American Period: 1898–1941, 1944–present Spain
lost Guam during the 1898
Spanish–American War in a bloodless invasion. For the next forty years, the
United States Navy assumed executive control of the island, treating it more as a military outpost than an overseas territory, with little to no civilian say in the island's affairs. Governor Captain Willis Winter Bradley instituted the
Guam Congress during the 1930s as an elected advisory body to the naval governor. On December 8, 1941,
Imperial Japanese forces invaded Guam, beginning a three-year occupation of the island. The island was eventually retaken in 1944 during the intense
Battle of Guam. Following the end of the war, the
U.S. Navy attempted to resume military control of the islands, much to the dismay of the local
Chamorro population who demanded greater rights on the heels of the harsh Japanese occupation. The
U.S. federal government listened. The result was the
Guam Organic Act of 1950 signed by President
Harry S. Truman. The act established a civilian territorial government with executive, legislative, and judicial branches. It was the first time that
Guam had a democratic civilian government.
Speakers of the Guam Legislature == Structure of the Guam Legislature ==