
Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in the city of Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama. Official Website Mobile is the county seat of Mobile County. It was established in 1702 by the French as the first capital of colonial La Louisiane (New France). During its first 100 years, Mobile was a colony of France, then Britain, and lastly Spain. Mobile first became a part of the Uni...
Pioneers of Africatown, Mobile, Mobile County Alabama Africatown Article Talk Read Edit View history Tools Appearance hide Text Small Standard Large Width Standard Wide Color (beta) Automatic Light Dark From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia For other uses, see Africatown (disambiguation). Africatown Historic District U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. Historic district...
Oaklawn Memorial Cemetery Also known as Oaklawn Cemetery Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, USA:
Magnolia Cemetery Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, USA Find a Grave
Residents of Mobile, Alabama and nearby areas during the French, British and Spanish Colonial Period, 1702-1813. This includes it's time in French Louisiana, British and Spanish West Florida.Creole herein refers to people of French or Spanish descent born in the New World colonies, particularly in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. Also included are British and early American immigrants. Focus i...
Primarily for early colonists of French and Spanish Louisiana and British and Spanish West Florida who have descendants throughout the Gulf Coast.One goal is to develop standardized surname spellings to allow for easier matching and merging in Geni.Includes people mentioned in Winston De Ville's "Gulf Coast Colonials," Stanley Clisby Arthur's "Old Families of Louisiana," Grace King's "Creole Fa...
Wikipedia Faulkner University is a private Christian university, located in Montgomery, Alabama, US, and affiliated with the Churches of Christ. The University was founded in 1942 as Montgomery Bible School . In 1953 the school's name was changed to Alabama Christian College (ACC). In 1965, the college was moved to its present location on Atlanta Highway. The year 1975 marked the beginning of t...
Brookley Air Force Base (Brookley AFB) is a former United States Air Force base located in Mobile, Alabama. After it closed in 1969, it became what is now known as the Mobile Aeroplex at Brookley. Brookley Air Force Base had its aeronautical beginnings with Mobile's first municipal airport, the original Bates Field. However, the site itself had been occupied from the time of Mobile's founding,...
Little Magnolia Cemetery Also known as Magnolia Cemetery #2 Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, USA:
This project is for French Immigrants to Mobile during Alabama's Colonial Period.
This project is intended for the Irish that immigrated directly to Mobile, Alabama, particularly in the 1800's, and left descendants there. This is for first generation immigrants only.
This project is for those buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, located on 1939 Dauphin Island Parkway, Mobile, Alabama. Notable Burials Tommie Lee Agee (1942-2001) - MLB Player Frank William Boykin (1885-1969) - US Congress Herbert Leon "Sonny" Callahan (1932-2021) - US Congress Winston Groom (1943-2020) - Author John McDuffie (1883-1950) - US Congress Links Find a Grave Bill...
Major American, British and Spanish players in the American Revolution on the Gulf Coast.See: "Independence Lost: Lives on the Edge of the American Revolution" by Kathleen DuVal, Random House, 2015
Springhill Avenue Temple Cemetery Also known as Sha'arai Shomayim Cemetery Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, USA Jewish Cemetery
Campo Santo Also known as Spanish Cemetery Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, USA: Burial ground until 1813 for colonial Mobile, Alabama. The Campo Santo was roughly 400 feet (120 m) long by 300 feet (91 m) wide and filled portions of what are now city blocks between Joachim, Dauphin, Franklin, and Conti Streets. Most, but not all, of the burials were moved to the new Church Street Graveyard ...
Immigrants from Switzerland to Mobile, Alabama This project is for those who immigrated to Mobile, Alabama from Switzerland.
Kings of Mardi Gras in Mobile, Alabama
Descendants of the people buried in the Church Street Graveyard in Mobile, Alabama, This cemetery is situated on 4 acres of land. Church Street Graveyard, as it was called, was founded in 1819, just a year prior to being purchased by the City of Mobile, upon which it became the city's primary burial site. Many of the earlier burials were those of victims of yellow fever. In 1820, Mobile's city...
Battle of Fort Charlotte:
Refugees from the Revolution in Saint Domingue (Haiti) that immigrated into New Orleans, the Gulf Coast and elsewhere from 1791 to 1810.Resources* Settlers of St. Domingue, 1750-1800 * Surnames of Some Saint-Domingue Refugee Families * The Road to Louisiana: The Saint-Domingue Refugees, 1792–1809 * From Saint-Domingue to New Orleans: Migration and Influences * The 1809 Immigration of Saint-Domi...
Settlers of Mississippi from 1699 to 1817
Saint Austin Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, USA: Find a Grave Saint Austin Cemetery (also known as St Austin Cemetery and occasionally as St Augustine Cemetery) This is a historically important African American private non perpetual care cemetery on approximately 2.97 acres located in the City of Mobile. There is no known office or signage marking the cemetery, the entrance or s...
Wikipedia Mobile National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the city of Mobile, Alabama.1202 Virginia Street Mobile, AL 36604 Phone: 850-453-4846 Or 850-453-4108 FAX: 850-453-4635 Burial Status - Closed Find a Grave
Purpose of Project===The purpose of this project is to identify the settlers of the Vine and Olive colony in Alabama, to build their trees on Geni, and to determine where the families went after the colony collapsed in the late 1830's. Even though this project focuses on Bonapartist exiles, it complements the many Huguenot projects, in that these were French immigrants to an English-speaking na...
Founders of "old line" Carnival (Mardi Gras and New Year's) krewes and mystic societies in Mobile and New Orleans:* Cowbellion de Rakin Society (1830, Mobile)* Strikers Independent Society (1843, Mobile)* T.D.S. (The Determined Set, 1844. Mobile)* Krewe of Comus (1856, New Orleans)* Lost Cause Minstrels (1867. Mobile)* Order of Myths (1868, Mobile)* Infant Mystics (H.S.S., 1869, Mobile)* Twelft...