This atoll was settled in the last half of the 18th century by coconut plantation workers from
Isle de France (now
Mauritius). Little is known about the condition of the workers who were mostly of
African origin. Most probably they lived in conditions close to
slavery. The company exploiting the plantation was called the
Chagos Agalega Company. The Salomon Islands were surveyed in 1837 by Commander
Robert Moresby of the Indian Navy on HMS
Benares. Moresby's survey produced the first detailed map of this atoll. The atoll was surveyed again in 1905 by Commander B.T. Sommerville on , who drew a more accurate map. Some of the Salomon Islands were inhabited by the
Chagossians, but at the time that the British Government decided to empty the Chagos of local inhabitants, only Île Boddam was inhabited. Between 1967 and 1973, 500 inhabitants of the Salomon Islands were evicted by the British and their pets were killed in gas chambers by
Sir Bruce Greatbatch in order to make way for an
American military base. The evictees were resettled in
Mauritius and
Seychelles. Île Boddam had a jetty, shops, offices, a school, a church and a villa where the plantation manager lived. All these buildings are now hidden by thick jungle. There are wells on Boddam and Takamaka islands which are still used by yachtsmen to replenish their supplies. == Islets ==