Lighthouses of U.S. Minor Pacific Islands

In 1856 the U.S. Congress passed the Guano Islands Act, which authorized U.S. citizens to take possesion of uninhabited oceanic islands anywhere in the world for the purpose of mining guano for fertilizer. More than 100 islands were occupied at various times in the second half of the 19th century. Several have remained permanently in U.S. possession, including Navassa Island in the Caribbean and a number of small islands in the northern and central Pacific west and south of Hawaii.

Among the guano islands are several in the Phoenix and Line Islands, located near the Equator. In the 1930s, the U.S. government decided to send American settlers to these islands to more clearly establish U.S. sovereignty in the face of Japanese imperial expansion. Small lighthouses were built as part of four settlements, including one on Kanton (Canton) Island in what is now Kiribati. These tiny colonies were short lived; all the settlers were withdrawn in 1942 after Kanton, Baker and Howland Islands were strafed by Japanese ships and planes based at Tarawa in the Gilbert Islands (now Kiribati). All the islands have been uninhabited ever since.

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Line Islands Lighthouse
Jarvis Island
1935. Inactive. No description or photo available. Jarvis Island is about 40 km (25 mi) south of the Equator and a huge distance, about 1800 km (1100 mi), east of Baker and Howland islands. Like Baker, it was mined for guano from 1858 to 1879. After being annexed briefly by Britain, it was reoccupied by American settlers from 1935 to early 1942. Harold Jewell visited the island with a biological expedition in 1958 and mentions the lighthouse several times in his report; the scientists stored some of their gear in it. The lighthouse still stands and is charted as a daybeacon. Like Howland, the island is a national wildlife refuge; visits require a permit from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. ARLHS PJI-001.


Amelia Earhart Beacon, Howland Island, 1963
U.S. Coast Guard photo

Phoenix Islands Lighthouses (see also Kiribati)
Amelia Earhart (Howland Island)
1937. Inactive as a lighthouse. 6 m (20 ft) sandstone monument, painted with black and white horizontal bands. Howland Island is an atoll in the Phoenix Islands 80 km (50 mi) north of the Equator and 3050 km (1900 mi) southwest of Honolulu. The atoll has been claimed by the U.S. since 1856. The lighthouse and an airstrip were constructed in 1937 to support a round-the-world flight by the famous aviator Amelia Earhart. After Earhart disappeared July 2 on her flight from New Guinea to Howland, the tower was retained in her memory. Damaged during World War II, it was restored by the U.S. Coast Guard in 1963 as a daybeacon. The island is a national wildlife refuge; visits require a permit from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. ARLHS BAK-002.
Baker Island
1935. Inactive. 4 m (17 ft) rubblestone tower; no lantern, but a light on a short mast was placed at the top. Baker Island is about 55 km (35 mi) south of Howland Island and only 25 km (15 mi) north of the equator. The island was mined for guano from 1859 to 1878. American settlers arrived in 1935 and built the lighthouse; the settlement was evacuated at the start of World War II and the island has been uninhabited and very rarely visited since then. The lighthouse still stands and is charted as a daybeacon. Like Howland, the island is a national wildlife refuge; visits require a permit from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. ARLHS BAK-001.

Information available on lost lighthouses:

Notable faux lighthouses:

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Posted August 28, 2005. Checked and revised December 2, 2007. Lighthouses: 3. Site copyright 2007 Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.