Flotte’s Notes on
Baldwin County Towns
An Unofficial Encyclopaedia
of Mobile & Baldwin Counties
Promoting local history, culture,
outdoors, businesses, attractions, food, people, and places
Please submit all comments,
additions, and corrections to: admin@flotte2.com
Flotte’s Notes
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Baldwin Municipalities and Communities
·
Stockton
was divided by Ellicott’s Line, with some residents living in the United States
and some in Spanish Florida. Although
·
The
Perdido
·
Jim
and Marianne Eddins, came to Perdido
in 1971 after Jim retired and opened
Bay Minette
·
1861 Bay Minette was founded. It was named for the French
colonial surveyor Minette
·
1901 The county seat was relocated from Daphne to Bay
Minette.
o Bay Minette was still little more than
a sleepy north
o In 1901, he swayed the Legislature to
move the seat of government from Daphne to Bay Minette. Hand made himself chairman of a courthouse construction committee,
donated the property where the courthouse still sits today and contributed
$1,600 toward its construction cost.
o When residents of Daphne filed a
lawsuit to block the move, they failed to get a restraining order. So on the
night of Oct. 11, 1901, Hand and 21 other men from Bay Minette sneaked into
Daphne and hauled off the courthouse records, furniture, the bars from the
jail, furnishings in the circuit courtroom, nearly everything "from the
judge's desk to the spittoons," according to a newspaper account. The
Legislature and the Alabama Supreme Court later ratified the transfer.
o In 1902, Hand was one of the chief
investors when the L&N Railroad sold $1.5 million in bonds to build a spur
from Bay Minette to Navy Cove, a distance of about 60 miles. Hand envisioned
Bay Minette turning into a major railroad hub between
o In 1906 the dredging of the Mobile
Ship Channel and the Hurricane of 1906 destroyed
The
·
In the days before the bay causeway, which opened in 1929, wealthy
·
The Eastern Shore Trail for hikers and bikers will run from the
battleship to Weeks Bay Estuary--33 miles altogether.
·
Punta Clara Kitchen, in Point Clear, for homemade pralines, fig
preserves, and other tantalizers to cart home. Lunch at Fly Creek Cafe; Sunday
afternoon jazz and a sunset Pelican Punch (white rum, triple sec, cranberry and
other juices) at Pelican Pointe Grill; and dinner at the Fairhope Inn &
Restaurant, which has a lovely setting.
·
The
Eastern Shore housing boom started decades ago in Daphne, Fairhope and Spanish
Fort, and is now pushing up
Spanish Fort
·
Spanish
Fort was incorporated in 1993.
·
There are 3 Forts in Spanish Fort, but our location got its name
from the first one that was built in 1781 by the Spanish. It is located near
the end of
o The other forts are Ft. McDermott
and Red Fort, both of which were built by the Confederates.
o George Fuller Sr.
constructed a stucco Fort, which was located next to the Tourist Village. When
the tourist would ask where the fort was, he would point to that. The photo on
the left shows the Stucco Tower which was added to the Tourist Village Circa
1939 – House of Dixie
·
In
1929, George Fuller had accumulated 2,500 acres. He began developing it in the
1950s, and most of that land has been developed as Spanish
Fort Estates. His family continues to develop the area as Fuller Brothers
Real Estate.
o Developer David Fuller expects Spanish
Fort Estates to reach the banks of Bay Minette Creek, where his family's
property ends at
·
In
1949 the Buzbee Fish Camp was at the end of what is
now Highway 225. The road was just a dirt lane then, and its terminus was the
base of their boat launch.
·
The
$12.8 million
·
In
2007, Spanish Fort annexed 11,000 acres of the Highlands of
Spanish Fort development by International Paper Realty. The project could
take 50 years to complete.
·
The
southern border of Spanish Fort abuts I-10 in two areas: a two-mile stretch
east of
·
Spanish Fort Bluff
Stabilization Project (FEMA) (2006)
History
·
1702 The French established a colony in
·
1743 British take
·
1779 The Spanish take
·
1781 A revolutionary battle was fought at the Village when
the British from
·
1787 Louis D’Olive
receives an 800 arpen Spanish land grant
(approximately 800 acres), part of which is Village Point Preserve. 1803 Louis
D’Olive establishes a permanent residence at Daphne, now Village Point Park
Preserve. His interests were cattle, goats, hogs, and woodland products. He
also established a hotel, La Belle Rose. During this same period, he
established the cemetery located in the Village Point Park Preserve. The
cemetery may be visited on one of the walking trails.
o 1819 Major Lewis Stark, who also
served under Andrew Jackson, contracted to furnish brick to build
·
1814 During the War of 1812, Gen. Andrew
Jackson rallied his troops, who had just fought the Creeks and British at
·
1820 The Village suffered a severe yellow fever epidemic and,
for the most part, was abandoned. Some of the remaining names locally are
Yancey, Crane, Phillips, Harrub, Rice and Stapleton.
·
1833 A
o Howard built the
o Captain Howard built a flume for the
spring and sold water to ships, and ran a water delivery service to the ships
too large to enter the bay. Later, when the bay boats were calling at the various
wharves (Halls, D’Olive, Stark, Howard, Short and
o The first post office was established
on Howard property, and Capt. Howard became Daphne’s first postmaster. Mrs.
Howard was credited in naming the post office Daphne because of the many laurel trees that grew along the shore.
According to Greek mythology, Daphne was a nymph who was loved by Apollo, but
did not return his love. She fled, pursued by Apollo, and when she could run no
more, was turned into a laurel tree, hence the name Daphne.
o 1858 A church was constructed on land
donated by Captain William Howard served all Protestant denominations until
1870, when it became Methodist. Worship services were held in the church until
1976, when a new sanctuary on
·
1845 Gavin Yuille purchased 72 acres, established a cabin and farm
and called the place Magnolia Hill.
The land lies along Belrose and Magnolia Avenues. His
great-granddaughter, Miss Jean Yuille still lives on
the estate. The family was prominent in the bakery business in
·
1847 The steamship Cora made runs twice daily across
·
1847 William Patterson
died. He was a very colorful person who had purchased 4 acres from Louis
D’Olive. He was buried on the property and his grave lies along the street
about 27340 North Main Street.
·
1851 Hollywood Hotel
was established near
·
1865 During the Civil War, the Union fleet
landed and camped at the Village during the campaign to capture Spanish Fort
and Fort Blakeley. Rebel
forces set up a cannon at Raggedy Point, firing upon a
union ship killing one and wounding three. In retaliation, the ship fired upon
some bay front homes and the
·
1868 The county seat is moved
from Blakeley to Daphne
·
1874 Daphne Post Office is opened. Mayor Lewis Stark donated
two acres of land to former slaves for the Little Bethel church on
·
1888 The first Italians of the Italian Colony arrive: Dominico Trione and the Castagnolli brothers, Dominico
and Cesare. Founder Allasandro
Valerio bought a tract of land and advertised in
newspapers in large cities, where many Italians lived in ghettos. None of the
families came direct from
o 1898 The Italian Catholic Church of the
Assumption was built; prior to that time, mass was held in private homes. Fr.
Angelo Chiariglione was known as “the priest of the
flying mission” as his territory was
·
1901 The county courthouse is
forcibly removed to Bay Minette. Between 1907 and
1940 the Courthouse became a Normal School, for training teachers.
·
1927 Daphne is incorporated.
The Mobile Bay Causeway is built. A dirt road is cut from
Spanish Fort to Fairhope which was paved about 1936 and is now Scenic Highway
98.
·
1930-1940s Downtown Daphne consisted of Trione’s Store, a post office, a barber shop, Frank Hill’s
Dry Goods Store, Peterson’s Store (formally Bertagnolli’s),
Dryer’s Drug and Sundries Store and Rayford and
Baggett’s General Store. A principal business was the Daphne Pottery, run by
Clarence Dryer, with the potter being Ed Grace. Several men were employed
digging the clay and preparing it for pottery as well as loading the kilns. The
main output was charcoal furnaces. The original building still stands. Dan Pruitte Eddins operated a garage
and a paper wood business located north of the current Bulletin Office. One of
the final uses of Yuille’s wharf was the loading of
wood on the barges for shipping to International Paper Company. With WWII and
the increase in
·
1950s-1960s, The water system, city hall, and other
infrastructure is built
·
1988
·
During
the 1990s, areas north of I-10, including TimberCreek
subdivision, were annexed.
·
Source:
Alfred Guarisco, Jubilee Breeze, June-Dec 2006.
·
The
City of
·
Daphne has an economic development program guided by a Strategic
Plan for Economic Development. The Industrial Development Board of the City
of
·
In
2006, Lamar Advertising Co. filed a lawsuit claiming the city's sign ordinance
violates the company's constitutional right to free speech. U.S. District Judge
Kristi Dubose issued an order sending the Lamar Co. vs. Daphne case to the
state court system, saying that Lamar's claims of the sign ordinance's
unconstitutionality failed to meet the standard for federal court involvement
without a prior state ruling.
·
Olde Towne Daphne Association
Attractions
·
Old Daphne Church Museum opened in 1998
·
The
second-largest known collection of Jim Beam decanters on display is in Daphne,
at Manci's Antique Club, Inc
·
Judge Roy Bean’s burnt down February 15, 2005. It was
uninsured. Owner John Sack said the bar's two mascots - a goat named ``Billy''
and a Macaw named ``Tattoo'' - survived the blaze, but everything else was
destroyed. Sack and Jack West founded the bar and restaurant in
1977. Judge's gained fame
in the late 1970s and '80s because of its big-name musical guests including
Emmylou Harris, the Marshall Tucker Band, Alabama and Jimmy Buffett, who played
Judge's about 25 times. West said the original building at Judge's was erected in
1946 and was known as the Embassy Lounge. He bought the property in 1976. In
2002, West sold the business and leased the property out to Sack and Steve
Anderson. Sack said he bought out
·
The
Jubilee Festival takes place on the
streets of downtown Daphne.
·
·
Village Point Preserve opened in 2002
·
Montrose
·
Ecor Rouge, the highest coastline point between
·
Poser
Business Forms Inc. in Montrose was started in 1949 in a small plant in
Fairhope by Walter Poser. It was acquired in 1998 by Mail-Well and now operates
as PrintXcel, headquartered in
Fairhope
Fairhope History
·
Before
it was Fairhope, the city was called
·
1893 The Fairhope Single Tax Corporation was founded by 28 Iowans seeking to
put into practice the economic theories of Henry
George.
o The Fairhope Industrial Association
incorporated in 1894 and changed the name to Fairhope Single Tax Corp. in 1905.
o The corporation
established their colony by pooling together funds and purchasing land known as
Stapleton's pasture. Then dividing the land into leaseholds they were able to
pay all government taxes and rents making a single tax. This single tax system
would maintain the value of the land by providing incentives for using the land
productively. Incorporated
under
o The Fairhope Single Tax Corporation still
operates 1800 leaseholds covering more than 4000 acres in and around Fairhope in return for the payment of a rent
(the "single tax") based on the land's valuation; the combined rents
are used to pay taxes and to provide and improve community services.
o In the late 19th century, after Swedish
settlers clear-cut the land that would later become Fairhope, rains created
deep gullies in the denuded landscape. The Fairhope Single Tax Corp. wrote into
the city's constitution the permanent preservation of the gullies and the land
surrounding them. And so today the ravines -- among them so-called Bayou Charbon and Stacks Gully -- represent a large portion of
the city's protected green space. – PR 1/3/08
o The corporation has long led
preservation efforts in the city, such as
·
1907
·
1908
The City of
·
Early
visitors came by Bayboat from
·
In
the 1930s, the city became the caretaker of Fairhope's beachfront park, Henry
George Park,
·
The 1980s beautification program was led by James P. Nix - mayor from 1972 to 2000
·
H.L.
"Sonny"
Fairhope Government
·
Fairhope doesn't have a sales tax. Rather, the town owns Fairhope Utilities -- water, electric
and gas – and sells the services to residents, and then reinvests the revenue
in the community. Mayor Tim Kant says utility revenue represents more than 40%
of Fairhope's $30 million budget.
·
Fairhope
Mayor Tim Kant makes $16,000 as mayor and over $70,000 as head of
utilities. The Fairhope City Council has
appointed a committee to investigate whether both positions should be held by
one person.
·
Fairhope
made national news when 7-year-old yellow lab Willie Bean Roscoe P. Coltrane, who’s owner is artist and Coffee Loft manager Tress Turner, began a
campaign for mayor against the seven human candidates in an acerbic election
Fairhope Art and Attractions
·
Fairhope
and De La Mare Avenues, the town's main shopping streets, are lined with
small antique stores, art galleries, independent book sellers and upscale
clothing boutiques. Ordinances prohibit big-box outlets such as Home Depot and
Wal-Mart from opening within town limits, and developers face rules and
restrictions.
·
The Eastern Shore Art Center in Fairhope is home to four galleries
with exhibits that change monthly. ESAC features a gallery with member artists’
work for sale. The galleries feature paintings, sculpture, photography and
multimedia artwork. The Academy at the
o The Eastern Shore Art Association is
the parent organization of the ESAC
o
The Fairhope
Committee On Public Art was established in 2001 as a committee of the
Eastern Shore Art Association and has placed 7 statues around Fairhope
o
Art Takes Flight
was a COPA project in 2006-2007 in which the Pelican Flight Trail
contained over 70 pelicans by various artists which were later auctioned
·
The
Fairhope
Center for the Writing Arts (FCWA) was founded by Fairhope writer Sonny Brewer
o Southern
Writers Reading Program,
started in 1999, is a three-day seminar held each November with the group’s
Writers-in-Residence. Southern Breeze article.
o The 501c3 organization also
established awards for local authors and commissioned the book chronicling
Fairhope's literary history and tradition
o
The
group voted to lease and renovate a tiny city-owned cottage at 9 N. School St.
built in the 1920s, and in danger of demolition. The FCWA board then voted to
call it the Betty Joe Wolff Writer's
Cottage, in honor of the founder of Page & Palette. The Wolff Cottage
was first put to use as a writer's residence for Rick Bragg, who was the
center's first author-in-residence. The property on which the cottage rests has
become the site for the new Fairhope Library. –PR 12/28/06
·
Theater
98 was
founded in 1961, when two older community theatre groups merged. In the 1970's
the group became dormant, but in November of 1982 was re-activated under the
leadership of Nancy Head, who continued until her death in 1996. In 1985,
Theatre 98 moved to the corner of Church and Morphy
streets. The Church Street Playhouse was built during the 1920's as the First
Baptist Church of Fairhope, it was later used as rehearsal and performance
space for the Fairhope High School band and then as Fairhope's Satellite
Courthouse. In the early eighties, local theatre legend Tom Pocase
converted the building to an intimate, three-quarter round theater, where his
company, Theatre 8:15, specialized in musicals.
·
The Fairhope Museum of History, which opened in 2008, is in Fairhope’s
old 1927 City Hall
·
Fairhope
Residential Development
Fairhope Festivals and Events
·
Fairhope Arts & Crafts Festival, March, started in Fairhope in 1952
and sponsored by the Eastern Shore Chamber of Commerce, began as a tour of
exhibits by local artists. Exhibitors now come from across the United States.
The Eastern Show Art Association’s juried Outdoor Art Show is held at the same
time. Also held on Saturday is the 10K Spring Fever Chase.
·
Fairhope Mullet Run, October
Point Clear
·
Named
Punta Clara by the Spanish
·
The Grand Hotel was originally built by F.H. Chamberlain 1847, a two-story
building with 40 rooms. A separate building housed the dining room and kitchen
while still another building held the bar named "The Texas". Guests
traveled to the hotel by steamboats and docked at what is now the marina.
o During the Civil War, the 21st
Alabama Regiment camped on the hotel grounds and the hotel was used as a base
hospital. In 1869 a fire broke out destroying the hotel.
o In the 1870's Captain H.C. Baldwin
purchased the hotel and, using some of the old foundations, built the second
Grand Hotel at a cost of $75,000. It was much like the first, except it was 300
feet in length and contained 60 suites.
o In 1901 Major James K. Glennon of
o In 1939 Mr. E.A. Roberts purchased
the hotel. His dream was to have an elaborate resort. Mr. Roberts bought 25
additional parcels of land and along with his architect brother, Mr. J.P. Roberts, the third Grand Hotel began to evolve. In 1940 the
old buildings were demolished and using some old timbers and hard pine
flooring, the main building was built. Soon after completion, World War II
broke out and the hotel was used as a training base.
o After World War II was over the hotel
was conveyed to Waterman
Steamship Company, Mr. Roberts' Company. A marina, two tennis courts, an
18-hole golf course, and a 750,000-gallon swimming pool were built. In 1955
Waterman Steamship sold out to Southern Industries.
o In 1966 James K. McLean purchased the
hotel. During Mr. McLean's ownership he added the hotel's current Bay House. At
that point the hotel had grown to 172 guestrooms. In 1967 a second 9-hole golf
course and the first conference center were added.
o In 1981 the Marriott Corporation
bought the Grand Hotel. Shortly after the purchase, the Marriott added two
buildings, the North Bay House and the
·
Punta
Clara Kitchen, 17111
Scenic Highway 98, 1
mile south of the historic Grand Hotel; started in 1952 in a circa 1897
Victorian home
·
Mullet Point is at the end of Highway 1. Pelican
Point Grill is there.
·
Point Clear Polo: Ed Bernard and Wilson
Greene brought Polo to the
Malbis
·
1906 Malbis
o
The
Malbis Plantation had its own bakery, dairy and
community with dorms for men and women. The bakery was located in downtown
o
The
community continued under generations of leadership after Jason Malbis died in 1942, selling land to Diamondhead
Corporation to create
o Malbis Plantation began selling some of its
several thousand acres in 1997, first with the 150-acre Historic Malbis subdivision at 181 and U.S. 90. The Malbis family have retained most
of their land on the south side of U.S. 90, and have a commercial lot across
from Lowe's on
·
Loxley
·
In
Loxley Ace Hardware has built a major distribution center employing 300.
·
Loxley
Strawberry Festival
·
Burris’
Farm Market
Robertsdale
·
The Southern Plantation Corporation of
·
The town was named after one of the officials of the Corporation,
Dr. B.F. Roberts, and was incorporated in 1921.
·
Robertsdale is home to
Silverhill
·
Silverhill
was founded in 1896 by settlers from
Summerdale
Magnolia Springs
·
Magnolia
Springs stands on land granted by the Spanish to Joseph Collins in 1800. In
1834 the administrators of the Joseph Collins Grants sold the land to Joshua Kennedy, and in
1855 the lands were transferred to Kennedy , Moore,
and Co. Those two and another partner were engaged in the turpentine business , and worked hundreds of slaves in the woods
gathering pine sap. The business thrived until the Civil War. Confederates
burned the turpentine still to keep the Union forces from using it.
·
In
1872, Kennedy & Moore sold their tract of land to a widow from
·
The
village has the only all-water mail route in the
·
Magnolia
Springs voted to incorporate in 2006
·
Sources:
“Restore
Elberta
·
In
1904, a group of German businessmen from
·
The
Town of
·
Baldwin
County Heritage Museum
·
Elberta
Sausage Festival was
started in 1978 by the Elberta Volunteer Fire
Department and is held on the last Saturdays in March and October
o The original secret recipe for Elberta's famous sausage is credited to Alfred Stucki who managed Elberta's
Locker Plant from 1953 until his death in 1973.
Foley
·
Foley Convention & Visitors Bureau
·
Foley Performing Arts Association
·
The City of
·
The L & N
Depot was built in 1905 when the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Line
came to Foley. The railroad was first known as the Bay Minette and Fort Morgan
Railroad. The town became the center for shipping
o
In 1971, L & N was discontinued service to Foley and
announced it would destroy the building. John Snook bought the building for
$1.00 and moved it to Magnolia Springs to serve as storage for Gulf Telephone.
In 1995, it was returned to the original site and made into a museum.
·
Hotel Magnolia was built in 1908 by John Foley. John Snook bought the
hotel after WWII and refurbished it. It was closed for over 30 years until Marjorie
Snook, John Snook’s widow, renovated and reopened it in 2005. The glass in the
front door of the Hotel was taken from John Snook's grandfather's home in
·
The
Foley Hotel opened in 1927. The
Foley Hotel cost $200,000 to build and furnish in an era when good
·
Goodrich Aerosructures has both its
·
The Tanger Outlet Center was built in 1988 and helped spur the growth of Foley.
·
In
2008, Foley adopted the comprehensive plan prepared by Barge Waggoner Sumner
& Cannon.
Bon Secour
·
“Bon Secour
History” by Debbie Owen is
the souce of the majority of this information
·
Bon Secour, meaning"safe harbor" in French, lies on the Bon Secour River.
·
Although
the name Bon Secour River appears on both French and
English maps and the name Rio del Buen Socorro on
Spanish maps all of much earlier date, it is traditionally held in Bon Secour that the name of the town originated with Jacques Cook who named it for the
Cathedral de Bon Secours in Montreal.
·
Land
titles can be traced in existing record books as far back as 1793 when John
Ward purchased a house and tract of land in Bon Secour.
An eminent historian mentions specifically the claims of N. Cook, J. Cook, and Augustin LaCoste on the north
side of
·
Nichlos
Cook, the father, and
Jacques Cook, the son, have many descendants around Bon Secour.
Edna Bertrand Laurendine who lives in the original
Cook homestead started by Jacques Cook and completed by Jerome, his son. Near
their homes the Cooks built a small school for their children and their
neighbors' children. The Cook family also gave land for a cemetery across the
road from their homes. This cemetery was started in 1835 and was originally
planned as a private burial ground for the Cook family and their heirs. It was
consecrated for the use of Roman Catholics. The earliest decipherable date on a
stone now is 1868.
·
The
first Roman Catholic Church in the Bon Secour area
was built on the south side of the river on land near the LaCoste
home. It is generally thought the church site was a gift of the LaCoste family. This church, Our Lady of Good Health, was dedicated about 1890 by Bishop
O'Sullivan according to his diary. Before that Mass had been said in either the
Cook or the LaCoste home. This church served its
congregation well for many years. It was damaged in the storm of 1917. After
that it was carefully dismantled and carried across the river piece by piece
and reassembled on land given by Mrs. Odile Cook
Bertrand. It is built on the spot on which the Nichlos
Cook house stood. Only the name was changed, for Mrs. Bertrand requested upon
giving the property that the church henceforth be called Our Lady of Bon Secour.
·
A
Baptist congregation was founded in
Bon Secour by Thomas
Nelson as early as 1849 or 1850. The church stood on Plash's
·
One
of the earliest settlements on
·
Bon
Secour was a center of salt making during the Civil War. Salt was in short supply during
the war. 'Wells' where salt was distilled are still evident today. A round hole
about eight feet deep and twelve feet wide or wider was dug near the edge of
the river. The sides of the wells were reinforced with logs. On the edges were
built platforms or shelves for the workers to stand on. The water seeped
through the ground from the bottom into the wells. The water was left standing
for about a day, then bailed out by big dippers, put into big boilers and
heated until the salt crystals were left by the evaporation of the water. Some
water was hauled from the Gulf. At least once a month, a schooner would sail
from Bon Secour to
·
The
first post office was established in
1875 kept by Theresa Margaret Keller Miller and was called "Theresa."
It has been discontinued.
·
Services
at St. Peter's-by-the-Sea began in
1878. It was built by Baltic German immigrants.
·
In
1896, Frank E. Nelson, immigrated
from Denmark, settled in the community of Oyster Bay, and founded the company
that has become Bon Secour
Fisheries. The schooner
MARY ETTA was acquired by the Nelson's in 1896 and used as an
oyster dredger, transporter, and shrimp boat. She was retired in 1969 to the
·
Oysters were gathered from private plant beds
as well as public reefs. They were kept alive in pens offshore from the
growers' residences and transported by sailing vessel to
o Some of the oystermen began
experimenting with using a trawl to catch shrimp. As the sailing vessels became
motorized, shrimping became more prevalent and this
activity extended the fishing season by another month. In 1951, the first
shrimp boats large enough to work offshore in the Gulf of Mexico began to
appear in the area. After the river channel was deepened to accommodate these
vessels, two Gulf trawlers began operation out of Bon Secour
Fisheries. Others soon joined these two boats.
o Construction of the Intracoastal Canal in the early 1930's
brought about the demise of many of the oyster beds and planting grounds,
either because it cut through their location or because the silt from the
dredging covered them. In the mid-1930's, the WPA and CCC boys were brought in
to the area to work on the roads and dig drainage ditches; and for the first
time it became easier to go to Foley by road than to Mobile by water. The
"buy" boats gave way to the dockside "shop", and delivery
to the city was by motor truck.
·
There are several major seafood businesses in Bon Secour. Bon Secour Seafood, Safe Harbor Seafood, Aquilla
Seafood and Billy's Seafood all ship Gulf of
o The
primary catch for the Bon Secour fishing fleet ranges
from Mobile Bay shrimp to deep water "Royal Red" shrimp. Because wild
shrimp caught by the local fleet must compete with farmed shrimp from overseas,
economic pressures have driven many, multi-generational shimpers
out of the business. As a result, the local shimpers,
along with shrimpers out of the Mobile area have formed an alliance, the "Alabama Wild Shrimp Program”.
o Billy’s Seafood
·
Just
inside the mouth of
o The settlement had received its name
from the Miller family, which had come to Bon Secour
in the mid-nineteenth century. In the year 1899 one of the most prominent
citizens of Bon Secour was Captain John Henry Andrew
Miller. Also at Miller's Bend were Charles Styron, Jacob Steiner, Conrad
Billie, Herman Rickens, Lewis Rayfield,
Peter Billie, Sam Wilson, J. H. A. Miller, Will Carver, Capt. Cash, St. Peter's
School, St. Peter's Church, the Witt home, Krouters, Snellmans, Rohnwicks and Joe Brown.
o
When
the automobile came into general use, all moved and Miller's Bend withered and
died. It is difficult to find the remains of most of these homes. Some burned, some were barged upriver and are homes in use now
near Swift's Landing. The beautiful
seaside church of St. Peter's burned about 1930 and the school was moved
upriver and made into a home.
·
Swift-Coles House: Originally built around 1882 as a 4
room home for the Charles A. Swift family, in 1902 the home grew to 16 rooms in
order to accommodate overnight guests arriving via ferry from Mobile. In 1976, Nik Coles purchased the home and began a lengthy and
thorough restoration. Upon his death, the Swift-Coles Home was willed to the
Baldwin County Historic Development Commission. Today, the Baldwin County
Department of Archives and History and the Baldwin County Historic Development
Commission continue restoration projects to the home and grounds in order to
make it available to the public as a museum. Informational Brochure
(PDF) Photo
·
The Oar House & Riverside Inn on Baldwin County 6 on Bon Secour River in Gulf Shores was purchased in 2004 by
investors from Mobile and New York for $2.8 million to build condominiums. It
reopened in downtown Foley.
·
Plash Island Bon Secour Land Use Study 2005
·
Formerly
the northernmost tip of the
·
·
Plash's
store was at the mouth of the south fork of
·
About 600 acres on or near
Lillian
·
Much
of the land in what is now Lillian, as well as around
·
A
16th century Spanish cemetery is maintained within the Spanish Cove community.
·
Lillian
was named after the first Postmaster's daughter in the 1880s.
·
Lillian
residents voted against incorporation in 2007
·
The
Spanish Cove community was first developed in the 1970s. The subdivision
consists of about 750 acres with four neighborhoods. The community began with
the building of traditional houses on the bay side of Baldwin County 99 (called
Bay Side), and eventually three more neighborhoods were created on the west side
of highway 99: one of conventional homes (Spanish Oaks), one for manufactured
housing (Perdido Pines), and one for RVs and Park
Model homes (Land Harbor).
Perdido
Beach
·
The
Perdido Beach Property Owners and Residents
Association, which has been pushing for township out of concern about the
impact of a planned bridge, began petitioning for incorporation. According to
state law, a referendum can be held if supported by owners of at least 60
percent of the property in the incorporation area, along with 15 percent of the
registered voters there. The county owns the 10-acre Perdido
Beach Volunteer Fire Department and park site in the proposed new town limits.
Commission legal counsel Scott Barnett recommended that commissioners not sign
the petition. The proposed town is home to about 500 people.
·
·
·
The
original 50 investors in the Ono
Island Development received an
exterior lot for $15,000. The developers cut canals through the interior of the
island, allowing those with
interior lots access to the water.
·
There
are now about 840 houses on the island, about half of those are year-round residents.
·
To
enter the island, visitors must
check in at a guard shack at the foot of the
·
The island is contained entirely within the city of
·
In
2001, prices were: *Perimeter lots, which include access to the main waterways,
range from $400,000 to $500,000. *A canal lot, which has water access via
canals, range in price from $125,000 to $130,000. *And the interior lots, which
don't include access to the water, range from $35,000 to $40,000. "
·
Well-known residents include actor Tom Selleck and musicians Jimmy Buffett and Reba McIntyre.
·
Alabama
Point
Perdido Key
·
Perdido Key is a
·
Early maps indicate that at the time
boundary.
·
The Flora-Bama Lounge and Package is only feet
away from the Florida-Alabama border, but is officially located in
o In his 2004 book "Travels with
Barley," former Wall Street Journal reporter Ken Wells dedicated his first
chapter to the Mullet Toss and estimated that the Flora-Bama
sold the equivalent of 96,000 12-ounce beers over the three days. – PR 4/27/08
·
·
In
1996, Richard Pugh of Fort Morgan was appointed “special master'' over Orange
Beach's building permit department by the Baldwin County Circuit Court. He
concluded that despite an almost completely new government,
·
In
2006 developers Ken Wall and Jim Brown were found guilty in federal court of
bribing Orange Beach Mayor Steve Russo to use his influence in City Hall to get
their development The Water Club approved.
o Wall and Russo were tried and
convicted in
o Russo left office in January after
being charged and was convicted on corruption charges in Sept. 2006
o Russo is serving a 10-year sentence at
the Federal Prison Camp at Maxwell Air Force Base in
o Larry Sutley, who authored the legal documents that founded
o
o During his testimony, Brown told a
federal jury that he and Wall set up a deal in which Russo would, using only
Brown's credit and none of his own money, make $400,000 by buying and rapidly
reselling two waterfront lots in
§ Russo
bought the property, just over an acre on the southern shore of where
o The City Council members later voted
unanimously against The Water Club because of a rule in
§ Owners of
the Water Club tract are listed as Romar Beach
Acquisitions LLC, which, according to corporate filings, is registered to Jim Brown,
Bay Minette lawyer Dan Blackburn,
Tennessee investor Phil Martin and Romar Villas LLC,
which is a corporation shared by Ken Wall and former Gulf Shores City
Councilman Greg Kennedy. – PR 2/6/06
o Councilman Ed Carroll and Councilwoman
Joni Blalock implied that the council was treating some developers unfairly
while catering to others. Carroll asked Mayor Steve Russo why he had scheduled
a vote on the three controversial items for Mandalay Beach, Portage Crossing,
and Turquoise Place at 9 a.m. "Because," Russo replied "I highly
resent the fact that we put all these people off at the last meeting when we
were here, and I will continue to do this as long as there is an attempt to delay
or stall things because some of you may or may not feel there's the votes to go
your way." Russo denied playing favorites with developers and called the
councilman an obstructionist.
o In a heated mayoral contest in 2004,
Russo edged city Councilperson Brett Holk by fewer
than 200 votes to retain the post. That contest was preceded by a frenzied
campaign, in which Russo and his political allies, including McCarron, fought
to retain control of the rapidly growing resort and the multimillion-dollar
development decisions that came with the job. Developer-funded PACs raised
hundreds of thousands of dollars to support the pro-growth slate. Russo,
according to his campaign finance disclosures, raised or accepted in-kind
contributions totaling nearly $47,000 to support his election.
o Russo reported getting $8,000 from the
Beach PAC, which raised more than
$104,000 – including $35,000 from prominent developer Larry Wireman's partner,
Judy Ramey – to support Russo and his allies. Thomas Eugene “Gene” Brett of
Brett-Robinson gave $12,000. Dean Young, a former Republican candidate for
·
Orange Beach World Championship Red
Snapper Tournament
·
Walker
Marina and five acres on Terry Cove was acquired in 2004 by the
City of Orange Beach.
o It was
purchased using a combination of $7.6 million cash and property -- a small
tract fronting
o With
several marinas, including Griffith's, Capt. Trent, Hudson and Sun Harbor,
destroyed in Hurricane Ivan or torn down to be redeveloped as condominiums,
city official sought the Walker Marina property to ensure Orange Beach's
charter fishing fleet would have a place from which to operate. – PR 10/23/05,12/18/06
o Plans to
build a municipal marina for fare-carrying vessels have been revived after a
plan to buy San Roc Cay was abandoned – PR 6/7/07
·
Zeke’s Marina and its 5-acres
were purchased for more than $11 million in January 2005 by four people – Tom Steber, Daphne resident Maurice Fitzsimons and two
out-of-state investors, under the name ZLM Acquisitions.
·
San Roc
Cay opened in 1999 on Cotton Bayou and combines four restaurants, about 20
high-end retail shops, a 120-space underground parking lot and a 54-slip marina
on four acres in a style that blends the architectural styles of
·
In August 2004, Dairy
magnate George Barber Jr. applied to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for
permission to build a 175-slip marina on the northern
·
o After annexing
·
o The Woerner
family requested that
o A bridge
over
·
Horizons 20/20 is
·
Catman: Legend states during the
Great Depression, three men lived in the swamp south of
Restuarants
·
The Keg: In August 2006, the Orange Beach City
Council approved a law mandating that bars not sell alcohol between 2 a.m. and
6 a.m. and that patrons must finish their last libations by 3 a.m. Three years
before, the council passed a law that forced The Keg -- which had traditionally
served alcohol 24 hours a day, seven days a week -- to cease booze sales from 4
a.m. to 6 a.m.
|
Name |
Height |
Floors |
Year |
|
|
79.2 m |
26 |
2005 |
|
The
Colonnades |
67.1 m |
20 |
2006 |
|
Seawind Condominiums |
67.1 m |
20 |
2006 |
|
|
67.1 m |
20 |
2001 |
|
|
67.1 m |
20 |
2002 |
|
|
64.0 m |
19 |
2006 |
|
Renaissance |
64.0 m |
19 |
construction |
|
Lighthouse
Condominium |
59.4 m |
18 |
2005 |
|
|
56.4 m |
17 |
2006 |
·
Gulf Shores History
·
In
1956, the recorded population of Gulf Shores was 120.
·
In
1979, Hurricane Frederic caused
major damage to Gulf Shores, but also spurred a building boom that radically
changed the town. Before Frederick, there was one condominium, a few hotels
(the Hardwick House), and a few businesses.
·
In
2004, Hurricane Ivan hit
·
Hurricane Ivan Damage Photos
·
Investors
bought the entire 2.3-acre block of businesses on the beach side of
·
Gulf Shores Attractions
o The National Shrimp Festival
is held every October at the Gulf Shores Public Beach since 1971 and is
sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce
o South Baldwin Community Theater was founded in 1972 by the late
Father Anthony Zogby, Nancy Holk
Totman and the late Herb Anderson
o The Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo
is moving to 25-acres off Baldwin County 6 which was donated by the family of
Clyde Weir.
§ The zoo rose to national fame after a
prime-time Animal Planet series, "The Little Zoo that Could,"
chronicled the menagerie's evacuation in the face of 2004's Hurricane Ivan as
well as its subsequent recovery from the storm.
§ The zoo opened in 1989 as Zooland Animal Park, a private enterprise of Joey Ward of
Gulf
Shores. In 1991, the Ward family
created the Zoo Foundation, Inc., a non-profit corporation, and donated the 17
acres of real estate that makes up the zoo today. Three years later, the Ward
family and the Erie Meyer Foundation donated an additional 13 acres, which are
still undeveloped.
o Amusement Parks include The Track and Waterville
USA. An amusement park was located on the northwest corner of Highways
59 & 181.
·
Gulf Shores Businesses
o Souvenir City was started in 1956 by Clyde Weir. It burned and
was rebuilt in 1996. Picture
o The Hangout at the public beach was owned
by Atmore businessman Adolph
"Doc" Sutton, Sr. (died 2007) and his wife, Ouida. The Suttons moved
to Gulf Shores in the late 1960’s, and after Hurricane Fredrick they rebuilt
The Hangout, constructed a seafood restaurant Adolph's, built a dress shop
named Sutton's Place and The Barefoot Bar all on Hwy. 59 on the beach. The
Hangout was
demolished. The inaugural Hangout
Reunion was held in 2007.
§ “The Hangout” was rebuilt
and reopened as a restaurant in 2008. Developer Shaul Zislin initially
planned a high-rise condominium for the land, but opted to build the restaurant
in view of the depressed real estate market.
o The Pink Pony Pub building first stood in 1950 as a
30-by-30 café/bar/bait shop at the foot of a fishing pier run by the Calloway
family. During the fifties and sixties, the pink wooden building was part
of Seahorse Cottages. The Mernik family bought the Seahorse Cottages and remodeled
the tiny shack in 1969 and called it the Pink Pony as a tiny offspring of the
pink Seahorse Cottages behind it. Hurricane Frederic leveled the wood building
in 1979, and it was rebuilt out of solid concrete on concrete bridge pilings. It
is currently owned by Bert and Susan Sanders and Chopper Schaffer.
o Bayou Village
·
Gulf Shores Restaurants
o BJ’s Seafood Restaurant, one of the oldest restaurants in Gulf Shores, was started by
Mike Mitchell. It was bought by Birmingham-based developer Ronald
Durham who plans to build Periwinkle Place, a 93-unit condominium complex.
o LuLu's @ Homeport Marina is owned by Lucy Buffett. It was
originally located on Weeks Bay as Lulu’s Sunset Grill.
o
The Original Oyster House, owned by
Joe and Mary Lou
Roszkowski and David and Jane Dekle,
opened in 1983 in Bayou Village, followed by a restaurant on the causeway in
1985.
o
King Neptune’s Seafood Restaurant, owned by Al and Diane
Sawyer. Al previously worked for Hemingway’s Restaurant and Bon Secour Fisheries.
·
Stretches
of the shore just west of Little Lagoon pass
have long been subject to erosion. In
2003,
·
In
1937 the first road to Fort Morgan opened when the Works Progress
Administration completed 22 miles of pavement from Gulf Shores to the fort
"which heretofore had been virtually inaccessible by land".
·
In
the late 1940s, Frank
Boykin and Ben Rester owned about 3,000 acres on
the
·
In
2003, the Gulf Shores City Council voted to annex the 19.3-mile-long
o Some area residents say they surprised
when it was introduced at the city council meeting. "To do it and not let the people hear
about it is wrong," Dudley Flotte said. Flotte, a
o Shortly afterward, the Fort Morgan
Civic Association sued the city, seeking to reverse the move, which the city
used to establish a border with and thus gain the ability to annex private
property along the peninsula. The civic association and three co-plaintiffs --
residents Ralph Gilges, Sarah DeMellier
and former County Commissioner Charles Browdy --
argued in the suit that the city's move was an illegal form of “long lasso” annexation
and would lead to over-development.
o A tentative settlement was approved by
the
o In a February court filing, the city,
though noting that the idea of annexing the state property "was raised
multiple times over the past several years," described a meeting between
then-Mayor David Bodenhamer, Hand, Head and Head's
lawyer, Sam Irby. "Mr. Head brought up the issue of the city annexing the
state property and the possibility he may want to have property he owned
annexed at some future date," the city wrote, adding that "some time
after this meeting" Bodenhamer approached state
officials about bringing the property into the city.
·
Shell Banks
·
Shell Banks was a thriving resort community
around the turn of the century. There
was no way to get there except by sand roads or by boat.
o Around 1917, there were about fifteen
hundred inhabitants. There were two
schools, several stores, two churches and a post office.
o The popularity of Shellbanks
was due to the
o The community began to decline after
the Hurricane of 1916 and the advent of World War I. The final blow came when the hotel burned
about 1926. All that remains today is a
Fire Department,
·
Shell Banks Cemetery is a small cemetery with only 270
visible graves remaining. The earliest
burial with a remaining tombstone is dated 1864. It is located on
Navy Cove
·
Navy
Cove reportedly got its name because the British Navy anchored its fleet there
to protect its commercial ships from pirates in the
·
·
Native
Americans piled the oyster shells in layers called "middens".
Huge sections of the middens still exist today; one
site covers more than 12 acres
·
In
three test excavations at the site since 1934, no Indian burial grounds have
turned up. Early inhabitants may have cremated their dead, or placed them in a communal
burial mound elsewhere
·
It
was at or very near Navy Cove that one of Hernando De Soto's officers, Capt.
Francisco Maldonado, waited nearly two years for his arrival.
·
By
1822, bar pilots had established a base at Navy Cove - "
·
By
1860, even though none of the pilots had a deed to the land, they had built 14
homes along the shore, bringing their families down from
·
By
1872, 14 bar pilots pooled their money - $338 - to buy the 620 acres where they
lived. They never divided the property, owning all of it equally.
·
It
was cumbersome to unload cargo from barges and rail cars in Mobile, ferry it on
small boats 30 miles to Navy Cove, unload it on the wharf at Pilot Town, then
reload it onto larger ships for the open Gulf.
·
By
the 1890s, Bay Minette railroad investors (The Mobile and Navy Cove Harbor and Railroad Co.) begins buying
up property at Pilot Town, even from some from the bar pilots, and closing up
legal loopholes to take possession of all the property. Their goal was to move
cargo by rail from
·
o There were six families, 53 people in
all, still at
o The hurricane of 1906 derailed work on
the railroad to Navy Cove long enough for the government to dredge a ship
channel in the Bay to a uniform depth. With a clear ship channel all the way to
·
A
1960 lawsuit over a couple of cabins, a fence and a claim of arson pulled in
hundreds of bar-pilot descendants, dozens of lawyers, six judges and the
Alabama Supreme Court.
o Eleanor Nicholls staked out 2 acres in
1960, which she said her family had been paying taxes on since the 1906
hurricane. In 1964, Peyton Norville's fishing shack
went up in flames, which was attributed in court documents to a suspicious
wildfire. In a separate, admitted case of arson, Nichols said that in 1957 she
set fire to another fishing shack that was built on what she felt was her
property. Court records 30 years after the fact do not identify the shack's
owner and those still living couldn't remember.
o In 1960 Quincie Godwin of Fairhope files a
lawsuit against the Nicholls family of bar-pilot descendants over property
Eleanor Nicholls had claimed at
o In 1986 Baldwin County Circuit Judge Harry J. Wilters
rules that families who have staked claims at
o The suit finally ended in 2000, when a
·
Ninety
acres of the bar pilots' land, including the
o Baldwin County Circuit Judge Lyn
Stuart orders Gulf Shores attorney Sam McKerall,
appointed special master to sort out the title history, to split the proceeds
of the sale among the bar pilot descendants and Geo Resources, owner of the
railroad's interest
o A separate court-ordered auction in
1994 brought $175,000 for the full 300 acres, but then-Circuit Judge Pamela Baschab rejected the bids because she said they were too
low.
o In the 1980s, Dot Dorgan pleaded with
other bar-pilot descendants to band together to preserve the property, saving
it as a memorial to their ancestors. She got nowhere, she said.
o Plans submitted by the Langan group for development of lots on the westernmost 25
acres of the roughly 90-acre property generated intense concern from area
residents, environmentalists and historic preservationists.
·
In
2005 PRM Realty Group Inc., a Chicago-based development firm bought nearly 148
acres from the Langan family for $18.85 million. They
proposed a large-scale residential and marina complex on land that includes the
site of
o PRM Realty's property also lies within
the congressionally outlined acquisition area for the Bon Secour
National Wildlife Refuge's 1,990-acre Little Point Clear Unit. That means that the refuge could have
expanded from the eastern shore of
·
The
Alabama Cemetery Preservation Alliance says that only two grave markers remain
at
·
Fort Morgan Marina has been known at various times as
“Hook, Line, and Sinker”, “Billy’s by the Bay”, and others. It was heavily
damaged by Hurricanes Ivan and Katrina, and was annexed into
Fort Morgan
·
During
the War of 1812, after Gen. James
Wilkinson seized Mobile from the Spanish in 1813, the Americans established Fort Bowyer at the mouth of Mobile Bay
and a shipyard about three miles east at Navy
Cove.
o On Sept. 15, 1814, four British ships
and 600 soldiers and Indians attacked the 130 American soldiers at
o Returning from their defeat at
·
Construction of
·
·
Union
ground troops seized
·
·
In
the late 1940s, Frank
Boykin and Ben Rester owned about 3,000 acres on
the
·
The
Civil War Preservation Trust has listed
·
The
Alabama Historical Commission, which owns and operates the fort, recently approved a restoration plan that calls for hiring
more staff, completing hurricane repairs and working out arrangements with the
Baldwin County Commission and the Alabama Gulf Coast Convention and Visitors
Bureau to provide additional services.
·
The
o Black
water means that it
is tannic water, which is tea-colored and acidic. Such rivers are uncommon
outside the coastal areas of the South, and few undammed, unaltered black water
rivers survive.
o The Nature
Conservancy purchased 14,000 acres along the river and transferred it to
the state Forever
Wild program in 2006. Conservationists aim to preserve the entire river.
Sources and Reference
Revised
6/8/08
Text
Copyright 2008
Disclaimer: These Notes are not
original. They are complied from various
sources, primarily the Press-Register (PR), Lagniappe,

Oleander