Foosha Village

Fuusha Village (フーシャ村, Fūsha-mura, Lit: "Windmill Village") is a village that is located on Dawn Island and is part of Goa Kingdom. It is where the story of One Piece starts from. According to the Colorwalk 1 East Blue map, it is located near the larger landmass close to the Red Line north-east of East Blue. The town first appeared in Chapter 1 and Episode 4.

A prominent feature of this sleepy village is Corvo Mountains in the background. Several notable Mountain Bandits live in or around the mountain near the village, causing the occasional chaos to the villagers or assisting them as needed. The town appears to be rather unknown, thus the townsfolk are thrilled and proud that their town might be known for producing a infamous pirate. They are led by Mayor Woop Slap who usually is against most ideas presented by the other townsfolk on pirates.

The town also has a local Sea Monster called Lord of the Coast. However, he is not as big as some of the Sea Monsters in the rest of the world and there is no indications he is as big of a problem as others of his kind may create.

History
This is Monkey D. Luffy's hometown where he was born and grew up in. It is also where Luffy met Red-Haired Shanks 10 years prior to the beginning of the storyline.

After the Battle of Marineford was over, Vice Admiral Monkey D. Garp returned, and though he had resigned from the Marines, he took a station to protect the village and the island.

Partys Bar
Partys Bar (パーテイーズ・バー, Pāteīzu Bā) is the name of a bar in Fuusha Village. Bartender Makino works here.

It is, in a way, where the story first takes place. It was where we see Shanks partying with his crew, in which a little monkey named Monstar is seen and where the incident between Shanks and Higuma takes place. It was also where Luffy ate the Gomu Gomu no Mi and discovered its powers.

Translation and Dub Issues
Due to the name Fuusha being phonically similar to the color "Fuschia", several fans originally believed that to be the Village's name. However, "Fuusha" is the Japanese word for "Windmill", The village having so many windmills makes it a given that's the intended name of the village. Thus, the official translations go with "Windmill Village" which is a direct translation of the Japanese.