Incredible photos of abandoned islands the world forgot
Deserted isles with a story to tell

Dreaming of an island far, far away? Many of these isles may look idyllic but each one has been all but deserted by humanity. Some harbour dark secrets while others have been rendered inhospitable by Mother Nature.
Read on as we reveal the stories behind the planet's most curious abandoned islands...
Hashima Island, Japan

Hashima Island, Japan

Poveglia, Italy

Poveglia, Italy

Lazzaretto Nuovo, Italy

Another abandoned island in the Venetian Lagoon, Lazzaretto Nuovo has its own story to tell. Settlers are thought to have been here as early as the Bronze Age and the island was also later owned by the Benedictine monks of San Giorgio Maggiore. In the 15th century, a lazaretto (a hospital for sufferers of contagious diseases) was founded and many patients thought to carry the plague were quarantined here. Tezon Grande (pictured), the island's main building, today holds artefacts from this period and beyond.
Lazzaretto Nuovo, Italy

Beyond the 1700s, the island was no longer used for its medical facilities. Instead, under Napoleon's rule, the island served as a military defence with gunpowder towers and fortified walls. It was then used by the Italian army right up until 1975 when it was finally abandoned. It's now popular with visitors (organised tours only) who come to see curious remnants of the island's past and to pore over exhibitions at the Tezon Grande.
Love this? Follow our Facebook page for more abandoned content and travel inspiration
Hirta, St Kilda, Scotland

Hirta, St Kilda, Scotland

The community on Hirta survived for many hundreds of years but by the late 1800s, increased tourism posed a threat to the islanders’ traditional way of life. Attempts to modernise the island were futile and flimsy houses built at the end of the 19th century could not withstand St Kilda’s merciless weather. Residents began to leave the island and by the 1930s, the last inhabitants left Hirta behind. Now tourists can visit the far-off isles and spot the crumbling stone houses and the Soay sheep that call the island home.
McNabs Island, Canada

McNabs Island, Canada

The island proved useful during the Second World War, dotted as it is with hulking forts used by the military over the years. Now the island is open to visitors who come to explore the lush expanse with crumbling ruins. Look out for abandoned homes, military forts and canons, and a mouldering soda factory. You’ll also see a lighthouse watching over the coast.
North Brother Island, New York, USA

Unruly greenery and ramshackle buildings characterise North Brother Island, an abandoned isle in the Big Apple’s East River. In the 1880s, the island became home to the Riverside Hospital which treated people with contagious diseases. Mary Mallon, better known as 'Typhoid Mary', is the hospital's most infamous patient – thought to be the first carrier of the bacteria causing typhoid fever, Mallon was quarantined here and eventually died on the island.
North Brother Island, New York, USA

Ross Island, India

Ross Island, India

In the years that followed, prisoners were moved to neighbouring isles and Ross Island was built up as an administrative headquarters and a place for senior officers to reside. The island boasted mansions and churches, plus a power station allowing residents to live in relative luxury. By the 1940s, in the face of a changing political landscape, the prison was closed and any remaining troops left the island. Now Mother Nature rules the land, with vines covering crumbling buildings and deer roaming freely between them.
Okunoshima, Japan

You might know this isle off the Japanese coast as 'Rabbit Island'. Okunoshima has earned this nickname due to the large population of bunnies that call it home. But despite how much Okunoshima's fluffy four-legged residents delight tourists today, the island has a macabre past. Any human inhabitants were evacuated from the island during the Second World War when Okunoshima was used to make poisonous gas. Though its factories were abandoned after the war, fear of contamination kept the island from being occupied again.
Okunoshima, Japan

Inishmurray, Republic of Ireland

The island of Inishmurray floats in Donegal Bay some four miles (6.4km) off the coast of County Sligo. Residents lived on the island until 1948 when Inishmurray was finally abandoned in favour of the mainland. Visitors to the island can still spot the remains of this community including some deserted homes and the old school house.
Inishmurray, Republic of Ireland

Pollepel Island, New York, USA

Pollepel Island, New York, USA

The lavish castle-style building was used for business purposes while the island was also home to a more humble residence where Bannerman lived with his family. However, construction of the castle was never actually completed. Bannerman's death in 1918 (as well as a series of damaging fires) meant that his vision for the castle would never truly be realised and Pollepel Island was eventually abandoned. Today the Bannerman Castle Trust maintains the site and visitors can take a tour.
Spinalonga, Greece

Spinalonga, Greece

From the early 1900s, the rugged island was used as a leper colony, with hundreds of sufferers finding themselves banished on Spinalonga. It's reported that only a single doctor operated here. The colony remained in operation until 1957, following the discovery of a treatment for the disease in the 1940s. Spinalonga remained all but forgotten until the 1980s when Victoria Hislop set her popular novel The Island here. Now tourists come from far and wide to wander the atmospheric ruins and learn more about the island's poignant history.
Tetepare Island, Solomon Islands

Tetepare Island, Solomon Islands

King Island, Alaska, USA

This stark island some 40 miles (64km) off the coast of Alaska is a rather hostile place. King Island is characterised by craggy cliffs and a bleak climate, but that hasn't stopped some hardy folks from settling it over the years. Local Inupiat peoples built a village named Ukivok on the cliffside. The peoples, who became known as Ukivokmiut, would spend their winters in this precarious village hunting seals and other marine mammals, before heading back to the mainland for summer.
King Island, Alaska, USA

However, the migrating population dwindled after the island's school was closed, meaning youngsters were forced to stay on the mainland over winter. Since it was difficult for the population's older members to hunt alone, the Ukivokmiut eventually stopped spending their winters on King Island, leaving it abandoned. Now all that remains are the rickety, wind-battered houses perched on the cliff face. It's possible to visit King Island but you'll need permission as it's privately owned.
Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands

Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands

Ilha da Queimada Grande, Brazil

Ilha da Queimada Grande, Brazil

Clipperton Island, France

Clipperton Island, France

However, as the Mexican Civil War escalated, the marooned workers were forgotten about and nearly all of them tragically starved to death. The lone male survivor, Victoriano Alvarez, terrorised the women and children until he was eventually murdered by one of the female islanders. Finally, in 1917, those who survived were rescued and the island remains deserted today, save for species like the brown booby and the Clipperton crab (pictured).
Antipodes Islands, New Zealand

No human inhabitants have ever truly conquered the Antipodes Islands, a forbidding string of volcanic isles in the Southern Ocean. Europeans descended on the islands in the 1800s in order to hunt seals but the land proved extremely inhospitable and the settlement wasn't able to flourish. Human attempts to populate the islands have been consistently short-lived over the centuries.
Antipodes Islands, New Zealand

In 1893, the British ship Spirit of the Dawn famously sank close to the shores of the Antipodes Islands and the castaway crew were forced to exist here for months, living off the land until the remaining survivors were eventually rescued. Today the island has no human inhabitants and is populated instead with seabirds, penguins and several species of seal.
Now discover these amazing ruins where Mother Nature has run riot
Comments
Be the first to comment
Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature