A History of the Bahamian People notes that even as Nassau became a more important port, "the majority of the Out Islands remained fixed in the
age of sail well into the twentieth century." A significant number of
American Loyalists fleeing from the
Revolution migrated to the Bahamas (including the Out Islands), along with their slaves, profoundly influencing the islands' history. Specifically, some 300 white families (owning an estimated 5,000 slaves) fled from
East Florida to New Providence; among these, the majority of the whites stayed on New Providence, while two-thirds of the slaves went to the previously undeveloped Out Islands.
A History of the Bahamian People notes that the Out Islands were historically "a miniature replica of Nassau's socialeconomic system based on race, differential wealth, and economic power" with some settlements being inhabited entirely by
Afro-Bahamians, others by white Bahamians, and others by mixed communities generally dominated by whites. In 1980, a Cuban
MiG fighter jet attacked a
Bahamian patrol boat, the
HMBS Flamingo, in the Out Islands, killing four Bahamian marines. Survivors of the attack came ashore on
Ragged Island. The Cuban government maintained that it had mistaken the ship for a
pirate vessel. The incident greatly angered Bahamians, and Cuba later issued an apology and reparations. ==Economy and demographics==