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Guam

Guam is the largest and southernmost island in the Marianas Archipelago. The island is sharply divided into a northern coralline limestone plateau and a southern chain of volcanic hills. Today Guam is an unincorporated, organized territory of the United States. The people of Guam have been U.S. citizens since 1950. They have been represented in the U.S. Congress since 1973 by a nonvoting delegate, but do not participate in presidential elections.

Guam was probably visited by the Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan (sailing for Spain) in 1521. The island was formally claimed by Spain in 1565, and its people were forced into submission and conversion to Roman Catholicism, beginning in 1668. After the Spanish-American War of 1898, Spain ceded Guam to the United States. From 1899 to 1949, the U.S. Navy administered Guam, except during 1941–44, when Japanese forces seized and occupied the island. Guam was liberated by American military forces in the summer of 1944. Guam's economy is based on two main sources of revenue: tourism and U.S. military spending (U.S. naval and air force bases occupy one-third of the land on Guam).

GOVERNMENT
Country name (conventional long form):
Territory of Guam
Capital: Agaña
House of Representatives: Congressional Delegate

STATISTICS
Population (July 2002 est.): 160,796; average annual rate of natural increase: 1.99%
Land Area:
209 sq. mi. (541 sq. km)

ECONOMY
GDP: purchasing power parity - $3.2 billion (2000 est.)
Exports
: $75.7 million f.o.b. (1999 est.)
Agriculture: Fruits, copra, vegetables; eggs, pork, poultry, beef.
Industry: U.S. military, tourism, construction, transshipment services, concrete products, printing and publishing, food processing, textiles.

 
 
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Updated: June 2003