|
Wake
Island
|
Chronology
2 Oct
1568
Sighted and claimed for Spain by
Álvaro de Mendaña
y
Neira (b. 1542 - d. 1595),
named Isla de San
Francisco
(no settlement).
1796
Visited by British Capt. Samuel Wake
on the
schooner Prince
William Henry. Soon
after Capt.
Charles William
Barkley (b. 1759 - d. 1832)
aboard merchant brig Halcyon sights
and names the
atoll Halcyon Island.
20 Dec 1840
U.S.
Commodore Charles Wilkes (b. 1798 - d.
1877)
of
U.S. Exploring
Expedition, on the U.S.S.
Vincennes,
lands on the island (Wake's Island).
4
Mar 1866
The Libelle,
of Bremen, Germany, wrecks on the
eastern reef of
Wake Island.
4
Jul
1898
General Francis V. Greene
(b. 1850 - d. 1921) from
the ship Thomas
raises the U.S. flag.
17 Jan
1899
Commander Edward D. Taussig (b.
1847 - d. 1921),
on the U.S.S.
Bennington,
formally takes U.S.
possession;
island remains generally
uninhabited
(Wake Island).
17 Jan
1900
Wake an un-incorporated territory of
the U.S.
29 Dec
1934
Administered by U.S. Navy Department,
which on 12
Mar
1935 contracts it to Pan
American World
Airways (Pan Am).
9 Aug
1935
Pan Am Sikorsky S-42 flying
boat made the first
aerial landing at the atoll.
19 Oct
1940
A typhoon passes Wake Island causing
considerable
damage to Pan Am property, but
no deaths.
10 Jan 1941
U.S. Naval Air Station, Wake Island
8-23 Dec
1941
All aircraft, large guns, above ground
structures
are
destroyed in 17 Japanese air raids on
Wake.
23 Dec 1941 - 4 Sep
1945 Occupied by Japan
(Wake renamed "Ōtori-shima" [Big
Bird Island], Wilkes Islet as
"Ashi-shima" and
Peale Islet as "Hani-shima").
4
Sep 1945 - 4 Sep 1962 Administered
by the U.S. Navy Department
(Wake Island
Naval Air Base).
1 Jul
1947
U.S. Navy delegates administration of
Wake to the
Civil Aeronautics Administration (from
31 Dec
1958, Federal
Aviation Agency [both
within Department of Commerce to 1 Apr
1967,
then under Department of
Transportation] to
30 Jun 1973).
16 Sep
1952
Typhoon Olive hits Wake destroying 85%
of
structures, but no deaths.
4 Sep 1962 - 24 Jun
1972 Administered by U.S.
Department of Interior;
administration is carried out
by the caretaker,
the Federal
Aviation Agency (from 1 Apr
1967,
Federal Aviation Administration).
16
Sep 1967
Typhoon Sarah hits Wake Island, 95%
of structures
on the were damaged, but no deaths.
Jun
1972
Final scheduled Pan Am
passenger flight landed
on the island and in Jul 1972
Pam Am's last
cargo fight departed the island.
25 Jun 1972
Wake Island an
un-incorporated territory of U.S.
25 Jun 1972 -
1 Oct 1994 Administered by
U.S. Air Force (Wake Island Air
Force Base), under Military Airlift
Command
(MAC), from 1 Jul 1973 under Detachment
4, 15th
Air Base Wing of Pacific Air
Forces.
Feb
1973
Marshall Islands claim Wake Island as
"Enen-kio."
May 1973
Last regularly scheduled
commercial passenger
flights ceased calling at Wake Island.
26 Apr 1975 – 3 Sep
1975 U.S. forces on Wake
support the movement of 92,126
orphans and
evacuees from South Vietnam in
support of Operations "Babylift" and
"New Life."
15-16 Mar
1981
Typhoon Freda hit Wake Island.
16 Sep
1985
Wake Island is
designated a National Historic
Landmark by National Park Service of
the U.S.
Interior Department.
1 Oct 1994 -
16 Jan 1997 Administered
by U.S. Army Space and
Missile
Defense Command
(USASMDC) by Detachment 1 of 15th
Logistics Group, 15 ABW Group of the
U.S. Army
Space and Missile Defense Command
(Wake Island
Launch Center).
16 Jan 1997
-
Administered by
U.S. Department of Interior;
(activities
on the island are managed by U.S.
Army to 1 Oct 2002, then U.S. Air
Force 15th
Wing to 1 Oct 2010, then under 11th
Air Force
Detachment 1 Pacific Air Forces
Regional Support
Center as Wake Island Airfield).
31 Aug
2006
Super
Typhoon Ioke hits Wake Island (which
was
evacuated 28 Aug - 12 Sep 2006).
6 Jan 2009
Wake Island's submerged waters part of
the Pacific
Remote Islands
Marine National Monument (expanded
27 Sep 2014 out to the full 200
nautical miles).
16 Jul
2015
Typhoon Halola passes Wake Island
(which was
evacuated 15-18 Jul 2015).
|