I was stationed on Midway Island with the Navy from December 1970 to September 1971, so every year or two I check in online learn a little about the island's current status. It no longer has a Navy presence; that ended in the nineties. It's now under the management of the Department of the Interior and is a wildlife refuge for birds, seals, turtles, and such. When I was there, there were about 3,000 inhabitants, mostly Navy personnel and dependents, and contractors. Today there are about 80 residents, federal employees, contractors, and researchers. The Island weathered a tsunami in 2011, but the waves raised only between four and five feet, so personnel took refuge on the third floor of a building and experienced very little other than clean-up afterwards. The Navy's largest presence was during the Korean War, with about 5,000 inhabitants. When I was there, there were amenities such as enlisted and officers' clubs, a theater, bowling alleys, and schools and little league teams for dependents. Even a tiny TV and radio station and a "newspaper" run on multilith. After the Navy decommissioned its base, tourists were allowed to visit for several years, and later from cruise ships that sent boats from the ships at anchor, but now access is limited and by special permission, apparently since the tourism did not pay for maintaining lodging and access.