
Beach Street - Levuka's main street facing the Pacific Ocean
'Levuka' is a
town on the south-east coast of the
Fijian island of
Ovalau, in
Lomaiviti Province, in the
Eastern Division of Fiji, of which it is the capital. At the
census in
1996, the last to date, Levuka had a population of 3,745, more than a third of Ovalau's total. It is the economic hub and the largest of 24 settlements on the island. Levuka and the island of Ovalau are seeking recognition from
UNESCO as a
World Heritage Site.
History
The modern town of Levuka was founded around
1820 by
European settlers and traders as the first modern town in the Fiji Islands, and became an important port and trading post. A disparate band of settlers made up Levuka's population - traders, missionaries, shipwrights, speculators, and vagabonds, as well as respectable businessmen.
Marist priests, led by Father Breheret, established a mission in Levuka in 1858. By
1870, the town had a population of more than 800. When the first modern nation state of Fiji was founded in
1871,
Seru Epenisa Cakobau was
crowned King at Levuka. After Fiji was annexed as a
British colony in
1874, Levuka remained the
capital until
1877, when the administration was moved to
Suva, althoughh the move was not made official until
1882. The move was prompted by concerns that the 600-meter high cliffs surrounding Levuka gave it no room for expansion.

Beach Street, Levuka, Fiji
Levuka is famous for many of Fiji's "firsts." It was the site of Fiji's first bank, post office, school, private members club, hospital, town hall, and municipal government. Fiji's first newspaper, the
Fiji Times, which is still in operation today, was founded in Levuka in
1869. Levuka's
Royal Hotel is the oldest hotel in the
South Pacific still operating. Historians have not ascertained its exact age, but records show that it was in existence by the early
1860s.
Levuka Public School, opened in
1879, was the first public school in Fiji and many of Fiji's leaders in the years leading up to and following independence in
1970 were educated there. The oldest
Masonic lodge in the South Pacific,
Lodge Polynesia 562 SC, is also to be found in Levuka. It was established in
1875. Levuka was also the site of Fiji's first public electricity system, which began in
1927, three days before the capital Suva was electrified.
Economic activities
Levuka's status as a stopover
port for ocean vessels crossing the
Pacific came to an end in the
1950s, threatening the town with economic extinction. In
1964, however, the
Pacific Fishing Company (PAFCO) was founded by a
Japanese firm, specializing in freezing and shipping canned
tuna, mostly to markets in
Europe and
Canada. A
cannery, a joint PAFCO-government venture, was opened in
1976, and is the largest private employer on the island of Ovalau.
Owing largely to Levuka's isolation,
tourism plays only a minor role in the Levuka/Ovalau economy.
Governance and politics
Levuka has been incorporated as a
Town since
1877, and is governed by a
Town Council of 8 members, elected for 3 year terms. The
municipal elections of
22 October 2005 resulted in a defeat for the
SDL of outgoing
Mayor Taniela Bulivou, with the
Balance Party taking 6 of the 8 seats. The new council elected
George Gibson to succeed Bulivou; the Mayoral term is for one year, but may be extended any number of times.
Landmarks

Sacred Heart Church, Beach Street
At the northern end of Levuka is the traditional Fijian village of Levuka. The village chief, who bears the title of ''
Tui Levuka'', is a direct descendant of the chief who welcomed the first European settlers. In memory of his ancestor, he is also known as ''"Tamana na vavalagi"'' (Father of the Europeans). At the southern end of the town lies the village of
Nasova, where the King
Seru Epenisa Cakobau signed the
Deed of Cession, ceding the islands to the
United Kingdom on
10 October 1874.
The
Levuka Community Centre, which houses a branch of the
Fiji Museum, a public library, crafts centre, kindergarten, squash court and meeting hall, occupies a renovated store built in
1878 by
Morris Hedstrom & Co., a trading company established in Levuka's early days and still in business in Fiji. Morris Hedstrom gave the building to the
National Trust of Fiji in
1980. Adjacent to the Levuka Community Centre stands
Queens Wharf, with a maximum depth of eight meters. Upgraded in the
1990s, it is used mostly by local craft, though foreign vessels sometimes dock, Levuka being one of three official ports of entry to Fiji (
Suva and
Lautoka being the other two).
Other well-known landmarks include
Sacred Heart Church, a legacy of the
Marist Fathers, who arrived in
1858, the
Ovalau Club, one of the oldest social organizations in the Pacific, and
Levuka Town Hall, which houses the
Levuka Town Council. It was built in
1898 in honour of
Queen Victoria's
Diamond Jubilee.
External links
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Levuka Fiji
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Levuka Town
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Lodge Polynesia 562 SC
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Levuka Guide
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Levuka Days of a Parson in Polynesia, Illustrated memoir by C.W. Whonsbon-Aston (1936)