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Home to approximately 250 native Hawaiians, Ni'ihau is the
smallest of the populated Hawaiian Islands. It is also privately
owned: Offered for sale by King Kamehameha IV in 1863, the
island was purchased by Elizabeth Sinclair for $10,000. (Sinclair
reportedly chose to buy the island over other choice pieces
of real estate such as Waikiki, Pearl Harbor and the island
of Lanai.) Mrs. Sinclair and her adult offspring turned the
entire island into a cattle and sheep ranch before moving
back to Kauai.
Forbidden
Today the Kauai descendents of Helen Sinclair Robinson hold
title to the land, with the U.S. Navy also maintaining a presence
there for weapons testing. Until recently the island was off-limits
to outsiders but is now open to helicopter tours on an extremely
limited basis. The three-hour tours, offered by the Robinson-owned
Ni'ihau Helicopters, subsidize the cost of maintaining helicopter
service to the island in times of medical emergency. (One
of the few outsiders to visit the island prior to these tours
did so in 1941, when a lone Japanese pilot involved in the
attack on Pearl Harbor crashed on the island.)
Preserving Culture
As such, the island has remained virtually immune to the influences
of the outside world: The Hawaiian language is spoken almost
exclusively here, and residents have no electricity, cars,
roads, hotels or restaurants. Each family tends its own garden
to supplement the beef and mutton that are still raised on
the ranch. Meanwhile, the pristine beaches of Ni'ihau yield
one of the most prized possessions in the Islands —
the extremely rare Ni'ihau shell islanders fashion into lei
worth hundreds (and even thousands) of dollars.
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