'Tabuaeran', also known as 'Fanning Island' or 'Fanning Atoll' (both
Gilbertese and
English names are recognised) is one of the
Line Islands of the central
Pacific Ocean, and part of
Kiribati. It is an
atoll located at . The maximum elevation is about 3 m (10 ft) above high tide.
Tabuaeran has a population of 2500, principally Gilbertese settlers brought from Kiribati by Fanning Island Plantations, Ltd., to work in the
copra industry (copra is the meat of the
coconut). The capital is Napari (Paelau) in the northwest. The former capital is Napia (English Harbour) on the western side, south of a passage into the lagoon. Other villages are Tereitaki, in the northwest, Aontena, a resettlement area just south of Napia, and Manuku, a resettlement area in the south.
| No. | Village | Population(Census 2005) |
|---|
| 1 | Napari (Nabari, English Harbour) | 194 |
| 2 | Tereitaki | 438 |
| 3 | Betania | 260 |
| 4 | Paelau (Napia) | 250 |
| 5 | Aontenaa (Aontena) | 177 |
| 6 | Tenenebo | 461 |
| 7 | Tereitannano (Tereitaki) | 249 |
| 8 | Aramari | 358 |
| 9 | Mwanuku (Manuku) | 152 |
| | 'Tabuaeran' | 2539 |
Reef fishes and shellfishes, ''babai'' (''Cyrtosperma chamissonis''), coconut, pigs, chickens, and
seaweed (limu) grown in a
lagoon are local foods, supplementing a main diet of imported rice and tinned meats.
The island's major exports are copra and hand crafts (including
cowrie shell, shark tooth knives, and
Kiribati stamps). A supply ship from
Australia calls two or three times a year. However, Tabuaeran is a weekly port of call for the ''
Norwegian Wind'' (
Norwegian Cruise Line) whose base port is
Honolulu. It is more cost effective for the cruise line to visit a foreign country than to pay port charges as a consequence of the U.S.
Passenger Services Act.
History
At some 900 miles distant, Tabuaeran is one of the closest landfalls to the
Hawaiian Islands, and the atoll was possibly used as a stopover by the
Polynesians who first settled Hawai‘i. Artifacts have been discovered that indicate possible early settlements by people from
Polynesia—probably the
Cook Islands or
Tonga.
The atoll was first charted by the American captain
Edmund Fanning on
November 6,
1798, on the USS ''Betsy'' and was named for him. At the time, the atoll was uninhabited, and in fact, like all of the
Line Islands, has no truly native population.
Fanning was next claimed by the
British in
1889, who blasted coral heads in the deep, natural opening—thereafter called the 'English Channel'—on the west side of the atoll. Tabuaeran once hosted a cable station on the
Trans-Pacific cable between Canada and Australia, a part of the
All Red Line. In
1914 (
World War I), the Cable Station was shelled by a
German gunboat, and the station slightly damaged. In
1939 the atoll was incorporated into the British colony of the
Gilbert and Ellice Islands, much later (
1979) gaining independence along with them, becoming part of the Republic of Kiribati.
Tabuaeran features in
John Updike's short story "The Blessed Old Man, My Grandmother's Thimble, and Fanning Island."
External links
★
map of Tabuaeran
★
Fanning Island on Jane Resture's Oceania Home Page A strong resource including geography, history, photos, and links.
★
Fanning-Island.com