Christopher Columbus's first landfall in the Americas was in the Bahamas, but after the Spanish had removed all of the native
Lucayans from the archipelago by 1520, they showed little interest in the islands. A group of religious dissidents from
Bermuda who settled on
Eleuthera in 1648 consisted primarily of people of European descent, but included a few slaves of African descent. Later migrants from Bermuda to Eleuthera also consisted primarily of white people, but included a few free and enslaved black people. Starting in 1666, immigrants, again primarily white, from Bermuda,
Jamaica, and elsewhere began settling on
New Providence and other islands in the Bahamas. By 1783 blacks outnumbered whites in the Bahamas. The Bahamas remained loyal to Britain during the
American Revolutionary War. During and after the war, approximately 1,600 white
Loyalist refugees, many with slaves of African descent, settled in the Bahamas. A survey in 1783 found 1,380 taxable persons, presumably adult males, in the islands. About two-thirds of those taxable persons were black, primarily slaves. In 1788, the number of white male heads of families had increased by a little over one-half, while the number of slaves had almost tripled. After World War II, greater accessibility to the US mainland led to the rapid growth of industry. The minority white population benefited most from this new-found prosperity, as they controlled the government and economy. White Bahamians owned many successful hotels, restaurants, and stores at a time when American money was flowing into the economy and causing the construction of numerous new hotels and other establishments. In 1966, White Bahamians constituted approximately 11.5% of the population of the Bahamas. ==Demographics==