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Pago Pago has been called O le Maputasi ("The Single Chief’s House") in compliment to the Mauga, who lived at Gagamoe and was the senior to all the other chiefs in the area. [ 9 ] In English, Maʻopūtasi County is occasionally spelled as Maoputasi [ 10 ] or Maputasi.
Pago Park Soccer Stadium, with a capacity of 2,000, is the home ground of the American Samoa national football team and hosts matches for the FFAS Senior League and the OFC Champions League. The stadium was featured in the 2014 film Next Goal Wins. [2]
The Sadie Thompson Inn is a historic building in Malaloa, one of the constituent villages of Pago Pago in American Samoa. The building is noted as the guest house where from mid-December 1916 author W. Somerset Maugham resided for six weeks during an extended trip through the South Sea Islands. He described it as a "dilapidated lodging house ...
There are international flights to Samoa 4–7 times daily by Polynesian Airlines: [130] Pago Pago is a 35-minute flight from Apia in Samoa. Most flights are to and from Fagali'i . [ 104 ] : 512 [ 196 ] There is only one flight destination from the territory to the United States: Honolulu International Airport , a five-hour flight from Pago ...
Fagatogo contains the Pago Pago port, the Pago Pago bus station and market, and the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph the Worker of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Samoa-Pago Pago. [12] Fagatogo is also home to the governor's mansion, which sits on a hilltop just west of the Rainmaker Hotel site, in a section of Fagatogo called Utulei. This colonial ...
Satala is one of Pago Pago’s constituent villages [1] and is located in Pago Pago Bay on Tutuila Island.Satala is in Maoputasi County in the Eastern District of the island. It is home to the historic Satala Cemetery, which is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, and the government-owned Ronald Reagan Marina Railway Shipyard.
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Hodel (decided on October 9, 1987) was a significant legal ruling in the context of land ownership in American Samoa. The court invalidated the sale of land in Malaeimi to the Mormon Church , affirming the constitutional validity of restrictions limiting the ownership of native land in American Samoa to individuals of Samoan ancestry.