 October 1891 Malia Jennings his Samoan widow d 1891 25 October 1891 24 October 1920 Eli Hutchinson Jennings Jr 1863 1920 son of Eli Sr and Malia referred to by Robert Louis Stevenson as King Jennings during a visit to the island 24 October 1920 August 1921 Ann Eliza Jennings Carruthers 1897 1921 jointly with sibling Alexander Hutchinson Jennings both children of Eli Jr 24 October 1920 4 March 1925 Alexander Hutchinson Jennings IIIJenningses who ruled under direct American jurisdiction 4 March 1925 Unknown date in 1940s Alexander Hutchinson Jennings III Unknown Dates between 1940 1954 Alexander E Jennings 1954 to present local government instituted by American Samoa However the island is still owned by the Jennings family In popular culture editSwains Island One of the Last Jewels of the Planet 2014 directed and narrated by Jean Michel Cousteau is the first American Samoan film to be entered in the Blue Ocean Festival in Florida 41 42 43 The band Te Vaka has written a song called Haloa Olohega Poor Olohega in Tokelauan lamenting about the loss of the island for Tokelau 44 Notes edit Land area 1 Area including lagoon is 3 5 km2 1 4 sq mi 2 Sources refer to this ship by various spellings Chamblain Chamblan Champlain Champlin Chaplin References edit a b c Population Housing Units Land Area and Density by Place for American Samoa 2010 U S Census Bureau a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Unlocking the Secrets of Swains Island National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration September 2013 a b c Population of American Samoa 2010 and 2020 U S Census Bureau A Brief History of Swains Island in American Samoa U S Department of the Interior Archived from the original on February 8 2012 Monmonier Mark 2010 No Dig No Fly No Go How Maps Restrict and Control University of Chicago Press pp 81 ISBN 9780226534633 The World Factbook Cia gov Retrieved March 11 2014 America Annexes Swain s Island V 11 Pacific Islands Monthly June 25 1935 Retrieved September 27 2021 a b Swains Island Charles A Veley 27 November 2008 2012 Swains Island DXpedition a b Assessment of the Birds of Swains Island American Samoa Andrew Titmus Nicola Arcilla and Christopher Lepczyk The Wilson Journal of Ornithology March 2016 Swains Island One of the Last Jewels of the Planet Ocean Futures Society 2014 a b Atoll envisioned as a model for sustainability Star Advertiser 20 September 2014 Maude H E 1968 Of Islands amp Men Oxford University Press pp 74 75 Sharp Andrew 1960 The Discovery of The Pacific Islands Oxford University Press pp 61 62 Journal of William L Hudson comdg U S Ship Peacock one of the vessels attached to the South Sea Surveying and Exploring Expedition under the command of Charles Wilkes Esq 1838 1842 American Museum of Natural History File no 811 0141q 14 Central Decimal File of the Dept of State Nara 1914 Lufkin and Swain family papers Bancroft Library UC Berkeley Ca Banc MSS 68 122 c Dehner Steve 2017 The Forged Discovery of Swains Island The Nantucket Connection I a b Tokelau Dictionary Office of Tokelau Affairs 1986 a b Wayfinding in Pacific linguascapes Negotiating Tokelau linguistic indentities in Hawai i Akiemi Glenn August 2012 a b c d e A brief history of Swains Island in American Samoa U S Department of the Interior Archived from the original on February 8 2012 Swains Atoll BirdLife Data Zone BirdLife International 2021 Retrieved February 14 2021 U S Decennial Census Census gov Retrieved June 6 2013 Fifteenth Census of the United States 1930 American Samoa U S Census Bureau American Samoa s 2010 Demographic Profile Summary File Data U S Census Bureau Krauss Bob April 3 2005 A Queen Mother s Last Wishes The Honolulu Advertiser Archived from the original on January 19 2008 Retrieved September 1 2021 a b Skaggs Jimmy M 1994 The Great Guano Rush Entrepreneurs and American Overseas Expansion Palgrave Macmillan US p 213 ISBN 978 0 312 10316 3 Maude H E 1981 Slavers In Paradise The Peruvian Labour Trade In Polynesia 1862 1864 Suva Fiji The University of the South Pacific p 63 ISBN 9780708116074 Gordon L Rottman 2002 World War II Pacific Island Guide A Geo military Study Greenwood Publishing Group p 83 ISBN 978 0 313 31395 0 Tokelau calls for return of island One News February 15 2006 Retrieved November 15 2011 American Samoa governor ready to resist Tokelau s claim to Swains Island Radio New Zealand International March 26 2007 Retrieved November 15 2011 Maclellan Nic February 23 2006 The Modern House of Tokelau Self determination in a Pacific Atoll Nation APSNet Policy Forum Retrieved August 30 2021 American Samoa s Swains Island seeks trade deal with Tokelau Radio New Zealand March 1 2007 Retrieved August 30 2021 1 Archived July 24 2008 at the Wayback Machine USCGC Kukui WLB 203 Archived from the original on December 13 2012 N8S Home Page Yt1ad info Retrieved March 11 2014 NH8S Swains Island 2012 March 2020 ARRL DXCC LIST CURRENT ENTITIES https www qrz com db W8S Swains Islanders meet to select Fono delegate Samoa News October 29 2020 Retrieved September 1 2021 American Samoa ocean film wins award Radio New Zealand November 11 2014 Swains Island One of the Last Jewels of the Planet Wins Festival Award Samoa News November 10 2014 SBIFF Movie Spotlight Swains Island KEYT TV Santa Barbara California June 28 2018 Archived from the original on June 28 2018 Retrieved September 1 2021 Te Vaka www tevaka com Retrieved April 28 2018 External links editUS Dept of Interior history and description of Swains Island Introduction to Swains Island geography and history Memorable events on Swains 2005 Story from the Samoa News about a 1920s visit to Swains Island A queen mother s last wish Article in the Honolulu Advertiser about the death of Eliza Jennings Thompson queen mother of Swains Island American Samoa its districts and unorganized islands United States Census Bureau Alert for Cyclone Percy Gives 2005 population History of Swains Island WorldStatesmen American Samoa Tokelau looks to independence Archived February 4 2009 at the Wayback Machine An account of a visit to Swain s Island in the 1960s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swains Island amp oldid 1199310954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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