
Mobile

County Government
behind Fort Conde
Mobile is the third most populous city in the Southern US state of Alabama and is the county seat of Mobile County. It is located on the Mobile River and the central Gulf Coast of the United States. The population within the city limits was 198,915 during the 2000 census. It is the largest municipality on the Gulf Coast between New Orleans, Louisiana and St. Petersburg, Florida. Mobile is the principal municipality of the Mobile Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), a region of 411,721 residents which is composed solely of Mobile County and is the second largest MSA in the state. Mobile is included in the Mobile-Daphne–Fairhope Combined Statistical Area with a total population of 591,599 the second largest combined statistical area in the state behind Birmingham.


Mobile began as the first capital of colonial French Louisiana in 1702. The city 
gained its name from the Native American Mobilian tribe that the French 
colonists found in the area of Mobile Bay. During its first 100 years, Mobile 
was a colony for France, then Britain, and lastly Spain. Mobile first became a 
part of the United States of America in 1810, with the annexation of West 
Florida under President James Madison. It then left that union in 1861 when 
Alabama joined the Confederate States of America, which collapsed in 1865.

Located at the junction of the Mobile River and Mobile Bay on the northern Gulf 
of Mexico, the city is the only seaport in Alabama. The Port of Mobile has 
always played a key role in the economic health of the city beginning with the 
city as a key trading center between the French and Native Americans down to its 
current role as the 9th-largest port in the United States.

As one of the Gulf Coast's cultural centers, Mobile houses several art museums, 
a symphony orchestra, a professional opera, a professional ballet company, and a 
large concentration of historic architecture. Mobile is known for having the 
oldest organized carnival celebrations in the United States, dating to the 18th 
century of its early colonial period. It was also host to the first formally 
organized Carnival mystic society or "krewe" in the United States, dating to 
1830. People from Mobile are known as Mobilians.

The European settlement of Mobile, then known as Fort Louis de la Louisiane, 
started in 1702, at Twenty-seven Mile Bluff on the Mobile River, as the first 
capital of the French colony of Louisiana. It was founded by French Canadian 
brothers Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville and Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de 
Bienville, to establish control over France's Louisiana claims. Bienville was 
made governor of French Louisiana in 1701. Mobile's Roman Catholic parish was 
established on 20 July 1703, by Jean-Baptiste de la Croix de Chevrières de 
Saint-Vallier, Bishop of Quebec. The parish was the first established on the 
Gulf Coast of the United States. In 1704 the ship Pélican delivered 23 French 
women to the colony, along with yellow fever which passengers had contracted at 
a stop in Havana. Though most of the "Pélican girls" recovered, numerous 
colonists and neighboring Native Americans died from the illness. This early 
period was also the occasion of the arrival of the first African slaves, 
transported aboard a French supply ship from Saint-Domingue. The population of 
the colony fluctuated over the next few years, growing to 279 persons by 1708, 
yet descending to 178 persons two years later due to disease.
 

These additional outbreaks of disease and a series of floods caused Bienville to 
order the town relocated several miles downriver to its present location at the 
confluence of the Mobile River and Mobile Bay in 1711. A new earth and palisade 
Fort Louis was constructed at the new site during this time. By 1712, when 
Antoine Crozat took over administration of the colony by royal appointment, the 
colony boasted a population of 400 persons. The capital of Louisiana was moved 
to Biloxi in 1720, leaving Mobile in the role of military and trading center. In 
1723 the construction of a new brick fort with a stone foundation began and it 
was renamed Fort Condé in honor of Louis Henri, Duc de Bourbon and prince of 
Condé.

In 1763, the Treaty of Paris was signed, ending the French and Indian War. The 
treaty ceded Mobile and the surrounding territory to Great Britain, and it was 
made a part of the expanded British West Florida colony. The British changed the 
name of Fort Condé to Fort Charlotte, after Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, 
King George III's queen.

Conde-Charlotte House
More Photos of Conde-Charlotte House
The British were eager not to lose any useful inhabitants and promised religious tolerance to the French colonists, ultimately 112 French Mobilians remained in the colony. The first permanent Jewish presence in Mobile began in 1763 as a result of the new religious tolerance. Jews had not been allowed to officially reside in colonial French Louisiana due to the Code Noir, a decree passed by France's King Louis XIV in 1685 that forbade the exercise of any religion other than Roman Catholicism, and ordered all Jews out of France's colonies. Most of these colonial era Jews in Mobile were merchants and traders, and added to the commercial development of Mobile. In 1766 the population was estimated to be 860, though the town's borders were smaller than they had been during the French colonial efforts. During the American Revolutionary War, West Florida and Mobile became a refuge for loyalists fleeing the other colonies.

Richard's House
More Photos of Richard's House

While the British were dealing with their rebellious colonists along the 
Atlantic coast, the Spanish entered the war as an ally of France in 1779. They 
took the opportunity to order Bernardo de Galvez, Governor of Louisiana, on an 
expedition east to retake Florida and captured Mobile during the Battle of Fort 
Charlotte in 1780 as part of this campaign. They wished to eliminate any British 
threat to their Louisiana colony, which they had received from France in the 
1763 Treaty of Paris. Their actions were also condoned by the revolting American 
colonies, as evidenced by the presence of Oliver Pollack, representative of the 
American Continental Congress, and due to the fact that West Florida, for the 
most part, remained loyal to the British Crown. The fort was renamed Fortaleza 
Carlota, with the Spanish holding Mobile as a part of Spanish West Florida until 
1813, when it was seized by the U.S. General James Wilkinson during the War of 
1812.
Text from Wikipedia

Mobile Convention Center


Ben May Library


Ben May

book return





dome of former Mobile Nigh School
adjacent to Catholic Cathedral



street cafe




Gumbo

Wintzell's Oyster House




Oyster Po'boy lunch

grilled shrimp


Bankhead tunnel under the Alabama River

Mobile port


the USS Alabama


Mobile Music