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Niulakita has never
had a permanent population of its own so it was well suited to being claimed
by people from elsewhere. The American trader Harry S. Moors, of Samoa,
exploited its guano deposit late last century. In 1914 he sold it to E. F.
H. Allen of the Samoa Shipping and Trading Company, which also maintained a
trading station on Funafuti.
The Allen's connection with Niulakita (and,
indeed, with Tuvalu) ended in 1916. That year the island was purchased by
Burns Philp and Co. of Sydney. They in turn, sold it in 1944 to the Western
Pacific High Commission who would administer it for the benefit of Tuvalu.
In
1946 a Lands Commissioner toured the group to find out how much land each
island had for its inhabitants. He discovered that Niutao had the highest
population density. To relieve the pressure on the land he suggested to the
old men of the island that some of their people could go to Tonga or, if
they preferred, they could exploit Niulakita. They chose the latter. A more
recent but less notable event in the history of Niutao has thus been its
acquisition of Niulakita.
The
first group of workers, with their wives and children, were sent to
Niulakita in 1949 to cut copra. When they arrived they found some Vaitupu
people there. These were returned to their home leaving their few cows
behind. The Niutao people were rather scared of these animals which they
did not have on their island.
There was no
school on the island in those days. Its children could not read nor write,
although they were given a little instruction by a man named Loela, who had
remained behind when the Vaitupuans left. A school was opened there in 1980
and operates as an extension of the one at Niutao. Similarly, the Niutao
council is responsible for the labourers at Niulakita. |