obscure islands..

Cool thread topic. I happen to have a huge world map hung on my wall opposite my PC monitor and coincidentally the pacific is directly in front of me. So of course when I'm bored I just Google random islands I've never heard of.

Here some obscure islands I've found with a largely forgotten "dark" history:

Niihau Island (Remote Hawaiian Island)
: A Japanese pilot crash landed on the island after participating in the raid on Pearl Harbor. He was detained by the residents there but with the help of a sympathetic Japanese-Hawaiian resident, he escaped.

The two aquired several firearms and terrorized the island's populace for a week trying to get back classified papers that had been confiscated from the pilot when he landed.

Eventually they took a Hawaiian sheep herder and his wife hostage. When the Japanese men were distracted, the sheep herder rushed the pilot and threw him against a stone wall. The wife then smashed his skull with a rock and the sheep herder slit his throat. The Japanese-Hawaiian then turned his shotgun on himself.

Clipperton Island: During its time as a Mexican possession it was settled by 100 people. During the Mexican Revolution the island and the settlers were forgotten and many starved to death.

Eventually all the males died except for the lighthouse keeper who declared himself king and terrorized the few dozen surviving women and children before he was finally killed and the survivors rescued by the USS Yorktown.
 
Quemoy and Matsu were also significant in international politics in the 1950s, out of proportion to the tiny islands themselves.
 
Sark is a rather curious little island.
 
Most of the little Pacific Islands, of which Easter Island was just one example were settled by Polynesians, who, over a few centuries, would fell all the trees to make canoes. However, complete deforestation would destroy the soils, and eventually they would be left with no boats, no soil, no food, and no escape.

Diego Garcio in the Indian was once inhabited by about 1300 people, until Great Britain and the US decided they wanted to build a naval base there. The British, who had purchased it as part of the British Indian Ocean Territory leased it to the United States in exchange for Polaris Missiles. The inhabitants meanwhile were forcibly relocated to Mauritius, and never reimbursed. Some inhabitants are still making human rights claims, and wish to be settled in Britain itself.

Today the island houses a large naval base, US AFB, one of three NAVSTAR tracking stations, and is regarded by the US and UK to be exempt from the African Nuclear Weapons Free Zone.
 
The "Mysterious Island " were Captain Nemo hid the Nautilus
 

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Bouvet Island holds the distinction of being lost for 69 years following its discovery. It's also more than 1500 miles from the nearest land, which is Antarctica. It's internet designation is .bv, just in case you want to send an e-mail to a penguin.
 
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