Subject: palmyra :a brief history "excerpted from wikipedia.com"
Date: Apr 14, 2005 @ 22:36
Author: raedwulf16 ("raedwulf16" <raedwulf16@...>)
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History
Palmyra was first sighted in 1798 by American sea captain, Edmund 
Fanning of Stonington, Connecticut, while his ship the Betsy was in 
transit to Asia, but it was only lateron November 7,
1802that the 
first western people landed on the uninhabited atoll. On that date, 
Captain Sawle of the American ship Palmyra was wrecked on the atoll.
In 1859, Palmyra was claimed both by the American Guano Company and 
the United States Guano Company, but the following year it was 
awarded to the second company which however never started mining for 
guano in accordance with the Guano Islands Act of 1856. Most likely 
this was because there was no guano. Palmyra is located close to the 
ITCZ there is too much rain for guano to accumulate. In the 
meanwhile, on February 26, 1862, His Majesty Kamehameha IV (1834-
1863), Fourth King of Hawai'i (1854-1863), issued a commission to 
Captain Zenas Bent and Johnson B. Wilkinson, both Hawaiian citizens, 
to sail to Palmyra and to take possession of the atoll in the king's 
name and on April 15, 1862 it was formally annexed to the Kingdom of 
Hawai'i.
Captain Bent sold his rights to Palmyra to Mr. Wilkinson on December 
24, 1862 and from 1862 to 1885, Kalama Wilkinson owned the island 
which was divided in 1885 between three heirs, two of which 
immediately transferred their rights to a certain Wilcox (?) who, in 
turn, transferred them to the Pacific Navigation Company. The latter 
entity made an attempt to colonize the atoll by sending a married 
couple to live there between September 1885 and August 1886.
In 1898 Palmyra was annexed to the U.S. in conjunction with the 
overall U.S. annexation of Hawai'i. In the period preceding the 
formal annexation of the atoll by the U.S., the U.K. had shown 
interest for the atoll to become part of the "Guano Empire" of John 
T. Arundel & Co; and in 1889 the British had even formally annexed 
it. In order to end all further British attempts or contestations, a 
second, separate act of annexation of Palmyra by the U.S. was made in 
1911.
Afterwards, by a series of agreements signed between 1888 and 1911, 
the Pacific Navigation Company transferred its interests to Henry 
Ernest Cooper Sr. (18571929). The third heir of Kalama Wilkinson 
transferred his rights to a Mr. Ringer, whose children in turn also 
transferred their rights to Henry Ernest Cooper Sr. (s.a.) in 1912 
and who then became the sole owner of the atoll.
In 1922 Cooper sold the whole atoll except some minor islets (the 
5 "home islands") to Leslie and Ellen Fullard-Leo on August 19 for 
$15,000.00. The latter party established the Palmyra Copra Company to 
exploit the coconuts growing on the atoll. Their heirs continued as 
proprietors afterwards, except for a period of Navy administration 
during World War II.
In 1934, Johnston Atoll, Kingman Reef, and Palmyra were placed under 
the Department of the Navy. When the U.S. Navy took over to use the 
atoll as a naval air base, the atoll was owned privately by Hawaiian 
and American citizens. After the war, the Fullard-Leos fought for the 
return of Palmyra all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court and won in 
1947. When Hawai`i achieved statehood in 1959, Palmyra was
explicitly 
separated from the new state; prior to that point in time, Palmyra 
Atoll was officially part of the City & County of Honolulu.
In July 1990 Peter Savio of Honolulu took a lease on the atoll until 
the year 2065 and formed the Palmyra Development Company. In January 
2000, the atoll was purchased by The Nature Conservancy for the 
purposes of coral reef conservation and research.