Midway is one of the world's most   spectacular wildlife experiences. Nearly two million birds call it home for much   of each year, including the world's largest population of Laysan Albatrosses, or   "gooney birds". Hawaiian monk seals, green sea turtles and spinner dolphins   frequent Midway's crystal blue lagoon. 
  
    
        
        
    
    Midway became an "overlay"   refuge in 1988, while still under the primary jurisdiction of the Navy. With the   closure of Naval Air Facility Midway Island in 1993, there began a transition   from bullets to birds, a change in mission from national defense to wildlife   conservation. 
        
Midway is one of the most remote   coral atolls on earth. Yet, it is much, much more! 
      
          - the last link in a global   telegraph system, inaugurated by a message from President Teddy Roosevelt on the   Fourth of July, 1903; 
- a landing site for Pan Am Clippers   enroute across the Pacific Ocean in the late 1930s; 
- the focus of a 1942 battle that   changed the tide of war in the Pacific; 
- from July 1942 to the end of   hostilities, Midway served as a submarine base that aided in bringing the war to   a close; 
- naval air facility that played a   pivotal role in support of the Korean War, the Cold War and the Vietnam War. 
      In 1996, for the   first time since the Clippers landed in Midway's lagoon, this special place was   opened to the public. Unfortunately, due to the departure of our cooperator in   2002, regularly scheduled trips to Midway currently are not available. We are   hopeful we will be able to once again welcome visitors to enjoy Midway's rich   wildlife and historical treasury in the coming months. 
  
Midway Islands Tourism