Guam (Chamorro: Guåhån) is an organized, unincorporated
territory of the United States in Micronesia in the western Pacific Ocean. It is the westernmost
point and territory of the United States, along with the Northern Mariana Islands.
The capital city of Guam is Hagåtña and the most populous city is Dededo. Guam has been a member of the Pacific Community since 1983. The inhabitants of Guam are
called Guamanians, and they are American citizens by
birth. The indigenous Guamanians are the Chamorros, who are related to other Austronesian peoples of
Indonesia, the Philippines, and Taiwan. The indigenous Chamorros
settled the island approximately 4,000 years ago. Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan, while
in the service of Spain, was the first European to visit the island, on March
6, 1521. Guam was colonized by Spain in 1668 with settlers, including Diego Luis de San Vitores,
a Catholic Jesuit missionary. Between
the 16th century and the 18th century, Guam was an important stopover for the
Spanish Manila Galleons. During
the Spanish–American War, the
United States captured Guam on June 21,
1898. Under the Treaty of Paris, signed on
December 10, 1898, Spain ceded Guam to the United States effective April 11, 1899. Guam is among the 17 non-self-governing territories listed by the United Nations. Before
World War II, there were five American jurisdictions in the
Pacific Ocean: Guam and Wake Island in Micronesia, American Samoa and Hawaii in Polynesia, and the Philippines.
On December 8, 1941, hours
after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Guam was captured by the Japanese, who occupied the island for two and a half years.
During the occupation, Guamanians were subjected to beheadings, forced labor,
rape, and torture. American forces recaptured the island
on July 21, 1944; Liberation Day
commemorates the victory. An unofficial but frequently used territorial motto
is "Where America's Day Begins", which refers to the island's
proximity to the International Date Line.
Guam lies in the path of typhoons and it is common for the island to be threatened by
tropical storms and possible typhoons during the rainy season. The highest risk
of typhoons is from August through November, where typhoons and tropical storms
are most probable in the northwest Pacific. They can, however, occur year
round. The most powerful typhoon to pass over Guam recently was Super Typhoon Pongsona, with sustained winds of 144 miles per
hour (232 km/h), gusts to 173 miles per hour (278 km/h), which struck
Guam on December 8, 2002, leaving massive destruction. Since Typhoon Pamela in 1976,
wooden structures have been largely replaced by concrete structures. During the
1980s, wooden utility poles began to be replaced by typhoon-resistant concrete
and steel poles. After the local Government enforced stricter construction
codes, many home and business owners built their structures out of reinforced concrete
with installed typhoon shutters.
Believed to be a stowaway on a U.S. military transport near the end of World
War II, the brown tree snake (Boiga
irregularis) was accidentally introduced to Guam, which previously had no
native species of snake. It nearly eliminated the native bird population. The
problem was exacerbated because the snake has no natural predators on the
island. The brown tree snake, known locally as the kulebla, is native to
northern and eastern coasts of Australia, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. It is slightly venomous, but relatively harmless to human beings; it is
nocturnal. Although some studies have suggested a high density of these
serpents on Guam, residents rarely see them. The United States
Department of Agriculture has trained detector dogs to keep the
snakes out of the island's cargo flow. The United States Geological Survey
also has dogs that can detect snakes in forested environments around the
region's islands.
Before the introduction of
the brown tree snake, Guam was home to several endemic bird species. Among them
were the Guam rail (or ko'ko' bird in Chamorro) and the Guam flycatcher, both were once common throughout the island.
Today the flycatcher is entirely extinct and the Guam rail is critically
endangered and they are bred in captivity by the Division of Aquatic and
Wildlife Resources. The devastation caused by the snake has been significant
over the past several decades. As many as twelve bird species are believed to
have been driven to extinction. However, some of the birds still thrive and are
common on other islands at the subspecies level in the Marianas, including
Saipan. According to many elders, ko'ko' birds were common in Guam before World
War II. Other bird species threatened by the brown tree snake include the Mariana crow, the Mariana swiftlet, and the Micronesian starling,
though populations are present on other islands, including Rota.
Guam is said to have many
more insects and 40 times more spiders than neighboring islands, because their
natural predators birds are severely diminished, and the forests are almost
completely silent due to lack of birdsong. An infestation of the coconut rhinoceros beetle (CRB),
Oryctes rhinoceros, was
detected on Guam on September 12, 2007. CRB is not known to occur in the United
States except in American Samoa.
The postage stamps and
postal history of Guam is an overview of the postage stamps and postal history of the United States territory of Guam.
Its postal service is linked to those of the Philippines during the Spanish Empire and, since 1898, to the United States of America. A peculiarity is that, for a short
period in the 1930s, Guam had a local post service. Because the US Postal administration
issued the same stamps in Guam as in the United States, cancellations are the
only way to identify a stamp as having been used in the island. Between the
1930s and 1970s, during the creation of trans-Pacific airways, stops at Guam
were commemorated with special illustrated marks.
In 1899, when it began to
administer the island, the US Navy issued eleven
postage stamps overprinted "GUAM". These were
from the definitive series
illustrating with portraits of US presidents or major personalities. This
series was first issued between 1890 and 1894. The denominations and colors
used for Guam are from 1895 and 1898–1899 issues. When the United States
Post Office Department (USPOD) took charge of the postal service of
Guam in March 1901, the local population, soldiers from the US Navy base and
indigenous Chamorros, had to use US
stamps without any distinctive marks. Since 1901, only a Guam town cancellation
indicates domestic posting. This situation is common to others insular unincorporated territories of
the United States, such as, Northern Mariana Islands
since 1944, Virgin Islands since
1917, Puerto Rico since 1900 and American Samoa since 1899. The
existence of a local post at the beginning of the 1930s and the Japan occupation
periods were exceptions.
Since its annexation, Guam
was the subject of one postage stamp produced by the United States Postal Service.
On June 1, 2007 a 90-cent stamp, part of the airmail series "Scenic
American Landscapes" depicting a sunset on a beach and the Hagåtña Bay was released. The island's name was included on
the central label of the 50th Anniversary of the World War II miniature sheets of ten stamps each, issued between 1991 and
1995. On August 29, 1930 the Guam Guard Mail
service was extended to the southern part of the island with stations at Merizo
and Inarajan. This route also included Umatac. The route was by bus from Agana
to Piti and then to Merizo via the semi-weekly boat service (this was necessary
since a bridge had not been completed on the road to Merizo). Then from Merizo
to Inarajan by Island Government truck. On July 10, 1930, two stamps were
issued depicting the Guam coat of arms. These 1-cent and 2-cents are bi-color
black and red, perforated 11 and without
gum. On December 29, 1930, Philippines stamps were issued with the overprint
« GUAM / GUARD / MAIL » in red using the same font as the 3rd issue. This
local service ceased operation in the northern half of the island on January 1,
1931 and on the southern half on April 8, 1931 when the US postal
administration took over all mail delivery on the island. After that date they
were served by the U.S. Post Office Department's Star Route 81102.
Right after the attack on Pearl Harbor
Japanese forces conquered Guam on December 10, 1941. The Japanese
administration used the same stamps as those issued for the occupied
Philippines. At first the former US administration stamps were overprinted with
messages commemorating the Japanese victories in the Pacific, then new stamps,
with an evolution in the legend: in English in 1942 ("PHILIPPINES"),
then Japanese in 1943, and finally in Filipino ("REPUBLIKA NG PILIPINAS") were released. As
previously, only the cancellation proves a Guam use. The island was recaptured
after the Battle of Guam, between
the July 21 and August 10, 1944 and US stamps were once again reintroduced.
These covers posted from Barrigada on June 20, 2017, and received on July 05, 2017. These Islands are very remote in pacific Ocean. On the first cover you can see the name of the state is written and the flag too.
This is the photo of a post office from Guam. Sender said there is No Aircondition, cash or check only, one staff operation , no postage label machine or computers. And no low value stamps too. These islands are very remote and very few people live there.
The one and only staff handling the registered mails in Guam post office.
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