Ebeye was an island of the Marshallese people; it was annexed in 1885 by the German Empire. In 1914 it became a mandate of the Empire of Japan. In 1944 it was captured by the United States during WW2, after Japan attacked the USA. After WW2, it was part of U.N. protectorate administered by the USA until 1979. The Marshall Islands maintains a compact of free association with United States to the present day. Ebeye is the closest location for those employed at the military base to the south, which coordinates many logistical and aid programs for the island. Ebeye was connected by causeway in 1992 to the islands to its north, so it is now physically connected to Loi, Shell and Gugeegue islands. Aid projects have increased programs for schools, medical access, water, and sewage, but concern about over-topping waves has led to a seawall project in the 2020s.
Etymology When
Christian missionaries first arrived in the Marshall Islands, they introduced
Latin script writing and
orthographized the
Marshallese language. Originally, Ebeye was written
Ebeje by Europeans (''
in modern orthography, pronounced ), which (according to elders of the atoll) means "making something out of nothing." However, the colonial German administration mispronounced the J as if it were German language , and foreign observers recorded the resulting pronunciation as Ebeye''. During the Japanese period, though, the island's pronunciation in
katakana, , re-approximated Marshallese. After
World War II, the
Americans took possession of the regional mandate from
Japan and mispronounced the island's name as from its spelling. Because most of the modern Marshallese residents of Ebeye don't have historical roots on the island, the American pronunciation has stuck and is the usual name for Ebeye among the island's current population. This pronunciation has even been adapted to Marshallese orthography, so that there are now two synonymous Marshallese names for the island officially and historically '
, and locally '. It was also called Burton Island by the USA, in what was called the Carillon atoll.
World War II The
Imperial Japanese Navy constructed a seaplane base on Ebeye in the early 1940s. Following the
Battle of Kwajalein from 31 January to 3 February 1944, Ebeye was occupied by US forces. On 7 March the
107th Naval Construction Battalion was sent to Ebeye to redevelop the seaplane base. The Seabees repaired the existing pier, adding a
ell extension, and also repaired a Japanese H-shaped pier. The Seabees assembled a pontoon wharf and pontoon barges for transporting damaged carrier aircraft to repair units ashore. Further installations on Ebeye consisted of housing in floored tents and
Quonset huts, a 150-bed dispensary, four magazines, of covered storage, and a aviation-gasoline tank farm.
Forced immigration from the Mid-Atoll Corridor Before the early 1950s, a large number of present-day residents of Ebeye lived on small islands throughout
Kwajalein Atoll. When Kwajalein island started to be used as a support base for the nuclear tests conducted at
Bikini Atoll and
Enewetak Atoll, Marshallese residents of Kwajalein were relocated by U.S. authorities to a planned community on Ebeye with housing for half their number. Until then, Ebeye was largely unpopulated and had served as a Japanese seaplane base before the Pacific War. In 1950, the US Navy constructed a
LORAN station on Ebeye. It was disestablished in 1977. With the advent of the
Nike-Zeus anti-ballistic missile testing program of the 1960s, the U.S. military decided for safety and security reasons to evacuate slightly more than 100 residents of the central part of the atoll to create a zone where unarmed guided missiles could be targeted from the continental United States. Subsequent population growth by migration from outlying rural atolls and islands throughout the Marshalls created a housing shortage and problems with resources throughout the following decades. Some of the original Ebeye inhabitants with land rights did not feel adequately compensated A new Emergency Operations Center for the RMI was opened in 2024 on Ebeye. The new 2-story building houses offices to coordinate disaster relief throughout the RMI. In early 2024, the Marshall Islands were experiencing three months of drought, and in response international aid organization mobilized to bring some relief, such as extra water storage tanks. In 2024, a plan was announced to build a protective seawall at Ebeye, to reduce erosion and help prevent inundation from waves that over top the island. The Marshall Islands periodically have issues with overtopping waves, which can damage infrastructure, cause injuries, and render ground water undrinkable. There is also a plan in the late 2010s and 2020s to modernize
waste management. Currently there is a large dump at the north end of Ebeye. ==Geography==