Katana VentraIP

Niihau

Niʻihau (Hawaiian: [ˈniʔiˈhɐw]), anglicized as Niihau (/ˈn(i)h/ NEE-(ee-)how), is the westernmost main and seventh largest inhabited island in Hawaii. It is 17.5 miles (28.2 km) southwest of Kauaʻi across the Kaulakahi Channel. Its area is 69.5 square miles (180 km2).[3] Several intermittent playa lakes provide wetland habitats for the Hawaiian coot, the Hawaiian stilt, and the Hawaiian duck. The island is designated as critical habitat for Brighamia insignis, an endemic and endangered species of Hawaiian lobelioid. The United States Census Bureau defines Niʻihau and the neighboring island and State Seabird Sanctuary of Lehua as Census Tract 410 of Kauai County, Hawaii. Its 2000 census population was 160, most of whom are native Hawaiians;[4] its 2010 census population was 170. At the 2020 census, the population had fallen to 84.[5]

Not to be confused with Nihoa.

Nickname: The Forbidden Isle

69.5 sq mi (180 km2)

1,250 ft (381 m)

Bruce Robinson
Keith Robinson

Pūpū keʻokeʻo (white shell)[1]

Keʻokeʻo (white)[2]

84 (2020)

1.9/sq mi (0.73/km2)

Elizabeth Sinclair purchased Niʻihau in 1864 for US$10,000 (equivalent to about $190,000 in 2023) from the Kingdom of Hawaii. The island's private ownership passed on to her descendants, the Robinsons. During World War II, the island was the site of the Niʻihau incident, in which, following the attack on Pearl Harbor, a Japanese navy fighter pilot crashed on the island and received help from the island's residents of Japanese descent.


The island, known as "the Forbidden Isle", is off-limits to all outsiders except the Robinson family and their relatives, U.S. Navy personnel, government officials, and invited guests. From 1987 onward, a limited number of supervised activity tours and hunting safaris have opened to tourists. The island is currently managed by brothers Bruce and Keith Robinson. The people of Niʻihau are noted for their gemlike lei pūpū (shell lei) craftsmanship. They speak Hawaiian as a primary language.

The final missions of the campaigns in the 2007 video game Supreme Commander and its expansion, Supreme Commander: Forged Alliance take place on Niʻihau, which houses a superweapon installation named Black Sun. The island is roughly portrayed correctly, and the missions also feature several fictitious islands around the island of Niʻihau itself.

real-time strategy

The is portrayed in the 2019 film Enemy Within.[56]

Niʻihau Incident

Barnhart, Sky (July 2008). . Maui Nō Ka ʻOi Magazine. 12 (4). Archived from the original on July 23, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2009.

"The Flowers of Niihau"

Clark, John R. K. (1990). Beaches of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. Honolulu, Hawaii: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 79–102.  0-8248-1260-3.

ISBN

Conover, Adele; Gary Braasch (November 1996). "A Onetime Rancher Wages Lonely War to Save Rare Plants". . 27 (8). Smithsonian Institution: 114.

Smithsonian

; Timothy Heap (October 1962). "Niihau a shoal of time". American Heritage. 14 (6). American Heritage Publishing Company. Archived from the original on February 19, 2009. Retrieved May 6, 2008.

Daws, Gavan

Laracy, Hugh (September 2001). "The Sinclairs of Pigeon Bay and the Romantic 'Pre-history' of the Robinsons of Niʻihau". Journal of Pacific History. 36 (2). Routledge: 183–199. :10.1080/00223340120075560. S2CID 162334677.

doi

Licayan, Emalia; Nizo, Virginia; Kanahele, Elama (2007). Kanahele, Elama; Armitage, Kimo; NeSmith, Keao (eds.). Aloha Niihau: Oral Histories. Waipahu, Hawaii: Island Heritage Publishing.  978-1-59700-209-7.

ISBN

May, Ernest R (November 2, 1946). "They Never Leave This Real Shangri-La". . 219 (18): 28–67. ISSN 0048-9239.

The Saturday Evening Post

Meyer, Philip A. (1998). "Niihau – Present Circumstances and Future Requirement in an Evolving Hawaiian Community". Ni'ihau, Hawai'i: Hoomana Ia Iesu Church. {{}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

cite journal

Paul, Caroline (2007). . Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-06-078076-0.

East Wind, Rain

Stepien, Edward R. (1988) [1984]. Niʻihau, A Brief History. Vol. 1. Honolulu: Center for Pacific Islands Studies, School of Hawaiian, Asian, & Pacific Studies, . pp. 1–268. hdl:10125/15544.

University of Hawaii at Manoa