Citations:Wake Island

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English citations of Wake Island

1866 1942 1956 1963 1970s
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Flag of Wake Island
  • 1866 August 18, “LAST NEWS OF ANNA BISHOP”, in The Musical World[1], volume 44, number 33, London, →OCLC, page 521:
    Intelligence has been received at Hong Kong of the total loss of the ship Libelle while on a voyage to that port from San Francisco, having on board a valuable cargo and specie to the extent of £76,000 in dollars, and a number of passengers, among whom were Madame Anna Bishop, Miss Phelan, Mr. M. Schrutz, and Mr. Charles Lascelles, of the English Opera Company, who, with other artists, were on a musical tour. The ship was cast away on the night of the 4th of March, on an uninhabited and dangerous reef called Wake Island, in the China Seas.
  • 1942 January 6, Franklin Roosevelt, 1942 President's Annual Message to Congress[2]:
    There were only some four hundred United States marines who in the heroic and historic defense of Wake Island inflicted such great losses on the enemy. Some of those men were killed in action; and others are now prisoners of war.
  • 1956, Harry S. Truman, Memoirs of Harry S. Truman: Years of Trial And Hope[3], volume II, Doubleday & Company, →OCLC, pages 368–369:
    "I went out to Wake Island to see General MacArthur because I did not want to take him far away from Korea, where he is conducting very important operations with great success.[...]
    "At the same time I believed my trip to Wake Island would give emphasis to the historic action taken by the United Nations on Korea.[...]
    "At Wake Island we talked over the Far Eastern situation and its relationship to the problem of world peace.[...]
    "Now I want Wake Island to be a symbol of our unity of purpose for world peace. I want to see world peace from Wake Island west all the way around back again. I want to see world peace from Wake Island all the way east and back again — and we are going to get it!
  • 1963, Dwight Eisenhower, “A Changed World, Formation of a Cabinet, a Mission to Korea”, in Mandate for Change 1953-1956[4], Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 96:
    At Guam, General Bradley and Admiral Radford left us, to proceed by airplane to Pearl Harbor. En route our ship passed Wake Island, where we were joined by Cabinet-designees Dulles, Humphrey, and McKay, and by General Qay and Mr. Dodge.
  • 1978, Duane Schultz, “"To Deny Wake to the Enemy"”, in Wake Island: The Heroic, Gallant Fight[5], New York: St. Martin's Press, →OCLC, page 13:
    It takes only a brief glimpse at a 1941 map of the Pacific to see why Wake Island was considered to be of such strategic value to the United States and why it was such an early target in Japan's program of conquest. As the war planners on both sides saw the situation in the late 1930s, possession of Wake was vital to the defense of their territory.
  • 1978, Richard Nixon, “Early Years 1913-1946”, in RN: the Memoirs of Richard Nixon[6], Grosset & Dunlap, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 29:
    In July 1944 my overseas tour of duty was completed and I was ordered back to the States. I caught a cargo plane from Guadalcanal to Hawaii, and when we made a fueling stop at Wake Island in the middle of the night I got out to stretch my legs. For the first time I saw one of our war cemeteries. I shall never forget those white crosses, row after row after row of them, beginning at the edge of the runway and stretching out into the darkness on that tiny island so far away from home.