Mobile ( ) is the third most
populous city in the Southern
U.S.
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.
Mobile is the principal municipality of the Mobile
Metropolitan Statistical
Area (MSA), a region of 399,843 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 540,258, 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 1813. 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
10th 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 1700s 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.
History
Colonial
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, 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.

Mobile and Fort Condé in 1725.
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 the Kingdom of
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.
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.
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
1763s 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.
19th century
By the time Mobile was included in the
Mississippi Territory in 1813, the
population had dwindled to roughly 300 people.
The city was included
in the Alabama
Territory
in 1817, after Mississippi
gained statehood. Alabama was granted
statehood in 1819; Mobile's population had increased to 809 by that
time. As the river frontage areas of Alabama and Mississippi were
settled by farmers and the
plantation
economy became established, Mobile's population exploded. It came
to be settled by merchants, attorneys, mechanics, doctors and
others seeking to capitalize on trade with these upriver areas.
Mobile was well situated for trade, as its location tied it to a
river system that served as the principal navigational access for
most of Alabama and a large part of Mississippi. By 1822 the city's
population was 2800.
From the 1830s onward, Mobile expanded into a city of commerce with
a primary focus on the cotton trade. The waterfront was developed
with wharves, terminal facilities, and fireproof brick warehouses.
The
exports of cotton grew in proportion to the amounts being produced
in the Black Belt; by
1840 Mobile was second only to New Orleans
in cotton exports in the nation. With the
economy so focused on one crop, Mobile's fortunes were always tied
to those of cotton, and the city weathered many financial crises.
Though
Mobile had a relatively small slave-owning population compared to
the inland plantation areas, it was the slave-trading center of the
state until surpassed by Montgomery
in the 1850s. By 1853, there were fifty
Jewish families living in Mobile, including Philp Phillips,an
attorney who was elected to the Alabama State Legislature and then
to the United States Congress. By 1860 Mobile's population within
the city limits had reached 29,258 people; it was the 27th largest
city in the United States and 4th largest in what would soon be the
Confederate States of
America. The free population in the whole of Mobile County,
including the city, consisted of 29,754 citizens, of which only
1195 were black. Additionally, 1785 slave owners held 11,376
slaves, for a total county population of 41,130 people.
During the
American Civil War,
Mobile was a Confederate city. The first
submarine to successfully sink an enemy ship, the
H. L.
Hunley, was built in Mobile.
One of
the most famous naval engagements
of the war was the Battle of Mobile Bay, resulting in the
Union taking possession
of Mobile
Bay
on 5 August 1864. On 12 April 1865, 3 days
after the surrender of
Robert E.
Lee at Appomattox
Courthouse
, the city of Mobile surrendered to the Union army to avoid destruction following the
Union victories at the Battle of
Spanish Fort and the Battle
of Fort Blakely. Ironically, on 25 May 1865, the city
suffered loss when some three hundred people died as a result of an
explosion at a
federal ammunition depot on Beauregard Street. The
explosion left a deep hole at the depot's location, sunk ships
docked on the Mobile River, and the resulting fires destroyed the
northern portion of the city.
Federal
Reconstruction in
Mobile began after the Civil War and effectively ended in 1874 when
the local
Democrats
gained control of the city government. The last quarter of the 19th
century was a time of economic depression and municipal insolvency
for Mobile. One example can be provided by the value of Mobile's
exports during this period of depression. The value of exports
leaving the city fell from $9 million in 1878 to $3 million in
1882.
20th century
The turn of the century brought the
Progressive Era to Mobile and saw Mobile's
economic structure evolve along with a significant increase in
population. The population increased from around 40,000 in 1900 to
60,000 by 1920. During this time the city received $3 million in
federal grants for harbor improvements to deepen the shipping
channels in the harbor. During and after
World War I, manufacturing became increasingly
vital to Mobile's economic health, with shipbuilding and steel
production being two of the most important. During this time,
social justice and race relations in Mobile worsened, however. In
1902 the city government passed Mobile's first
segregation ordinance, one that
segregated the city streetcars. It legislated what had been
informal practice, enforced by convention. Mobile's
African-American population responded to this with a two-month
boycott, but it did not change the law. After this, Mobile's
de facto segregation was increasingly
replaced with legislated segregation as whites imposed
Jim Crow laws to maintain dominance.
World War II led to a massive military effort
causing a considerable increase in Mobile's population, largely due
to the massive influx of workers coming to Mobile to work in the
shipyards and at the Brookley Army Air Field
. Between 1940 and 1943, more than 89,000
people moved into Mobile to work for war effort industries. Mobile
was one of eighteen U.S. cities producing
Liberty ships. Its
Alabama Drydock and
Shipbuilding Company supported the war effort by producing
ships faster than the
Axis
powers could sink them.
Gulf Shipbuilding Corporation,
a
subsidiary of
Waterman Steamship
Corporation, focused on building
freighters,
Fletcher class destroyers, and
minesweepers.
The years after World War II brought about changes in Mobile's
social structure and economy. Instead of shipbuilding being a
primary economic force, the paper and chemical industries began to
expand, and most of the old military bases were converted to
civilian uses.
After World War II, African Americans stepped up their efforts to
achieve equal rights and social justice. Some residents of Mobile
had considered the city to be tolerant and racially accommodating
compared to other cities in
the South,
especially as the police force and one local college became
integrated in the 1950s. Buses and lunch counters were voluntarily
desegregated by the early 1960s. Mobile's African-American citizens
were not as content with the
status quo
as such residents believed.
In 1963 three African-American students
brought a case against the Mobile County School Board for being
denied admission to Murphy High School
. The court ordered that the three students
be admitted to Murphy for the 1964 school year, leading to the
desegregation of Mobile County's school system. The Civil Rights
Movement led to the end of legal racial segregation with passage of
the
Civil Rights Act of
1964.
In the
late 1960s, Mobile's economy was dealt a blow with the closing of
Brookley Air
Force Base
. This and other factors ushered in a period
of economic depression that lasted through the 1970s.
The Alabama legislature passed the Cater Act in 1949 allowing
cities and counties to set up industrial development boards (IDB)
to issue municipal bonds as incentives to attract new industry into
their local areas. The city of Mobile did not establish a Cater Act
board until 1962. George E. McNally, Mobile's first Republican
mayor since Reconstruction, was the driving force behind its
creation. The existing Mobile Area Chamber of Commerce, considering
itself better qualified to attract new businesses and industry to
the area, saw the new IDB as a serious rival. After several years
of political squabbling, the Chamber of Commerce emerged
victorious. While McNally's IDB prompted the Chamber of Commerce to
become more proactive in attracting new industry, the chamber
effectively shut Mobile city government out of economic development
decisions.
Beginning in the late 1980s, the new mayor,
Mike Dow, and the city council began an effort
termed the "String of Pearls Initiative" to make Mobile into a
competitive city. The city initiated construction of numerous new
facilities and projects, and the restoration of hundreds of
historic downtown buildings and homes. Violent crime was reduced,
and city and county leaders attracted new business ventures to the
area. The effort continues into the present under the current
mayor,
Sam Jones, and city council.
Shipbuilding began to make a major comeback
in Mobile in 1999 with the founding of Austal USA
.
Geography and climate
Geography
Mobile is located at 30°40'46" North, 88°6'12" West (30.679523,
-88.103280) , in the southwestern corner of the U.S. state of
Alabama. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city has a total
area of 412.9 km² (159.4 mi²). 305.4 km²
(117.9 mi²) of it is land and 107.6 km² (41.5 mi²)
of it is water. The elevation in Mobile ranges from on Water Street
in downtown to at the Mobile Regional Airport.
Climate
Mobile's geographical location on the
Gulf of
Mexico
provides a mild subtropical climate, with
an average annual temperature of . Normal average January
through December temperatures range from minimum and maximum.
Mobile has hot, humid summers and mild, rainy winters. A 2007 study
by
WeatherBill, Inc. determined that
Mobile is the wettest city in the contiguous 48 states, with of
average annual rainfall. Mobile averages 59 rainy days per year.
Snow is rare in Mobile, with the last snowfall being on 18 December
1996.
Mobile is occasionally affected by major
tropical storms and
hurricanes. Mobile suffered a major natural
disaster on the night of 12 September 1979 when
Category 3 Hurricane Frederic passed over the heart
of the city. The storm caused tremendous damage to Mobile and the
surrounding area. Mobile had moderate damage from
Hurricane Opal on 4 October 1995 and
Hurricane Ivan on 16 September 2004. Mobile
also suffered US$ millions in damage from
Hurricane Katrina on 29 August 2005.
A storm
surge of , topped by higher waves, damaged eastern sections of
Mobile, with extensive flooding in downtown, Battleship
Parkway
, and the elevated Jubilee Parkway
, destroying the electronic speed-limit fog-warning
signals.
Culture
Mobile is home to an array of cultural influences with its mixed
French, Spanish, Creole and Catholic heritage, in addition to
British and African, distinguishing it from all other cities in the
state of Alabama. The annual
Carnival
celebration is perhaps the best illustration of this.
Mobile has the oldest
Mardi Gras celebration, dating
to the early 1700s of French
colonial
times. Carnival in Mobile has evolved over the course of 300
years from a sedate French Catholic tradition into a mainstream
multi-week celebration across the spectrum of cultures.
Carnival and Mardi Gras
Mobile's Carnival celebrations start as early as November with
several
balls, with the
parades usually beginning after January 5. Carnival
celebrations end promptly at the stroke of midnight on
Mardi Gras, signaling the beginning of
Ash Wednesday and the first day of
Lent. In Mobile, locals use the term Mardi Gras as a
shorthand to refer to the entire Carnival season, although it
literally means
Fat Tuesday in French,
the day before Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent. During this
time Mobile's
mystic societies build
colorful Carnival floats and parade throughout downtown with masked
society members tossing small gifts, known as
throws, to
parade spectators. Mobile's mystic societies, essentially private
clubs, also give formal
masquerade
balls, which are almost always invitation only and are oriented
to adults.
Mobile
first celebrated Carnival in 1703 when French settlers began the
festivities at the Old Mobile Site
. Mobile's first Carnival society began in
1711 with the
Boeuf Gras Society (Fatted Ox Society). In
1830 Mobile's Cowbellion de Rakin Society was the first formally
organized and masked mystic society in the United States to
celebrate with a parade.
The Cowbellions got their start when Michael
Krafft, a cotton factor from Pennsylvania
, began a parade with rakes, hoes, and
cowbells. The
Cowbellians introduced horse-drawn
floats to the parades in 1840 with a parade entitled, “Heathen Gods
and Goddesses". The
Striker's Independent Society
was formed in 1843 and is the oldest surviving mystic society in
the United States.
Carnival celebrations in Mobile were cancelled during the
American Civil War. In 1866
Joe Cain revived Mardi Gras parades when he paraded
through the city streets on Fat Tuesday while costumed as a
fictional
Chickasaw chief named
Slacabamorinico. He celebrated the day in front of the
occupying
Union Army troops. The year
2002 saw Mobile's
Tricentennial
celebrated with parades that represented all of Mobile's mystic
societies, both black and white.
In 2009, for the first time in the city's history, Mardi Gras
reached the 1,000,000-attendee milestone during the 5-day citywide
celebration .
Archives and libraries

The Ben May Main Library on Government
Street.
The
National African American Archives and
Museum
features the history of "Colored Carnival",
African-American participation in Mobile's Mardi Gras;
authentic artifacts from the era of slavery, and portraits and
biographies of famous African Americans. The University of
South Alabama Archives houses primary source material relating to
the history of Mobile and southern Alabama, as well as the
university's history. The archives are located on the ground floor
of the USA Spring Hill Campus and are open to the general public.
The Mobile Municipal Archives contains the extant records of the
City of Mobile, dating from the city's creation as a municipality
by the Mississippi Territory in 1814.
The majority of the
original records of Mobile's colonial history (1702-1813) are
housed in Paris
, London
, Seville
, and Madrid
. The
Mobile Genealogical Society Library and Media Center is located at
the Holy Family Catholic Church and School complex. It features
handwritten manuscripts and published materials for use in
genealogical research.
The Mobile Public Library
system serves Mobile and consists of eight branches
across Mobile County, featuring its own large local history and
genealogy division housed in a facility next to the newly restored
and enlarged Ben May Main Library on Government Street. The
Saint Ignatius Archives, Museum and Theological Research Library
contains primary sources, artifacts, documents, photographs and
publications that pertain to the history of Saint Ignatius Church
and School, the Catholic history of the city, and the history of
the
Roman Catholic
Church.
Entertainment and arts
The
Mobile
Museum of Art
features European, Non-Western, American, and
Decorative Arts collections. The Saenger
Theatre
of Mobile was opened in 1927 and is a modern
dynamic performing arts center. It is home to the
Mobile Symphony, conducted by Maestro Scott
Speck, and Space 301, a contemporary art gallery. It also serves as
a small concert venue for the city.
The Mobile Civic Center
contains three facilities under one roof.
The building has an arena, a theater and an exposition hall. It is
the primary concert venue for the city and hosts a wide variety of
events. It is home to the
Mobile Opera
and the Mobile Ballet. The 60-year old
Mobile Opera averages about 1,200 attendees per
performance. A wide variety of events are held at Mobile's Arthur
C. Outlaw Convention Center. It contains a exhibit hall, a grand
ballroom, and sixteen meeting rooms. Additionally, the city
sponsors
BayFest, an annual
three-day music festival with over 125 live musical acts on nine
stages.
Tourism
Museums
Mobile is home to a variety of museums.
Battleship
Memorial Park
is a military park on the shore of Mobile Bay and
features the World War II era battleship USS Alabama
, the World War II era submarine USS Drum
, Korean War and Vietnam War Memorials, and a variety of
historical military equipment. The Museum of
Mobile
chronicles 300 years of Mobile history and material
culture and is housed in the historic Old City
Hall
. The Oakleigh Historic Complex
features three house museums that interpret the
lives of people from three levels of Mobile society in the mid-19th
century. The Mobile Carnival Museum
, which houses the city's Mardi Gras history and memorabilia,
documents the variety of floats, costumes, and displays seen during
the history of the festival season. The Bragg-Mitchell Mansion
(1855), Richards DAR House (1860), and
the Condé-Charlotte House
(1822) are historic antebellum house museums. Fort
Morgan
, Fort Gaines
, and Historic Blakeley State Park
figure into local American Civil War history. The
Mobile Medical Museum is housed in the historic Vincent-Doan House
(1827) and features artifacts and resources that chronicle the
history of medicine in Mobile. The Phoenix Fire Museum is located
in the restored Phoenix Volunteer Fire Company Number 6 building
and features the history of fire companies in Mobile from their
organization in 1838. The Mobile Police Department Museum features
exhibits that chronicle the history of law enforcement in Mobile.
The
Gulf Coast
Exploreum
is a non-profit science center located in
downtown. It features permanent and traveling exhibits, an
IMAX dome theater, a digital 3D virtual
theater, and a hands-on chemistry laboratory.
The Dauphin
Island Sea Lab
is located south of the city near the mouth of
Mobile
Bay
. It houses the Estuarium, an aquarium which
illustrates the four habitats of the Mobile Bay
ecosystem: the river delta, bay
, barrier
islands
and Gulf of Mexico
.
Parks and other attractions

Delta Sunset over Downtown Mobile from
a 5 Rivers Delta Safaris Boat Tour.
The
Mobile
Botanical Gardens
feature a variety of flora spread over . It
contains the Millie McConnell
Rhododendron Garden with 1,000 evergreen and
native azaleas and the
Longleaf Pine
Habitat.
The Bellingrath Gardens and Home
are located on Fowl River
and contain of landscaped gardens and a mansion dating to the
1930s. The 5 Rivers Delta Resource Center is a new facility
for exploring the Mobile, Spanish, Tensaw, Appalachee, and Blakeley
River delta. "5 Rivers" as it is affectionately known to locals,
was established by the State of AL to be a "Gateway to the Mobile
Delta" and contains within its grounds a Theatrette; Exhibit Hall;
Meeting, Wedding and Party facilities; a myriad of boat and
adventure tours operated by Five Rivers Delta Safaris, walking
trails and a Canoe and Kayak Landing.
Mobile has more than 45 public parks with some that are of special
interest.
Bienville Square
is a historic park dating to 1850 in the Lower
Dauphin Street Historic District and is named for Mobile’s founder,
Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville. This park was
once a principal gathering place for the citizens of the city and
remains popular today.
Cathedral
Square
is a performing arts park in the Lower Dauphin
Street Historic District overlooked by the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate
Conception
. Fort Condé
is a reconstruction of the original Fort Condé, built on the old
fort's footprint. It is the city’s official welcome center and
living history museum. Spanish Plaza is a downtown park that honors
the Spanish occupation of the city between 1780 and 1813.
It
features the "Arches of Friendship", a fountain presented to Mobile
by the city of Málaga
,
Spain. Langan Park
is a municipal park that features lakes and
natural spaces. It is home to the Mobile Museum of Art,
Azalea City Golf Course, Mobile Botanical Gardens and Playhouse in
the Park.
Historic architecture
Mobile has antebellum architectural examples of
Greek Revival,
Gothic Revival,
Italianate, and
Creole
cottage. Later architectural styles found in the city include
the various
Victorian types,
shotgun types,
Colonial Revival,
Tudor Revival,
Spanish Colonial
Revival,
Beaux-Arts and
many others.
The city currently has nine major historic
districts consisting of Old Dauphin
Way
, Oakleigh Garden
, Lower Dauphin Street
, Leinkauf
, De Tonti Square
, Church Street East
, Ashland Place
, Campground
, and Midtown
.
Mobile has a number of historic structures spread throughout the
city.
Some of Mobile's historic churches include
Christ Church Cathedral
, the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate
Conception
, Emanuel AME Church
, Government Street Presbyterian
Church
, St. Louis Street Missionary Baptist
Church
, State Street AME Zion Church
, Stone Street Baptist Church
, and Trinity Episcopal Church
. Two historic Roman
Catholic convents survive, the Convent and
Academy of the Visitation
and the Convent of
Mercy
. Barton Academy
is a historic Greek Revival school building and
local landmark on Government Street. The Bishop
Portier House
and the Carlen House
are two of the many surviving examples of Creole cottages in the city.
The
Mobile City
Hospital
and the United States Marine Hospital
are both restored Greek Revival hospital buildings
that predate the Civil War. The Washington Firehouse No.
5
is a Greek Revival fire
station, built in 1851. The Hunter
House
is an example of the Italianate style and was built by a
successful 19th century African American businesswoman.
The
Shepard
House
is a good example of the Queen Anne style.
The
Scottish Rite Temple
is the only surviving example of Egyptian Revival architecture
in the city. The Gulf,
Mobile, and Ohio Passenger Terminal
is an example of the Mission Revival
style.
The city has several historic cemeteries that were established
after the colonial era.
They replaced Mobile's colonial Campo Santo
, of which no traces remain. The Church
Street Graveyard
contains above-ground tombs and monuments spread
over and was founded in 1819, during the height of the yellow fever
epidemics. The nearby Magnolia
Cemetery
was established in 1836 and was Mobile's primary
burial site during the 19th century with approximately 80,000
burials. It features tombs and many intricately carved
monuments and statues.
The Catholic
Cemetery
was established in 1848 by the Archdiocese of Mobile and covers more
than . It contains plots for the
Brothers of the Sacred Heart,
Little Sisters of the
Poor,
Sisters of Charity, and
Sisters of Mercy, in addition to
many other historically significant burials.
Mobile's Jewish
community dates back to the 1820s and the city has two historic
Jewish cemeteries, Ahavas Chesed Cemetery
and Sha'arai Shomayim Cemetery
.
Demographics
The 2000 census determined that there were 198,915 people residing
within the city limits.
Mobile is the center of Alabama
's
second-largest metropolitan area, which consists of all of Mobile
County. Metropolitan Mobile
(MSA) had a population of 399,843 as of 2000
census.
There were 73,057 households out of which 22,225 had children under
the age of 18 living with them, 29,963 were
married couples living together, 15,360 had a
female householder with no husband present, 3,488 had a male
householder with no wife present, and 24,246 were non-families.
20,957 of all households were made up of individuals and 7,994 had
someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The racial
makeup of the city was 48.2%
White,
47.9%
Black or
African American, 0.2%
Native American, 1.8%
Asian, 0.3%
Pacific Islander, 0.5% from
other races, 0.9% from two or more races,
and 1.2% of the population were
Latino. The
average household size was 2.59 and the average family size was
3.23. Same-sex couple households comprised 0.9% of all
households.
The population was spread out with 7.1% under the age of 5, 73.6%
over 18, and 13.4% over 65. The median age was 35.6 years. The male
population was 47.6% and the female population was 52.4%. The
median income for a household in the city was $37,439, and the
median income for a family was $45,217. The
per capita income for the city was
$21,612. 21.3% of the population and 17.6% of families were below
the
poverty line.
Government

Government Plaza in Mobile, seat of
government for the city and the county.
Since 1985 the government of Mobile has consisted of a mayor and a
seven member
city council. The mayor is
elected
at-large and the council members
are elected from each of the seven city council districts. A
supermajority of five votes is
required to conduct council business. This form of city government
was chosen by the voters after the previous form of government,
which used three city commissioners who were elected at-large, was
ruled to substantially dilute the African American vote in the 1975
case
Bolden v. City of Mobile. Municipal
elections are held every four years.
The current mayor,
Sam Jones, was
elected in September 2005 and is the first African American mayor
of Mobile. As of January 2006, the city council is composed of
Fredrick Richardson, Jr. from District 1, William Carroll from
District 2, Clinton Johnson from District 3, John C. Williams from
District 4, Reggie Copeland, Sr. from District 5, Connie Hudson
from District 6, and Gina Gregory from District 7. Reggie Copeland,
Sr. is currently serving as Council President with Fredrick
Richardson, Jr. serving as Council Vice President.
In January 2008, the city hired EDSA, an
urban design firm, to create a new
comprehensive master plan for the downtown area and surrounding
neighborhoods. The planning area is bordered on the east by the
Mobile River, to the south by Interstate 10 and Duval Street, to
the west by Houston Street and to the north by Three Mile Creek and
the neighborhoods north of Martin Luther King Avenue.
Education
Primary and secondary
Public facilities
Public schools in Mobile are operated by the
Mobile County Public School
System. The Mobile County Public School System has an
enrollment of over 65,000 students, employs approximately 8,500
public school employees, and had a budget in 2005-2006 of
$617,162,616.
The State of Alabama operates the Alabama
School of Mathematics and Science
on Dauphin Street in Mobile, which boards advanced
Alabama high school students. It was founded in 1989 to
identify, challenge, and educate future leaders.
Private facilities
Mobile also has a large number of private schools, most of them
being
parochial in nature. Many of
these belong to the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese
of Mobile.
The private Catholic institutions include
McGill-Toolen Catholic High
School
(1896), Corpus Christi School, Little Flower
Catholic School (1934), Most Pure Heart of Mary Catholic School
(1900), Saint Dominic School (1961), Saint Ignatius School (1952),
Saint Mary Catholic School (1867), Saint Pius X Catholic School
(1957), and Saint Vincent DePaul Catholic School (1976).
The
private Protestant institutions include St. Paul's
Episcopal School
(1947), Mobile Christian School (1961), St. Lukes
Episcopal School (1961), Faith Academy
(1967), and the Cottage Hill Baptist School System
(1970), which operates Cottage Hill Baptist School and Cottage Hill
Christian Academy. UMS-Wright Preparatory School
(1893) is an independent, non-religious,
co-educational preparatory
school.
Tertiary
Colleges and universities in Mobile include the University of South
Alabama, Spring Hill College, the University of Mobile, Faulkner
University, and Bishop State Community College.
The
University
of South Alabama
is a public, doctoral-level university established in
1963. The university is composed of the College of Arts and
Sciences, the Mitchell College of Business, the College of
Education, the College of Engineering, the College of Medicine, the
Doctor of Pharmacy Program, the College of Nursing, the School of
Computer and Information Sciences, and the School of Continuing
Education and Special Programs.
Bishop
State Community College
, founded in 1927, is a historically
African American community
college. Bishop State has four campuses in Mobile and
offers a wide array of associate degrees.
Faulkner
University
is a four-year private Church of Christ-affiliated university
based in Montgomery,
Alabama
. The Mobile campus was established in 1975
and offers bachelor's degrees in Business Administration,Management
of Human Resources, and Criminal Justice. It also offers associate
degrees in Business Administration, Business Information Systems,
Computer & Information Science, Criminal Justice, Informatics,
Legal Studies, Arts, and Science.

Spring Hill College
Spring
Hill College
, chartered in 1830, was the first Catholic
college in the southeastern U.S. and is the third oldest Jesuit college in the country. This
four-year private college offers graduate programs in Business
Administration, Education, Liberal Arts, Nursing (MSN), and
Theological Studies. Undergraduate divisions and programs include
the Division of Business, the Communications/Arts Division,
International Studies, Interdivisional Studies, the Language and
Literature Division, Nursing (BSN), Philosophy and Theology,
Political Science, the Sciences Division, the Social Sciences
Division, and the Teacher Education Division.
The
University
of Mobile
is a four-year private Baptist-affiliated
university that was founded in 1961. It consists of the
College of Arts and Sciences, School of Business, School of
Christian Studies, School of Education, the School of Leadership
Development, and the School of Nursing.
Healthcare
Mobile serves the central Gulf Coast as a regional center for
medicine. The city is served by over 850 physicians and 175
dentists.
There are four major medical centers within the city limits: Mobile
Infirmary Medical Center with 704 beds, Springhill Medical Center
with 252 beds, Providence Hospital
with 349 beds, and the University of South Alabama
Medical Center with 346 beds and a level I trauma center.
Additionally, the University of South Alabama also operates USA
Children's & Women's Hospital with 219 beds, dedicated
exclusively to the care of children and women, and Mobile Infirmary
Medical Center operates Infirmary West with 100 acute care beds. In
2008, the University of South Alabama opened the USA Mitchell
Cancer Center Institute. The center is home to the first academic
cancer research center in the Gulf Coast region. BayPointe Hospital
and Children’s Residential Services is a 94-bed psychiatric
hospital that houses a residential unit for children, an acute unit
for children and adolescents, and an involuntary hospital unit for
adults undergoing evaluation ordered by the Mobile Probate Court.
The city has a broad array of outpatient surgical centers,
emergency clinics, home health care services, assisted-living
facilities and
skilled nursing
facilities.
Economy

Aerial view of southern portion of the
Port of Mobile.

Cranes at the Port of Mobile.
Aerospace, retail, services, construction, medicine, and
manufacturing are Mobile's major industries. After experiencing
economic decline for several decades, Mobile's economy began to
rebound in the late 1980s. Between 1993 and 2003 13,983 new jobs
were created as 87 new companies were founded and 399 existing
companies were expanded. 1,700 new jobs were created from February
2003 to February 2004.
Following the global economic downturn, the
U.S.
Department of Labor
's Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated Mobile's
unemployment rate at 7.8% in January 2009.
Expansion
Mobile's
Alabama
State Docks
underwent
the largest expansion in its history by expanding its container
processing and storage facility and increasing container storage at
the docks by over 1,000% at a cost of over $300 million, thus
positioning Mobile for rapid container processing growth. As
of 2007, the Port of Mobile was the 10th largest by tonnage in the
United States.
In 2005
Austal
USA
, based in Mobile, expanded their production
facility for US defense and commercial aluminium
shipbuilding. Austal announced in late December upon winning
another multi billion dollar defense contract it will yet again
expand its facilities in downtown.
In 2007 German
steel manufacturer ThyssenKrupp announced plans for a $4.65
billion steel mill, which upon completion in late 2009, will become
the largest steel plant in the world with over 1,200 acres under
roof at 7.7 million square feet. The new plant is currently
under construction in northern Mobile County. Company officials
state that 2,700 permanent jobs will be added to the local
economy.
Brookley Complex
The
Brookley
Complex
, also known as the Mobile Downtown Airport, is an
industrial complex and airport located south
of the central business
district of the city. It is currently the largest
industrial and transportation complex in the region with over 100
companies, many of which are
aerospace,
and 4000 employees on . Brookley includes the largest private
employer in Mobile County,
Mobile Aerospace
Engineering, a
subsidiary of
Singapore Technologies
Engineering.
Transportation
Air
Local
airline passengers are served by the Mobile
Regional Airport
, with direct connections to five major hub
airports: Charlotte
, Dallas
, Atlanta
, Houston
, and Memphis
. It is served by
American Eagle Airlines,
Continental Express,
Delta Air Lines,
Northwest Airlink and
US Airways Express.
The Mobile
Downtown Airport
serves corporate, cargo and private cargo
aircraft.
Rail
Mobile is served by four
Class I
railroads, including the
Canadian National Railway (CNR),
CSX Transportation (CSX), the
Kansas City Southern
Railway (KCS), and the
Norfolk Southern Railway (NS).
The
Alabama
and Gulf Coast Railway
, a Class III
railroad, links Mobile to the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway at
Amory,
Mississippi
. These converge at the Port of Mobile, which
provides
intermodal freight
transport service to companies engaged in importing and
exporting. Other railroads include the Terminal Railway of Alabama
State Docks (TASD), a
switching railroad, and the
Central Gulf Railroad, a rail ship service to
Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz. The city
was served by
Amtrak's
Sunset Limited passenger train service until
2005, when the service was suspended due to the effects of
Hurricane Katrina.
Road

Eastbound Interstate 10 in Mobile as
it approaches the Wallace Tunnel.
Two major
interstate highways
and a spur converge in Mobile.
Interstate
10 runs northeast to southwest across the city while
Interstate 65 starts in Mobile at Interstate
10 and runs north.
Interstate 165 connects to
Interstate 65 north of the city in Prichard
and joins Interstate 10 in downtown Mobile.
Mobile is well served by many major highway systems. United States
Highways
US 31,
US 43,
US 45,
US 90 and
US 98 radiate from Mobile traveling east, west, and
north.
Mobile has three routes east across the
Mobile River and Mobile Bay into neighboring Baldwin
County, Alabama
. Interstate 10 leaves downtown through the
George
Wallace Tunnel
under the river and then over the bay across the
Jubilee
Parkway
to Spanish Fort
/Daphne
.
US 98
leaves downtown through the Bankhead Tunnel
under the river onto Blakeley Island and then over
the bay across the Battleship Parkway
into Spanish Fort, Alabama. US 90 travels over
the Cochrane-Africatown USA
Bridge
to the north of downtown onto Blakeley Island where
it becomes co-routed with US 98.
Mobile's public transportation is the Wave Transit System which
features buses with 18 fixed routes and neighborhood service. The
Wave Transit System also operates the Moda! electric trolley
service in downtown Mobile with 22 stops Monday through Saturday.
Baylinc
is a public transportation bus service provided by the Baldwin
Rural Transit System in cooperation with the Wave Transit System
that provides service between eastern Baldwin
County
and downtown Mobile. Baylinc operates Monday
through Friday.
Greyhound Lines
provides intercity bus service between Mobile and many locations
throughout the United States. Mobile is served by several taxi and
limousine services.
Water

Alabama Cruise Terminal
The
Port of
Mobile
has public, deepwater terminals with direct access
to of inland and intracoastal waterways serving the Great Lakes
, the Ohio and Tennessee river valleys (via the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway),
and the Gulf of
Mexico
. The Alabama State Port Authority owns and
operates the public terminals at the Port of Mobile. The public
terminals handle
containerized,
bulk, breakbulk,
roll-on/roll-off, and heavy lift cargoes.
The port is also home to private bulk terminal operators, as well
as a number of highly specialized shipbuilding and repair companies
with two of the largest floating dry docks on the Gulf Coast.
The city
is home port for Carnival Cruise
Lines' Carnival
Fantasy cruise ship which sails
on four and five day itineraries through the Western Caribbean
from the Alabama Cruise Terminal on Water
Street. Carnival Fantasy will be permanently
replaced by
Carnival
Elation in May 2010.
Media
Print
Mobile's
Press-Register is
Alabama's oldest active newspaper, dating back to 1813.
The paper
focuses on Mobile
and Baldwin
counties and the city of Mobile, but also serves
southwestern Alabama and southeastern Mississippi. Mobile's
alternative newspaper is the
Lagniappe. The Mobile area's local
magazine is
Mobile Bay Monthly. The
Mobile Beacon
is an alternative focusing on the African-American communities of
Mobile.
The Mobilian is a web-based, interactive portal
with a focus on cultured-living in Mobile.
Television
Mobile is
served locally by four television stations: WPMI 15
(NBC), WKRG 5
(CBS), WALA 10
(Fox), and
WFNA
55
(CW). The regional area is
also served by WEAR
3
(ABC)
and WJTC
44
, an independent station. They are both based
in Pensacola,
Florida
. Mobile is included in the Mobile-Pensacola
-Fort Walton Beach
designated market
area, as defined by Nielsen
Media Research, and is ranked 61st in the United States for the
2007-08 television season.
Radio
Thirteen
FM radio stations transmit from
Mobile: WABB-FM, WAVH
, WBHY
, WBLX
, WDLT, WHIL
, WKSJ
, WKSJ-HD2, WMXC
, WMXC
-HD2,
WQUA
, WRKH, and WRKH-HD2.
Nine
AM radio stations transmit from
Mobile: WABB, WBHY
, WGOK, WIJD
, WLPR
, WLVV
, WMOB
, WNTM
, and
WXQW
.
The content ranges from Christian Contemporary to
Hip hop to
Top 40.
Arbitron ranks Mobile's radio market as 93rd in the
United States as of autumn 2007.
Sports
Mobile
is the home of Ladd-Peebles Stadium
. The
football stadium opened in 1948. With a
current capacity of 40,646, Ladd-Peebles Stadium is the 4th largest
stadium in the state. Ladd-Peebles Stadium has been home to the
Senior Bowl since 1951, featuring the
best college seniors in
NCAA football. The
GMAC Bowl has been played since 1999
featuring opponents from the
Mid-American Conference and
Conference USA. Since 1988, Ladd-Peebles
Stadium has hosted the Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Classic. The
top graduating high school seniors from their respective states
compete each June.The public Mobile Tennis Center includes over 50
courts, all lighted and hard-court.For golfers, Magnolia Grove,
part of the
Robert Trent
Jones Golf Trail, has 36 holes. The Falls course was recently
named the best par 3 course in America. Since 1999, the
LPGA Tournament of Champions has been played annually
at Magnolia Grove. The Crossings course is home of this tournament.
Beginning in 2008, the
Bell
Micro LPGA Classic will also be held in Mobile. Mobile is also
home to the
Azalea Trail Run, which
races through historic midtown and downtown Mobile. This 10k run
has been an annual event since 1978. The Azalea Trail Run is one of
the premier 10k road races in the U.S., attracting runners from all
over the world.
Mobile's Hank Aaron Stadium
is the home of the Mobile BayBears minor league baseball team. As
of December 2007, Mobile's University of South Alabama approved a
NCAA Football program to be played at Ladd-Peebles Stadium.
Sister cities
Mobile has registered
sister city
arrangements with the following cities:
Additionally, it has pending sister city arrangements with:
See also
References
- Drechsel, Emanuel. Mobilian Jargon: Linguistic and
Sociohistorical Aspects of a Native American Pidgin. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0198240333
- Higginbotham, Jay. Old Mobile: Fort Louis de la Louisiane,
1702-1711, pages 106-107. Museum of the City of Mobile, 1977.
ISBN 0914334034.
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city,pages 20-21. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city,pages 17-27. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- "Other Locations: Historic Fort Conde" (history), Museum of Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, 2006
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile: the new history of Alabama's
first city,pages 44-45. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Zietz, Robert (1994). The Gates of Heaven : Congregation
Sha'arai Shomayim, the first 150 years, Mobile, Alabama, 1844-1994.
Mobile, Alabama: Congregation Sha'arai Shomayim . pp7-39
- Delaney, Caldwell. The Story of Mobile, page 45.
Mobile, Alabama: Gill Press, 1953. ISBN 0940882140
- Zietz, Robert (1994). The Gates of Heaven : Congregation
Sha'arai Shomayim, the first 150 years, Mobile, Alabama, 1844-1994.
Mobile, Alabama: Congregation Sha'arai Shomayim. pp7-39
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, page 113. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press,
2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Delaney, Caldwell. The Story of Mobile, pages 144-146.
Mobile, Alabama: Gill Press, 1953. ISBN 0940882140
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, page 153. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press,
2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, page 145. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press,
2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, pages 154-169. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, pages 213-217. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, pages 260-261. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- Bill Patterson, "The Founding of the Industrial Development
Board of the City of Mobile: The Port City's Reluctant Use of
Subsidies," Gulf South Historical Review 2000 15(2):
21-40,
- Thompsen, Andrea (May 22, 2007) " Study Reveals Top 10 Wettest U.S. Cities."
- "Joe Cain Articles" (newspaper story), Joe Danborn & Cammie
East, Mobile Register, 2001, webpage: CMW-history.
- Andrews, Casandra, "Master of make-Believe", Press
Register, Mobile, Alabama: 28 January 2007.
- Delaney, Caldwell. The Story of Mobile,page 79.
Mobile, Alabama: Gill Press, 1953.
- Thomason, Michael. Mobile : the new history of Alabama's
first city, pages 272-273. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama
Press, 2001. ISBN 0817310657
- "Newhouse News Service - The Press-Register" (description),
Newhouse News Service, 2007, webpage: NH-Register.
External links