Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands explained

Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands should not be confused with South Seas Mandate.

Conventional Long Name:Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands
Common Name:Pacific Islands
Empire:United States
Status:United Nations Trust Territory under the administration of the United States
P1:South Seas Mandate
Flag P1:Flag of Japan (1870–1999).svg
S1:Marshall Islands
Flag S1:Flag of the Marshall Islands.svg
S2:Federated States of Micronesia
Flag S2:Flag of the Federated States of Micronesia.svg
S3:Northern Mariana Islands
Flag S3:Flag of the Northern Mariana Islands.svg
S4:Palau
Flag S4:Flag of Palau.svg
Flag:Flag of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands
Flag Type:Flag
(1965–1980)
Symbol:Seal of the Federated States of Micronesia
National Anthem:"The Star-Spangled Banner"[1]
Image Map Caption:Location of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands in the Pacific
Capital:Saipan
Common Languages:English
Micronesian languages
Title Leader:Chief of State
Leader1:Harry S. Truman
Year Leader1:1947–1953
Leader2:Bill Clinton
Year Leader2:1993–1994
Title Deputy:High Commissioner
Deputy1:Louis E. Denfeld
Year Deputy1:1947–1948
Deputy2:Janet J. McCoy
Year Deputy2:1981–1987
Legislature:Congress
Era:Cold War
Event Start:Trusteeship
Date Start:July 18,
Year Start:1947
Event1:Termination of administration (Marshall Islands)
Date Event1:October 21, 1986
Event2:Termination of administration (Micronesia)
Date Event2:November 3, 1986
Event End:Free Association and De jure independence of Palau
Date End:October 1,
Year End:1994
Currency:United States dollar
Footnote A:Clinton was President when Palau's Compact of Free Association took effect. Ronald Reagan was President when the RMI, FSM, and CNMI's final status took effect.
Footnote B:McCoy retired as High Commissioner in 1987. As Palau was still a part of the TTPI, it was administered by officials in the Office of Territorial and International Affairs until 1994.

The Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (TTPI) was a United Nations trust territory in Micronesia administered by the United States from 1947 to 1994. The Imperial Japanese South Seas Mandate had been seized by the US during the Pacific War, as Japan had administered the territory since the League of Nations gave Japan mandate over the area from Imperial Germany after World War I. However, in the 1930s, Japan left the League of Nations, and then invaded additional lands. During World War II, military control of the islands was disputed, but by the end of the war the islands had come under control of the Allies. The Trust Territory of the Pacific was created to administer the islands as part of the United States, while still under the auspices of the United Nations. Most of the island groups in the territory became independent states, with some degree of ties kept with the United States: the Federated States of Micronesia, Marshall Islands and Palau are today independent states in a Compact of Free Association with the US, while the Northern Mariana Islands remain under US jurisdiction, as an unincorporated territory and commonwealth.

History

Spain initially claimed the islands that later composed the territory of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (TTPI).[2] Subsequently, Germany established competing claims over the islands. The competing claims were eventually resolved in favor of Germany when Spain, following its loss of several possessions to the United States during the Spanish–American War, ceded its claims over the islands to Germany pursuant to the German–Spanish Treaty (1899). Germany, in turn, continued to retain possession until the islands were captured by Japan during World War I. The League of Nations formally placed the islands in the former South Seas Mandate, a mandate that authorized Japanese administration of the islands. The islands then remained under Japanese control until captured by the United States in 1944 during World War II.

The TTPI entered UN trusteeship pursuant to Security Council Resolution 21 on July 18, 1947, and was designated a "strategic area" in its 1947 trusteeship agreement. Article 83 of the UN Charter provided that, as such, its formal status as a UN trust territory could be terminated only by the Security Council, and not by the General Assembly as with other trust territories. The United States Navy controlled the TTPI from a headquarters in Guam until 1951, when the United States Department of the Interior took over control, administering the territory from a base in Saipan.[3]

The Territory contained 100,000 people scattered over a water area the size of the continental United States. It was subdivided into six districts, and represented a variety of cultures, with nine spoken languages. The Pohnpeians and Kosraeans, Marshallese and Palauans, Chuukese, Yapese and Chamorros had little in common, except they were in the same general area of the Pacific Ocean.[4]

The large distances between people, lack of an economy, language and cultural barriers, all worked against the union. The six district centers became upscale slums, containing deteriorated Japanese-built roads, with electricity, modern music and distractions, which led to alienated youth and elders. The remainder of the islands maintained their traditional way of life and infrastructure.[4]

In the late 1960s, the U.S. opposed the idea of eventual independence. Instead, they aimed for some form of association, perhaps with Hawaii. They estimated that perhaps 10-25% of the population were at that point in favor of independence.[5]

A Congress of Micronesia first levied an income tax in 1971. It affected mainly foreigners working at military bases in the region.[6]

On October 21, 1986, the U.S. ended its administration of the Marshall Islands District.[7] The termination of U.S. administration of the Chuuk, Yap, Kosrae, Pohnpei, and the Mariana Islands districts of the TTPI soon followed on November 3, 1986.[8] [9] The Security Council formally ended the trusteeship for the Chuuk, Yap, Kosrae, Pohnpei, Mariana Islands, and Marshall Islands districts on December 22, 1990, pursuant to Security Council Resolution 683.[10] On May 25, 1994, the Council ended the trusteeship for the Palau District pursuant to Security Council Resolution 956, after which the U.S. and Palau agreed to establish the latter's independence on October 1.[11] [12]

Geography

In 1969, the 100 occupied islands comprised over an area of of sea. The latter area was comparable in size to the continental United States. The water area is about 5% of the Pacific Ocean.

Demographics

The population of the islands was 200,000 in the latter part of the 19th century. The population decreased to 100,000 by 1969 due to emigration, war, and disease. At that time, the population inhabited less than 100 out of 2,141 of the Marshall, Mariana, and Caroline Islands.[13]

Education

In 1947 the Mariana Islands' Teacher Training School (MITTS), a normal school serving all areas of the Trust Territory, opened in Guam.[16] It moved to Chuuk in 1948,[17] to be more central in the Trust Territory,[16] and was renamed Pacific Islands' Teacher Training School (PITTS).[17] It transitioned from being a normal school to a comprehensive secondary school, so it was renamed the Pacific Islands Central School (PICS). The school moved to Pohnpei in 1959.[16] At the time it was a three-year institution housing students who graduated from intermediate schools.[18] The school, later known as Pohnpei Island Central School (PICS),[19] is now Bailey Olter High School.[20]

Palau Intermediate School, established in 1946, became Palau High School in 1962 as it added senior high grades.[21] From the late 1960s to the middle of the 1970s, several public high schools were built or received additions in the Trust Territory. They included Jaluit High School, Kosrae High School, Marshall Islands High School in Majuro, Palau High, PICS, and Truk High School (now Chuuk High School). The Micronesian Occupational College in Koror, Palau was also built.[22] It later merged with the Kolonia-based Community College of Micronesia, which began operations in 1969, into the College of Micronesia-FSM in 1976.[23]

Current status

Following the termination of the trusteeship, the territory of the former TTPI became four separate jurisdictions:

Sovereign states in free association with the United States

The following sovereign states have become freely associated with the United States under the Compact of Free Association (COFA).

Commonwealth in political union with the United States

See also

Bibliography

External links

10.5°N 152°W

Notes and References

  1. March 3, 1931. 14. H.R.. 71st United States Congress. An Act To make The Star-Spangled Banner the national anthem of the United States of America.
  2. Encyclopædia Britannica

    Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands

  3. Web site: Trust Territory of the Pacific Archives Photos. University of Hawaii at Manoa Hamilton Library.
  4. News: P. F.. Kluge. Micronesia: America's Troubled Island Ward. Reader's Digest . The Beacon . Hawaii. 161. December 1971.
  5. Book: Brij V Lal . British Documents on the End of Empire Project Series B Volume 10: Fiji . 22 September 2006 . University of London: Institute of Commonwealth Studies . 301, 304, 310 . 'Pacific Island talks': Commonwealth Office notes on four-power talks in Washington . 9780112905899 . https://books.google.com/books?id=Z2R3Nk3jUlsC&pg=PA297.
  6. Web site: Micronesia's Simplified Income Tax System. American Bar Association Journal . September 1976. 1176–1178. Glenn B. Martineau.
  7. Web site: Marshall Islands (07/00). U.S. Department of State. https://web.archive.org/web/20190427205535/https://2009-2017.state.gov/outofdate/bgn/marshallislands/14446.htm. April 27, 2019. 2019-04-27.
  8. Web site: Background Notes: Micronesia 6/96. United States Department of State. 2019-04-27.
  9. Web site: Proclamation 5564 of November 3,1986. Reagan. Ronald. Government Publishing Office.
  10. Web site: Resolution 683 (1990). December 22, 1990. United Nations Security Council.
  11. Web site: [USC04] 48 USC 1931: Approval of Compact of Free Association: Article VII]. United States House. 2019-04-27.
  12. Web site: Trusteeship Council formally suspends operation: Palau admitted to UN. March 1995. UN Chronicle.
  13. News: Remembering an adopted cousin . Time . New York City. 28 . May 23, 1969.
  14. Web site: Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands Population and Housing Census 1957-1958 . GHDX .
  15. Web site: Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands Population and Housing Census 1970 . GHDX .
  16. Wuerch, William L. and Dirk Anthony Ballendorf. Historical Dictionary of Guam and Micronesia, 1994., 9780810828582. p.91.
  17. Goetzfridt, Nicholas J. and Karen M. Peacock. Micronesian Histories: An Analytical Bibliography and Guide to Interpretations'. p. 190.
  18. Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Office of United Nations Political Affairs, 1961. p. 137. "The Pacific Islands Central School is the only public senior secondary school of the Territory. Students selected for further training following graduation from the district intermediate schools may go to the Pacific Islands Central School for 3 additional years of education."
  19. "TITLE: Pohnpei Island Central School : (papers, articles, etc.). "
  20. "Higher Education in the Federated States of Micronesia ." Embassy of the Federated States of Micronesia Washington DC. Retrieved on February 23, 2018. "Bailey Olter High School (former PICS) P.O. Box 250 Kolonia, Pohnpei FM 96941"
  21. "About ." Palau High School. Retrieved on February 22, 2018.
  22. Compact of Free Association in the Micronesian States of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands: Environmental Impact Statement. United States Department of State, 1984. p. 36. "From the late 1960s to mid-1970s the major high school complexes throughout the Trust Territory were constructed: notably,[...]additions to the Ponape High School[...]"
  23. Thomas, R. Murray. "The U.S. Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (Micronesia)" (Chapter 3). In: Thomas, R. Murray and T. Neville Postlethwaite (editors). Schooling in the Pacific Islands: Colonies in Transition . Elsevier, January 26, 2016., 9781483148557. Start: 67. CITED: p. 91.
  24. Web site: Northern Mariana Islands . Central Intelligence Agency . CIA World Factbook . March 27, 2014 . April 5, 2014 .