History of Wake Island…

Controversy revolves around the tropical paradise of Wake Island, part of Eneen-Kio Atoll, the collection of three islands also known as Wake Atoll, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The island is claimed by both the United States and the Marshall Islands. It is further claimed as an independent sovereignty in the name of the Kingdom of EnenKio.

The World Factbook, published by the CIA, states that the 2.5-square-mile Wake Island has no arable land, no crops, no forests or woodland, no indigenous inhabitants. The population consists (as of the latest record from January 2001) of only one US Army civilian and 123 civilian contractor personnel. The island is economically insignificant, as all food and manufactured goods must be imported. There is no domestic or international telephone system, no radio service, no television broadcasting. There isn’t even a harbor.

Wake IslandDespite its lack of agriculture or an economy, the island is rich in historical significance, warranting a lengthy and subsequently fascinating lesson on the history of Wake Atoll. According to Theodore Leverett’s history of the island on the Flags of the World website, “Wake Island was first discovered by the Spaniard Álvaro de Mendana in 1586, who named it San Francisco and claimed it in the name of the King of Spain. This claim was internationally recognized, the atoll being viewed as worthless… In 1796 the Englishman Captain Samuel Wake of the merchant vessel Prince William Henry rediscovered it. He gave the atoll its present name, also carried by its largest island… On December 20, 1840, the USS Vincennes brought the explorer Charles Wilkes and the naturalist Titian Peale to the island where they conducted a series of surveys and eventually lent their names to the other two islands of the atoll… During the Spanish-American War, an American troop convoy bound for the Philippines (then owned by Spain) stopped off at Wake. Major General Francis V. Greene hoisted the Stars and Stripes, then with 45 stars, there on July 4, 1898… The subsequent peace treaty which ended the war [with Spain] transferred Wake to the United States.”

For the record, the Treaty of Paris, ratified by officials from the United States of America and the Spanish Empire on December 10, 1898, relinquished all Spanish claim of sovereignty over and title to Cuba, Puerto Rico, the island of Guam in the Marianas, all islands in the West Indies, and all islands within approximately 116 degrees and 127 degrees longitude east of Greenwich near and including the Philippine Island archipelago. An amendment three years later added several additional islands located southwest of the island chain of Palawan that had been inadvertently left off the original treaty. No other specific islands or locations of any kind were mentioned. Wake Island did not fall within the boundaries of the treaty as it is located at 166 degrees of longitude east of Greenwich. This finding directly contradicts the common opinion that Wake Island was included in the spoils of war between the United States and Spain as shared by such historians as Stanley K. Schultz, Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin, but the language of the treaty is indisputable.

However the island was acquired, the US Navy recognized the potential of Wake as a military base and contributed both materially and financially to the construction of Pan American facilities. The historical recollections of the original Pan American World Airways and the newsletter of The Pan Am Historical Foundation quote the words of John G. Borger, the then 21-year-old Junior Assistant Engineer for the S.S. North Haven, regarding the initial construction of the airbase.

“On March 27, 1935, the S.S. North Haven embarked from San Francisco for Honolulu, Midway, Wake, Guam, and Manila, to prepare bases for Pan Am’s flying boats to cross the Pacific… Wake [Island] was totally uninhabited; all we had on it were a hydrographic chart with no detail, and an article in National Geographic magazine… We loaded into the ship 12 prefabricated buildings for Midway, and 12 for Wake. We loaded for each base two diesel engines to generate electricity, two windmills to pump water up and get water pressure, a Caterpillar tractor with interchangeable bulldozer blade and crane, and 4,000-gallon tanks for both aviation gas and water… On the deck we loaded two 38-foot power launches, one for Midway and one for Wake, and a 26-foot launch for Guam, intended for air-sea rescue…

Wake is made up of three islands. It’s true it was uninhabited except for birds; we had to wear hats. We’d planned to put the station on Wilkes Island, which is open to the sea, but the survey team found it was too low in the water. So was Wake Island. But Peale Island, on the far side of the lagoon, was okay. We unloaded the cargo into a storage yard on Wilkes Island, then built a 50-yard railroad (somebody by inspiration had brought light-gauge railroad track) to the lagoon. We put the small launch on a barge and, with the help of the tractor, we shoved it across the knee-deep channel between Wake and Wilkes. The launch towed the barges of cargo across the lagoon to Peale Island. Wake depended on rainfall for water, so we rigged canvases on the roofs, drained them into underground tanks, then pumped the water up to the windmills.

We had to clear the coral heads to provide a six-foot deep open landing area in the Wake lagoon for the M-130 to land. So we hung a length of a light-gauge railroad track six feet deep under a barge, and a launch towed the barge back and forth across the lagoon. When the track hit coral, it shook the barge, wakened the guy sleeping on it, and he threw a cork buoy with an anchor to mark the spot. Then Bill Mullahey and I, in a rowboat, rowed out to the buoys. Bill put on goggles he’d made out of bamboo, took a bamboo spear, and dove down and inspected the coral head… Bill surfaced and said, give me six, or eight, sticks of dynamite, dove back down and tied them to the coral. He resurfaced, I rowed us upwind as far as we could, and he pressed a magneto button and blew up the coral. We rowed back, picked up the fish the blast had killed, and brought them back for dinner. We did this [until] we cleared a pie-shaped landing area [where we] built a 400-foot dock.”

After the completion of the airbase and a 48-room hotel, Wake Island became one of the stopping points on regular Pan American flights for servicing and refueling of the famous “Pan Am Clippers”, four-engined flying boats. Pan American published a 24-page brochure in 1937 to promote the transpacific China Clipper service from San Francisco to Hawaii, Midway Island, Wake Island, Guam, Manila, and its final destination of Hong Kong.

“A tiny pinpoint on the vast Pacific’s map - five thousand miles from America’s mainland. A land unheard of until a few years ago - uninhabited, until the coming of the airway pioneers - became the scene of one of the most dramatic struggles in the history of American transportation. Here hardship, toil and thrilling courage overcame tremendous odds to set in final place four thousand tons of materials. Scarcely eight hours from Midway - another change in time - you are ashore in the early afternoon and the island is yours to explore… Down paths lined with magnolia are living quarters for the base staff, the power plant, the big refrigerators, a little hospital, a pergola where you will find an unusual collection of the little atoll’s lore - bits from ancient sailing craft that came to grief on the treacherous reefs that so effectively shelter the lagoon’s water for the flying clipper ships; heaps of coral in fantastic designs; sea shells of every form. Along the arcs of glistening beach you can find all these for yourself - and perhaps a dozen little hollow balls of glass - floats from Japanese fishing nets that have drifted half way across the Pacific…

Wake Island, so newly added to the world’s travel map, is already becoming a favorite vacation spot for travel-wise voyageurs. A beautiful, unspoiled land a world away from the hustle and bustle of modern life. A land reserved to those who fly, where every comfort and convenience, excellent food and expert attention are as much a part of your stay as the breath-taking sunsets, the soft thundering of the sea and its magnificent thirty-foot surf. Not soon can one forget these rainbow waters, soft deep sands, the friendly sun, the cool sweet trade winds blown from across the broadest sea.”

James W. Wensyel, in his article titled Odyssey Of The Wake Island Prisoners, states that the US Navy never lost sight of Wake Island’s military potential and turned the commercial airfield into a full-fledged defensive fortification, complete with 449 Marines, 71 Naval personnel, 5 Army radio operators, and 12 fixed-wing Grumman F4F-3 Wildcats fighter planes, all under the overall command of Commander Winfield S. Cunningham.

“War with Japan was imminent, and an airstrip on Wake, about 2,000 miles west of Hawaii, would allow American heavy bombers to strike the Japanese-controlled Marshall Islands. And, if Guam were lost to the Japanese, Wake would be one of the closest American outposts to the Japanese mainland… [Early on the morning of December 8, 1941,] at 8:50 the Marines raised the American flag on its staff, something Marines did every morning all over the world… Not long after the flag raising, 36 Japanese Mitsubishi G3M2 Nell bombers crossed Wake in three V-formations. Soon their fragmentation bombs, accompanied by a steady drumming of machine-gun fire, tore the island to pieces… Japanese land-based aircraft from Roi in the Marshalls, later joined by aircraft from approaching Japanese carriers, pounded the atoll day after day. Before each attack, a dwindling number of American Wildcat fighters rose to meet them.

At 3 a.m. on December 11, a Japanese invasion task force commanded by Rear Adm. Sadamichi Kajioka, consisting of a light cruiser, six destroyers, two troop carriers and two armed merchantmen, confidently approached Wake’s beaches. Marine gunners let them close to 4,500 yards before their 5-inch naval guns opened fire. Their patience was rewarded with the sinking of one Japanese destroyer and damaging of the cruiser and three additional destroyers.

Kajioka retreated, now knowing that Wake would not be taken without a fight. By the 21st, the last of the Wildcats had been destroyed in dogfights over the atoll… Japanese airplanes now roamed over the island at will, pounding American positions in preparation for a renewed attempt to seize the atoll. In the dark, rain-swept early morning hours of December 23rd, Kajioka returned, his fleet bolstered by four heavy cruisers and various other warships, including landing craft, to assault Wake’s beaches with more than 900 well-trained infantrymen of the Special Naval Landing Force. At 2:35 a.m., the first Japanese landing barge ground ashore.

Soon a desperate battle was being fought across the atoll between groups of men fighting with rifles, bayonets, grenades and fists. The Americans fought hard, but more Japanese landed and pushed them toward the island’s center… Reports from the three islands were discouraging; there were simply too many Japanese and too few Americans… Cunningham, as the ranking officer, made the inevitable decision to surrender… Stunned defenders threw away rifle bolts, destroyed delicate range-finding instruments, drained hydraulic fluid from recoil cylinders and then surrendered. Eighty-one Marines, eight sailors and 82 civilian construction workers had been killed or wounded. The Japanese, however, paid a heavy price for their victory. The fight for Wake Island had cost them two destroyers and one submarine sunk, seven additional ships damaged, 21 aircraft shot down and almost 1,000 men killed.

Enraged by their losses, the Japanese treated their prisoners–military and civilian–brutally. Some were stripped naked, others to their underwear. Most had their hands tied behind their backs with telephone wire, with a second wire looped tightly from their necks to their wrists so that if they lowered their arms they would strangle themselves… The prisoners were then jammed into two suffocating concrete ammunition bunkers. Later they were herded to the airstrip and made to sit, naked, on the blistering hot concrete. When the Japanese set up machine guns nearby, most of the prisoners expected to be executed. That night, bone-chilling winds replaced the heat. The prisoners sat there, still waiting for food, water or medical treatment. The unfortunate prisoners remained sitting on the airstrip for two days. Finally, they were given food, much of it spoiled by the heat, and water, contaminated from being placed in unclean gasoline drums. Piles of assorted clothing seized earlier were placed before them… After returning his prisoners’ clothes, Kajioka, resplendent in white dress uniform and gleaming samurai sword, read a proclamation to the assembled prisoners. When he concluded, a Japanese interpreter informed the Americans that ‘the Emperor has graciously presented you with your lives.’”

The defense of Wake was testimony to the valor and professionalism of the Marine garrison and its officers, December 11th being the only successful thwarting of an attempted amphibious landing by enemy forces in the Pacific throughout the war. The tale of the heroic battle for Wake Island inspired American soldiers worldwide. Almost four long years later, World War II ended, the prisoners were released, and control of the island was returned to the United States by the Japanese.

After a 7000-foot runway was paved over the existing coral runway in 1949, the island base also played a key role as a refueling stop for aircraft during the Korean War. And, as a result of the foresighted runway lengthening in 1959 to 9800 feet, the island was able to participate in Desert Storm in 1991, once again as a fueling station. Today, the former commercial airbase is used primarily by the US Army Space and Strategic Defense Command and for emergency landings of trans-Pacific flights. There are over 700 landings a year on the island.

An understanding of the history of Wake Island is fundamental for understanding the claims made by the Marshall Islands and the Kingdom of EnenKio.

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Responses

171 Responses to “History of Wake Island…”

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  1. Response #71
    Ken Krenkel (IP) on July 27th, 2005 at 3:20 pm

    I was watching History Chanel and my God. What a sad situation that was. There is no excuse for those animals the japs that is. No one should ever forget! Our Guys were Horoes! I am Proud of them and God rest there souls! Yea Harry Truman. The buck stopes there!

  2. Response #72
    Bill MacMinn (IP) on July 30th, 2005 at 7:32 pm

    My dad was Island comander 1962-64 and was able to have his family on the island. My parents are in their 80’s and the “kids” are in their 50’s but Wake still has special meaning to us as a special place and time. We have often talked of going back. Is it possible? I know no commercial flights but are private boats or airplane’s allowed? I will mark this as one of my favorites and check back from time to time. regards, Bill MacMinn

  3. Response #73
    Richard Peale Russell (IP) on July 31st, 2005 at 1:35 pm

    Peale Island was named for my G-G-G Grandfather, Titian Ramsay Peale,a member of the first US exploration expedition in the Pacific. They had reached Antartica south of New Zealand, fought cannibals in Fiji before arriving @ Wake. While surveying the US Pacific coast, providing most of the names in Puget Sound, TRP’s ship “Peacock” was shipwrecked at the mouth of the Columbia River. They had to hike overland from Ft Vancouver to Sutter’s Mill in Mexican California. I had several occasions to overnight on Wake while flying KC-97’s to Kadena. Also made several fuel stops (707) flying MAC Viet Nam airlift with AMR. I still remember the Clipper lagoon, the jap ship, rusted guns, the bridge, and best of all the club which I think included a bowling alley

  4. Response #74
    Bill Bostwick (IP) on August 18th, 2005 at 1:47 pm

    Nice site. I’m enjoying the many comment’s about Wake. Stopped off there many times as a USAF C-118 crewmember in the early 70’s. Always enjoyed the climate, the quarters and the watering hole, Drifters Reef. I actually stayed there for a couple of weeks waiting an engine to be flown in from Honolulu once. That was tooo long.

  5. Response #75
    Brian Dyba (IP) on August 19th, 2005 at 8:54 am

    I lived on Wake Island from 1968 to 1970. I started first grade there and Mrs. Suizo was my first grade teacher My father, Fred Dyba, worked for the FAA for those years and even though I was small have vivid memories of Wake. We drove a jeep that the breaks were bad on and I remember actually running into the bowling alley and commissary(on 2 different occasions). We lived on the beach and have many glass balls and glass “rolling pins” we’ve saved. Is there any way a civilian can get to the Island for a few days? Thank You, Brian Dyba

  6. Response #76
    Carol Nickisher (IP) on September 1st, 2005 at 6:45 pm

    I’ve just published a book about Wake Island! My father worked on the island (and Midway, as well)- building air bases and hotels for Pan American in 1936 - for the first trans-Pacific flights. He kept a journal, wrote letters to my mother, with whom he was in love, and took 200 rare photos. I compiled these into a book, and added my own research - and the perspective of a daughter. The result is a great adventure, and a romance that lasted a lifetime. My parents were married for 67 years. It’s a personal glimpse into the most romantic era of aviation - the era of the China Clipper - and into Wake Island before it was turned into a missile base. It’s got sharks, 30′ waves, and a daring young man who earned the nickname, Tarzan, King of Wake Island. If interested, contact me for an autographed copy. Don’t miss this one. There’s already a movie star interested in this story. Honest! Carol Nickisher

  7. Response #77
    Allen Woffard (IP) on September 13th, 2005 at 4:14 pm

    Excellent Site - before I was stationed here I got some ofthe best information about the history from here. Currently I am on Wake and developing a website for what we do and things to enjoy when here. If you have historical information for the history page or photos please let me know. Allen Woffard, OIC Peace Officer Wake Island Airfield Wake Island, Mid Pacific 96898

  8. Response #78
    Annette Hobbs (IP) on September 20th, 2005 at 11:23 am

    My Father, Winfield “Dutch” Graves was a civilian iron worker working on Wake Island when it was invaded by the Japanese. He did not talk about the horrible things that he and the other prisoners (civilian and military personnel) were made to endure. I have learned since his death in 1986 just how horrible it was for them. They were treated worse than animals while imprisoned and forced to work for the Japanese as slave labor. We (USA) have compensated the Japanese civilians who were imprisoned here for a short amount of time, but Japan will not consider compensating our men or their families for their atrocities! There is no amount of compensation that would cover what they were put through, but it may help some of them. Please don’t forget the brave civilians that fought along side the military in trying to hold Wake Island. Those who are still living that I have had a chance to meet through the reunions they have are wonderful, forgiving people.

  9. Response #79
    Warren Guinn (IP) on October 20th, 2005 at 7:35 pm

    Thanks for the history & memories! I was with the Air Force on the Island 1966-1967 and was on duty with Jim Cox during typhoon Sarah. Would really like to see a reunion of surviving Island Personell.

  10. Response #80
    Andrew S. Fleming (IP) on January 18th, 2006 at 8:33 pm

    I was employed on Wake Island by FMC (Facilities Management Corp.) as an aircraft mechanic servicing MAC aircraft enroute to Souteast Asia from August of 1969 to October 1972. While the isolation bothered many people and most didn’t stay long, I found it to my liking. Mostly I enjoyed exploring the Island’s many historical sites. It is a place of incredible natural beauty and offered a sense of tranqility not found anywhere else. When I left for the last time it was like I left a piece of me behind. Great memories.

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